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Buzzz
One minute I'm standing on a filing
cabinet, my head poked up through a moved drop ceiling panel
trying to eavesdrop on the meeting going on in the adjacent
conference room, and the next thing I know I'm hanging onto
a wall rubbing my legs together, attempting to dodge the rubber
bands coming at me from one of the suits sitting around the
conference table.
My job is in jeopardy. That's why I was standing on the filing
cabinet with my head stuck up through the ceiling--to hear
what they were saying about me. I couldn't hear them clearly--I
had to try and move one of their ceiling panels too. I'm lucky
the conference room is next to my office.
My right leg itches and the pink insulation makes me sweat
and through all of this I can only think of my wife. "If you
lose this one, Mirsky," Elaine had said on my first day, "I'm
history. I'm not going to support you any longer. Face it.
You are not the brightest bulb on the marquee. Do your job--and
for once keep your mouth shut."
I'm in trouble. What the hell is a suggestion box for, if
not for suggestions? I just wanted the big boss and the managers
to know that they weren't being discreet in their expense
accounts--especially with their secretaries. Okay. So I probably
screwed up because someone knew my handwriting. I should have
typed the note.The least they could do is thank me for trying
to protect them. I can be trusted. Maybe I should tell them
about Elaine and offer to trade my silence to keep my job.
I'd even promise not to use the suggestion box anymore. If
I can hear their discussion about me I'll be better able to
mount a job-saving defense.
My leg was really itching and I couldn't bend over to scratch
it because I'd make a racket--either knocking the ceiling
apart or falling off the filing cabinet. I was standing on
one leg and having trouble keeping my balance, all-the-while
trying not to sneeze from the insulation while scratching
my itchy calf with my shoe. "There must be an easier way,"
I thought. "If only I could be a fly on the wall."
The next rubber band almost wings me and I fly off to try
and hide behind a curtain but I have no control over my flying
and I land on the table. I look up at my boss and he looks
as big as the city of Toledo--even though I've never been
to Toledo. He rears his open hand back and coming at me from
an angle slaps the table trying to squash me. Instinctively
I do what all flys do--I fly straight up avoiding his sideward
movement and I end up on the back of his chair, unnoticed.
I'm out of breath and panting my little fly pants and flapping
my translucent wings to cool myself off, and then I realize
that I'm finally in a perfectly safe position to hear what's
going on. I realize that I was able to wish myself into becoming
that fly on the wall. Imagine the possibilities. Just the
inside information I could glean for the stock market could
set us up for life. I wouldn't tell Elaine, though, I'd let
her think I'd suddenly become brilliant--found my niche in
life. My bosses voice snaps me out of my revelry.
"Buzzz," is what I hear him say.
"Buzzz. Buzzz," someone else says.
"Buzzzzzz. Bz. Bz."
"Bzz."
"Bzzz."
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