âBut I'm just not sure â'
Midge kissed his forehead. âAnd you should wrap a blanket or a towel around your fishbowl on the way to work, so it doesn't freeze.'
âOkay,' he said, and the alarm went off.
âWhat's that you got there?' asked the bus driver when Pulpy stepped onto the bus. He was hugging the fishbowl to his chest and squeezing Midge's catalogue under one armpit.
âA fish.' He looked at the crowd ahead of him. All the seats were taken.
âWho carries a fish around in weather like this?'
âThat's why I wrapped his bowl in a towel. So he doesn't freeze.'
âYou better hope it doesn't. Move up the bus, please.'
He took a few steps and stopped when the bowl nudged someone's back.
âKeep going. I need you on the other side of the line.'
Pulpy looked down. âWhat line?'
The driver sighed. âI need you on the other side of that line or else this bus doesn't leave the station.'
âGet on the other side of the line!' one of the seated passengers shouted.
Pulpy shuffled another step along and the swaddled fishbowl pushed into a teenager's backpack. âSorry,' he said.
The teenager sneered at him.
âHere we go!' said the driver, and started the engine.
The bus lurched forward and Pulpy stumbled backward, dropping the catalogue onto the floor of the bus and spilling water from the fishbowl. The bus stopped.
A rumble of discontent rose from the other riders.
The driver looked at Pulpy. âOnce more and you're off. I cannot abide fish water on my vehicle.'
âI tripped,' he said.
âI will not repeat myself. One more time and you are off this bus.'
Pulpy nodded and braced himself.
The receptionist turned to look at the clock when Pulpy walked in. âI think the clock is dirty. See it?' She pointed.
The time was
8:39
. As far as he could tell, there was no dirt.
âI think I'll have to clean it,' she said. âI should make a note.' And she looked at the clock again, eyeballed Pulpy and reached for a pen and paper.
Pulpy stood on the welcome mat with the towel-wrapped fishbowl. âHow was your weekend?'
She put her pen down and clicked her pink nails on the desk. âOver too fast.'
âStart of the week,' he said.
âUh huh. Under new management too. I didn't think I'd say this, but I miss Al already. At least he included me in things.'
Pulpy stood there while she stuck and unstuck paperclips to the magnetic top of their container. âI told Dan you should've been invited to the party,' he said.
She paused with a paperclip at her lips like a tiny silver trombone. âYou told him that?' She put the paperclip down. âWhat are you doing with that towel?'
âOh, this.' The towel was soaked and so was his coat. He unwrapped the bowl and set it on the ground. âIt's for my fish.'
âWell, don't leave the bowl on the floor like that. Here, put it on my desk.'
The fish was orange. It swam in a circle one way, then the other. He set the bowl gently on her desk.
She peered at it. âIt's moving pretty slow.'
âHe's probably cold,' he said. âHe'll warm up.'
The receptionist nudged the little bowl and the water sloshed. âWhere'd you get it?'
âThe winter fair.' He cleared his throat. âI won him at the fish game.'
âGood for you.' She dipped her finger in the water and swirled it around.
He puffed up a little. âIt wasn't as hard as I thought it would be.'
âThis is a nice fish. The gravel's nice.'
âRainbow.' He watched the ripples she was making, then shook off his coat.
The closet was full again but there was room on the floor. He deposited his coat and then reached for the fish. âWell, I guess we should be getting upstairs.'
She pulled the bowl toward her. âI think it likes it here.'
âHmm,' he said. âActually, I was going to put him on my desk.'
âBut it's so nice and bright here, with the window. I think it wants to stay with me.'
âWell,' said Pulpy.
âBesides, you have to get to the boardroom. It's the new boss's first meeting so you better hurry up. It's an
all-staff
meeting, except I have to cover the desk. So now I'm not included in parties
or
meetings.'
âThere's a meeting?' He rushed for the stairs, but the receptionist kept talking.
âAm
I
not staff? You would think when there's an all-staff meeting,
all
staff would be invited. But I guess that's not the way it works anymore.' She looked at him standing there. âWell, what are you waiting for?'
He took the steps two at a time, certain that the fish was watching him go.
âWe need a vision statement,' Dan was saying when Pulpy tiptoed into the boardroom. âAnd we need it now.'
Nobody said anything. There were about thirty staff members sitting in a semi-circle around the big boardroom table, with Dan at the head of it. One of Al's red retirement balloons, now partially deflated, still adorned one corner of the room.
Pulpy looked for an empty seat.
Dan folded his hands in front of him. âSo we are going to sit here and write a vision statement, and nobody leaves until it's done.'
There were a few murmurs at this.
âAre there any questions?' Dan noticed Pulpy and nodded at him.
Pulpy nodded back and sat down quickly between Roy from Customer Service and Carmelita from the Parts Department.
Carmelita raised her hand.
âYes?' said Dan. âAnd what's your name?'
âCarmelita,' said Carmelita. “From the Parts Department.”
âYes, Carmelita?' Dan smiled at her. âStand up so we can get a look at you.'
She turned her head from side to side and then stood, slowly.
Dan continued to smile.
Carmelita crossed her arms over her chest. âWhat's a vision statement?'
Dan was silent. Then he put his elbows on the table and put his hands together and said, âAh.'
Carmelita sat down.
âI'm glad you asked, actually, because you all need to know the answer.' Dan leaned forward. âA vision statement is the statement of a company's vision, put into words. It's about how the company sees itself. That's the vision part. The statement part is the words themselves.' He sat back, looking pleased with himself.
Roy elbowed Pulpy. Pulpy didn't know how to respond to that. Then Roy's hand went up.
âYes?' said Dan.
âRoy here.' Roy stood. âFrom Customer Service. Why, exactly, do we need a vision statement?'
âWhy?' said Dan. âI think that's obvious.'
âNot really,' said Roy. âAl never thought we needed one.'
Pulpy sunk lower in his chair and there was some laughter around the semi-circle, but Dan wasn't smiling.
âAl ran his show his way, and I'm running my show my way.' Dan leaned forward a little further, and his broad shoulders cast a shadow over the table in front of him. âSo like I said, we need a vision statement.'
Roy sat down. âWhat do you think of him?' he whispered to Pulpy.
âOh, well,' said Pulpy, sensing Dan looking their way, âI think he'll do a good job.'
Another hand went up. This time it was Vince from Archiving.
Dan frowned. âYes?'
Vince stood up. âHi, I'm Vince from Archiving. The thing is, Al didn't â'
âExcuse me,' said Dan, âdo you have a job here?'
âYes?' Vince looked confused. âI'm in Archiving.'
âActually, the answer to that question I just posed would be no.'
âSorry?' Vince half-smiled and half-frowned, like he wasn't getting a joke.
âDon't be sorry. Just go.' Dan stood up. âNow.'
Vince blinked and then slowly made his way out of the room. There were a few more murmurs, but they were quieter now.
âAll right.' Dan sat back down and cracked his large knuckles. âIf nobody has any more questions, I'll start taking your vision-statement suggestions.'
When the meeting was ending and Dan had the vision statement tucked into a folder under his arm, he pulled Pulpy aside. âPulpy, I'd like to ask you something.'
Pulpy's shoulders stiffened. âI'm sorry I was late,' he said in a rush. âI lost track of time this morning, I don't know how it happens. My wife and I, we always set the alarm, so I don't know how the delay happens there, and then there's the bus â¦'
Dan shook his head. âForget about that. How would you and your wife like to go to the Ice Follies with me and Beatrice?'
Pulpy stared at him.
âWe have a pair of extra tickets with your name on them.' Dan chuckled. âWell, not really. I don't even know what your wife's name is! Ha! What is her name, anyway?'
âMidge.'
âMidge.' Dan rolled her name around his mouth like he was savouring it.
Pulpy looked from Dan's neat pant creases to his own baggy pleats. âWhen's the show?'
âTonight. Does that work for you?'
Pulpy pressed a thumb between his eyebrows. âI think so. I'll call Midge. I mean, I'm sure it works.'
âOn your lunch break, right?' said Dan. âYou'll call her on your lunch break.'
âMy lunch break. Yes.' Pulpy nodded. âThank you.'
Dan winked at him. âYou're welcome.'
âTonight?' said Midge.
âHe's got the tickets,' said Pulpy.
âWhat if I can't go tonight? What if I had plans?'
âBut you don't. And it's the Ice Follies, Midge â it's your thing.' The food court was busy. He eyed all the lineups forming. He still needed to eat.
âIt's not my thing, it's
our
thing. We signed up to take Couples Ice Dance Expression together, remember? So what row are we?'
âHe didn't say.'
âHmm. But the tickets are free.'
âHe didn't say that, either.'
âHow could he possibly offer you tickets to an event and then charge you for them? What kind of a person would do that?' She sighed. âDid you show him the catalogue, at least?'
âThe catalogue.' Pulpy tightened his grip on the receiver. The damp edge of his coat collar scratched his neck.
âJust bring it tonight, then. We'll show it to his wife. The wife is the key.'
âRight.' He cleared his throat and thought about the square lump of mush that Midge's catalogue must be now, on the floor of the bus.
âWhat should I wear? Because I have a skirt, but I can't wear nice shoes with it because of the weather.'
âWhat about those dress pants you bought?'
âI can't wear them anymore. I took them to get altered and the woman at the tailor's said, “Waist in or out?” And I said, “In.”'
âWhy don't you just take them back and have her fix them?'
âBut she's put so much effort into them already. I wouldn't want to bother her. I couldn't go back and ask her to reverse all that work. To
reverse
it, Pulpy! No, I'll have to pick up some more dress pants at the mall. Do you need anything?'
âI really don't think we should be spending money willy-nilly like this, Midge.'
âIt's not willy-nilly, it's important. Besides, you're getting a promotion and I'm going to sell lots of candles. And if we're going to succeed we need to look good.'
Pulpy's hands went to his pleats. âThen I think,' he said, âthat I'd like pants with creases.'
âYou mean the same as the ones you have?'
âNo, those are pleated. Where there are a lot of creases it's pleats. I'm just looking for a single crease, down the front of each leg.'
âThere you go,' she said. âThat wasn't so hard, was it?'
âShe said she'd love to come,' Pulpy told Dan after lunch.
âGreat!' Dan clapped his big hands, once. âSo it's ten-fifty each. Usually they're twelve but I got a deal. You can pay me later if you don't have exact change. I don't have any cash on me right now. Take a load off!' Dan pointed at the two buttery leather chairs by his door.
Pulpy sat in one and was engulfed.
âThat's nice, isn't it? Did I or did I not say I was going to bring in chairs? These ones over here, they're not quite as comfy but they're just as expensive.' Dan indicated the two hard-backed chairs in front of his desk, where Al's couch had been.
âLooks like quality wood,' said Pulpy.
âThat they are. That they are indeed.' Dan leaned back. âSo, about your lateness this morning â the secretary tells me this is a chronic problem with you. What was it you were saying about the bus earlier?'
Pulpy nodded fast. âThe bus driver wouldn't leave the station until I stepped over the line.'
âThose buses will be the death of us all,' said Dan. âAnd that secretary is a snoop. She should mind her own business.' He looked at his watch. âWell, back to work.'
âYes.' Pulpy blinked, and heaved himself out of the chair. âBack to it.'
âDo you have any food for this fish?' asked the receptionist when Pulpy walked past her desk at the end of the day.
âI do. I guess I forgot to give it to you.' He found his coat in the closet and dug the small shaker of fish food out of his pocket.
âI'm practising positive self-talk.' She tapped a fingernail on the fishbowl without looking at it. âIt says here you can only put eight ounces into an eight-ounce glass.' She smoothed out the seminar flyer. âWhat that means is, you can't fill it higher, so don't even try.'
He handed her the fish food. âDan said, um, he said you told him I was late all the time.'
She pushed open the dispenser and sniffed inside. âWell, you are, aren't you?'