Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Deleted Scene #12: Sexual Harassment

In this scene in the middle of Chapter 12, Emma and Dan go jogging and Dan accidentally cops a feel.  The scene doesn't really add anything, so it was easy to cut it.

#
A drawback of working in the subbasement was that it did not come equipped with a bathroom.  By lunchtime she was ready to grab one of the antique bedpans from a Victorian medicine exhibit and press it into service for her personal use.  Her respect for history won out—barely—so that she managed to hold it until she could take the elevator up to the first floor.
While up there, she changed into her running clothes.  She found Dr. Dreyfus waiting at their usual bench, stretching his quads.  “Hey,” he said.  “Are you sure you’re up to this?”
“I’m feeling much better, thank you,” she said.  The cuts to her midsection didn’t really bother her much as she ran, so long as she didn’t try to stop to scratch them.  She suspected that Dr. Dreyfus kept his pace slower than usual so as not to push her too much, for which she was grateful.  Her ankle felt much better, but it did start to ache a bit after the first lap.
“So they put you down in the subbasement?”
“Yes.”
“By yourself?”
“Yes.”
“That’s terrible.”  He shook his head and then smiled at her.  “Did you find the Ark of the Covenant down there?”
“No.  Should I have?”
“It was a joke.  Did you ever see Raiders of the Lost Ark?”
“No.”
“That’s all right.  I guess it is more of a guy movie.”
“What’s it about?”
He spent another lap telling her about the movie, which involved a dashing scientist who rescued artifacts from exotic locations.  “Isn’t that illegal?” she asked, interrupting him.
“Well, I suppose it would be, but it’s kind of a Robin Hood deal.  He takes the artifacts so they aren’t stolen by treasure hunters.  That way they can end up in establishments like ours.”
“I see.  Have you ever stolen anything?”
“Not yet.  But then I don’t have a bull whip and fedora.”
She laughed uncertainly at this.  Besides An Affair to Remember, she had watched only a handful of movies, most of them old Disney cartoons with Becky when they were kids.  Like television, movies had never really held much interest for her. 
She tripped over her sneakers when he said, “Maybe we could see it sometime.”  He reached out just in time to catch her, one hand catching her left breast.  He left it there for a few seconds before letting go.  She could feel her face turning volcanically hot.  “I’m so sorry,” he said.  “I didn’t mean—”
“No, it’s all right,” she mumbled.
“It’s just that you were falling and I—”
“I understand,” she said, though she was certain her red face belied this.  By all rights she could go to the director and have him reported for sexual harassment.  She wouldn’t do this, though, knowing that he hadn’t meant to touch her there; he had touched her to keep her from falling, not to fondle her. 
“I guess we should go back now, huh?”
“I suppose so.”
They jogged in silence, Emma trying to think of something comforting to say to him.  The words caught in her throat and despite her best efforts she couldn’t force them to the surface.  “See you later,” he said in the main gallery.  She could only nod to him and then stagger off to the elevator.
She managed to wait until she was down in the subbasement to put her head down on her desk and cry.  There was every chance Dr. Dreyfus would be scared off by this accidental indiscretion and never want to see her again.  Why hadn’t she said more to make him understand that she knew he didn’t mean anything by it?  Why hadn’t she told him that she didn’t want this to change things between them?

Deleted Scene #11: The Witches Visit Emma

This was the original ending to Chapter 11. In it Emma is visited by Mrs. Chiostro and her sister Sylvia.  They give her a potion to help her wound from the Black Dragoon heal.  Again there were too many spoilers in this scene, so it got cut.

#
Though everyone from the doctors to the nurses to Becky told her to get some sleep, Emma didn’t want to.  She feared that if she did, she would have another dream of her mother and wind up sleepwalking again.  The next time it happened, Becky might not be there to stop her; she might end up walking right out a window.  If something that terrible didn’t happen, the nursing staff might have her in restraints like a crazy person.
Eventually Becky had to leave, giving Emma one final hug.  “Get some rest, kid,” she said.  “You want me to bring you anything from home?  Some books maybe?”
“It’s all right.  I should be going home tomorrow.”
“Right.  I’ll see you first thing in the morning.”
There was a television in the room for entertainment, but Emma never watched TV on a regular basis.  Flipping through the channels, she found a local feed of the Rampart City Symphony Orchestra, performing a concerto by Grieg.  Closing her eyes, she imagined her mother still there, older now, about fifty-two.  She would probably look like Sylvia Joubert, except for the eyes.  Her father would be a few years older than her, more Aunt Gladys’s age.  He would be bald and gray and probably a little overweight despite Emma’s nagging that he take care of himself.
She badly wished they were still here.  She missed them so much.  No wonder her concussed brain had conjured up a dream like that, of her angelic mother telling her how special she was.  Not that special, she thought.  She hadn’t been able to help them, just as she hadn’t been able to help Dr. Brighton or to save anything from the offices upstairs.  All of her research was gone.  At least that terrible thing in her closet was probably destroyed as well.
With a shiver she thought of the monster again.  The creature had certainly been as black and evil as the thing in the closet.  Were they one and the same?  Maybe the object Dr. Dreyfus had found had opened some kind of gateway, letting the horrible creature through.
She shook her head.  This was nonsense.  Monsters, evil objects, and dimensional gateways were all the stuff of science fiction.  She had dedicated her life to studying science fact.  Donovan was right that there probably was a more logical explanation for what she had seen.  The eyes could have been goggles or something similar to give the appearance of glowing red eyes.  As for the claws, anyone good enough at metallurgy could make something like that.  She put a hand to her stomach, thinking again of how the creature’s claws had barely grazed her and yet from the doctor said, the cuts were deep.  Not deep enough to ruin any of her organs at least.  Still, if it had actually put some force into a swing, it seemed entirely possible for it to cut a man in half.
She shivered at such a thought.  She wasn’t a science fiction writer and she wasn’t a police officer either.  She had made her statement to Donovan.  That was enough.  Maybe she could remember something else later, but for now she had done what she could.  As usual, it wasn’t enough.
Her mind turned to Dr. Brighton.  There was no word yet that it was him who had died, but it seemed logical.  The only others who would have access on the weekend were the cleaning staff and building security.  The cleaning staff and security wouldn’t have been up there, not with the presentation going on.  But then again, Dr. Brighton shouldn’t have been up there either.  Maybe he had wanted to catch up on some work now that he was running the department or maybe he just wanted to take a nap in peace.
She felt a stab of guilt at the latter thought.  She wished she had gotten to know Dr. Brighton better.  As she had told Ian, she had read his work.  Not just some of his work, but all of it.  At one point—long before she was born—he had been the top expert on meteors in the world.  Once she learned she was going to be working for him, Emma had entertained thoughts of him being a mentor to her, sharing his wisdom.  She thought he would take her under his wing and treat her with grandfatherly affection the way Mr. Graves did.
That certainly hadn’t come to pass.  He had hated her.  Hated her because she was young and because she was a woman.  That prejudice wasn’t unusual, but she had hoped it would be different with a scientist of his caliber.  Maybe twenty or thirty years ago it might have been.  Maybe if she had been male or older he would have liked her.  Maybe he wouldn’t have been up there when the museum exploded.  Maybe he would still be alive.
She sighed at this.  She had gone through this with her parents.  Maybe, maybe, maybe.  There was no changing the past, though; time travel was just another bit of science fiction.  That knowledge didn’t make her feel any better about any of it.  She shouldn’t have argued with Dr. Brighton about the equipment.  She should have done more to be understanding, to befriend him.
Despite her best efforts, she fell asleep late in the night.  She had the strangest dream.  Mrs. Chiostro was beside her bed, wearing a white nightgown and with her hair down.  The old woman smiled at her and said, “It’s all right, dear.  I’m going to give you something to help make you better.”
Emma mumbled something incoherent.  Then she heard a second woman’s voice.  “You better hurry.  That night nurse is three doors away.” 
Turning her head slightly, Emma saw a woman in camouflage pants and a green tank top.  Without her glasses, Emma couldn’t see the woman’s face clearly, but she recognized the dark red hair.  “Sylvia?”
“Shit,” Sylvia hissed.  She came over to the other side of the bed and bent down.  “Just relax, Emma.  Agnes is going to take care of you.”
“What’s going on?” Emma asked.
Sylvia looked up at Mrs. Chiostro.  “You want me to knock her out?”
“There’s no need for that.  You really should have changed your appearance, though.  I told you that hair was too recognizable.”
“Yeah, it’s a pain in the ass to take care of too,” Sylvia said.  Emma knew she must be dreaming, because Sylvia’s hair began shortening until it was almost military length.  What remained of it turned completely gray.  “Happy now?”
“You shouldn’t do that in front of her.  What if she remembers?”
“She’s not going to remember.  Are you?”
Emma stared at the newly shorn Sylvia for a moment and then shook her head.  Sylvia patted her cheek and smiled.  “Good girl.”  She looked over again at Mrs. Chiostro.  “Are you going to do it or dawdle all night?”
“The stopper was stuck.  It’s been a while since I used this on anyone.”
“Just hurry up.  Otherwise I’m going to have to knock out that damned nurse and then the kid.”
Mrs. Chiostro’s hand touched Emma’s cheek, turning Emma’s head to face her.  The old woman held up a dark gray bottle with the word “Restoration” written in curly script on a yellowed label.  “I’m going to give you a teaspoon of this medicine to help you get better.”
“What is it?”
“Just an old family recipe.  Trust me.”
Mrs. Chiostro looked so kind and harmless that Emma did believe her.  She opened her mouth to let Mrs. Chiostro dribble the medicine down her throat.  It tasted like her mother’s cinnamon toast, except burnt, which was what usually happened when Emma tried to make it.  Sylvia poured some water down Emma’s throat to wash the taste out.
Emma heard footsteps approaching, as did her two guests.  The old women stood up, Mrs. Chiostro stopping the bottle and then dropping it into a pocket of her nightgown.  “So long, dear.  I hope you feel better soon.”  With a flash of white they disappeared.
The door opened, the night nurse peaking inside.  Emma closed her eyes, feigning sleep as the woman checked Emma’s vitals.  When she opened her eyes again, Emma saw the room filled with golden light.  At first she thought she must be dreaming again, but this time her mother wasn’t here or the two old women. 
Dr. Dreyfus sat beside her bed.  “Hello,” he said with a smile.  “How are you feeling?”
Emma put a hand to her head, which felt remarkably clearer than the night before.  She wiggled her ankle, which also seemed markedly improved.  Only the cuts on her midsection didn’t seem to have gotten any better.  “I’m better,” she whispered.
“Do you want a drink?”
“Yes please.”  She took the glass of water he handed to her.  As she did, she noticed a Mylar balloon hovering over the nightstand.  It featured a cuddly teddy bear against a pink background with the words, “Get Well” in blue.  She frowned slightly at this, the balloon seeming more at home in a six-year-old’s room.
“I hope you don’t mind I bought you a little something.  I thought it might help cheer you up, make the room seem a little less sterile.”
“It’s very nice.  Thank you,” she said.
“I’m sorry about how the other night ended.”
“It’s not your fault.”  She took another sip of water and then said, “How’s the exhibit?  Did Karlak make it?”
“He’s fine.  So’s the exhibit.  But I wouldn’t blame the Egyptians for wanting him back after what’s happened.  This is the second time we’ve almost lost him.”
“Maybe there’s a curse,” she said, thinking of all the supposed curses of the pharaohs for trespassers. 
“If it is, it’s going after the wrong people.  It should be going after me, not you.”  They said nothing for a moment before Dr. Dreyfus patted her hand.  “I didn’t get a chance to say how much I really appreciated you being there.”
“I was glad to do it”
“Seeing you there in the front row, knowing there was someone there on my side, really helped me do it—until, you know—”
“I know.”
The door opened, Becky standing there, glaring at Dr. Dreyfus.  He must have noticed this glare, as he stood up immediately.  “I’ll see you back at work.  I hope you feel better.”
“Thank you,” she said, watching him squeeze by Becky through the door.  Looking up at the balloon, she decided it really did brighten up the place after all.

Deleted Scene #10: Donovan At the Crime Scene

This was the original ending for Chapter 10.  In it Detective Donovan investigates the scene of Roscoe Caffee's murder.  I think I cut this in large part because it's a bit too gory for mainstream audiences.  The less time spent contemplating a guy being butchered the better.

#
Donovan had hit a dead end in the MacGregor case.  That Dr. Earl had been her best suspect and even she was lukewarm at best.  The kid didn’t strike Donovan as the type to have a torrid affair or a psychotic crush.  Just to be sure, Donovan had visited Marston’s and confirmed with a salesgirl there that Emma Earl had been there that night.  It didn’t seem likely there were two young redheaded girls with size-15 feet.
With Earl ruled out, Donovan had no leads to follow.  Forensics had turned up nothing in the house or from the body.  Maybe they could have kept the body longer for another autopsy, but Donovan doubted it would have turned up anything.  Whoever had killed Sarah MacGregor had done a professional job of it, leaving nothing behind, especially not witnesses.
About the only thing she could do was hope the killer got sloppy and started bragging about it in some bar.  That none of the thieves in this town had any honor could always be counted on.  Most of the hoods in this town would snitch on their grandmothers for a nickel, provided they knew who their grandmothers were.
So when the call came over the radio of a body found in the industrial sector, Donovan decided to answer it.  Maybe this case would be a bit easier.  If nothing else it would keep her occupied while she waited for her snitches to beat the bushes.
When she had first started, a scene like the one in the alley would have left her nauseous and sleepless for days.  Now she only reached into her jacket for a fresh cigarette before bending down to inspect the body that had been just about cut in half.  From the look of it, a few rats had already used the corpse as a snack, which would only make her job more difficult.
“Great,” she muttered.  “Nothing ever easy.”
She was glad Officer Early was on the scene; she hadn’t gotten a chance to have coffee with Lois in the last couple of days.  “What do we got?” Donovan asked.
“Night watchman was doing his rounds and found this guy here,” Early said.
“Any identification?”
Early nodded, tossing a wallet to her.  There was no driver’s license, just a bus pass for Roscoe Caffee.  It wasn’t a picture ID, but they might be able to get a match on the prints.  From the look of him—what hadn’t been turned into a rat buffet—Caffee was the type who had run afoul of the law on more than one occasion.
“Night watchman see anyone?”
“Not a soul.  Just the rats nibbling on the body.”
“Fantastic.  Got another winner here.”
Early nodded again.  “No luck on the MacGregor case?”
“Nothing so far.  Had someone in mind.  Didn’t pan out.”
“Shit,” Early said.  That she had swore meant she was especially agitated as Early had tried to cut down on that too after she became a mother.  “I was hoping you’d find that bastard.  I don’t know what this city’s coming to when someone shoots a pregnant woman in the stomach.”
“There are a lot of animals out here,” Donovan said.  She turned back to Caffee’s body.  An animal is what it looked like had been at Caffee.  Not the rats, but something like a grizzly or a wolverine.  Other than the zoo, though, she doubted there were any of those running around Rampart City.  “What the hell you suppose could do something like that?”
“An axe maybe?”
“Yeah, maybe.”  Donovan was not a forensic expert, but she doubted a simple axe could have done this, not unless the killer had worked for a while at it.  In which case it seemed like there would have been a more widespread mess.  As it was, Caffee’s blood and cuts were relatively localized, none of him splattered against the walls.
Playing her flashlight around the alley, she could something on the fence, about halfway up.  She spit out her cigarette and then began scrambling up the fence.  It had been a while since she’d had to do this professionally, but she hadn’t lost her touch.
Keeping one hand on the fence and the other on her flashlight, she looked closer at what she had seen.  Blood.  At least it sure as hell looked like blood.  From the look of it, she could see more of it just a few inches away.
She swung down to the ground to examine Caffee again.  This time she saw what she had missed the first time:  holes in his shoulders.  Not just the typical bullet hole, but holes that went all the way through him, like someone had hammered a big nail through him.  “Jesus Christ,” she whispered.
“You got something?” Early asked.
Donovan motioned to the fence.  “Looks like he was on the fence and someone shot him twice in the shoulders.  Must have been a real high caliber to go through him.  When it gets light we’ll have to look around for the bullets or casings.”  She looked down at Caffee again.  “He must have fell and then the killer finished him off.”
“Holy cow,” Early said.  “Why go to that much trouble to shoot him in the shoulders?  Why not just shoot him in the heart or the head?”
“I don’t know.  Maybe he had something the killer wanted.”
“You think it might be a mob hit then?”
“Doubt it.  Vendetta’s goons aren’t this messy.  Not unless they want to make a point.  Of course he could be a small fish who got in over his head in something.”  She shrugged.  “Too bad we can’t just ask the poor bitch.”
Donovan was still looking around for anything and waiting for the forensics people to arrive when Early came running over to her.  “We got three more in another factory about a mile away.  Another night watchman.”
“It’s really jumping tonight,” Donovan grumbled, reaching for another cigarette.  “Must be my birthday.”
She left Early at the crime scene to wait for the others while she went to see these three other victims.  As Early had indicated, it was another rundown factory in the industrial sector.  There was another beat cop on the scene with an elderly man in a security uniform.  According to the security guard, he had been walking around on his rounds and found three dead vagrants and a dead dog.
“Stay here with the officer.  I’ll be right back.”
Donovan had walked into enough of these abandoned buildings that the empty, dusty spaces no longer gave her the creeps.  The rats didn’t scare her either.  What did scare her was the thought of so many places to hide for a shooter.  Of course if the killer had any brains he would have made tracks a while ago, but some couldn’t resist hanging around to see what they had wrought or to add another victim to the list. 
She took her pistol out as she crept into the factory.  Had she simply walked in it would have been quick enough, but without any backup, she took it slow, keeping an eye out for anyone who might still be here.  Sweeping her gun around the factory, she heard a piece of metal hit the floor.  From the light tinkle of it, it was probably an old tool.  Goddamned rat, she told herself.
It was easy enough to find the scene of the crime.  She only had to find the barrel that was still burning.  Around this were three vagrants lying on the ground.  Each one had a bloody hole in the throat that went clear through.  The gray mutt lying nearby had a similar hole through the middle of its torso.  She didn’t have a measuring tape with her, but she was pretty damned sure the holes would match those in Roscoe Caffee’s shoulders.
A new scenario formed in her mind.  Someone might have been holding a meeting here, running drugs or guns and these three plus Caffee had stumbled onto the deal.  The killer took out the vagrants and dogs and then chased Caffee down.  That worked, except for the barrel.  The flaming barrel and position of the vagrants would mean they were already here sitting around.  Maybe someone wanted to clean out the riffraff for a meeting later.  Except why leave the bodies for the watchman to find?
She thought of what she and Early had discussed about Caffee.  Maybe he had something Vendetta wanted and she’d sent one of her assassins out to hunt him down.  The vagrants then would all be collateral damage.  Donovan shook her head and then flicked her cigarette into the barrel.  Too damned many questions and not nearly enough answers.
When she came back outside, the officer told her about the explosion at the Plaine Museum.  “Just fucking great,” Donovan grumbled.  She’d let someone else take that one.  She had enough mysteries for right now.
That was until she heard that one Dr. Emma Earl had been admitted to the emergency room.  Then she was grabbing the radio to tell them she would be on the scene in five minutes.


Deleted Scene #9: Emma & Dan Have Coffee

This was part of Chapter 9.  It takes place after the funeral, first when Emma goes back to the apartment and then when she meets Dan Dreyfus for some coffee before the Karlak II presentation.  Part of the reason for the coffee scene was to showcase Emma's language abilities.  Ultimately it wasn't a necessary scene and slowed things down too much.

#


Becky didn’t show up at the apartment before Emma left, but she did call from Lintner’s headquarters.  “How did it go?” she asked.

“Fine,” Emma said.  She reached over to turn down the volume of her tape, but was too late to keep Becky from noticing.

“Is that Carmen in the background?”

“Yes.”

“It must not have gone too well if you’re listening to that.”

While having a friend like Becky who knew her so well was usually a blessing, sometimes it was a curse as well.  “It was just seeing the little coffin for the baby.”

“Oh shit.”  Becky sighed into the receiver.  “I’m sorry I wasn’t there.”

“It’s all right.  There was a very nice old woman there.  She helped me get through it.”

“Always good to rely on the kindness of strangers.”

“She was very kind.  She’s a seamstress,” Emma said, not sure why she kept saying this.

“A kindly old seamstress?  You meet all sorts in this city.”

“Are you making fun of me?”

“Not at all.  I think it’s great.”  Becky sighed again into the phone.  “I have to go.  Captain Bligh is still on the warpath.  Take care of yourself, kid.  And good luck on your non-date tonight.”

“Becky—”

“I know, you’re just colleagues.  This means nothing.”

“I wish you would believe me.”

“I wish I did too.  Gotta go.”

Becky hung up, leaving Emma to sit on the bed listening to her tape of Carmen, her mother’s favorite opera.  This was her mother’s last performance before she quit the orchestra, though she had performed a few more times after Emma was born.  There was no solo for her in this performance, but Emma always thought she could hear her mother’s cello above everything else, even the singers.  She closed her eyes, immersing herself in the music and story.

Six o’clock came far too soon.  Emma roused herself from bed and then began the process of combing her hair and doing her makeup again.  This time she applied a bit more so she wouldn’t be so pasty.  As in Marston’s, she let her hair down to cover the naked back of the dress.  She stuffed her feet into the shoes and then grabbed her purse.

Before leaving, she put on an overcoat, not wanting everyone on the bus to see her in the dress.  On the walk to the bus stop she kept looking over her shoulder, waiting for someone to appear and attack her.  It was still light enough, though, that most of the criminals were probably still hiding—like the ones who had killed Sarah MacGregor.

On the ride downtown, Emma kept looking down at her feet, in part to make sure her feet weren’t turning purple in the undersized shoes.  There were of course cultures where women’s feet were broken or even cut so they could fit into smaller shoes.  She shivered at this thought and then wished she had brought her Walkman and a tape to help soothe her nerves.

The place Dr. Dreyfus had indicated was about three blocks from the museum, in a slightly more downscale location.  She saw him standing in front of a little café with a sign in Arabic that said, “Istanbul Café.”

Dr. Dreyfus wore a black overcoat as well; when he untied the belt she saw the tuxedo he was wearing and instantly felt underdressed.  “I’m glad you could find the place,” he said.

“So am I,” she said.

He took her arm, leading her into the café.  “I usually come here when I’m in town.  They have great coffee.  I’m not sure about the tea.”

“I’m sure it will be fine,” she said.

A very fat Arab man greeted them by shaking Dr. Dreyfus’s hand.  In Arabic, he said, “Hello Daniel.  Are you finally back in town to stay?”

“For a little while,” Dr. Dreyfus said in Arabic.

The man glanced at Emma and then said to Dr. Dreyfus, “Who is this lovely creature you bring into my establishment?”

“My name is Dr. Emma Earl,” she said in Arabic, taking them both by surprise.  She chided herself for showing off, but she didn’t want them to think they could talk about her as if she wasn’t there.

“You speak Arabic very well,” the man said.

“Thank you.”

“Let me show you to a table.”  He led them to a table in a corner, away from the few other patrons in the tiny café.  “What will the lady be drinking?”

“Tea.  Hot,” she said.

“Ah, yes.  And coffee for you, Daniel?”

“That would be fine.”

The man hurried off, leaving them alone at last.  The café was warm enough—or maybe it was just her nervousness—that Emma had to take off her overcoat.  Dr. Dreyfus smiled at her.  “That’s a great dress,” he said.

“You don’t think it’s a little boring?”

“Not at all.  Very elegant.”

“Thank you.”

The man who had greeted them came back with their drinks.  “Is there anything else I can get for you?” he asked.

“No, I think we’re fine,” Dr. Dreyfus said.

The man bowed slightly and then shuffled off over to the cash register, though Emma could sense his eyes still on them.  “Do you come here a lot?” she asked.

“Usually before I go to work in the morning.”  He took a sip of his coffee and then smiled.  “You just can’t get coffee like this at home.”

Emma’s tea tasted good as well, easily the best she’d had in the city yet.  “The tea is pretty good too,” she said.

“I’m glad you like it.”  Dr. Dreyfus glanced over towards the cash register and then back at her.  “So when did you learn Arabic?”

“When I was ten.  My friend Becky had the mumps, so it gave me something to do.”

“You speak it like a natural.  Have you ever been to the Middle East?”

“No, not yet.”  She had never been anywhere outside the United States, not even to Canada, which was just a couple hundred miles north of the city.

“It’s a really fascinating region.  There’s so much we can learn there.”

“Like about Karlak II?” she asked.

“That’s right.”  He reached into the pocket of his tuxedo for a stack of note cards.  “Are you sure you want to hear this?”

“Yes.”

He cleared his throat and then began to read from the cards.  “For millennia, knowledge had lain buried in the sands.  Only now are we beginning to clear those sands away and to discover what lies beneath.”

As Dr. Dreyfus went on, Emma listened intently.  She found it fascinating how Dr. Dreyfus and his team had exposed Karlak’s tomb to the light of day and then unraveled the mystery surrounding him.  His delivery, while unsteady at first, seemed to gather momentum as he went on, becoming more passionate as he described the significance of the discovery to understanding early Egyptian culture.  “The more we understand about Karlak and his people, the more we understand about ourselves,” he said and then stopped.  “What do you think?”

“I think it’s wonderful,” she said.

“You’re sure it’s not too dry?”

“No, not at all,” she said, although she supposed as a fellow scientist she wouldn’t be the best judge of this.  “I think they’ll really like it.”

“I hope so.”  Dr. Dreyfus checked his watch.  “We’d better get going.  Wouldn’t want to be late for my own presentation.”

He took her arm, leading her over to the cash register, where they paid their bill.  The man at the register thanked them in Arabic, saying, “Allah bless you.”

“And you,” Dr. Dreyfus said and then they left for the museum.

Deleted Scene #8: Marlin Attends the Funeral

This was the original ending to Chapter 8.  In it Marlin--referred to only as "the ghost"--visits the funeral and hears the black case talking to someone, presumably Emma.  Like the earlier scene with Marlin and Percival I thought it was too much of a spoiler for this point of the story, so it gets cut.

#

Besides the nearly fifty mourners at the funeral, there were two uninvited guests.  One was the ghost who had visited Percival Graves in his room.  The ghost didn’t make a habit of going to funerals; there was nothing more depressing for someone already dead than listening to the living with their stupid platitudes about how wonderful so-and-so was.  And in this century, funerals were so somber and boring—except for the Irish wakes, which could be good once everyone got liquored up.  People really knew how to throw funerals back in the old days with treasures, sacrifices, and then lighting the body on fire.  Things were so sterile now, the body either sealed into a wooden box or else burned in a crematorium with little fanfare.

The ghost came to this funeral because he knew that it was going to be here as well.  He’d heard it talking to the girl, the gangly redhead in the back sitting next to some fop with curly brown hair.  That old witch sat on the other side of the redhead; what was she doing here?  Probably just went to all the funerals like a typical nosy old woman.

Having failed to get Graves off his ass, the ghost saw no choice but to go it alone.  He couldn’t actually stop it from communicating with the girl or anyone else.  The best he could do was to observe and then maybe he could find a way to intervene later.  Or at least he would know who it had recruited so that when The Call went out, he could have some solid information to give.

The ghost was relieved that this funeral was being held in a chapel and without a priest around.  He could go into churches, but especially with the Catholic ones he risked being seen and having some well-meaning priest trying to exorcise him.  They didn’t have the magical ability for that, but they could temporarily banish him.  That had happened back in the 16th Century and by the time he found his way back, the Reformation was underway, which he took as poetic justice.

The funeral director took to the podium, indicating that in lieu of a formal service, this would be a memorial service.  Friends and family were encouraged to take the stage and share their memories of the deceased.  Of course no one had any memories of the child since the poor bugger never had a chance to be born.

One of the older men took the stage, talking about how he had met Sarah when she and her husband first arrived from Scotland.  The ghost didn’t bother listening to this story; he had something far more important to listen to—it was here!

“I can give you the power to find those responsible,” it said.  The ghost watched the redhead, but she showed no reaction to this.  “I can make them pay.”

It let this thought hang in the air for a minute.  The old man on the stage continued with his rambling story, which seemed to involve a Christmas party and something called egg nog.  Once it waited long enough, it said, “The police will never find them.  You know that.  Even if they did, the police couldn’t make them pay.  The police can’t bring them to justice.  You can.  I will show you how.”

There was still no response to this, which the ghost took as a good sign.  Maybe the redhead would resist the temptation.  To the ghost’s knowledge no one ever had, but there was always a first for everything.  Not that it would really matter, as it would find someone else.  Days from now or years from now it would eventually find a host.  Then the war would be on again, just as it had been for millennia now.

“When you are ready, we will speak again.  I will show you how to find me.”

The ghost took this as a sign that it had gone.  Probably it didn’t have the strength for an extended conversation—not yet.  The ghost hovered lower, getting a look at the redhead’s face.  There were no tears behind the glasses, but she clearly had been crying.  The girl’s going to crack, he thought.  It wouldn’t be long until she gave in.  It would bide its time.  It could wait forever.  The ghost shook his head and then floated off to prepare himself.

Deleted Scene #7: Emma and Becky Discuss the Funeral

This was the original ending to Chapter 7.  In a restaurant with Becky, Emma contemplates whether she should go to Sarah MacGregor's funeral or not.  From a character development standpoint it's a good scene, but it slows the pace of the story down and so I cut it.
#


To save money they went to a deli for a couple of sandwiches instead of to the restaurant in Chinatown.  That Emma ordered a turkey club was the first sign that something was wrong with her.  “What’s eating you, kid?” Becky asked while Emma stared at her sandwich without eating more than the pickle.

“You remember that story on the news this morning?  About the pregnant woman who was shot?”

Becky thought about this for a moment.  She vaguely remembered something about a murder on the news, but there was always a murder on the morning news.  Becky supposed Emma would be more sensitive to this after what had happened with her parents.  “What about it?” she asked.

“It was Ian’s—Dr. MacGregor’s—wife.”

“Your boss?”

“Yes.”

“Jesus Christ.”  Becky reached across the table to pat Emma’s arm.  “I’m sorry, kid.  Are you all right?”

“I’ll be fine.  But the funeral is tomorrow.”

“That’s pretty quick,” Becky said, but Emma only shrugged.  Her parents had waited on a slab in the morgue for nearly a week while the police investigated and Aunt Gladys arranged for taking custody of Emma before she could put her sister and brother-in-law in the ground.

“I should go, don’t you think?”

“You don’t have to go if you don’t want to.”

“But I should go.  Ian was so nice to me.  I should be there for him.”

“There’s nothing you can really do for him, though.  You know that.”

“Yes, but he might need some support.”

“You only knew him for a few days,” Becky said, playing devil’s advocate.  She knew just by the hollowness in Emma’s voice and the way she stared at her plate that she didn’t really want to go to the funeral.  Her damned nagging conscience wasn’t going to let her off the hook easily, though.  “I’m sure he has a lot of other friends at the museum.”

“Maybe.  That doesn’t mean I shouldn’t go to pay my respects.”

“Emma, come on.  You don’t have to put yourself through that.”

Emma shook her head.  “That was a long time ago.  I’m a grownup now, aren’t I?”

“Yes,” Becky said, though she didn’t entirely believe this.  While in age and certainly in knowledge Emma was an adult, in some ways she was still a child, especially when it came to her parents.  Whenever she thought of them, Emma’s eyes retained that lost, hurt look as when they had died.  Going to a funeral would only exacerbate the problem.  “I wish I could go with you.”

“You can’t?”

“Lintner has us working Saturdays now.  He says that he’s campaigning seven days a week so we can at least put in six days.”

“I’m sorry,” Emma said.

“It’s not your fault.  He’s just a jerk.”  When she found out, Becky and most of the office toyed with the idea of assassinating Lintner just to put an end to the insanity.  Maybe they didn’t have to kill him outright, just put him in the hospital until after the election.  Though if he didn’t die people would probably feel sorry for him.  “I really wish I could go with you.  A funeral would be more fun than working for him.”

“Becky—”

“I’m sorry,” she said, though she really wasn’t.  “You really don’t have to go.  Stay home and get ready for that date—presentation—with Dr. Whatshisname.”

“Dreyfus,” Emma said.  She picked up the turkey sandwich, taking a tiny bite from the corner of it.  Once she’d chewed properly and swallowed, she said, “I can do it by myself.  But thank you.”

“If that’s what you really want, kid,” Becky said.  It wasn’t what Emma really wanted, just what she thought her conscience wanted from her.  That conscience would always get the better of her.  “You just be careful.  And if you need anything, you find a phone and call me at the office, all right?”

“I will.”  As they left the deli, Becky promised herself that if Emma did call, Becky would come running, Lintner’s campaign be damned.

Deleted Scene #6: Percival Contemplates Retirement

This scene was at the end of Chapter 6.  In it Percival talks to Marlin about coming back as the Scarlet Knight.  I thought this scene was too much of a spoiler, so I decided to cut it.
#

Percival Graves hadn’t slept in two nights.  He was starting to think that he should ask one of the quacks for a pill to help him with that.  Or maybe he should ask them for the whole bottle of pills.  He might as well end it before someone ended it for him.

As soon as he thought of this, the face of Emma Earl appeared in his mind.  Cute little Emma who had grown into a beautiful young woman.  Despite that she was taller and had breasts now, she still had the eyes of that little child he had first seen at the Plaine Museum while he was sweeping up.  Those innocent eyes that hadn’t changed despite the awful things that had happened to her.  She was the reason for him not to end it all.

If he hadn’t stopped believing in God during the war, he might have thought it was a miracle that had brought her back into his life.  In reality he knew it was just good luck that his idiot son had dumped him into the same old fogies home as Emma’s aunt.  Finally that cheap bastard was good for something.

Unfortunately, his son wasn’t a bastard, not in the true sense of the word.  He was Percival’s flesh and blood, though he had far more of his mother’s blood it seemed like.  That such a whiny, obnoxious little twit could come from his seed seemed almost impossible.  That was what he deserved for marrying a beast like the boy’s mother.

He’d always felt Emma was more of his real child.  Had it been possible, he would have adopted her after her parents died, but her aunt had stepped in to care for her.  Not that he felt any anger at Gladys; she was a perfectly nice woman even when she was senile.  If he hadn’t been married and already old, he might have made a play for her ten years ago.

Percival sighed as he sat up in bed.  It seemed all he could do anymore was think about the past.  That was the real horror of getting old, all this time on his hands and nothing to do but think about all the water under the bridge.  So many things he should have done differently.  If only he could go back in time and right all those wrongs.

He would start with making sure his leg didn’t get all but chopped off.  The wound had eventually healed, but it had pained him for the last thirty years.  Tonight he felt the pain more acutely than he had since it first happened.  That was part of what had kept him from sleeping the last two nights.

The other was the nightmare he’d had two nights ago.  In the dream he was back in the Plaine Museum, sweeping it up as he had always done.  Then he heard a scream and saw little Emma, a toddler like when he first saw her, being chased by the reanimated skeleton of Alex the mastodon.  “Hewp me!” she screamed.  “Mr. Gwaves, hewp me!”  But Percival couldn’t help her.  He was too old and slow even in the dream.  He could only watch and scream as one of the mastodon’s tusks punctured the little girl’s heart.

He knew the source of the dream.  Sitting in his bed, he knew what the dream wanted.  It wanted him to come back, to perform the duty once again.  He wasn’t surprised then when the ghost appeared over his bed.

“I knew it was you,” Percival said.  “I knew you’d be coming for me.”

“It wasn’t my idea,” the ghost said.  “I’d have just as soon left you for dead.  But I suppose it wants to let you have the first crack at it.”

“You mean it wants me to get myself killed.”

“Not necessarily.  It’s still weak enough that even an old codger like you could stop it.”

“Then why don’t you stop it, you annoying prick?”

“Because I’m a bloody ghost, you twit.”

“Yes, well, I’m a bloody invalid now, so go find some other poor bugger to do it.”

“We will.  You can be sure of that.  Just thought you might want to go out in a blaze of glory instead of rotting away in this hellhole.”

“I’m much too old for a blaze of glory.”

“So that’s it, then?  You’re going to spend your last days cowering here, until it finally comes for you?”

“If that’s what happens, then it happens.  None of my business anymore.”  Percival tapped his leg with his cane.  “I gave more than enough to you and your Order already.”

“The others gave their lives.”

“And they all died before they were fifty, didn’t they?”

“Not all.  There was one who started when he was fifty-two.”

“He probably died when he was fifty-two as well.”

“Fifty-three.”

“Fine.  The point is that I’m not going to do it anymore.  You understand?”

“Go ahead then, you coward.  Don’t be asking for my help when it comes back to finish the job.”

“I wouldn’t ask for your help, you bloody twerp.”  The ghost started to fade back into the wall.  Percival called out, “And don’t you ever make me dream about her like that again or I swear I’ll find a way to wring your scrawny neck.”

“It wasn’t my idea.  You know how it works.”

“Yes, I suppose I do,” Percival said.  The ghost disappeared, leaving Percival alone in the room again.  He sighed and then reached over for the call button to get some damned sleeping pills.

Deleted Scene #5: Chapter 5--Extended Version

There was originally a lot of extra stuff in Chapter 5.  There was more detail about Becky's job at Lintner's office, a flashback to Becky's childhood and a promise she made to Emma's mother, and Emma and Becky go shopping for a formal dress.  Since the story was running a bit long and none of these scenes were extremely important to the plot, I cut them out.
#

#
Becky knew it wasn’t going to be a good day as soon as she turned on the morning news and saw a reporter standing in front of the Archlinger Building.  The media had learned of the raid on Lintner’s office yesterday by that loudmouthed cop.  Becky sagged onto one of the beanbag chairs, listening to the report.  It didn’t tell her anything she didn’t already know; just a thirty-second sound bite saying cops had taken some papers from the office.
Becky was glad this came on while Emma was in the shower.  Her friend had enough on her mind already without worrying that Becky was going to lose her job or wind up in prison.  Becky shivered as she thought of waking up to Emma’s screams.  She had heard these screams before, back when Emma was just eight years old, not long after her parents died.  Since then Emma had seemed fine, more or less.  It was true the girl kept to herself, usually with her nose planted in a book, but she had always been that way.  It was also true Emma didn’t have any other close friends, but she had been bouncing from school to school for her degrees so that she didn’t really have time.
Maybe it was moving back here that had done it.  Becky promised herself to keep a closer eye on Emma, to make sure nothing bad happened to her.  That was the promise she had made to Emma’s mother years ago.
That promise came in a Kmart bathroom of all places.  Not long after Emma and Becky met in kindergarten, Emma’s mother had insisted on taking Becky to the store for some new clothes, ones that fit her.  All her life, Becky had never gone clothes shopping before; her mother’s idea of clothes shopping was to give Becky whatever she might rummage out of the trash or a donation box.  For the first time, Becky actually got to try on clothes without stains or strange odors.
Emma’s mother bought an entire new wardrobe for Becky that day:  T-shirts, pants, dresses, socks, underwear, and a new coat for the winter months.  The Earl family was far from rich, though Becky didn’t realize this at the time.  She only knew that Emma’s parents were richer than her mother.
Before they went home—Emma’s home so that Becky could show off her new clothes—they stopped at the bathroom.  While Becky sat in one stall with Mrs. Earl in the other to keep her company, Mrs. Earl said, “I really think Emma has taken a shine to you.”
“A shine?”
“It means she likes you.  Do you like her?”
“Yes.  She’s nice.  But she talks funny.”  Though she was only five, Becky knew she shouldn’t have said the last part to the woman who had just bought her a lot of expensive clothes.  “I’m sorry.”
“No, that’s all right.  Emma will outgrow her speech impediment.”
“I hope so.”  Becky finished her business and then emerged from the stall.  Mrs. Earl helped her to reach the sink so that she could wash her hands.  Looking in the mirror, Becky saw the sadness on Mrs. Earl’s face.  “Why are you sad?”
Mrs. Earl knelt down to look Becky in the eye.  “I want you to be honest with me, Becky.  Have the other kids been picking on Emma?  Do they tease her because she’s different?”
Becky was only five, but she knew how much the truth would hurt in this case.  “Not much,” she said, trying to soften the blow.
This didn’t seem to make any difference, as Mrs. Earl looked even sadder.  She didn’t cry, but the sadness in her eyes almost prompted Becky to do so.  “I understand.  It’s going to be hard on her.  She’s so very gifted, but she’s also so gentle.  That’s why she needs a friend like you, Becky.  She needs someone who can look out for her, like a big sister.”
Becky began to understand that the shopping trip hadn’t merely been to buy Becky some new clothes.  It had also been a bribe.  Mrs. Earl wanted Becky to be not only Emma’s friend, but her protector, to insulate her from the taunts of other kids on the playground.  What Mrs. Earl didn’t understand—what Becky didn’t really understand until later—was that she would have done this anyway.  Just as Becky was Emma’s only friend, so too was Emma Becky’s only friend; they only had each other.  And Becky had seen the same things in Emma that Mrs. Earl did, even though they had known each other just a few days. 
“Do you think you can be her big sister, Becky?” Mrs. Earl asked.
“Yes,” Becky said.
“Thank you, Becky.  That means a lot to me.  But you mustn’t let her know about this talk, all right?”
“I understand.”
Becky had taken that promise to heart.  She had done what she could to protect Emma, though there were times when she failed, like the incident on the playground with Jimmy Gates.  Then of course Emma’s parents dying, followed five years later by Emma leaving the state to go to college.  But now that Emma was back and they were here, together, Becky intended to keep the promise she had made.
“Are you ready to go?” Emma asked.
Becky turned around to see her friend dressed and ready to go, looking none the worse for her rough night.  She seemed able to handle nights with little sleep much better than Becky, who woke with bedhead and bloodshot eyes if she didn’t get at least seven hours of rest.  “I’m fine,” Becky said.  She pushed herself up from the beanbag chair, turning the television off as well.  “How about you?”
“I’m fine,” Emma said.  She went into the kitchen, taking out a protein shake she had prepared the night before.  Becky’s stomach churned at the thought of how awful that tasted.  “It was just a bad dream.”
“Right.”  Still, Becky kept looking at her friend as they rode the bus, searching for any cracks in Emma’s armor.  She didn’t see anything, but that didn’t mean there wasn’t something going on.  While not a gifted liar, Emma had become quite adept at repressing her emotions.
After they got off the bus, Becky lingered for a moment.  “We’re meeting in Chinatown at five-thirty, right?”
“Yes.”
“If you want to go somewhere else—”
“No, it’s fine.  I liked it.”
Becky nodded and then checked her watch.  She would have to hurry to make it on time.  “Well, I better get going.  See you later, kid.”
“See you later.”
With that, Emma was gone and Becky was alone in the city of nine million.  She made her way across Executive Plaza, as always feeling out of place among the people in their expensive suits.  She kept waiting for someone to stop her and tell her to get out of here, to go back to the trailer park where she belonged.  The way things were going, though, she might end up there before much longer.
She didn’t say anything to Connie as she began stuffing envelopes.  Her mind was too preoccupied with the strange scene during the night.  Emma could say that it was just a bad dream and she couldn’t remember, but Becky knew this wasn’t true.  She knew that only a dream about her parents could make Emma scream like that.
Maybe it was time to call in a professional.  The police had given Emma’s aunt the name of a grief counselor after Emma’s parents died.  Aunt Gladys and Becky had tried to get Emma to go, but she refused.  She didn’t want to go to a stranger’s office and talk about her feelings; she just wanted to stay in her room and read her books, listen to her opera tapes, and cry for her parents in peace.  While Aunt Gladys could have forced Emma to go, in the end she had respected the girl’s wishes, as had Becky.
Maybe they shouldn’t have.  Maybe she needed to see a shrink, to get everything out into the open.  The problem now was that Becky didn’t know how to find a psychiatrist.  She could look in the phone book, in which case she might as well throw darts at the page and hope for the best.  She didn’t want just any quack to work with Emma; someone as strong-willed as her friend would need a really good head shrinker.
Lintner interrupted these musings by stomping into the room.  “Listen up, people,” he said.  “I know you all saw it on the news today.  It’s not looking good.  They think they have us by the short and curlies.”
Becky hunched down in her chair, sensing that this was not going to be good.  Lintner, not caring about the building’s rules, lit a cigarette and then began pacing back and forth.  “Those people are assholes.  We are not licked yet, not by a long shot.  We still have almost three months to turn this thing around.  All we need is a little luck and a lot of hard work.
“So from now on no one is going to leave until every envelope is mailed and every phone call has been made.  No one is going to call in sick or take vacation days.  You will eat lunch at your desk and take bathroom breaks only when you’re going to piss down your leg.  Any questions?”
Becky knew better than to raise her hand and ask if they were going to be paid overtime.  Of course not.  They were “volunteers” after all.  They were lucky to get any pittance they received for their effort on behalf of the noble Lintner campaign.  She thought of Emma and their dinner for tonight; she wished she could use the phone to call the museum and say that she was going to be late, but she supposed that would be against Lintner’s new rules.
The candidate blew out a stream of smoke and then clapped his hands.  “Now, all of you get your asses to work!”  As Lintner stormed out, Becky wondered if she could find a shrink for him as well. 
#
Emma waited two hours at the restaurant for Becky.  She tried calling Lintner’s headquarters five times, but every time the lines were busy, no doubt with outgoing calls.  She called the apartment as well, but no one picked up.  Grim scenarios ran through Emma’s mind about what might have become of Becky on her way to Chinatown.  To block these out, Emma took a book from her purse and began to read the latest issue of Geology Quarterly.
            She had finished the journal and an issue of a local newspaper written in Mandarin when Becky finally did show up.  Emma threw herself against her friend, hugging her until Becky gasped for air.  Her face burning with embarrassment, Emma let Becky breathe.  “I’m sorry.  I was just so worried about you.  What happened?”
“Lintner went all Captain Ahab on us.  Or maybe more that like guy on the Bounty.  Whatshisname.”
“Bligh.”
“Whatever.  He’s going to have a mutiny on his hands if he keeps this up.”  As they finally sat down for dinner, Becky explained that Lintner had come in ranting about everyone needing to put more effort in to win his campaign.  “He doesn’t even want us to use the bathroom until we’re going to pop.”
“That’s terrible.  Isn’t there something you can do?”
“I could quit.  That’s about all.”  But Emma knew that Becky wasn’t about to quit, not without earning her college credits.  “It’s going to take a lot more than taking away potty breaks, though.”
“Becky—”
“Don’t worry about me, kid.  I’ll be fine.  The worst that can happen to me there is a paper cut.”
Emma wanted to argue about this, but it wouldn’t do any good.  Once Becky made up her mind about something, she wouldn’t change it.  That was the spirit Emma had always admired, ever since they met back in kindergarten.  Becky wasn’t afraid to speak her mind or even to step on a few toes if need be.  She didn’t worry about hurting someone’s feelings—except Emma’s.  Becky was always so careful around her, especially after Emma’s parents died.  As much as Emma appreciated this, sometimes she wished her friend wouldn’t treat her special.
“Enough about me,” Becky said, stabbing into a piece of mushu pork.  “How are things going at the museum with you and whatshisname?”
“Dr. Dreyfus,” Emma said.  She looked down at her mostly-untouched plate of stir fried vegetables.  “He showed me the exhibit today.”
“Oh, a personal tour?”
Though Emma was still looking down at her food, she sensed Becky’s leer.  “It’s not like that,” Emma said.  “There were a lot of workers around.  We just walked around and talked.”
“I see.  That’s all there was to it?”
“Well, no, not exactly.”  Emma forced herself to look up at Becky, to meet her friend’s eyes.  “Promise you won’t overreact to this.”
“What is it?”
“He asked me to go to dinner before the presentation.”
The left side of Becky’s mouth curled up with a smile before she reached for her napkin to dab at phantom stains.  “I’m sure it’s nothing important,” Becky said.  “Just dinner like a couple of colleagues, right?”
“Yes.”  Emma looked back down at the plate.  Despite what Becky had said, Emma could hear the gentle mocking in her friend’s voice.  She still thought Dr. Dreyfus was taking her on a date.  It was starting to look that way even to Emma.  She cleared her throat before adding, “I thought I’d go back to the house tomorrow.  Aunt Gladys probably still has some clothes I could wear.”
Becky’s fork hit the plate with a sound like a bell.  “Are you serious?”
“Why not?  I’m sure Aunt Gladys has some very nice things.”
“Jesus, Emma, your aunt was never much of a snappy dresser and that was ten years ago.”  Becky shook her head.  “This is a big deal.  It’s going to be an A-list crowd.  Even Lintner’s going to be there, or so I’ve heard through the grapevine.  You can’t go wearing something that’s spent ten years in a box in the attic.”
“It’s only a presentation,” Emma said.  “It’s not a ball.”
“It’s close enough,” Becky said.  She pushed away from the table, getting to her feet.  “And we can’t have you going in rags.”
“Where are you going?”
“Let your fairy godmother work,” Becky said.
#
They wound up at Marston’s, the oldest department store in the city.  Emma hadn’t been to the store since she was a little girl, when she had gone with Aunt Gladys for a dress to wear at the funeral.  Emma had spent most of that trip clinging to her aunt like a toddler, intermittently sobbing whenever she saw a family or anyone who even vaguely resembled either of her parents.
These memories forced their way back into her consciousness as she rode the escalator up to the women’s clothes section.  She tried to tell herself that this time things were different, that she was here for a much different reason, a happy reason.  She was going to an exclusive party with a handsome young Egyptologist, not to a funeral.  No one would be buried this time.
“Relax,” Becky said.  “I’m sure they’ll have something really pretty.”
“I can’t really afford much,” Emma said.  “I haven’t been paid yet.”
“Don’t worry, this one is on me.”
“I couldn’t let you do that.”
Becky took Emma’s arm and looked her in the eye, her gaze turning steely.  “It’s not a problem.  You can pay me back once you get your first check.”  As quickly as it appeared, the severe look faded and Becky smiled.  “It won’t be my money anyway.  It’ll be the credit card company’s money.”
Emma thought of arguing about the interest charges and fees inherent with credit cards, but she decided against it.  Becky wasn’t going to listen, not in this case.  And as Becky said, Emma could pay it off with her first check, or so she hoped.  If anyone at the museum decided she and Dr. Dreyfus were going out on a date, she might not have much of a first check.
A salesgirl intercepted them as they neared the women’s clothes.  The salesgirl was only a few years older than them, probably just out of college.  She hardly glanced at Becky, intuiting that Emma was the one to focus on.  “Can I help you ladies?” she asked, her voice unnaturally cheery.
“I need a dress,” Emma mumbled.
“A formal dress,” Becky amended.  “Something classy but not too pricey, if you know what I mean.”
“Yes, I think I might have a few things we can look at.”
Despite that she was the one the clothes were for, Emma lagged behind Becky.  She hadn’t enjoyed clothes shopping since her mother died.  Back then she had always been so happy to come running out of the changing room in a new outfit and see her mother’s smile.  It just hadn’t been the same with Aunt Gladys and once she went off to college, Emma rarely did much in the way of buying clothes.  When she did, it was usually just at the local discount store, where she quickly plucked things off the rack and then took them to the checkout. 
The salesgirl held up a bright red dress.  “This would look stunning on you,” she said.  “It would go beautifully with your hair.”
Emma didn’t need to hold the dress up to know it would be short, far too short for a formal party that wasn’t a date.  And while the color might complement her hair, she remembered that red was the traditional color of prostitutes.  “I think something a little more neutral would be better,” Emma said in almost a whisper.
“Of course,” the salesgirl said, putting the red dress back.  She took a few steps over to another rack to hold up a dark blue dress sparkling with sequins.  “This is very elegant.”
Becky checked the price tag and then shook her head.  “It’s also a little more than we can spend,” she said.
“I understand.  I think I have something else that might do the trick.”  The salesgirl led them over to another rack, where she pulled out a black dress.  “Every girl needs a little black dress.  And it’s on sale for thirty percent off, but for you girls I’ll make it forty percent off.”
Emma took the dress, holding it up against her body.  The hem of the skirt came down to the tops of her ankles, which would be fine for the occasion.  What worried her was the back—there was almost no back to the dress.  Still, it was elegant and well within their price range with the deal the salesgirl was giving them.  “Can I try it on?” she asked.
“Of course.  Right this way.”
For a dress off the rack, it fit well enough.  The spaghetti straps held it up and the neckline didn’t plunge too much.  As she had feared, though, it did show off most of her back, which looked terribly pale against the black fabric.  She could always try going to a tanning booth, except usually she wound up looking like a broiled lobster after a few minutes in the sun; she had found this out her first day in sunny California.  She reached up to free her hair; this covered most of the exposed skin.
She let Becky be the final arbiter since it was her money.  Stepping out of the dressing room, Emma felt like a little girl showing off for her mother again.  Just like Mom, Becky smiled as Emma came out.  “You like it?”
“You look like a million bucks, kid,” Becky said.  “Go on, give it a turn.”
Emma did so, nearly falling over in the process.  She was glad there wasn’t supposed to be any dancing at this presentation so Dr. Dreyfus wouldn’t see how clumsy she was.  “You don’t think the back is too much?”
“It’s fine, especially with your hair like that.”
“Well, all right, if you think it’s good enough,” Emma said.
The problem, as it always did, came with the shoes.  Emma never wore heels of more than a half-inch, not wanting to exaggerate her height any more than she had to.  The real problem, though, was with the size of her feet.  For as long as she could remember, her feet had always been big.  She had inherited them from her father’s side of the family; her father had ordered his shoes from a cobbler’s shop on the east side of the city, where they could be custom made for him.  “If I ever need a job, I can always go into the circus,” he used to tell her.  “All I need is the red nose.”
Marston’s did not have any shoes in her size, at least not women’s shoes.  If she wanted to go to the presentation in men’s work boots then it would have been fine.  “I can order some,” the salesgirl said.
“As long as they’re here by Friday,” Becky said.
“That might be a problem.  It takes a few days to ship them from the warehouse.”  The salesgirl checked her computer and then looked up.  “I do have some in a size fourteen.  It might be a tight squeeze, but if you’re only going to wear them for a little while—”
“Let’s try that,” Emma said.  The shoes turned out to be snug, but she could compact her feet enough so they fit.  Just to make sure, she took a few practice steps in them.  “I think these will do,” she said.
“Great,” the salesgirl said.  “Let me just write this up and we can get you ladies on your way.”
The total—even with the discount—almost prompted Emma to faint.  Her entire wardrobe probably didn’t cost that much.  She knew better than mentioning this to Becky, who seemed so happy once they had found something; Becky hadn’t stopped smiling since Emma came out of the dressing room.
It was afterward, when they were on the bus with the dress in a bag, that Becky said, “You really do look great in that dress,” she said.
“Thanks.”
To Emma’s surprise, Becky wiped a tear away.  “I’m sorry,” Becky said.  “It’s just that when you left you were still the gawky kid with zits and now, seeing you dressed like that, it finally hit me.  You’re all grown up now.  Maybe you don’t need me after all.”
“Becky, no, don’t talk like that.  You’re my best friend.  I’m always going to need you.”  She smiled at Becky.  “I couldn’t have bought it without you, remember?”
Becky nodded at this.  “That’s true.  You’d probably be wearing some old leopard print caftan.”
They laughed at this, the tears gone from Becky’s face.  Once the bus reached their stop, they got off and Emma gave Becky another hug, albeit one more restrained.  “Thank you for this.  It was really special.”
“You’re welcome, kid,” Becky said, her lip trembling as if she were going to cry again.  “Now let’s get inside before someone steals it and some crack whore is wearing your dress.”
They went inside, Emma hanging the dress in her closet.  She stared at it for a moment, wondering what Dr. Dreyfus would think of it.  He hoped his reaction would be similar to Becky’s.

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