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And the Angels Sing

Copyright (c)1990 Kate Wilhelm

First published in Omni, April 1990

Eddie never left the office until one or even two in the morning on Sundays, Tuesdays, and
Thursdays. The -North Coast News- came out three times a week, and it seemed to him that no one
could publish a paper unless someone in charge was on hand until the press run. He knew that the
publisher, Stuart Winkle, didn't care particularly, as long as the advertising was in place, but
it wasn't right, Eddie thought. What if something came up, something went wrong? Even out here at
the end of the world there could be a late-breaking story that required someone to write it, to
see that it got placed. Actually, Eddie's hopes for that event, high six years ago, had diminished
to the point of needing conscious effort to recall them even. In fact, he liked to see his
editorials before he packed it in.

This night, Thursday, he read his own words and then bellowed, "Where is she?"

-She- was Ruthie Jenson, and -she- had spelled frequency with one -e- and an -a-. Eddie stormed
through the deserted outer office looking for her, and caught her at the door just as she was
wrapping her vampire cloak about her thin shoulders. She was thin, her hair was cut too short, too
close to her head, and she was too frightened of him. And, he thought with bitterness, she was
crazy, or she would not wait around three nights a week for him to catch her at the door and give
her hell.

"Why don't you use the goddamn dictionary? Why do you correct my copy? I told you I'd wring your
neck if you touched my copy again!"

She made a whimpering noise and looked past him in terror, down the hallway, into the office.
"I... I'm sorry. I didn't mean..." Fast as quicksilver then, she fled out into the storm that was
still howling. He hoped the goddamn wind would carry her to Australia or beyond.

The wind screamed as it poured through the outer office, scattering a few papers, setting a light
adance on a chain. Eddie slammed the door against it and surveyed the space around him, detesting
every inch of it at the moment. Three desks, the fluttering papers that Mrs. Rondale would heave
out because anything on the floor got heaved out. Except dirt; she seemed never to see quite all
of it. Next door, the presses were running; people were doing things, but the staff that put the
paper together had left now. Ruthie was always next to last to go, and then Eddie. He kicked a
chair on his way back to his own cubicle, clutching the ink-wet paper in his hand, well aware that
the ink was smearing onto his skin.

He knew that the door to the press room had opened and softly closed again. In there they would be
saying Fat Eddie was in a rage. He knew they called him Fat Eddie, or even worse, behind his back,
and he knew that no one on earth cared if the -North Coast News- was a mess except him. He sat at
his desk scowling at the editorial, one of his better ones, he thought, and the word -frequency-
leaped off the page at him; nothing else registered. What he had written was "At this time of year
the storms bear down on shore with such regularity, such frequency, that it's as if the sea and
air are engaged in the final battle." It got better, but he put it aside and listened to the wind.