
"I will have an egg then," said Little Worker.
"There are eggs," said the food-center.
"There is no jelly for an egg?" hopefully asked Little Worker one last time.
"There is no jelly even for an egg."
"Then I will have an egg alone."
Little Worker sat at a table with metal legs and white tile top. When her egg came she ate it, licking the plate to get all the yolk. It would serve to make her fur glossy. But it did not taste as good as jelly.
When she was done, Little Worker ordered the food-center to prepare and serve breakfast for Mister Michael and his wife in the south dining room. Then she walked through halls and storage rooms until she arrived at the south dining room.
Mister Michael was already there, seated at one end of a long polished table, reading a newspaper and sipping coffee.
"Good morning, Mister Michael," said Little Worker.
"Morning," said Mister Michael somewhat gruffly.
Little Worker quivered inside. Mister Michael did not seem himself this morning. He worked too hard, thought
Little Worker. He had too much on his mind. The state demanded too much of him. He should be better to himself.
Little Worker coiled up at Mister Michael's feet beside the table, where she could watch everything that happened.
Breakfast was served. Mister Michael's wife did not arrive on time. Mister Michael began to eat anyway. Only when the fine Canadian ham and scrambled eggs and poached fish were cold did she come through the door.
Mister Michael's wife was dressed for shopping. She wore an ivory jacket short in front but with long tails that hung to her knees in back, over a pale blue silk blouse and tulip-hemmed ivory skirt. She wore blue metallic stockings and creamy high heels. She smelled heavily of expensive perfume, which failed to conceal entirely from Little Worker's keen nose the aromas of her recent mating.
