“To take it in the early Spring,” she finished, her voice entirely under control. “Is there anything wrong with that, Mr. Balik? That way I don’t have any conflict with the other girls and the firm is sure of a secretary being in the office all through the summer.”

“There’s nothing wrong with that per se. By that I mean,” he explained carefully, “that there is nothing wrong with the arrangement as such. But it makes for loose ends, for organizational confusion. And loose ends, Miss Gresham, loose ends and organizational confusion have no place in a well-regulated office.”

He was pleased to note that she was looking uncomfortable again.

“Does that mean—are you trying to tell me that—I might be laid off?”

“It could happen,” Fabian agreed, neglecting to add that it was, however, very unlikely to happen in the case of a secretary who was as generally efficient on the one hand, and as innocuous on the other, as Wednesday Gresham. He carefully cut a fork-sized portion of roast beef free of its accompanying strip of orange fat before going on. “Look at it this way. How would it be if every girl in the office asked for an additional week’s leave of absence every year—even if it was without pay, as it would have to be? And then, every few years, wanted an additional month’s leave of absence on top of that? What kind of an office would we have, Miss Gresham? Not a well-regulated one, certainly.”

As he chewed the roast beef with the requisite thoroughness he beamed at the thoughtful concern on her face and was mentally grateful that he hadn’t had to present that line of argument to anyone as sharp as Arlette Stein, for example. He knew what the well-hipped thirtyish widow would have immediately replied: “But every girl in the office doesn’t ask for it, Mr. Balik.” A heavy sneer at such sophistry would mean little to Stein.



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