
"Well, he's not drooling."
"Norma."
"He's better than the last one."
That wasn't saying much: the last one had fallen off a wing in major join and had nearly electrocuted himself in radio rack. "How much better?"
"I'm looking at his resume," Norma said. "Yale law school and a year at GM. But he's been in Marketing for the last three months, and he doesn't know anything about production. You're going to have to start him from the beginning."
"Right," Casey said, sighing. Marder would expect her to bring him to the meeting. "Have the kid meet me in front of Administration in ten minutes. And make sure he doesn't get lost, okay?"
"You want me to walk him down?"
"Yeah, you better."
Casey hung up and glanced at her watch. Traffic was moving slowly. Still ten minutes to the plant. She drummed her fingers on the dashboard impatiently. What could the meeting be about? There might have been an accident, or a crash.
She turned on the radio to see if it was on the news. She got a talk station, a caller saying, "-not fair to make kids wear uniforms to school. It's elitist and discriminatory-"
Casey pushed a button, changing the station.
"-trying to force their personal morality on the rest of us. I don't believe a fetus is a human being-"
She pushed another button.
"-these media attacks are all coming from people who don't like free speech-"
Where, she thought, is the news? Had an airplane crashed or not?
She had a sudden image of her father, reading a big stack of newspapers from all over the country every Sunday after church, muttering to himself, "That's not the story, that's not the story!" as he dropped the pages in an untidy heap around his living room chair. Of course, her father had been a print journalist, back in the 1960s. It was a different world now. Now, everything was on television. Television, and the mindless chatter on the radio.
