'A blacksmith,' I said. 'I work with wrought  iron. That's my work,' I said, pointing at the  candlestick.

  'I'm impressed. But obviously confused;  I thought your mother said you and Eileen were partners.'

  'We share a booth and sometimes  collaborate,' I said. 'Mother hates to tell  people what I really do; she thinks it's  unladylike.'

  'Ladylike or not, it's useful. I was on  the porch and heard you telling him to let you go, so  I rushed in to rescue you. Only to find you  didn't need rescuing at all.'

  'I don't think he'd have gone as easily if  you hadn't come along. Thanks.'

  We strolled out. Barry, fortunately, was  nowhere to be seen. I'd be just as happy if I  never saw Barry again.

  Michael walked home with me and stayed for  several hours, amusing Mother and me with his banter.  I had the feeling, though, that he was keeping a  lookout in case Barry showed up to pick up where  he'd left off.

  Which was silly. Barry was obtuse but not  dangerous or violent.

  Or was I being obtuse?

  I pondered briefly how satisfying it would be  to catch Barry red-handed with a blunt instrument in  one fist and a tampered fuse in the other.

  I suppressed that train of thought and tried  to call Mrs. Thornhill, the calligrapher,  a few more times before going to bed. I tossed and  turned for a while, remembering the sullen anger  on Barry's face when he left the dining room.  I knew I'd handled the situation badly, but I  wasn't sure what I could have done that would have  turned out better.

          Sunday, June 26

  Samantha and Mother, having heard what I'd done for Eileen, insisted on the same  service. Since their weddings were one and two  weeks behind hers, respectively, they didn't  have quite as many presents. Yet.

  Pam had only seen Dad in passing, and  Mrs. Thornhill was nowhere to be found. On the  positive side, Barry made himself scarce.

          Monday, June 27

  By Monday, I was beginning to think that Mrs.  Thornhill, the calligrapher, had skipped the  country, taking Samantha's envelopes with her.  At her rates, the 50-percent down payment  Samantha had made would certainly cover plane  fare to Buenos Aires, and probably a few  nights at a moderately priced hotel. I  decided to go over and confront her in person. If  she wasn't there, I would wait for her. I could  make use of the time; I took my clipboard and  my notes for another batch of the thoughtful, warm,  personal invitations Mother wanted me to ghostwrite  for her. I wasn't sure how early to go--I  wanted to catch Mrs. Thornhill before she could  disappear for the day, but not wake her up. I finally  decided on eight. If she hadn't already missed  her deadline I might have given her till nine.  If I had to go a second time, I'd go at  seven. Maybe six.

  When I got there, I saw Mrs. Thornhill's car parked in the driveway--somewhat carelessly--and heard a television blaring  away. I'm in luck, I thought. She's home.  But as I walked to the front door, I noticed  half a dozen copies of the Daily Press  scattered on the lawn and a Jehovah's Witness  flyer stuck behind the screen door. Perhaps she  wasn't home after all. Perhaps she left the  TV on at top volume to discourage  burglars. If so, her neighbors would be ready  to strangle her when she got back.

  I rang the bell several times, and since the  television kept me from hearing whether it worked,  knocked a few times for good measure. At last  some impulse inspired me to turn the knob. The  door was unlocked.

  Had something happened to Mrs. Thornhill? I  had laughed at Dad's melodramatic  suggestion when he made it, but what if he was  right? Could that be why she hadn't answered any of my calls this week? Was I about to walk  in and discover a horrible, bloody corpse?

  Nonsense, I thought. But still, I braced myself  before carefully reaching to push the door open--

  And hurriedly jumped aside to avoid a  tidal wave of cats. They swarmed out of the door  and scattered to the four winds. About a dozen of  them, I thought, although it seemed like more. I waited  until they were out of sight ... waited a little  longer while one extremely fat cat waddled  slowly out, hissed at me, and disappeared into the  bushes. Then, very cautiously, I entered the  front hall.

  There were still cats left indoors, and the place  reeked of cat urine and fish. Two or three  cats wound themselves sinuously around my ankles, and  several others scattered from my advance. There were  sedate cats sitting at the top of the stairs, and  half a dozen playful kittens scampering up and  down.

  I peered to the right into a dining room that was more or  less empty of cats, but filled with debris.  Empty catfood cans strewed both the floor  and the mahogany dining room table, which they shared with a  number of Royal Doulton plates holding  crumbs of catfood. I went back through the  hall into the living room and found Mrs.  Thornhill. She was on the couch, unconscious,  with a gin bottle in her hand, and half a dozen  cats draped companionably over various  portions of her body, some sleeping and others  washing whichever parts of her or themselves were handy.

  Oh, please, let her have finished the  envelopes before she started drinking. Or at least  let her have left them in a safe place. Somewhere  the cats couldn't get to them.

  A prayer destined to remain unfulfilled.  Scattered among the cats, cans, bottles, and  plates in the living room were a number of  cream-colored envelopes. I began gathering them  up.

  Most of them were in the living room, though a few  had migrated into the kitchen, or upstairs into the  bedroom. She had gotten as far as the S's,  unfortunately. The lettering on the A's was  absolutely gorgeous. B through D were a little  less precise, but still had a kind of  aristocratic dash about them. By E she was  definitely going downhill, and I could only  guess what names some of her late scribbles were intended to represent. Unfortunately,  the envelopes that had been completed first had also  been lying around longer at the mercy of the cats. I  couldn't find a one that hadn't been chewed on,  slept on, peed on or blotched with  fishy-smelling grease stains. The blank  envelopes were a dead loss; several of the cats  had used the carton as a litterbox. I made  sure I collected all forty-seven pages of  Samantha's guest list. Thank goodness I had  numbered the pages. I thought I still had a copy  somewhere, but with my luck Natalie and Eric would have  used it as kindling.

  Having gathered up all the envelopes and list  pages and deposited them, as appropriate, either  in my car or in the overflowing trash can, I  turned to consider Mrs. Thornhill. However  exasperated I was with her, I couldn't leave her  here unconscious. What should I do?

  I called Mother.

  'Mother, I'm over here at Mrs.  Thornhill's.'

  'That's nice, dear. How is she?'

  'She's passed out on the sofa, dead drunk and  covered with cats.'

  After a short pause, I heard Mother's  patient sigh. 'Oh, dear. Not again. We were all so hoping  she was doing better this time,' Mother said, infinitely  sorrowful. Great. Why hadn't someone bothered  to mention that our calligrapher was a dipsomaniac  cat freak? I should have known better than to hire  one of Mrs. Fenniman's cronies.

  'Do you have any idea who I should call?' I  asked. 'I can't just leave her there. Does she have  family, or should I find one of the neighbors?'

  'Oh, dear, I don't think the neighbors.  Such intolerant people.' I felt a sudden surge  of solidarity with Mrs. Thornhill's  long-suffering neighbors. 'I'll call her son  and his wife. You look after her till they get  there.'

  And so I spent the rest of the day baby-sitting  Mrs. Thornhill. I realized I hadn't  asked Mother where the son lived--in-state, I  hoped--but when I tried to call her back the line  was busy. For several hours. Presumably the  grapevine was disseminating and analyzing Mrs.  Thornhill's fall from grace. I checked  periodically to make sure she was all right, but the last thing I wanted to do was wake her.

  I called Be-Stitched to let Michael know  I would miss the afternoon's fittings. I browbeat the  printer into promising that he'd find some new  envelopes for me in twenty-four hours. I  tuned into the Weather Channel, saw a  long-range forecast for July and began calling  caterers to discuss making menus  mayonnaise-free and otherwise heat-proof. I  made every other call on my to-do list. I  opened a can of cat food for any cat who wandered  in and

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