
Bright sunlight streamed in the front window of the Poppycock offices, and, after passing through the eyelet pattern of the delicate muslin curtains (Elfriede Jelinek had sent them in thanks for understanding that not everyone likes to go out of the house or use the telephone) made a quaint, fluttering field of flowers on the floor, which Maude was busy sweeping. Professor De Busque was doing a lot of writing and crossing things out in a rather frazzled manner, crumpling numerous papers into the wastebasket that Professor P’ohlig had recently snitched from the post office near Stefan Zwieg’s former house. Professor De Busque had recently suggested an Austrian theme for the office as sort of a last resort, but Professor P’ohlig had taken it a little too far, and had taped pictures of Egon Schiele portraits all over her desk, as inspiration for the new skeletal ideal she was currently aspiring to.
There was a delicate tap at the front door which could have been mistaken for the approach of a timid mouse. Emily and Maude held their collective breath as the door creaked open, but it was just dear Mr. Periwinkle peeking around the corner, struggling with a large number of packages. “Is she here?” he whispered.
“She’s gone out to post more letters,” Maude said, grabbing Mr. Periwinkle’s arm and hustling him in. “She got too impatient to wait for you about an hour ago.”
“Oh, heavens preserve us,” Mr. Periwinkle said, mopping his brow with a suspicious looking handkerchief he’d picked up from Molly’s cluttered desk.
“Mr. Periwinkle, what are those stains on your handkerchief?” Emily said sternly, looking over the rims of her glasses (she didn’t really need spectacles, but they looked so very fetching).
Mr. Periwinkle peered at the handkerchief, which indeed had a number of rusty red stains.
“Drop it!” shouted Maude, and Mr. Periwinkle was so startled that he did. “That came yesterday.”
Emily gasped. “Not from --”
“Yes,” Maude whispered with a shiver. “From the estate of the Moors Murderer Myra Hindley.”
Mr. Periwinkle shrieked and swooned, and was carried quickly off into house to be revived.
***
“Something simply must be done,” Emily declared, pounding her adorable fist on the kitchen table. Mr. Periwinkle put a protective hand over his strengthening glass of gin. “She cannot be allowed to be continue in this fashion.”
Maude and Mr. Periwinkle nodded solemnly. The ‘she’ in question, of course, was Professor P’ohlig. She was having a dreadful time of it. After a few anxious months with Poppycock’s financial advisor, Mr. Denning, they had a series of furious rows, and Mr. Denning had behaved quite badly. He swore that never more would he darken the threshold of Poppycock Enterprises and returned the large file holding all of their receipts. Molly, who was apt to turn into a bit of a Bertha Mason in Mr. Rochester’s attic, screamed at him most unprettily, and hurled at his feet the box containing treasured mementos of him which she had saved over the years. For several days she kept to her room, not seeing anyone and leaving the dinner trays they brought untouched outside of her room. For several days after that she haunted Mr. Periwinkle like Giselle haunted Albrecht, asking hourly in a pathetic voice if perchance there was any more post to be had. But it was the several days that had occurred since that were the trouble. Molly had taken to working feverishly from dawn until dusk, running errands all over the city until she fell into an exhausted sleep. She had been in contact with a most unsavory new author who was working on a grand compendium of female serial killers. Now, Professor P’ohlig had always nourished a taste for the macabre, but she had gone completely overboard. Sandwiched in between the sickly Egon Schiele figures were crime scene photos, and she had written to the estates of a multitude of murderous ladies, requesting any information or documents that they could spare. Her desk was now piled high with mementos of a more gruesome kind: Mary Ann Cotton’s bonnet, a tiny, moth-eaten sweater knitted by Amelia Dyer, Belle Gunness’ porcelain teeth, and some leather gloves that had belonged to Elizabeth Báthory. This last item was crusted with a substance that no one apart from Molly particularly wanted to think about.
Everyone was worried. Their cheerful Professor P’ohlig (alright, she was sarcastic and gloomy much of the time, but she was definitely cheerful sometimes) had entirely disappeared. Mr. Periwinkle poured gin for everyone (yes, even a tiny drop for Maude).
“Couldn’t we plead our case before Mr. Denning?” Maude said hopefully, sniffing the gin experimentally.
“Absolutely not,” said Mr. Periwinkle with uncustomary sternness. “If he can’t appreciate the Professor, well, then I pity him, but there must be something wrong with his character.”
“Indeed,” agreed Emily. “No doubt he is even now buried in a pile of newspapers, pretending that everything is perfectly fine. He is no longer our concern. It’s he who has ruined everything. It’s Professor P’ohlig that needs our help, and help her we shall. All of this murder business is only prolonging her misery.”
“And it’s beginning to give me nightmares,” said Maude. Mr. Periwinkle tried to pat Maude’s head, but missed. He had had a lot of gin before he’d even arrived, as he was having nightmares too.
“But what to do?” Emily sighed. At that moment, Molly’s storming footsteps were heard entering the house and pounding up the stairs.
“Don’t bother me the rest of the day,” she shouted. “I’ve got lots of research to do, in my room, by myself!”
No one spoke for a few minutes. Everyone had more gin, except for Maude, who thought it tasted like Christmas tree needles, which is quite nice in theory, but not so much in practice. Then Mr. Periwinkle cocked his head, listening, and a small smile appeared on his lips.
“She’s not working at all,” he said.
Everyone listened hard, and then everyone began to smile.
“She’s watching “Brideshead Revisited”,” Emily said. “She’s not as far gone as we thought!”
The kitchen turned into a whirl of activity. Maude made coffee and sandwiches to sober everyone up, and they began to formulate a plan.
***
“It certainly is odd that Mr. King has stopped responding to my letters,” Molly said, furrowing her brow under her sharply cut bangs.
“Mm, yes,” said Emily, trying not to smile. She was very good at writing cease and desist letters when the occasion called for it. “Have you any appointments today?”
Molly flipped through a tattered calendar book, which now rested on a desk devoid of skeletal Schieles or bloody photographs. “Ever so many, really. And curiously, they seem to be all with young, unmarried, male writers.”
“That is curious,” said Maude, sliding a little black address book under a sheaf of papers. Life had really been so much more pleasant the last several days.
“I think I’ll start looking for a new financial advisor,” Molly said suddenly. Everyone looked up, and Mr. Periwinkle dropped a book of stamps.
“Oh, it’s not that I wouldn’t prefer to have....He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named back,” Molly said with an unhappy sounding laugh. “Because I would. But he’s not here now. Sometimes things don’t happen like they do in your favorite books. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if they did?”
Everyone nodded quietly, for everyone has at least one something in their life that they secretly long to be different, and Mr. Periwinkle, Emily, and Maude were no exceptions.
“But our finances need attention, dammit!” Molly said with a bit of her old sparkle. “So let’s see what can be done, shall we?”
Their old Professor P’ohlig wasn’t exactly back, she was a sadder, wiser Professor P’ohlig, but it was close enough for the moment. Everyone rushed over to give her a hug, and then they had a delightful cream tea with champagne while they watched “Cranford”, and then everyone had a very satisfying nap, with not a nightmare between them.

2 comments:
yes yes yesssss! my name is Prof. de Busque, and I approve this message.
Dammit, why am I always left out of the rounds of gin and champagne? The image of me toasting the Professor all by myself is pathetic, to say the least, but toast her I shall. For just about everyone, in the end, does need a financial advisor.
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