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Spring Cleaning By: Jess
for E
A week after Casino Night, a memo comes in over the fax machine from
New York: spring cleaning this week in the office. Michael trashes
every fax from headquarters that relates to actual work and
treasures the ones that don't. This one falls in the middle.
"Cleaning. Yech. Get enough of that at home," Michael says, looking
meaningfully at the camera.
Pam looks over at Jim, expecting to see him looking at back at her,
with an expression that says, What? But he isn't looking at her.
He's staring at the papers on his desk with a determined expression,
a pen in his hand. A Rollerball 3X, dark blue. His favorite.
"Right, Pam?"
"Mm," Pam says, the sound she makes when she feels like she has to
acknowledge something Michael has said even though she'd rather not.
She makes the sound a lot.
~
Jan Levinson calls from Corporate at noon.
"Hey there, Jan."
"Michael," Jan says. Her voice is crisp, but Michael can hear the
feelings underneath.
"I've been meaning to call you. Carol told me to tell you what a
great time she had talking to you."
"Yes, well, I had a good time too."
"That's great!" Michael leans back in his chair, twirls a pencil in
his hands. He can tell this is going to be a good day. "How are
things at headquarters? Everything copasetic in the 4-7?"
There's a pause. "I have no idea what you're talking about."
"It's from NYPD never mind. So, what's up?" The pencil spins out
of Michael's hand and lands on his desk, next to his World's Best
Boss trophy. He has a matching mug but can't find it, now.
"Did you get the fax we sent over this morning?"
"Got it, put it in the special filing bin, just like all the other
faxes from corporate." Michael looks up, already half-pointing at
the garbage bin next to his desk, but the cameras are by Creed's
desk. No audience.
"That's fine, as long as it gets done. It's very important that this
happens in a timely fashion. We're going to be inspecting each
branch soon."
Michael sighs and picks up the trophy. "Jan, people are working
here. It's "
"Just do it."
The trophy has something on its face, or face-like-region. Black
smudges. Michael tries to wipe it off and sees: it's a mustache and
goatee and, well, it's not just the face. He's going to need a new
trophy. "Okay. Fine."
Another pause. "Michael," she says, the sharp edge to her voice
muted, almost gone.
"What, Jan?" Michael suddenly feels very tired.
"You need to do a good job with this. We've already talked about the
possibility of layoffs and branch closures, and now that the Albany
branch is turning around under the new leadership, you really need
to -"
"Albany! Like we have to worry about Albany. It's not even a real
city."
"It's the capital of New York State."
Michael laughs. "I'm not so sure about that."
"Right. Goodbye, Michael." Her voice is clipped and formal again.
"Bye," Michael says, but she's hung up already. He puts the phone
back and stares at the faded, smudged face of his trophy before
hitting the intercom button. "Pam, get everyone in the conference
room."
~
Dwight admires the way Michael conducts a meeting. The casual
confidence, effortless humor, brilliant insights. He usually starts
with a few jokes that are beyond the mental reach of most of the
staff, but not Dwight.
"Ha! That's right!" Dwight says when Michael gets to the punchline.
"Dwight, I wasn't finished."
"Right, sorry." Occasionally, Michael is so ahead of the curve that
even Dwight doesn't see the destination.
"Anyway, like I was saying, 'the man' is asking us to clean our
office like we're the hired help no offense, Oscar -- and while at
first I was going to just ignore it, something happened today that
made me realize that this may be an opportunity. A golden
opportunity. Which means a good opportunity. Does anybody here
recognize this?"
Dwight does; his hand was in the air before Michael finished his
question. "It is your World's Best Boss Trophy, which I purchased
for you last year for Boss's Day."
"Right, just needed the title there, Dwight. It's a trophy. My
trophy. And if you can see, someone has drawn all over the trophy,
in a semi-obscene way." Michael starts walking around the room,
through and around the messy organization of chairs. "What I
realized is that we need to grow. Connect. Value each other more.
This is something I would usually see as HR's department, but since
their efforts have led to the current work environment, I don't
think they can be expected to handle this."
Dwight turns and gives Toby a scathing look.
Toby is looking at Michael. "Michael, what are you suggesting?"
Michael holds up the other item he carried in with him, a turquoise
lunch tote. "I'm getting to that. I have put each of your names in
this bag. We will all pick one out, and whichever name you pick,
that is the workspace you will be cleaning."
Angela says, "But we already cleaned."
Michael shakes his head. "No, see, this is different than before,
more than just cleaning, Angela! We'll be learning about each other.
By the end of work today, you're going to see the person whose name
you draw in a very different way."
Jim raises his hand. "Just so I'm clear here we will be cleaning
the person whose name we draw?"
Phyllis shakes her head. "Michael, I'm not sure I'm comfortable "
Michael waves the lunch tote. "No! No, no, no. Jim. You will be
cleaning the workspace belonging to that person."
"Oh, okay. That makes sense." Jim is wearing a satisfied little
smile and looking right at Dwight, his eyebrows raised.
Dwight knows what that means. "Question: Can we officially block
certain co-workers from the cleaning task due to past behavior?"
"No."
"But-"
"I said, no," Michael says. Dwight can't argue with that kind of
command.
Stanley can. "This is stupid."
"Stanley-" Michael puts a hand to his forehead. "That attitude is
not helping. Let's get started. Jim, you pick first."
Jim picks himself.
"That won't work," Michael says.
Jim holds up the piece of paper. "You said we had to clean the space
of the person we selected, and I selected myself, so-"
"But the whole purpose is to work on someone else's space, Jim."
"All right. Can I pick someone else? I pick Dwight."
Dwight raises his hand. "Michael!"
Michael sighs. "You can't pick someone else, someone else has to
pick you, since your name is out of the bag."
Jim is still holding onto his slip of paper. "Why? Anyway, I already
picked me."
"Yes, but-"
Dwight raises his hand. "Question "
Michael shakes his head. "Dwight, I dont really have time for your
questions."
"But I was going to ask whether I could -"
"I'll do it," Pam interrupts.
Dwight looks over at Pam, whose hand is tentatively in the air.
She's wearing an innocent expression. "I'll do it. I'll take Jim's
name," she says.
Dwight is outraged. "Michael!"
"Not now, Dwight. Okay, fine. Pam, you take Jim's name, and Jim, you
take Pam's."
Dwight shakes his head and looks over at Jim, expecting to see a
familiar mix of smugness and satisfaction on his features. He
doesn't find it there.
~~
Pam stops Jim by the conference room door, and lets the other people
file out into the office ahead of them. She leans in close to him,
probably so she can speak quietly, but waits a few seconds to say
anything. She's looking away from Jim, maybe checking for camera
people, or trying to find the right words. Jim doesn't really care;
he has been trying his hardest not to think about her, but at this
distance, it's impossible. All he can think about is how nice she
smells, how much he wants to kiss her.
Finally, she looks up at him. She seems nervous. "I could see that
Dwight was about to pounce, so -"
"Yeah, thanks."
Jim kind of thinks Dwight would be preferable.
Pam can tell. "Is that all right? I know - "
"What? Yeah, of course." Jim does his best fake
what-are-you-talking-about face, and then adds, "My desk is kind of
a mess."
Pam gives him a raised eyebrow. "Jim. Your version of mess is very
far from other people's. Especially some people in this office."
Jim grimaces. "Yeah. Poor Phyllis."
~
Phyllis drew Kevin's name. She starts with the top drawer, and
finds:
-one sharpened pencil;
-eight pencils with broken tips;
-four dried-out highlighters with missing tops;
-fifty-seven loose M&Ms;
-eight slightly-discolored M&Ms stuck to the bottom of the drawer,
which she has to pry loose with a letter opener;
-an ounce of unidentified crumbs;
-twelve pieces of balled-up Kleenex; and
-several folded up papers that she threw out unopened after Kevin
came up behind her and said, "You might find some papers on there
with weird stuff on them. They're for my brother. He has me print
them out at work because of these restrictions at his job. And at
his house. So, you know. They're not mine."
~
Dwight approaches Stanley just outside the conference room.
"Stanley, a word. I think you will be glad that you drew my name,
since I take pride in a neat and ordered workspace. If you have any
questions-"
"I'm not cleaning your desk."
Dwight stares at him. "But you drew my name."
"I did not spend four years in college to sit and clean your desk. I
am going to sit there and look like I'm doing something, just like I
do every other day. And you better not touch anything on my desk.
Understood?"
Dwight grimaces. "Completely."
~
Jim's desk chair is set too high off the ground for Pam (she has to
tilt her feet to reach the floor), but she doesn't adjust the
setting. Every time Pam looks at Jim, he's not looking her way;
right now he is twisting back and forth in her own chair, looking at
her computer. She left a Free Cell game half-finished when the
meeting started, and he's probably finishing it up.
The main phone rings a few minutes after Pam starts going through
Jim's desk. She spins the chair to face Jim and says, "The phones
are set to voice-"
"Dunder Mifflin," Jim says into the phone before she finishes. "Just
a second, I'll put you through."
Jim stares at the phone for a few seconds, then looks up and covers
the mouthpiece with one hand. "How do I do that, exactly?"
"Keep the person on the line and put them on park 1," Pam says, but
she's already turning away from the desk to walk over to reception.
Jim shakes his head. "Yeah, I have no idea what that means."
"I'll do it this time," Pam says, and does. She has to reach around
Jim to push the right buttons on the phone, and Jim is still as a
statue. She sends calls through to voicemail countless times a day
without a thought, but now, reaching around Jim, who still won't
really look at her, she finds she has to focus.
When she's done, Pam forces herself to be light. "Not as easy as it
looks, is it?"
"No, it's not. I'm definitely going to let voicemail take it from
here on out."
"Good choice." His hair is sticking up in a funny way on one side,
and she wants to reach out and pat it down. She used to do that
without thinking. Now she clasps her hands behind her back to keep
them to herself. "Hey, how's the game going?"
"Game?"
"Free cell. Did you finish up? I thought you were -"
"Oh, yeah, I am. Haven't finished it yet, but I will." Jim turns in
his chair, away from her a little bit, and brings the game up. It
looks mostly unchanged.
"Good luck," Pam says.
"Thanks," Jim says. He doesn't turn around.
~
Kevin finds three Snickers bars in different parts of Phyllis's
desk. He pockets two and leaves one behind; if questioned, he will
tell her that they were past their expiration date and he threw them
out for her own safety.
~
Toby drew Meredith's name, but refuses to take part in the exercise
due to the confidentiality restrictions placed on Human Resources.
Michael accuses him of being a party pooper, which Toby sees as
another in a long line of indignities he has suffered at the hands
of Dunder Mifflin.
Toby plans to spend the afternoon balancing his checkbook, but then
Dwight arrives to complain about Stanley's uncooperative approach to
the day's activities. He spends the rest of the day in the
conference room pretending to take notes.
His checkbook balances perfectly.
~
Jim's desk is messy in a guy kind of way, with few personal things
and a lot of clutter. Pam finds four pens that don't work sitting in
his drawer, along with a bunch of faded messages and takeout menus
for restaurants that have gone out of business. Nothing too
incriminating or even very interesting.
This is what Pam wants to do: She wants to buzz him after a few
minutes and make a joke, something like, "Hey, so what do you want
me to do with this Celine Dion mix tape?"
And he would look at her and smile in that way that seemed to reach
beyond an appreciation for the joke to an appreciation for the
person who made it. For Pam herself.
And maybe he'd make a joke back, something like, "Why are you going
through Dwight's desk?"
But they dont do that anymore.
And so this is what Pam does: She starts separating the contents of
Jim's desk, starting with the old messages.
~
Toby's refusal to take part in the exercise is almost enough to get
Meredith to believe in a higher power. She takes the event as a sign
and reinvents herself. She empties out her garbage can, wipes down
her desk with a wet paper towel, and reorganizes the deep bottom
drawer of her desk (file folders, calculator, spare pair of
pantyhose, three flasks wrapped up in a blue sweatshirt).
She spends the rest of the day looking up clothes on the LL Bean
website.
~
Kelly draws Creed, whose desk smells foul. Ten minutes after
starting, she finds the paper towel with mungbeans on it and shows
them to Michael, who is working on Ryan's desk.
"Michael! Look at this. Do you think I can throw this out? It smells
disgusting. Ryan told me that Creed's desk smelled like death, but I
thought he was exaggerating. He really wasn't. This is so gross."
Michael looks up from the computer. "What? I don't know, maybe-"
"I mean, it could be his food to eat for lunch or something. I think
it's beans, and they say beans are really nutritious. They're great
for protein, which is why I eat them every night as part of my
dinner beans and a rice medley, because I'm trying to watch my
poly-saturated fat intake, even though Ryan says I really don't have
to. Isn't that sweet of him?"
"I guess-"
"I don't know. I guess I'll just put it back. Better safe than
sorry, right? How's it going for you? Have you found anything
interesting?"
Michael is staring into the bottom drawer of Ryan's desk: empty,
just like the two others. Kelly knows because she kind of peeked in
them once when Ryan wasn't in. She needed a pen.
Michael looks up. "Not really. There's not much here."
Kelly thinks Michael looks kind of down. She decides to tell him a
story to cheer him up.
"Did I ever tell you about my sorority's reunion last Saturday? It
was unbelievable."
~~
Pam's desk is hidden from view, so she could get away with being
messy, but she keeps it pretty neat. Everything is put away except
for one pen, which sits at an angle next to the message pad book. It
has two messages ripped off already, and the carbons left behind are
faded but clear. Pam's handwriting is neat and feminine, easy to
read with few flourishes, and she signs each message "PB" in the
bottom corner.
Also on her desk, he has found: a bunch of Save the Date cards,
which he piles neatly and doesn't look at again; several sharpened
pencils; a half-full bag of mini-Cheese Nips, folded over neatly and
held closed with a paper clip; a grocery list (milk, bread, Diet
Pepsi, ice cream); and a pile of printed-out supply requests from
co-workers.
The last is the most interesting. Angela has complained because the
new hanging folders are a darker green than purchased previously,
disrupting the continuity of her filing system. Toby has told Pam
that Michael can't order anything from the Spencer's Gift Catalog
for the office. Phyllis is apologetic in her request for a new
stapler, offering to buy one herself if it's too much trouble.
Oscar sends an e-mail with a reminder of the new supply policy:
generic when possible, cheap always. The new rules went into effect
six months ago, and since then, people talk about their old pens and
Post-its as if they're dearly departed friends. Jim doesn't have
to. Pam has a secret stash, stockpiled just before Oscar sent out
the notice, and she has been sneaking Jim his favorite pens and
expensive white-out when others weren't looking. Jim thinks that's
probably over, not that it matters; Jim won't be in Scranton long.
At the bottom of Oscar's e-mail, Pam sketched a hand reaching out
for a balloon. Jim stares at it for a long time.
~
Creed likes Kelly's desk. It's isolated. He finds four dollars in
loose change in the top drawer and takes seventy-five cents (enough
for peanut butter crackers, not enough to arouse real suspicion). He
finds an envelope of pictures in the second desk drawer and pulls
out the ones featuring attractive girls (there are several). He
spends the rest of the day making long-distance phone calls and
trying out the pens in Kelly's desk to find the best ones to take
with him when he leaves (he takes four).
~~
Angela cleans Oscar's workspace methodically and effectively, using
the same supplies she uses every week on her own desk. Oscar sits
five feet away, eyeing her suspiciously, taking too little care with
her Precious Moments figurines. She appealed when she drew Oscar's
name due to the recent poster issue, but Michael dismissed her by
saying, "You see, Angela, that's exactly what this exercise is
about!"
"You can stop giving me those looks. I'm not going to do anything to
any of your collectibles," Oscar finally says.
"Fine."
"And I expect the same from you," he says.
"Of course."
She thinks she hears him mutter something under his breath about
cats a little while later, but can't be sure. She moves his stapler
to where his pencil holder used to be, switches the picture of Oscar
with his brother to another corner of his desk, and smiles in
satisfaction when she's done.
~
Pam means to respect Jim's privacy, and does for more than a half
hour, but then she sees that one of his messages is missing a phone
number and has no name in the "From" box. Also, it has a strange
reference line: Re: Michael's boots.
Check them out, the message reads. It's dated October 2004,
and it takes Pam a minute to remember: the message is from her, sent
during Michael's unfortunate cowboy boots phase. That fall, he saw a
John Wayne marathon on Turner Classic Movies and started infusing
the office with the old west. Cowboy Hat Friday, Beans-For-Lunch
Wednesday, an endless meeting in the conference room about
incorporating the themes from High Noon into Dunder Mifflin.
The next message Pam reads was folded up with the first, and says,
Re: Today -- Has the clock stopped moving? Will this day ever
end?
The "Please call" box is checked. Pam doesn't remember writing the
message, or if Jim ever got back to her. It's not surprising; she
wrote a lot of messages like this one, before the office converted
to voicemail.
She looks over at Jim he's facing the computer, not looking at
her.
The messages are all in her handwriting. From her. It's not like she
hasn't seen them before.
She piles the messages in her lap and spins Jim's chair so that her
back is to him, and begins reading.
~
Michael drew last and picked Ryan. Or at least he said he did. He
put his hand in and read the name off while keeping his hand in the
lunch tote, but Ryan never actually saw the piece of paper. It would
have creeped Ryan out a few months ago, but now, Ryan finds he's
kind of gotten used to it.
Michael's office is in better shape than his car, at least. The
desktop is dusty but the floor is clean, and it doesn't smell like
fish or anything. One drawer to his desk is open just enough to
reveal a Chapelle's Show DVD with the cellophane off but the
protective tape still in place. His has several Internet Explorer
windows minimized; the away message on AIM is "working hard or
hardly working? who can tell at dm!"
He's been signed on for four hours and has no messages.
Ryan sits at the desk and looks out. Pam is hunched over looking at
something at Jim's desk, Stanley is staring into space, and Kelly is
talking with her hands. Michael is staring right at Ryan.
Ryan hates this place.
~
Pam has an open Word document on her computer (mailing labels for
Michael, created two years ago and unmodified since), and her game
of Free Cell, which Jim has figured out but hasn't finished. The
surface of her desk is neat and clean. He opens the drawers and
separates her pens and pencils, piles up her papers, gets all of her
file folders facing the same way, and he's done. It takes less than
ten minutes.
He makes two interesting finds:
-A box of pens in Pam's third drawer, Rollerball 3x, Dark Blue, in a
Rite Aid bag along with a half-empty box of NutraGrain bars and a
receipt for those two items and a bottle of Diet Pepsi.
-A note in the steno pad, underneath the grocery list, "Remind R.
about mtg. w/ch," underlined three times.
Pam's desktop image is a picture of Pam and Roy in Atlantic City.
Pam looks happy in the picture head tilted up in Roy's direction,
smile wide and bright.
Jim also thinks Pam looks really pretty.
Jim would like to take Pam to Atlantic City. He would like to walk
with her on the Boardwalk, buy her cotton candy or popcorn or
anything else she likes. They would laugh at the same things and
she'd put her hand in his (a small, warm hand; Jim remembers the way
it felt on his face after he kissed her, the gentle pressure of her
fingers, just before she pulled away and said, "I'm sorry, I can't,"
and Jim felt a piece of himself cave in.).
Still. Still, Jim would like to take Pam anywhere.
~~
At 4:30, Dwight comes out of the conference room and stands next to
Stanley, who, as far as Pam can tell, has done nothing but stare
into space the entire afternoon.
"Stanley. I think you should move."
Stanley stares at Dwight.
"Stanley," Toby says, stepping out of the conference room.. "It
would be really great if you could go back to your desk. For the
next half hour or so."
"Fine by me." Stanley gets up.
Pam spins in her chair to look at Jim, who is watching this as well,
with something like a smile on his face.
Pam feels a little funny for a second. She turned around too quickly
in the chair, or she's guilty over reading the messages, or maybe
she's getting an ear infection.
Or maybe it's Jim. Not Jim.
Maybe it's the messages, the rush of things from the past, all of
them in her handwriting. Some of them don't make sense (Re:
Dwight TOTALLY), others are boring. Some he started to write
responses to, but never delivered one message says, "How about
dinner?" under her message (Long day. Angela insulted my boots
again.).
She's sure she never got it, because the date on the message is
3/5/03, two days before the day Roy proposed to her, one day after
their biggest-ever fight, and Jim never asked her to dinner.
It doesn't really matter. She wouldn't have said yes anyway. She
wouldn't.
Pam waits for Jim to look away and puts the messages back where she
found them, strewn around the bottom of his top desk drawer.
All except for one.
~
Michael considers the day a failure. He's learned nothing about Ryan
from his desk, which is spare and impersonal. Michael suspects that
Ryan still doesn't feel at home yet at D-M, and makes a mental note
to schedule more business lunches with him.
Also, Kelly is kind of driving him insane.
"And then, the other day, I was watching Oprah: After the Show,
because I can' t watch Oprah during the day. I used to watch her on
my break in the lunch room, but ever since the Scranton affiliate
moved her airtime to 4PM, I can't, because that's just when I'm in
the car driving home. I can't tape Oprah, because that's too much of
a commitment. You know? Oprah's one of those shows you need to be
there to watch. You can't really tape it. It's like TRL. It's just
not the same at night. You know?"
Michael doesn't respond, but Kelly either doesn't notice or doesn't
care.
"Anyway, on Oprah, she was talking about having a successful
relationship she's started doing those shows again, you know,
which I'm glad about, because I was getting kind of sick of her
other stuff. Before it was, like, all Remembering Your Spirit. Now
it's more like, half-celebrity, half-orphans in Africa, half-helping
you solve personal problems. You know? And Dr. Robin was saying that
when men can't commit, they're not refusing to commit to you,
they're refusing to commit to a responsible future self, and I was
thinking, maybe that's Ryan's problem. Everything with him is so
temporary temporary girlfriend, temporary job, temporary -"
Michael sits up straight. "What do you mean, temporary job?"
Kelly looks kind of surprised that Michael responded. "I just meant,
you know, Ryan is a temp. It's not like he's going to be here at
Dunder-Mifflin forever."
"Being a temp does not mean that he is temporary, Kelly. It just
means that he's on a different payroll, and that we pay twice the
rate for him that we would pay for a regular employee. But we do
that because of how much we value Ryan. That is how much he is worth
to this company. And Ryan certainly is committed to this job, to
this company."
"Yeah, okay, but "
"But nothing! I don't know what kind of stuff this Robin Retard is
selling, but you shouldn't buy it, because Ryan doesn't have a
commitment problem with anything other than you" Michael says, and
starts gathering himself to leave, but before he can, he looks at
Kelly. Her eyes are wide, and look panicked, and Michael gets a
familiar feeling: she's about to cry.
"Wait, Kelly-"
But she's already turned away, started walking toward the bathroom
with a hand over her mouth. Michael stands up to follow her, or get
someone to follow her (maybe Phyllis? She looks like the maternal
type), but doesn't have to; Ryan is already on Kelly's heels, and
looking at Michael with something unpleasant in his eyes.
"Ryan!"
~
Pam did a good job cleaning Jim's desk. Things are back in their
usual places, and the whole area smells like lemons. The entire
office reeks of lemons, in fact; there was only one ancient bottle
of cleaning spray in the supply closet, which got passed from person
to person as the afternoon went on.
Dwight is reading the label. "Did anyone check this expiration date?
These fumes could be poisonous."
"It's fine, Dwight."
"You have no way of knowing that."
Jim feels the familiar slow pressure building up inside him, and
knows he should just turn away, ignore Dwight. Instead, he says,
"No, I don't, but I'm guessing that a cleanser designed specifically
for use in an enclosed office won't kill us."
"Won't kill us, maybe, but who knows what kind of long-term damage
it will do? Especially considering the fact that it is " He pauses
to examine the bottle, holding it sideways and squinting his eyes "
nine months past expiration. We might not know the full extent of
the damage for years, and then it would be too late."
"Too late for what? What can we do about it now, even if you did
find something out? Aren't we already exposed?"
"I don't know. I'd have to look into it." Dwight is typing something
on his computer now; looking back and forth between the bottle and
his screen.
"Don't Google the cleanser, Dwight."
"I'll Google anything I want to, Jim." Dwight pauses, clicks on
something. "Anything work related, that is."
Dwight gives Jim an obnoxious, accusatory glare.
"Whatever, Dwight."
Jim looks at his own computer monitor. A half hour left in the day,
almost no work done, and all Jim can think about is the fact that
Pam is staring at him. Jim can't see, but he can feel it, a
prickling under his skin.
He doesn't look up. He doesn't see Pam look away, but he feels it
happen. Where there used to be a prickling, there's nothing, until
he sees her walk by him, toward the ladies' room, hunched forward in
a funny way. Not in a good way.
Jim looks around; no one else has noticed.
~
Kelly is in the ladies room when Pam gets there, fixing her eye
makeup, and she stops with her mascara wand poised in mid-air when
she sees Pam's face.
"Oh my God. What's wrong?"
"Nothing. Nothing's wrong," Pam says, and walks past Kelly into a
stall, closing the door behind her. She puts a hand over her mouth,
and tries to keep quiet, but she can't help breathing funny, and you
can hear every small sound in a bathroom.
"Something's wrong."
"Nope, nothing," Pam says. "You know, um. I think Ryan was looking
for you."
Kelly takes a second to respond. "Really? That's funny. I just
talked to him."
"Oh," Pam says.
"He brought me my bag. I needed my makeup because Michael said
something awful that made me cry. You wouldn't believe it, he said-"
Kelly says a lot more, but Pam doesn't hear it. She's grateful for
the sound of Kelly's voice, for once. Kelly will talk a long time,
long enough for Pam to settle herself down.
She looks down to the papers in her hand: An old, faded message (How
about dinner?); a bright pink Post-it (Ten of Clubs on Jack
of Diamonds). Both in Jim's handwriting, angular and messy.
When Roy asked Pam out the first time, she thought it was a joke, or
a bet, or worse. Her friend Melissa convinced her otherwise (He
stares at you all through lunch, Pam. He's totally into you.),
and so she said yes.
Roy was genuine. He liked Pam, for reasons Pam couldn't really
figure out. When she asked him, after they'd been dating a while, he
said something like, "I don't know, I thought you were pretty. And
you were always quiet or off doing some art thing, and I wondered
about you. I couldn't figure you out. You were, like, a mystery."
Pam was a mystery. Pam had been described a lot of ways by boys in
school okay, average, smart, weird Roy was the first and only
one to call her mysterious. Pam liked that, then. It made her feel
powerful, strong, safe to know that there were parts of herself that
Roy couldn't reach, that he only saw what she let him.
It's not like that with Jim.
" - Pam? Do you remember the name?"
Name of what? Pam plays back the tape in her head and has nothing.
She sniffs, and clears her throat. "I'm sorry, Kelly, what?"
"I was thinking maybe of going away on a weekend in the Poconos,
like you and Roy did before, and actually I wanted to ask, where did
you stay?"
"Um, I can't remember off the top of my head. I can e-mail you."
"That would be awesome. Ryan said he wanted to slow things down, but
did you see how he just followed me to the bathroom when I was
upset? He so totally cares! And I want to show him that I care, too.
I make way more money than he does, so I'll pay for the cabin. He'll
probably feel all guilty, but "
Kelly goes on. Pam stops listening, starts thinking about how weird
it is that she doesn't feel guilty for kissing Jim back. She's
supposed to feel guilty about that, but the truth is, when she
thinks about kissing Jim, she does just that: thinks about kissing
him. The way his hair felt between her fingers. The gentle pressure
of his hand on her back. When she does feel guilty, it's over other
things: the look on Jim's face after she pushed him away. Not
returning her mother's phone calls. The Post-it in her hand.
But not Roy. There's something messed up about that.
Pam sniffs, uses toilet paper to dry off her face and blow her nose,
waits for Kelly to take a breath to interrupt her. "Hey, Kelly?"
"Yeah?" Kelly's voice is eager, cheerful.
"Can I borrow your phone?"
"Sure."
Pam opens the bathroom stall door; when Kelly looks up from her bag,
she shakes her head. "I'll let you borrow some of my eye makeup,
too."
~
Pam comes back to the reception area twenty minutes before the end
of the day. Her face looks funny and it takes a minute for Jim to
pin down why: she's wearing makeup. A lot of it. Probably going out
somewhere fancy.
Roy usually picks Pam up when they're going someplace; Jim decides
to leave early.
"It's not five yet," Dwight announces when Jim's computer sounds the
shut-down chime.
"Thanks for the update."
"Where are you going? You can't leave."
"Yeah, I can." Jim closes his messenger bag, checks the clock: ten
of five. Roy usually arrives at five of. He'll just make it.
"I'll tell Michael."
"Go right ahead." Michael is meeting with Ryan right now, and will
bite Dwight's head off for interrupting. It's almost worth sticking
around an extra minute to watch it happen, but Jim prioritizes. He
packs up his bag and goes, doesn't even wait for the elevator. He
runs down the stairs, pushes the door open with one hand, and walks
through the parking lot with his head down even though it's a nice
day, one of the sunniest so far this spring.
Someone grabs him by the arm just as he's turning down the row he
parks in, scares the crap out of him. He turns around, expecting an
attacker or, God forbid, Dwight sent on a mission from Michael to
bring him back to the office for the last few minutes of the day,
but no. It's Pam.
"You solved my Free Cell," she says.
Jim thought it was a nice gesture. Another mistake. "Sorry."
"No, I didn't mean see, you didn't finish it, you left the last
two cards for me, because you know I like to watch the cards go all
" and here she makes the little noise, wiggles her fingers. It's
endearing, still.
Jim doesn't know what to say. After a minute, he turns to leave, but
Pam doesn't let go of his arm.
"I wanted to say thank you." Pam stands there, holding him by the
wrist. Her grip is warm and strong.
"You're welcome." Jim shakes his arm free. "I have to get
somewhere."
"I'm sorry about the other night."
Jim starts walking toward his car. "Yeah, I definitely don't need to
hear this again."
"No," Pam says, grabbing his arm again. "No, I mean. I mean "
"You mean what, Pam? That you're calling off the wedding? Breaking
up with Roy?" Jim turns around.
Pam is looking up at him. "Yes."
"Wait, what?"
"Yes," she says again. "I'm calling off the wedding."
Jim suddenly sees past the makeup: her eyes are pink. She's been
crying. He has to look away, at the busy road on the other side of
the parking lot, partly because it bothers him to think of Pam
crying. Mostly because if she doesn't really mean it, if it's a
joke, if it's something that won't stick -
"Jim."
Even if it does stick, it doesn't necessarily mean anything. People
call off weddings every day, for lots of reasons. Even if it
happens, it doesn't mean anything will change.
"Jim." She lets go of his arm, takes his hand. His right in her
left, her fingers folding over the side of his hand. She's not
wearing a ring. "Look at me."
He does, and she lets go of his hand, reaches for his shoulders, a
little awkwardly. She pulls him into a kiss, which doesn't feel
awkward at all, and when he pulls away (not her, him, this time),
she doesn't apologize or think better of it or try to run away. She
says, "We should probably get out of here."
"Okay," Jim says, wondering if she means for the moment or for
forever. Either is fine with him.
.end.
Thanks to lesasoja, Amy, and Kaelie for fab beta action.
All mistakes are mine and mine alone.
Feedback is always
appreciated! Take me back.
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