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.PP
.ps 10
No, he was serious.  There had been another stork he had tried to be friends
with, before college, but it hadn't worked out.  Part of why he left
town.  He didn't like to think about that time.  Nowadays, it was
Doritos and the mail truck.
.PP
.ps 10
And his music.  When he wasn't snacking or asleep he tried to set down
his ideas.  His equipment was primitive, but he found he had no
aptitude for operating complicated machines.  He pressed the record
button and played his guitar.
.PP
.ps 10
He didn't talk to anyone about this.  It wasn't for them to know.  Something
happened when he played that he wouldn't have been able to explain, anyway.
The recordings themselves were superfluous (though they did comprise a
record of the experience); it was primarily the process that gripped him.
.PP
.ps 10
In his bumbling way he was transported.
.PP
.ps 10
On the other side of the musical divide, the man he had come to know as the Chief presently
resolved into view.
.PP
.ps 10
"Report," said the Chief, swiveling in his chair to face Stan and his
guitar.
.PP
.ps 10
"Slow week," Stan said.  "Three tracks, none of them mixed.  I'm...
not sure where to go from here."
.PP
.ps 10
"Don't worry about it," said the Chief, and broke the connection.
Stan set down his guitar.  What was \fIthat\fR supposed to mean?  He stopped
the tape recorder and opened another bag of Doritos.

.PP
.ps 10
Thirteen years into his career as a mail carrier, Stan still didn't
know what he wanted to be when he grew up.  Spying with his guitar was
okay, but, he had always assumed he'd get famous for something...
else.  He still had no idea what that might be.  His current pay was
sufficient to finance his lifestyle, so he was free to follow his conscience during his free
time.  He wasn't even sure that his career needed to encompass his
interests.
.PP
.ps 10
Whatever, it was time for work.