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.PP
.ps 10
But, there would be no New Era.  Daisuke stopped pretending;
there was no company for him to return to, no way he could
return to his old life.  Japan or no, he was much too busy with each
day's fresh batch of problems at work.
.PP
.ps 10
The operator had moved him to a desk inside his own office.  Sitting
there, watching his boss breathe, Daisuke found it difficult to
concentrate on his work.  It didn't seem to matter.  The operator
liked having him within earshot, just in case he decided to say
something that required an immediate response.  Daisuke had faced more
challenging work in the past.
.PP
.ps 10
Listening to the operator talk on the phone.  He spent
much of his time chatting with one particular fellow, Slate, or
Snake, or something like that.  Very deferential.  Totally unlike the
manner in which he spoke to his own subordinates in real life.  Daisuke could only imagine what the
other guy must have been saying during all those calls.
.PP
.ps 10
Daisuke worked in that office for five, maybe six years.  He began to
forget what it had been like, out in the field.  The moment\-to\-moment
hustle and bustle conspired to grind all the reflection out of him.
He was left a smooth, matte surface.  Blank.  By the end of each
day he wanted nothing more than to lay down on the floor and never get
up again.  That, he imagined the operator covering the phone with his
hand and saying to him, could be arranged.

.PP
.ps 10
Daisuke had begun corresponding with former employees.  One in
particular, a man named Stan, who had returned to his previous job as a
mail carrier, had become a good friend (or at least someone who would
answer Daisuke's frequent letters).  From Stan he gradually pieced
together a clearer picture of the events that had taken place shortly
before he was hired.  Daisuke was surprised at what he learned.