Rick yancey the monstrumologist series5/28/2023 ![]() ![]() He grunted, flipped through some pages, his lips pursed, thick brows gathering over his dark eyes. “Last month.” I pulled a copy from my briefcase and handed it to him. He settled into his chair and asked, “So how is the book coming?” On the credenza behind his leather chair sat a framed photograph of an elderly woman scowling at the camera, as if to say, Don’t you dare take my picture! I assumed it was his wife. ![]() The desktop was hidden beneath listing towers of paper, manila file folders, periodicals, and books with titles such as Estate Planning 101 and Saying Good-bye to the Ones You Love. His office was at the far end of the common area, a cluttered, claustrophobic room dominated by a mahogany desk with a broken front leg that someone had attempted to level by placing a book beneath it and the dingy white carpet. He released my hand, wrapped his thick fingers around my elbow, and guided me down the deserted hallway to his office. His handshake was quick and strong, though not too quick and not too strong: He was accustomed to gripping arthritic fingers. The director of facilities was a small man with ruddy cheeks and dark, deep-set eyes, his prominent forehead framed by an explosion of cottony white hair, thinning as it marched toward the back of his head, cowlicks rising from the mass like waves moving toward the slightly pink island of his bald spot. ![]()
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