The twenty-second floor, home to the typists and clerks that peer over the tops of dividers like human veal.One particular calf, a brunette typist with green eyes named Edith Neuwirth, needed a change. She slaved for a soul-less life insurance company, a clown-faced cesspool of depressed and repressed people, some at the end of their ropes, others just out of college, in for the (Very boring) long haul. Her supervisor was an arrogant jerk, this man made his living terrorizing the typing pool. He gleaned nourishment from stalking the silk and Chanel scented fields of typewriters. Edith was very good at not being seen, keeping her affairs firmly to herself, even when Karl the boss man stomped on her schedule by keeping her late and with no overtime. No justice, she'd think to herself. She always did as she was told and never outwardly complained. Karl favoured the highly made-up, shallow, clucking hens of the finance department, but recently he had taken to sniffing out the typist quarter. Edith was very astute and noticed that when a girl stayed late, that meant that Karl, with a 'K' wanted something. But, she would ponder, why would he make her stay late and never approach her with even the slightest request. Then like every day, as it neared ever so close to the five, the clock's ticking grew louder so that no one could block it out, and then when it felt like you were going to lose your head, the bell would signal the stampede of smartly coutured cattle. Well, here I am still working and until he says so, again, She thought, in utter defeat. Once again she would have to put off catching the latest Hitchcock picture. And once again she was the only soul seated at the typing machines, the rest all snug inside their little green plastic cosies, silent and peaceful. The tap tapping droned on, and on, and on. The rhythm sounding more and more like some twisted version of Gene Krupa's syncopated drum beats. Tap-taptippytap-tap-tap-tipp-pip-pat-tat…………
Satisfied that she was in no immediate danger, she began to gingerly unfasten the tight black straps that kept her bound in her inexpensive shiny five-inch heels. Holding the thin heel, she lifted her aching foot out of the shoe and squeezed her small size six foot. "Goodness….oh." she breathed. Then crossing over her other leg, she went to undo the buckle of the strap and it sprang smartly out from the tension. "There we are…." Edith closed her eyes and firmly gasped her ankles and gently massaged them, scarcely feeling the dark reinforced heel and back-seam. Edith never dressed too licentiously always partial to conservative dark suits. Today she had picked her suffocatingly fitted, navy-blue knee-length Dior number. She had a habit of cinching up her snowy blouses right up to the last asphyxiating button. She placed her long legs up onto her desk; she felt a short nap was in order and with a skittish look around finally let her guard down and closed her eyes.