Pausing at the front door of the newspaper office, Robyn took a deep breath. She looked into the dust-stained window. The gray-haired lady on the other side of the window looked up from her desk and stared back. Robyn fought the urge to turn away.
What the heck, she thought. I've got to give it a try.
Robyn swung open the door as the lady brushed the droning flies from her worksheets, pushed the pencil into her large bun of hair, and stiffened her back.
"May I help you?"
Her icy tone was the one she reserved for salesmen and bill collectors. But Robyn met her piercing eyes with a smile.
"I'm Robyn Dunmore. My dad was the editor."
The old lady gave a sharp rustle to her long black dress as she stood up. She always used every inch of her six-foot frame to intimidate strangers. Her steel-gray eyebrows arched above bifocals.
"You're the fourth editor those meddling executors have run in here since Mr. Dunmore took ill," she said. "So don't you get fired up and try anything fancy. I've been here for ten years and I'll damn well be here long after Global Media takes over."
Robyn saw a head peek around the partition of a cubicle. The young man had thick black hair.
"Hey," he called. "I'm Barry English. The advertising salesman. You've just met Lucy Warren. Folks around here call her 'The Beast.'"
Lucy Warren loudly cleared her throat. Her fingers drummed sharply on the corner of her desk.
"Young man, you quit your flirting and go get those grocery ads. And don't stop to feed your smelly horses!"
"I'm going, I'm going," Barry English said. "Glad to meetcha, Miss D. See ya later, Beastie."
He swept out the door, grabbing pencils, notebooks and scraps of paper as he went.
Robyn forced back a grin as she turned to Lucy Warren.
"And what do you do, Ms. Warren?"
"It's Miss Warren, young lady! Not Ms. And certainly not Mrs.," she said. "What do I do?"
She swept her arms around. "Why, I do everything around here, of course! I run this place!"
Robyn could feel her muscles tense. She began walking through the office. Lucy Warren trailed on her heels.
"Then who does the sweeping, Miss Warren? You?"
"Of course not," Lucy Warren said. "I'm authorized to bring in a cleaning woman whenever I need to."
"Ask her to be here in the morning."