The attorney felt a weight on her shoulder.
"It's really no fun at all being a secretary."
The attorney felt lips on her ear.
"Secretaries hardly get any attention."
Increasingly, the attorney felt her position to be unnavigable. The Kaerimasu Maru was sunk, its cargo would go uncompensated, and, unlike the pyjama bottoms descending on her periphery, neither would rise again.
"There are more interesting things in the world than boats," the secretary said, prising the attorney's hand from the keyboard.
"Ships," the attorney said, "ships." She felt her lifeless fingers contact the secretary's skin, which was warm and soft, then stubbly, then wet.
"I don't like them," the secretary said, "they steal you away from me." Stutteringly, the attorney moved her forefinger against the secretary. "I think that's why I call them boats, to... diminish them." With her uncaptured hand, the attorney shoved aside an obdurate tome of sticky-note-feathered maritime law and pulled the secretary close. "Silly... little... boats."
The Kaerimasu Maru no longer mattered, thought the attorney, absorbing herself instead with the secretary: smelling musk in combination with perfume and feeling welcoming flesh lap against her nose and lips, which she pressed to the secretary - who moaned as the attorney grasped her buttocks and ran her tongue across her. The secretary listed backwards from her hips: unsteady on her heels, gripping the desk, crying out. The attorney's nails scraped goosebumps, her cheeks conducted tremors, her chin became damp. Glancing up, she saw the secretary's breasts - quivering, nipples stiff - between them: fluttering eyelids, a lolling mouth, a nodding head. Her breasts, of course they were her breasts, thought the attorney, what a funny lie: she'd heard the camera shutter sound, the background was patently the hallway wall, and as if she wouldn't recognise... the Kaerimasu Maru sank in Honduran waters, that was fact, but... the shape was different - Belize. If Belize, then it wasn't descended on at all. If Belize, there was no ill-fated voyage from Veracruz, no balanced sea turning unexpectedly corrugated. Belize - then it would have left port a day later, which meant they knew that the hurricane had shifted before they sailed, which meant it wasn't an act of God, it was negligence.