to conceal and help him blend into a crowd. Nobody at the Daily Planet knows anything about Clark. Underneath these button-up shirts, Joshua could be relatively featureless or ripped like Superman. Itâs a mystery.
He doesnât have the forehead curl or the nerdy black glasses, but heâs got the strong masculine jawline and sulky, pretty mouth. Iâve been thinking all this time his hair is black but now that Iâm closer, I can see it is dark brown. He doesnât comb it as neatly as Clark does. Heâs definitely got the ink-blue eyes and the laser stare, and probably some of the other superpowers, too.
But Clark Kent is such a darling; all bumbling and soft. Joshua is hardly the mild-mannered reporter. Heâs a sarcastic, cynical,Bizarro Clark Kent, terrorizing everyone in the newsroom and pissing off poor little Lois Lane until she screams into her pillow at night.
I donât like big guys. Theyâre too much like horses. They could trample you if you got underfoot. He is auditing my appearance with the same narrowed eyes that I am. I wonder what the top of my head looks like. Iâm sure he only fornicates with Amazons. Our stares clash and maybe comparing them to an ink stain was a tad too harsh. Those eyes are wasted on him.
To avoid dying, I reluctantly breathe in a steady lungful of cedar-pine spice. He smells like a freshly sharpened pencil. A Christmas tree in a cold, dark room. Despite the tendons in my neck beginning to cramp, I donât permit myself to lower my eyes. I might look at his mouth then, and I get a good enough view of his mouth when heâs tossing insults at me across the office. Why would I want to see it up close? I wouldnât.
The elevator bings like the answer to all my prayers. Enter Andy the courier.
Andy looks like a movie extra who appears in the credits as âCourier.â Leathery, midforties, clad in fluorescent yellow. His sunglasses sit like a tiara on top of his head. Like most couriers, he enriches his workday by flirting with every female under the age of sixty he encounters.
âLovely Luce!â He booms it so loud I hear Fat Little Dick make a wet snort as he jolts awake in his office.
âAndy!â I return, skittering backward. I could honestly hug him for interrupting what was feeling like a whole new kind of strange game. He has a small parcel in his hand, no bigger than a Rubikâs cube. Itâs got to be my 1984 baseball-player Smurfette. Super rare, very minty. Iâve wanted her forever and Iâve been stalking her journey via her tracking number.
âI know you want me to call from the foyer with your Smurfs, but no answer.â
My desk phone is diverted to my personal cell, which is currently located near my hip bone in the waistband of my underwear. So thatâs what the buzzing feeling was. Phew. I was thinking I needed my head checked.
âWhat does he mean, Smurfs?â Joshua narrows his eyes like weâre nuts.
âIâm sure youâre busy, Andy, Iâll let you get out of here.â I grab at the parcel, but itâs too late.
âItâs her passion in life. She lives and breathes Smurfs. Those little blue people, yea big. They wear white hats.â Andy holds two of his fingers an inch apart.
âI know what Smurfs are.â Joshua is irritated.
âI donât live or breathe them.â My voice betrays the lie. Joshuaâs sudden cough sounds suspiciously like a laugh.
âSmurfs, huh? So thatâs what those little boxes are. I thought maybe you were buying your tiny clothes online. Do you think itâs appropriate to get personal items delivered to your workplace, Lucinda?â
âSheâs got a whole cabinet of them. Sheâs got a . . . What is it, Luce? A Thomas Edison Smurf? Heâs a rare one, Josh. Her parents gave it to her for high school graduation.â Andy blithely continues humiliating me.
âQuiet now, Andy! How