IIIRufus Sollenar paced his office, his hands held safely still in front of him, their fingers spread and rigid. The telephone sounded, and his secretary said to him: “Mr. Sollenar, you are ten minutes from being late at the TTV Executives' Ball. This is a First Class obligation.” Sollenar laughed. “I thought it was, when I originally classified it.” “Are you now planning to renege, Mr. Sollenar?” the secretary inquired politely. Certainly, Sollenar thought. He could as easily renege on the Ball as a king could on his coronation. “Burr, you scum, what have you done to me?” he asked the air, and the telephone said: “Beg pardon?” “Tell my valet,” Sollenar said. “I'm going.” He dismissed the phone. His hands cupped in front of his chest. A firm grip on emptiness might be stronger than a

