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at the same time
that he was out on the airfield checking on the blocked runway and the
mired Afteo-Mexican jet.
At the Snow Desk, Danny Far-row was talking with Airport Maintenance again.
When there was a moment's break, Mel interjected, "I'll. be in the
terminal, then on the field."
He had remembered what Tanya said in her note about having coffee together.
He would stop at his own office first, then, on his way through the
terminal, he would drop by Trans America to see her. The thought excited
him.
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2
Mel used the private elevator, which operated by passkey only, to descend
from the tower to the administrative mezzanine. Though his own office
suite was silent, with stenographers' desks cleared and typewriters
covered, the lights had been left on. He entered his own interior office.
From a closet, near the wide mahogany desk he used in daytime, he took out
a heavy topcoat and fur-lined boots.
Tonight Mel himself was without specific duties at the airport. This was
as it should be. The reason he had stayed, through most of the three-day
storm, was to be available for emergencies. Otherwise, he mused, as he
pulled on the boots and laced them, by now he would have been home with
Cindy and the children.
Or would he?
No matter how objective you tried to be, Mel reasoned, it was hard to be
sure of your own real motives. Probably, if it had not been the storm,
something else would have arisen to justify not going. Not going home,
in fact, seemed lately to have become the pattern of his life. His job
was a cause, of course. It provided plenty of reasons to remain extra
hours at the airport, where lately there had been big
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