'Women of Science Fiction' --
and he wanted to stop in the dealer's room on the way.
Chapter Four
The door to room 422 opened as Mandi neared it and a tall guy in jeans,
cowboy boots, and a green Army field jacket stepped out. He pulled the door shut
with a glance in her direction that turned into a rather long look, then he
hefted his black backpack and followed her toward the elevators.
He had to be close to fifty; Mandi wondered which team he was with, and in
what capacity. All the rooms from 420 to 430 had been reserved as a block to
centralize personnel, so he had to be some kind of a cop or fed. Or a liaison?
Pressing the 'down' button, she heard -- no, she 'felt' -- the man come to
stand quietly a few feet behind her. Very quietly, she added after a few
moments. Almost unnaturally quietly.
There was no rubbing of fabric or scuffing of his boots on the carpet. No
shifting of his backpack or even the soft creak of old boot leather as weight
shifted from one leg to the other. The guy was an embodiment of silence.
Mandi had to actually focus her hearing a bit to be sure he was breathing,
and she found it mildly unnerving that anyone could stand so silently for so
long.
Another few moments passed before she turned and grinningly said with a
raised eyebrow, "Just checking to see if you're really back there. You're very
quiet."
He nodded slightly and returned her grin. When she'd turned, his eyes hadn't
been on her butt or her legs, as she'd expected. They'd been on her hair or
shoulders, because they'd met her eyes instantly. Mandi found that odd, too.
The guy seemed to study her face as he said, "Yeah, I guess I am kind of
quiet sometimes. That's a nice outfit, milady. It doesn't scream 'look at me!',
but it can't very easily be ignored, either."
'Milady'? Who calls a woman 'milady' these days? Mandi accepted his
compliment as given and saw his eyes drop to her breasts. Correction; to her
badge, which hung from one of her tiny demi-lapels. Her eyes fell to his badge
in return.
"Mandi Steele," he read, extending his hand. "Hi, Mandi. I'm Ed Cade."
His eyes returned to hers as she shook his hand and said, "So I see. Nice to
meet you. Why's the name block on your badge light blue?"
"I'm registered as a guest author. Artists get a different color -- light
green, I think. Staff types get red or yellow."
She glanced at his badge again, then asked
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