I'd made a small scene at the Circular Journey Cafe that morning. Nothing that would require legal counsel, you understand, but enough that Amy was still replaying the highlight reel with editorial commentary when I arrived home.
You interrupted the conversations of everyone in the cafe, she said. The couple at the table by the door has filed a noise complaint.
"You may be aware, Amy, that in the spy trade, when an operative is suddenly cut off from reliable intelligence and left to improvise, it's called being burned. That's how I felt when Island Irv didn't show up, burned. It wasn't pleasant. I felt the need to stir up some activity among the patrons."
She didn't respond, which was just as well, because I was home and in the presence of Ms. Wonder.
"Wonder!" I said. "It's so good to see you."
She gave me that look of hers that says, You saw me about an hour ago.
"I know that we had breakfast together; it's just that I seldom see you at this hour of the morning."
This time her response was to engage in one of those eye-rolling frenzies that I've mentioned so many times before. I considered nicking her for diverting from an appropriate response, but decided to let it go. There were more important concerns.
"Wonder," I said, "my friends seem to agree that I talk too much and it's disturbing. Disturbing because I'm sure I've heard from reliable sources that the key to winning friends and influencing people is listening to them. It seems I may be losing friends and annoying people."
"And influencing people is what makes you happy?" she said.
"Why do you think I talk so much if not to influence people?"
"Splain, s'il vous plait," she said, because she's cosmopolitan like that.
"Simple," I said. "When I see a situation that demands strong action, I exhort others to take that action and rectify the situation. That requires a lot of speech. Actually, a lot of buzzing."
"Like a hyper-caffeinated bumblebee?"
"Wonder!" I said, for the second time that morning.
"Oh, all right," she said. "Just a little joke. Don't get your knickers in a wad."
"I do so enjoy it when you quote me," I said, more than a little pleased with myself that she remembered one of my signature phrases. Not mine, of course — it was the phrase of the day, suggested by the P.G. Wodehouse Society.
"Why is it important that someone else take action?" she said. "Why not you?"
I almost scoffed. She knows full well that taking action is dangerous for me and for innocent bystanders, if there are any. But I bottled the scoff just in time. After all, she was only trying to be helpful.
"You know why," I said, "but it's nice of you to pretend that you think I'm normal."
"Typical," she said, and once again I wondered what on earth she was talking about. I took a breath and steeled myself to speak of Princess Amy for the first time that day.
"You're aware that my limbic system gives me a little shove toward the fray with a sic 'em, boy — and the next thing I know, I'm standing in front of a judge who fines me fifty dollars and orders me to make restitution for damages."
"You do remind me of a tank rolling through a minefield," she said.
"Wonder! You're supposed to be on my side." I adopted a philosophical tone, hoping it might soften the terrain. "Besides — rank is but a penny stamp, and a man's a man for all that."
"Wow," she said, with a look that didn't exactly reflect her words. "I'm impressed."
"Not one of mine," I admitted. "Just something I heard somewhere and liked so much that I throw it into the conversation now and then. Probably Shakespeare."
"Burns," she said.
Now here's the thing. Given that we had just been discussing my tendency to talk too much and get things wrong, you might expect me to have taken the correction gracefully. What I said instead was:
"Do you think so? My apologies then, Poopsie — I really didn't mean to be abrasive."
"Robert Burns," she said. "The poet."
"Oh, good lord. Poetry! Thank you for pointing it out. And it's still morning, too."
She smiled in that particular way of hers — the one that is equal parts fond and long-suffering — and said, "I apologize if my words seemed harsh before."
"No apology needed, Wonder," I said. "You know it's the Genome way — when offered a piece of grit, his oyster constitution goes to work and builds it into a pearl richer than all his tribe."
"Well put," she said.
I was pleased — exceedingly pleased, this time. She had complimented me, and that is the one thing I want more than any other. More than winning friends. More than influencing people. More, even, than getting the last word at the Circular Journey Cafe.
I only want to please Ms. Wonder.
I searched the databanks for something to say in reply — something worthy of the moment, something that would let her know how much her words meant.
"Fierce Qigong!" I said.
She looked at me for a long moment.
"You talked too much at the café again, didn't you," she said. It wasn't a question.
"Extensively," I admitted.





