We could never be sure what was true and what wasn't those old OSS records had a way of disappearing. We'd heard she once provided dynamite to a man who blew up a resource train as it passed over a bridge somewhere in Burma. During the war, she ran black ops, striking blows at opposition morale by planting newspaper articles and dropping propaganda flyers from airplanes. Leftovers from the OSS, where they'd been legends during the war, they'd become relics relegated to the typing pool or the records department or some desk in some corner with nothing to do. Other women came to the Agency not to start their careers but to round them out. We thought of it as a beginning, not an end, despite what we'd been told all our lives. We wouldn't admit it aloud-not even to each other-but many of us believed it would be a first rung toward achieving what the men got right out of college: positions as officers our own offices with lamps that gave off a flattering light, plush rugs, wooden desks our own typists taking down our dictation. Most of us viewed the job in the typing pool as temporary. Almost.īut did we aspire to tension headaches and sore wrists and bad posture? Is it what we dreamed of in high school, when studying twice as hard as the boys? Was clerical work what we had in mind when opening the fat manila envelopes containing our college acceptance letters? Or where we thought we'd be headed as we sat in those white wooden chairs on the fifty-yard line, capped and gowned, receiving the rolled parchments that promised we were qualified to do so much more? And when you think about it like that, about the mechanics of it all, it's almost poetic. But what we will say is that as we typed, our fingers became extensions of our brains, with no delay between the words coming out of their mouths-words they told us not to remember-and our keys slapping ink onto paper. It's been said that the typewriter was built for women-that to truly make the keys sing requires the feminine touch, that our narrow fingers are suited for the device, that while men lay claim to cars and bombs and rockets, the typewriter is a machine of our own. But all we were asked when interviewed was "Can you type?" Some of us could handle a Colt 1873 better than John Wayne. We were the first daughters of our families to earn degrees. We came to the Agency by way of Radcliffe, Vassar, Smith. They would call us girls, but we were not. We had our secret names for them, too: Grabber, Coffee Breath, Teeth. Sometimes they'd refer to us not by name but by hair color or body type: Blondie, Red, Tits. Sometimes they'd forget we were there and we'd learn much more: who was trying to box out whom, who was making a power play, who was having an affair, who was in and who was out. We were their audience of one for their memos, reports, write-ups, lunch orders. We'd sit in small chairs pushed into the corners while they'd sit behind their large mahogany desks or pace the carpet while speaking to the ceiling. One by one, they'd pull us into their offices. We'd pause only to answer the phone or to take a drag of a cigarette some of us managed to master both without missing a beat. Our identical desks were each equipped with a mint-shelled Royal Quiet Deluxe typewriter, a black Western Electric rotary phone, and a stack of yellow steno pads. We typed a hundred words per minute and never missed a syllable.
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