fit check for my napalm era
THE SENATE
SENATOR LEX'S OFFICE
Verity decided, after making the gesture for
In one hand was a wooden box, roughly the size of a shoe box, within which was a small selection of customized stationery: letterheads with the Senator's name, public office address, and public coms information, note cards and matching envelopes, plus some otherwise plain notepads with the subtle monogram of his initial, all accompanied by a business card for the shop that Verity Stuyveris considered the very best stationer one could patronize on Theed.
It wasn't a bribe to Senator Lex, and it wasn't patronage to Giuseppe Trossi, whose business card it was. Verity just knew how difficult it could be to get good stationery on a foreign world and wanted to save new colleagues the trouble ifs he could.
"Senator Stuyveris for Senator Lex," the Senator for Druckenwell said pleasantly to the staff in the outer office. "I believe my assistant called ahead to see if he was free."