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Roots & Ripov/1
by Albert Russo

Watching his contemporaries go about their daily business so efficiently while he remained in a state of perpetual doubt, Ripov thought maybe something had happened during his childhood which he wasn't aware of ... Until he realized he'd been plagued with a malady as refractory as herpes: rootlessness.

A new craze was sweeping through society and people around him were digging into their pasts like greedy treasure hunters. Among the tenants of his own apartment building was Mr. O, an engineer of Italian extraction, who traced his ancestry to none other than Leonardo da Vinci - his mother's side of the family - deeming it unnecessary to go farther back. Then there was Miss T, a pretty history teacher who had taken a sabbatical to write a thesis on what she termed her 'personal journey into culture.' After crusading through the Renaissance and the Middle Ages, trekking to the Holy Land, she landed in Ancient Egypt amid the all but enviable guild of fly-catchers appointed to the service of Pharaoh. There was also Madame V, the concierge with three upper teeth missing, whose discovery gave her the shock of her life: one of her forebears, Marie-Antoinette's night-commode attendant, had been instrumental in the Queen's beheading. Madame V immediately wrote to the French Government to claim a fair readjustment of her social status and to demand that she at least be elevated to the rank of chambermaid to Madame la Présidente de la République, inasmuch as her great-great-great-great aunt, Madesoille VD, had so magnificently contributed to the success the French Revolution.

Madame V received a reply from the Office of the Presidency, politely declining her kind offer. She refused to give up and, totally neglecting her duties as a concierge, she made it her business to write to every department in the Administration.

Before such fervor, such determination, Ripov could only express his admiration.