Tag Archives: books

Phases: Waxing Crescent

Penny: You were fine. Really. Sounded extra confident. Like a boss.

Sam: I don’t think Tom bought it.

Penny: Tom? Are you kidding, Barbs? Tom LOVES you. Like actually loves you.

Sam: He does not, you maniac.

Penny: His aura changes when you speak. Vibrates.

Sam: His aura vibrates?

Penny: Trust me. I am attuned.

Sam: He is too old. Must be nearly 50.

Penny: There is nobody your age in this workshop. What did we say about being choosy?

Sam: “We” didn’t say anything. I said I wasn’t interested right now and, very specifically, that I wasn’t interested in anybody in this office.

Penny: Yes but we said you shouldn’t be choosy. Even with TDH. And now is the perfect time. The imminent waxing crescent. New beginnings. Possibilities.

Sam: Are you high right now, Pen? Please tell me you are either stoned or drunk or gave up your caffeine sabbatical and are struggling to deal with a double shot macchiato.

Penny: Clean and serene, Barbs. Clean and serene. The moon is my only mistress. Okay. Maybe the moon and Matthew McConaughey.

Sam: Alright, alright, alright. How is he your mistress?

Penny: Don’t be so gender normative. Me and Matthew would be mixing it all up.

Sam: Enough now. Do you know what’s going on?

Penny: Still reviewing the risk register. Ten more minutes and then I will buy you that coffee.

Sam toggled alt and tab on her keyboard, watched her Teams chat with Penny be replaced with a copy of the Powerpoint they were supposed to be following in the meeting. She glanced up at the larger TV screen in the meeting room where one of Tom’s auditors, she hadn’t clocked his name, had plugged his laptop in and was walking them through the content. She realised she was about three slides behind. Nobody seemed to have noticed, lost in a conversation about whether to extend the scope of the audit to include expenses. As she picked up the thread it largely served to remind her why she had zoned out and looked for the distraction with Penny.

The core group running the meeting were Tom, Head of Financial Controls, Richard, some guy from another part of Finance, and Henry, their external auditor from Deloitte. Early on in the process Penny had repeatedly tried to call Henry, Harry, just so that she could refer to them collectively as Tom, Dick, and Harry, but he had politely – and in the end firmly – insisted that his name was never intended to be anything other than Henry. It hadn’t stopped her consistently referring to them as TDH on every Teams exchange with Sam since. Exchanges like “WTF TDH” and “IDK TDH” had become far more common than “LOL TDH” or “FTW TDH” as the project had steadily unearthed more and more process anomalies that seemed to vex the auditors. Status ratings moved like traffic lights stuck permanently in reverse: green to amber to red.

“I’m still not comfortable that we close out the earlier points about salary sacrifice controls,” said Richard. “I don’t think flagging it as a requiring a minor mitigation is sufficient.”

“We covered this…” started Penny.

“It’s not your area,” said Richard. “Sam? I’m surprised you were so willing to shut this down.”

Sam felt her heart rate quicken. Unseen she curled her toes within her shoes, as if she could hook them into the ground beneath her seat. One of her fingers began to lightly tap on the surface of her laptop, just next to the trackpad. She watched it, tried to count each fourth tap, tried to focus on her breathing but all it served to do was make her more aware of the syncopation between the tapping, her heartbeat, and her now less steady inhalation and exhalation.

“We’ve logged it to follow up,” she said, forcing herself to look directly at him, maintaining eye contact until he looked back down at his screen. “Let’s keep moving, please, or we won’t cover everyone else’s items.”

“I just think…,”

“It’s done,” she snapped. Silence fell in the room. Sam could see Penny rapidly tapping out something on her keyboard and in her peripheral vision she registered a new notification in her Teams. She held Richard’s surprised gaze. More quietly now: “It’s done.”

“Let’s take that break,” said Tom. “Twenty minutes, grab a coffee, and then we can work through the rest of the agenda.”

Richard looked like he was about to interject again but Tom looked across at him and gave the slightest shake of his head, barely perceptible to anyone else. Penny clocked it. She had been holding an exaggerated focus on the others to disguise that her fingers were still flying over her keys, sending a series of concerned, supportive messages to Sam. (Penny: Hang in there Barbs. He’s literally a dick called Dick. Tom just shut him down, I told you he liked you.) Their recipient remained very still save for her persistently tapping finger which only ceased once the three men had left the room.

Sam excused herself as Penny began talking – exclamations broadly in keeping with her Teams message but with even less censorship – and left the room, headed back down a floor away from the Finance neighbourhood (when the offices had been refurbed Facilities had insisted on calling the various open plan zones where functions sat, neighbourhoods – Penny had spent the first week coming in wearing sunglasses and insisting that the entire second floor was her ‘hood). She found a vacant toilet, locked the door behind herself and engaged the hand dryer. She had expected to burst into tears and she was using the noise from the dryer purely as cover but something in its dissonant din seemed to calm her and so she stood, turning her hands over and over beneath the jet of air. She considered whether to run through her exercises to steady herself further but the prospect of naming five things she could see, five things she could hear, and five things she could smell, was too depressing. She could see herself in the mirror, a sink in front of her, a toilet behind her, a discarded sanitary towel wrapper that had fallen out of the bin, and a checklist on the door showing the two hourly intervals at which the room had been cleaned which confirmed it had been done twenty minutes ago. The sound of the dryer, as she intended, blotted everything else out and she refused to remove the focus of her nostrils from the lavender hand wash in a dispenser by the taps; it was slightly undercut by a too sharp, citrus disinfectant. Her breathing slowed.

Penny was waiting for her in the coffee shop, they still had ten minutes before the meeting was due to resume. She had bought her a drink – “you’re not back on oat, are you, because if you are then, sorry, but I just fucked up” – and was waiting with it in a corner. She put her phone down and smiled as Sam walked over, explained about the drink. Sam shook her head and sat down.

“I could set the fire alarm off?” said Penny. Sam looked up at her. “To crash the meeting. I reckon it’d waste another half an hour easy and then we just claim we’ve got something else that clashes.”

“It’s fine,” said Sam. “Really, it’s fine. I don’t know why it’s all getting so…”

“Tense?”

“I was going to go with panicky or anxious or worrying but tense is okay.” She sipped her coffee. “As long as I can spend a solid twenty to thirty minutes every day hiding in a toilet and recomposing myself then everything will be fine.”

“It’s just an audit,” said Penny. “I don’t understand why you’re taking it so personally. A bunch of grey men with grey lives checking up on the cool kids.”

“I run a tech stack that includes payroll, expenses, the order management system for this building’s canteen, and the software that runs office security. You work in HR. In payroll. If they’re checking up on the cool kids then they’re checking in the wrong place.”

“I still think office security sounds quite cool. You can see all the CCTV footage, right?”

“One last time, Pen. Yes, I can but, no, I don’t. And very definitely, no, you can’t.” Penny started to open her mouth. “Not even to watch yourself walking around the office to see who looks up from their desk as you go by.”

“Such an obvious use case,” sighed Penny. “You should absolutely do that for yourself. I suspect you’d be shocked at the attention you get.”

“Attention is not what I’m after right now. Not from anybody in this office. Not Tom before you start up with that again. I want to be invisible to everyone, maybe even to myself.”

“It’s still the new moon, Barbs, which is lucky for you as that’s when it’s invisible but it won’t stay like that for long.”

“Waxing crescent. You told me, several times. More like waxing lyrical. A sliver of it comes back into view. I understand the clunky analogy, Pen. Unlike you, though, I don’t believe my fate is tied up by the natural progression of celestial objects through space. Shit happens, or happened, and I need to deal with them. Some sleep, some control back over my own brain, and it’ll all be fine.”

“You’re being too rational about it all,” said Penny. “It’s a lot, what happened. Ben leaving. The tax stuff. That new arsehole starting above you.”

“The week that FOMS started duplicating orders and they got six hundred chicken breasts, two hundred tomatoes, and so much lettuce they gave everyone one to take home and still couldn’t fit it all in the fridges,” added Sam.

“Chicken salad week? Everyone loved that week. Or I did anyway, lost half a kilo. All I’m saying is that you’ve got a lot going on and maybe need to give yourself a break, not try to fix it all up here.” Penny tapped the side of her head to illustrate. “Give in to something you don’t understand. Even one of those celestial objects you’re so quick to dismiss.”

“Nine more days and it’s done, I just need to keep it together until then.”

“I’m going to the States then,” said Penny. “When it’s all done. I’m doing that California trip. Come with.”

Sam raised an eyebrow. “The one where you’re going moon gazing with a bunch of hippies and men in cargo shorts with telescopes and their own fold away canvas chairs?”

“It does involve some time in Yosemite and the desert looking up at the ineffable reaches of space, yes.”

“Is that what the brochure says?”

“I need more time to sell it to you,” said Penny. “Me, you, hire car, the great highways of North America. Nature. Probably some ill advised cut off denim shorts. Come on, it’ll be great.”

“It sounds like Thelma and Louise…”

“Yeah. I’ll even let you have Brad Pitt when we meet him.”

“You know how that movie ends?”

“We write our own ending, Barbs. I promise you I won’t pitch us off the Grand Canyon. Even if they sack us for fucking up everyone’s expenses last year and that minor salmonella outbreak from chicken that had gone past its sell by date.”

“That was not my fault!” laughed Sam. “The system ordered it, sure, but the kitchen should’ve dealt with it after that.”

“Think about it,” said Penny.

“Later. I will. Come on, we’ve got to get back to TDH. They’ll think I’m stalling on ‘appropriate mitigations’ again.”

Penny looked at her. “We could do that. Or…” She reached her hand up behind her shoulder, ran her hand across the front of the fire alarm panel. “How much force do you need to break the glass in these anyway?”

Sam started to stand, reaching for Penny’s arm. She knocked her coffee over and jumped back from the pooling brown liquid spreading across the table, watched it begin to spill over the side and run like a waterfall to the floor. Penny put a finger to her lips, closed her eyes, and pressed hard against the glass. As the alarm began to echo around the building Penny stood, took Sam by the arm, and steadily walked them both towards the exit.

“Tell me you can delete the CCTV?”

10 favourite books

There’s a meme doing the rounds on Facebook at the moment to list out your 10 favourite books. At risk of turning this into Buzzfeed I thought I’d note my choices here, mainly in the spirit of trying to reflect on what, if anything, I could glean about my own writing from my selection of reading. Other than oh-my-god-I-could-never-write-as-well-as-that, of course…

Subject to change on a whim, with a break in the weather, or depending on what I’ve just had for breakfast here are the 10:

One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest – Ken Kesey. This is my all time favourite and the book that fired my entire interest in 60s counter culture in the States. From here I went back to Kerouac and forwards to Tom Wolfe and Hunter S. Thompson. Sadly I never drove across America in a brightly painted bus with flowers in my hair but perhaps there is still time. If you know the film then you’ll know that it is a brilliant thing but the book is far richer and more nuanced. It works as a straightforward story but also allegorically to describe the entire movement Kesey was associated with: a freeing of the mind from tradition and authority. It’s very funny, deeply sad, and, by the end, redemptive and hopeful.

The Lord Of The Rings – JRR Tolkien. Yes it’s somewhat predictable. And yes I have read many fantasy genre books since that I consider “better”. However, this is the one that opened an 11/12 year old me up to an entire genre that has given me significant pleasure and escape over the past 30 years. If there’s a fantasy closet then I’m coming out of it. Two books in and another that’s possibly now more famous for the film version which may say something about either my taste or the steady decline of Western Civilisation. Or both. Either way the films nail the scale and scope but the key to why I love this, which the books inevitably had long before Peter Jackson could speak, let alone speak Elvish, is imagination. All of that stuff. Out of one person’s head. Imagination was Tolkien’s great gift to me.

Unreliable Memoirs – Clive James. I’m not sure if the rules for this list specified works of fiction. I’m not particularly sure that Clive James took much notice of the fiction / non fiction distinction in his collection of memoirs anyway so it probably evens out. This is here simply because the man writes so beautifully; few craft a phrase as eloquently as James and few could guide you through their formative years with such humour, candour, and grace. His command of voice leaves me mildly awestruck – each page is perfectly and consistently him. This is the book that made me look at fifteen odd years’ worth of diary entries and want to chuck them all in the bin.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy – Douglas Adams. Eminently quotable, much cleverer than it’s given credit for, and extremely funny. I think, reflecting on it, that what I really like about Hitchhikers is the sheer number of ideas in it. Whilst it’s difficult to know how much ended up on the cutting room floor I like to imagine that Adams chucked everything in that was running through his head, inventing ever more complex problems for his narrative to solve. The slight cheat, of course, was that he was writing both SF and comedy so when things got too tough he could always fall back (with a knowing wink) on deus ex machina.

Generation X – Douglas Coupland. I’m instinctively wary of something that had the whole “defines a generation” tag foisted on it but this book caught me at exactly the right time. Reading it in my mid 20s it felt authentic to me at a time when I was wondering what else was. I haven’t read it since and suspect that it may not speak as loudly now as it did then albeit it’s interesting that the central premise of the book – that three disempowered friends tell each other stories as a means of expression – is one that I seem to have unconsciously processed and am vaguely channeling in this year’s writing project.

The Lions Of Al-Rassan – Guy Gavriel Kay. There are a number of fantasy books (other than LOTR) that I could have picked but Kay has steadily worked his way to the top of my pile in recent years. His early work was very Tolkien-esque (relatively unsurprising given that he worked on editing some of Tolkien’s unpublished writing) but he has subsequently mined a richer seam that weaves fantasy with historical fiction. Al-Rassan is set in a parallel mediaeval Spain and chronicles a regional power struggle between various political and religious factions. The central characters are brilliant, it’s tightly plotted, lyrically written, and a fabulous exercise in world building (or, I guess, world borrowing).

The Unbearable Lightness of Being – Milan Kundera. Another book I read in my mid to late 20s and which, I think, stuck with me precisely because it was so overtly philosophical. It was probably the first time I’d encountered a style that very consciously called out the themes that the book was seeking to explore in its narrative, often directly framed to the reader almost as non fiction. I like that authorial voice speaking from the page alongside the narrative voices and I like that this is a book that is unashamedly about the big stuff: existence, love, being, life.

Stoner – John Williams. The newest book on my list in terms of when it was read. This popped up last year to a fair degree of fanfare as a “lost classic” and I picked it up whilst taking a 6 month sabbatical from work. In that sense it’s probably another case of right book at the right time given that it deals almost exclusively in reflecting on the course of a relatively ordinary life and its significance. It’s quite slow, nothing much happens, but it’s breathtakingly beautiful and heartbreakingly sad.

The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald. I read it for English Literature A level. I didn’t get it. See also Pride And Prejudice. I had one teacher, a man, who taught me Arthur Miller, dystopian visions of the future, and Shakespeare. I got all that. I had another, a woman, who taught me Gatsby, Austen, and the Romantic poets. For a long time I didn’t get it all. She persevered with my immaturity and wall of rationality until, between us, we knocked it down (or, at least, took a couple of bricks out). Gatsby is magical, poetic, heady, dizzying, and, in a common theme for me, also, at its core, very sad. I love it now, just as I also learned to love Austen, and Keats, and anyone else that understood how to make your heart beat a little faster through words.

Fantastic Mr Fox – Roald Dahl. This is the one I read and read and read as a child. Reading Dahl again now, to my daughter, is a great pleasure but this was the one that I loved as a kid and probably most obviously started me off into all of the other books listed above. I also loved those Enid Blyton books about all girls’ boarding schools as a kid: not really sure what that was all about and perhaps best we let that one lie…

Tomorrow I will remember with a groan something really obvious that I’ve missed out. Let me know in the comments what your favourites are and what I’m missing out on.