âHey, Jill.' I was stood behind her swivel chair. Over her shoulder pad I could see she was tapping out a press release. The headline read: âDisabled Youth Get Chance Thanks To Workington Wads of Cash'. Hardly subtle. Just like Jill.
âJill,' I said, louder this time, âwhat's going down?'
The patter of the keyboard stopped and she turned to face me. I moved to her side. Jill was wearing a trouser-style suit stolen from Annie Lennox and had a mop of ashen blonde curls that were more Sideshow Bob than Shirley Temple.
âWhat do you want, Bill?'
âAh, you know. The skinny, the QT, the 411. What's going down?'
âOh, I don't know. You on the new girl?'
Jill was rarely off target with her gossip. Unfortunately, today her sight was not set on the bullseye.
âFuck off, Jill.'
âDrink making you tetchy is it, Bill?'
âNo.' Unlike most at Morgan & Schwarz, Jill could always tell when I'd had a sup.
âYou ought to watch it, you know,' she said, âbecause Miles is onto you'.
âBecause you write everything you think you know on the toilet door?'
âMaybe because Miles is a perceptive human being.' She'd totally fallen for the âMiles has a massive cock' yarn.
âWell thanks for the heads up, Jill.'
âAll part of the friendly service.' Perhaps Jill wasn't my best bet. I looked around the office. People worked on engagement strategies on Apple iMacs sat boastfully on sleek desks. Photo-shoot briefs were thought out to the beat of designer heels tip-tapping on the parquet floor. In the distance Miles' outline could be seen against the horizontal blinds of his glass box of an office. Even his silhouette was convincing. It was a toss-up between Carol and Pete. Both had their drawbacks. According to a selective group email Jill had sent earlier this morning, Carol was on her period and while this didn't make her aggressive, an emotion uncommon in her 5-foot frame, it did make her acutely emotional and if I had to chair any more counselling sessions with Morgan & Schwarz-esses today I was going to have a strong case for sticking a roll-neck sweater, a pipe and a chaise lounge on expenses. And if I was going to keep sneaking the odd bottle of 15-year-old scotch through on the âsundries' column of my claims spreadsheet, it would be best not to draw undue scrutiny.
Pete it was, then. I walked over to the side of the office where he spent his nine to five. Never earlier, never later. Pete was a stickler for routine. His desk looked like it'd been airlifted from a show room in Ikea. The papers were very neatly arranged. A stationery tidy housed his pens, stapler and rubber bands. Unseen ties kept cables hidden from his ergonomic keyboard. Dark wood framed a couple with a mock happy, blank expression. They looked like the kind of soulless people who existed only in the sample pictures supplied with off-the-shelf photo frames. They were Pete's parents. Pete was on the phone.
ââ¦but as I say, it really is a super project. Just superâ¦' Pete was selling in a story, âyou know, I've been around, oooh, let me see, five, ten, fifteen years now, and I've never heard of a corporate giving this much back. It really is super to see. The blind school are overjoyed.' Pete looked at me like I was a distraction. âRight you are then, I'll send the story your way. Good man. All the best.' He put the phone down and sucked his teeth.
âBill, how are you?'
âSurviving, Pete, surviving.' I picked up a rubber band from his desk tidy and started twanging it between my fingers. I knew this would grate on him.
âJolly good,' he said, if not meant. A sudden look of realisation came over his face. The glasses on the end of his nose twitched ever so slightly.
âIt's fitting you came over actually, Bill. There was something I wanted to ask you about,' he then lowered his voice, âbut it's a bit personal. Do you think we could perhaps go into the kitchen to chat?' I nodded.
âI'll follow you in,' he said.
I leaned against the mock marble worktop. Now just what could the sad fucker want?
âTea?' Pete offered. He knew how to push the right buttons.
âAlways,' I replied. Pete flicked the switch on the electric kettle.
âFresh water please, Peter.'
âOh gosh, sorry, Bill. I forgot for a moment there just how particular you are about your tea.' I was more pedantic than a man who ironed his socks.
âSo what can I do for you then?' I nudged. âWhat counsel can I offer? I'm becoming quite the shrink around here.'
âOh it's nothing like that, Bill.' Pete looked flustered. His cheeks reddened. âBut it is, umm, it is, personal, in a manner of speaking.' Pete didn't have a personal life. Pete creosoted fences to the musical version of
War of the Worlds
in his spare time.
âGo onâ¦' I said.
He handed me a small business card and looked sheepishly at the floor. The design was discreet. A small swirling typeface read:Â
Brief Encounters,Â
Modern Mating Services.Â
âPete, this sounds like a brothel. I didn't think you had it in you, you old dog.'
He looked at me with disgust.
âBill, how dare you. I would never be involved in such abhorrent activities and find it frankly insulting you would suggest otherwise.'
âJeez man, take a chill pill.'
âI won't be taking any pills either, thank you very much.'
âOkay, Pete. No sex or drugs. I got it. Are you going to shed any further light on this?'
âWell, if you're going to be sensibleâ¦'
âVery sensible.'
âGood.'
âGreat.'
âOkay then, it's a, umm, evening where you have the opportunity to meet like-minded peopleâ¦'
âA singles club?'
âNo, Bill.'
âA gay club?'
âNo, Bill.'
âWhat then?'
âIt's a speed dating evening,' he revealed. Now, I'd dated on speed before. I had a feeling Pete's night would be slightly more sedate.
âSpeed dating?'
âYes. Speed dating. It took me a while to get used to the idea, but you know, I'm cash rich, if I say so myself, but time poor. I'm not getting any younger, Bill. And neither are you.' I'd worked with Pete for longer than I care to remember and this was the first time he'd shown any suggestion of a sexual need. A Ken doll had more meat in his seat.
âWell, Peter, the Lord moves in mysterious ways. I certainly didn't think this is what you wanted to talk about. Actually, what was it exactly that you wanted to talk about?'
âWell, I was thinking that maybe we could go along to one of the evenings together. You could be my wingman.' And then he winked at me.
âChrist, Pete, it's not
Top Gun
.'
âI know, I know, but that's what lads do isn't it? Help each other out, back each other upâ¦'
âWhat the hell has gotten into you?' The kettle whistled. I gave Pete my best âthis-situation-calls-for-tea' look. I had this down to an almost involuntary raise of one brow line. Pete took the cue and set about the elaborate tea-making routine he knew it was wise to follow in moments such as these. He tried to explain himself as the leaves brewed.
âOh, I don't know what's got into me. A sense of urgency? Because, God knows, excuse the language, I need it. A bit of life? Because I'm not sure I've been living it. Isn't it meant to be for sharing?'
I was quite sure I was witnessing a mental breakdown first hand. No need to read about this âOffice worker realises life is vacuous and guns down colleagues one Tuesday morning' story. I was front and centre. And quite certain he'd turn the two barrels my way first. Oh well, what will be will be. There might be the chance to chase some tail in the meantime. Pete was looking at me with a sense of anticipation.
âPete, the tea.'
âYes, sorry, Bill.'
âYou know what? You're right. Life
is
for the living,' I said.
âExactly! What was it Robbie Williams said? No Regrets?'
âI have absolutely no idea, Pete.'
âBut you get my meaning. It's time to grab the bull by the hornsâ¦'
âSteady on, Pete.'
âSorry, I'm getting carried away. It's just been a while since I've done this kind of thing.'
âWhat kind of thing?'
âBeen in the dating game.' I dry heaved.
âSo we're on then?' he said.
âOkay, Pete, we're on. When is it?'
âWell, there's one on tonight.' He gave me an expectant-dog look.
âTonight?!'
âYou're not busy are you, Bill?'
âNo, Pete, I am not busy.' I could put off pleasuring myself with a bottle and the internet until another time. Who knows? I might even find someone else to do it for me.
âYou're buying all the drinks though.' I said.
âAll the drinks?'
âAll the drinks.'
âYou're on.' I finished my tea and headed back to my desk.
Pete shouted after me, âI'm looking forward to our brief encounter!'
Jill overheard.
âSaucy.'
I killed the afternoon by convincing an internet illiterate client to give us 30k for a social media campaign. When I was on it, I could sell ice to the Inuits like no-one bar Big Cock Miles. Digitally duping an old duffer was like flogging time-shares on the Costas to lower-middle-class social climbers: they knew everyone else was doing it and wanted a piece of the action to keep up appearances. The rub was they didn't have a fucking clue how the thing worked. Which was where we came in. A tour guide to Tron, giving our accountants hard-ons and us a carte blanche to piss about on the internet for hours while someone else footed the bill for broadband and Bellinis.
Today however I used the free time not to Facebook-stalk future ex-girlfriends but to gen up on the seemingly unsordid world of speed dating. Like a typical PR man, Pete didn't give me the whole story â we had to submit a thirty-word biog for the briefing sheets. As if I didn't have enough bullshit to write. As ever, Google was my most steadfast friend. A few searches later I came to realise that, like every secret society, this lot had their own language. A lexicon of love, it was cheesy as fuck. But I'd promised Pete. I'd promised him. This was my chance of only suffering a flesh wound in his demented corporate killing spree. I'd go along. I'd support. I'd try to enjoy. First off, I'd better learn the lingo. Didn't want to look like a dog in a cat fight. So here goes:
Jesus, this bullshit was nearly as bad as PR. This biog was getting binned off. My chance to sell myself replaced by the worst words any spin-doctor could commit to copy: âno comment'.
I checked my hair in the mirror, sprayed on cologne bought by an ex-girlfriend's mother four Christmases ago, brushed up my GSOH and hit the town.