Authors: Iain Hollingshead
âOh, ha! No. They're for my granny. It's her birthday.'
My confidence hits the basement about the same time as the lift.
âSee you, then,' she says.
I doubt it. I'm a cack-handed, flower-stealing arse of a Casanova. I put the flowers in the shredder. Which broke.
Lucy rang to request a meeting for tomorrow. âSomewhere cheap and cheerful.' A pity that she's so expensive and miserable.
âWhat am I?' I raged. âSome sort of awkward fixture that has to be keyed into your little Outlook diary? Private appointment, out of the office, highlighted in pink, set reminder fifteen minutes beforehand.'
âIt's green for private appointments,' she said calmly. âMagenta pink is for vital appointments that absolutely can't be moved. And you're not one of those.'
Cow. What kind of colour is magenta pink, anyway? Magenta pink cow.
Before Lucy rang, my mind had been on other things such as Excel spreadsheets, stolen trees and Leila. But her call made me
realise how much I'd been bottling up my thoughts again. I know I've written some horrible things about her, but my mind is all jumbled up. I'm scared by commitment, but I'm equally frightened at the prospect of losing her for ever. I don't want her myself, but I don't want anyone else going within five paces of her, either.
Maybe all relationships go through this âI hate everything about you' stage and then you come out the other side and get a mortgage and get married.
Then again, maybe I should develop a spine at some point.
My spine and I went along after lunch today with the intention of having a brief chat about our trial separation and proposing a lengthy adjournment before making a final decision.
I hadn't counted on her looking stunning. She'd stuck to the first rule of meeting up with your exes/trial exes: Make it look like you're coping very well without them.
Unfortunately, she really was coping very well without with me.
âJack, I kissed someone last night.'
I felt like my entire world had caved in. I wanted to be sick â preferably on her. How dare she? I was not happy first. No wonder she hadn't replied to my text requesting further information on the rules regarding pulling during our trial separation. She had been too busy getting on with it herself.
But I was determined to be big about it. Rule two of meeting exes/trial exes: Never let them realise that they can hurt you. After all, hadn't I almost given a bunch of stolen flowers to a colleague who didn't know my name in a lift? 15â15.
âWho?'
âI'd rather not say.'
âIs it someone I know?'
âYes.'
âThen, who the hell is it? Whose dirty little tonsils have you been playing hockey with?'
She paused, and then, with a flash of triumph in her eyes, dealt the deathblow: âRick's.'
I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. So I cried. Right there in an alfresco bar in Covent Garden, I, Jack Lancaster, wept my bloody eyes out for the first time since my hamster died when I was thirteen. But it was easier back then. At least Frisky had just died. He hadn't been playing tonsil hockey with my best mate.
For some reason, the whole twenty-first century man thing went down quite well with Lucy.
âOh, Jack,' she simpered. âI'm so sorry. It was a silly drunken thing. I didn't know it would cause so much emotion in you.'
Not so much so much emotion; more like, so
many
emotions. Part of me wanted to kill her. The other wanted to run my hand up her little skirt and take her there and then. In some weird way, that would solve everything. Cock my leg. Reclaim my territory.
Lucy, however, wasn't a lamppost and didn't want to be peed on. She wanted to talk. I didn't. If she wanted a conversation, there was only one way it was going to end.
âLucy Poett, this is not a mutual breakup; I am dumping you. Be mine no more. Go forth and multiply in dark corners in dank little clubs. Live long and weep. Never again will I go shopping with you on Oxford Street in mid-August. Never again will I stroke your hair while you puke up your four JD and Cokes. The Jack 'n' Lucy roadshow has come to an end. Kaput,
finito
, over and out. Sod off out of my life.'
It wasn't that fluent, of course. But it did the trick and made her cry, too.
30â30.
And with that I turned on my heel and sodded off out of Covent Garden, tears streaming down my face, heading towards Leicester Square for no particular reason, occasionally
pausing to practise my monologue of rage with a passing shop window. Like bollocks, she didn't know it would hurt me. She'd done it on purpose. Hit me at my weakest point.
And, as for Rick, what a ginger dickhead. No wonder he didn't want to come round and play FIFA on the Xbox with me and Flatmate Fred last night. He was too busy trying to get into my ex's box. I hate the little carroty bastard.
I ring him up to share my thoughts, but he has the good grace to put me straight on to answer machine. So I share my feelings with the mechanised Orange woman. âIf you want to re-record your message, press one at any time.' Why, thank you. So I re-record my message about ten times in an attempt to get the right combination of invective and bile.
It's a hollow victory. I go to bed a broken excuse for a man.
Pulled a sickie at work. Just couldn't cope with heading in today and facing an email barrage of emotional blackmail from Lucy. I've got a fairly croaky voice in any case in the morning, so I thought I'd find it pretty easy to hoodwink my line manager over the phone. What I hadn't counted on was the company's new policy of transferring all sickie-takers through to the corporate nurse.
âWhat exactly is wrong with you?' she asked.
âEr, I think my thyroid is swollen and my left ventricle is playing up again. I've been vomiting all weekend.'
Arse, I wasn't prepared for this.
âI'm sorry?'
âSo am I. My ulna and my nephrons are in absolute agony. I think I've got food poisoning.'
She wasn't convinced.
âLook, OK, I'm faking. But my heart was broken yesterday and I need some time off.'
âWe'll see about that.'
She could see about it by herself. I hung up, feeling genuinely ill by this point.
The best thing about pulling a sickie when you're sharing with Flatmate Fred is that you can count on him to be free during the day.
âAny important meetings today, Fred? Any conference calls with the Washington office? Any quarterly appraisals? No? Right, get out of your dressing gown, put on some clean clothes and we're going to the pub.'
And so we did. Looking like two well-heeled alcoholics (which, I guess, is exactly what we were), we went to our local at 11am and drank until closing time. Interesting landmarks along the way included:
11.30 | Lucy texts to ask why I'm not replying to her emails. |
12.14 | Lucy texts to ask why I'm not replying to her texts. |
14.52 | Rupert (bald) rings to ask how I'm feeling. âFucking fantashtic,' I reply, which in retrospect was probably a poor answer. |
15.30 | Flatmate Fred declares that he loves me. |
15.35 | After due consideration (this is no light matter), I declare that I love Flatmate Fred. |
16.47 | Buddy rings from work to tell me that I'm, like, in big fucking shit, man. |
18.01 | Lucy rings and leaves a message on my voicemail asking why I'm not answering my phone. |
19.23 | Lucy texts to ask why I'm not listening to my voicemail messages. |
19.24 | Flatmate Fred comes back from the loo with lucky-dip, curry-flavoured condoms. âI was hoping for glow-in-the-dark ones,' he mourns. âOnly way they'd find your cock,' I suggest. âThat's harsh, but I still love you.' |
22.35 | Rick rings to say that we really need to talk. No we don't. We really need to fight. Flatmate Fred wrestles |
22.44 | Pretty barmaid suggests that we've had enough and might want to leave. |
22.45 | I ask pretty barmaid whether she'd like to leave with us. |
23.30 | We leave. By ourselves. |
23.50 | Flatmate Fred and I carry the |
00.45 | Blissfully innocent and comatose sleep. |
This is agony. No one at work has mentioned anything about my little sickie misdemeanours on Monday. I feel like they're playing mind games with me. Am I meant to come forward and confess? I'd rather just have a bollocking and get on with things as normal.
Only Buddy can be relied on for continuing moral support.
âOh. Still here, are we, mate?' he asks every time he walks past my desk. Buddy calling me âmate' causes almost as much distress as seeing his emails with the words âcolor' and âthru' in them.
âYes, Buddy, old buddy, I'm still here. Milk, two sugars, there's a good boy. Make one for yourself while you're there.'
There was a generic email to the entire company awaiting us this morning asking everyone to be at their desks for a short announcement at 2pm. The rest of the morning rushed past in a flurry of nerves and excitement. Internal email speculation pinged backwards and forwards.
Buddy: âThis is it, Jacko, boy. They're announcing your promotion to everyone.'
At 2pm exactly, the plummy tones of the chief executive came over the Tannoy.
âI am delighted to announce that, due to market conditions, there will be an element of restructuring at Citicorp. This is part of our commitment to providing a 360-degree approach to client-oriented relationships in the twenty-first century. Our greatest asset is our people. The following assets, in alphabetical order, will no longer be required.'
I couldn't believe it. The wanker of a banker was planning on sacking half the workforce over a loudspeaker.
âAhmadi, Alexander, Atkinson, Babbington, Baker-Wilbraham'
Actually, I'd sack someone with a name like that
. âHolloway, Holston, Laird' I look up at my computer screen. The log-in is no longer working. Sod a dog backwards, I'm going to be next. But no, Laird is followed by Robson who is followed by Waterman. People with surnames in the early part of the alphabet must be worse at their jobs.
So I'm safe in the career that I hate more than life itself. The only consolation is that Leila Sidebottom is safe, too. Buddy Wilton-Steer had a rather long and nervous wait, but he also made the cut.
I rang my dad to tell him the bad news.
âDon't worry, Jack. You'll get out of there one day,' he laughed. âIn the meantime, your job still gives your mother something to boast about at dinner parties.'
Oh, good.
Rick finally rang, after waiting six days and playing me like a girl.
âDonthangupJackIvereallygottoexplain,' he says in his best radio advert voice.
âOK, you ginger scrot-face, but terms and conditions apply. This better be good.'
And so I go round to his flat in Angel.
âDid it happen here?' I ask plaintively, nervously examining his bed for signs of Lucy's existence.
âNo, you fool, if you'd just shuddup and listen, innit.'
For all the benefits of his outrageously expensive education, Rick remains incapable of constructing a full English sentence without a nod to street vernacular. Rick's dad QC talks like Prince Charles. Rick is Prince of Estuary. He maintains this is natural, whereas the rest of us argue that he picked it up to avoid getting beaten up at the university formerly known as the Anglia Polytechnic.
Eventually, Rick manages to explain that he didn't pull Lucy at all. She'd launched at him in a club on Saturday night and he'd jumped backwards to avoid her.
âSo why the hell did she tell me that she'd pulled you?'
âEasy, Jack. Get with it. She was just trying to make you jealous, izzit. Win you back for herself. Drive a wedge between you and your best mate.'
Oh God, I feel awful. I start crying for the second time in a week. What a loser.
âDid your lips touch?' I ask, between shuddering sobs.
But Rick doesn't hear, as my face is muffled into his shoulder and he's thumping me on the back in a manly, syncopated way. We're bestest mates again and all is right with the world.
Found out at work why they didn't sack me â apparently I'm too expensive. Now that I've been here for four years, they'd have to give me a hefty payoff, which I'd probably spend on an expensive car and a backpacking trip before picking up a better-paid job in a rival bank. It's reassuring to know that I'm such a valuable asset to the company â too crap to be promoted, too good to be sacked. My sly sickie last week seems to have been overlooked in the general excitement of firing everyone else.
As it is, ninety per cent of the âassets' whose services are no longer required are from the new graduate intake. Leila seems to have sneaked through the net, which is probably because she's only just arrived and the bosses would rather get in the sack with her than sack her. For the first time in my glittering career, I find myself applauding the result, if not the motive, of one of their decisions.