Thursday 29 July 2010

17 - Flogging A Dead Philip

Eek, I've broken my own rule of publishing something each and every day. I missed yesterday and should probably be hung, drawn and quartered, shot and sent to the Russian Front! Any, we now leave Arthur Bayly for a wee while and follow Mary Collins' story. Mary and Arthur will meet up soon ...

Life hadn't worked out as Mary had hoped, not at all. In fact, if she'd had a plan (which she didn't) this definitely wouldn't have been it.

In a strange way, her life had gone fast and slow at the same time. In her honest moments, she was able to admit that most days were interminably slow, like wading through a swamp. At the same time her life had seemed to flash by so fast for her to ever to have grabbed it by the lapels or even the bloody neck, and say, "Now, look here, Life, we're going this damned way. OK!"

Of course, there had been some bright spots (just enough to stop her giving it all up), some glimpses of hope that kept her believing that the elusive happiness state was just around the next wee glass of wine … glimpses of hope that usually died a sad old death that chocolate and red wine could not help her forget though, God forbid, she tried hard enough to forget that way!

She still had her dreams of long, languid, luscious Sunday mornings, rural views, sun filtering in, breakfast together, reading together, crosswords together, cuddling together, making love together … yet again. And long, languid, loud Sunday mornings with the same luscious chap and their two toddlers, all hugging, chatting and laughing in bed together, planning the day and wasting time the best way possible.

Somehow, that luscious chap had never materialised - well, not in any bed on any Sunday morning. There had been a few interested and quite-luscious chaps but, though there'd been dinners out, movies together and furtive snoggings in dark pub cubicles, none of them had gone the distance - any distance, really - and she now believed herself, at 37, to be too old for a first marriage and children and too young for someone else's second marriage. She just seemed to fall between the cracks in everyone's life … in her own life, too, it seemed.

She had left Dunfermline with such hope. This Scottish town, the birthplace of Andrew Carnegie, the wealthiest man of his time, had absorbed little of Carnegie's wealth and her parents had absorbed even less. Her father, a butcher who left the house at 4.30am every day … perhaps that's why she dreamed of long Sunday mornings as she'd had none … never owned the three-bedroom brick, terraced house his parents had rented. Determined not to follow her family's dogged wretchedness - her brother, Angus, also worked with his hands, as a welder - she had left with high hopes of emulating Mr Carnegie. Her slim five-foot three-inch frame, topped with long, luscious, black tresses, strode from the house that day, oozing confidence while her mind struggled, in vain, to hide her fear of the big, wild world out there.

She stayed with her Uncle Hughie, as arranged, in London. His Camden flat was no more than a bachelor pad and she soon found a job and a flat of her own. Hughie was fun to stay with but some story in her mind had it that she'd never make it if she was saddled down by others - success came to those who walked the high road alone. Perhaps, she sometimes ruminated, that was why she was still single … though where the making it was, she never knew.

She always loved the fuzziness of the mist over the heath, with the sun quietly filtering through but, somehow, she'd ended up in jobs with no fuzziness at all - all sharp edges, objective and serious stuff … and all very urgent. She discovered her mind was more astute than others' - she'd easily see what needed to be done, how to do it and who best to do it. Sometimes she'd get down and dirty, as Uncle Hughie would say, but she really couldn't see why she should when she could order three people to do three jobs and do triple the work she'd do alone.

It wasn't long before she was developing the hard edge of the business world she fell so effortlessly into. Her long locks were gone, replaced by a coiffure that needed little prissing and her blacks suits echoed those of the men she worked with.

Of course, her apartments had always been in the City, only minutes' walk from work. What a stupid waste of time, spending hours a day on some train, tube or other, when you could jolly well be at work doing something useful. Mary was always the first to work, the last to leave and the first one home. Stupid to do otherwise.

Her brusqueness enabled things to get done and, though her Scottish burr softened the long, cold English vowels she'd developed, she was more feared than loved, more admired than liked. Maybe, unconsciously, her quick tongue kept people at bay, avoiding connection, closeness, and disappointment. Maybe …

One psychic told her that she had put on so much weight to insulate herself from the harsh realities of the world. Another suggested it was an unconscious attempt to make her look less attractive and then avoid the abuse her mother had faced. Well, yes, there was a thinner woman in there, not screaming to get out but certainly enveloped, maybe hiding.

She did wonder why it was she often found herself back at Uncle Hughie's lively little flat, surrounded by his theatrical and New Agey friends - all bright colours, edges as soft as the mist, quick, inconsequential and harmless tongues and no urgency about anything. Nothing mattered and yet everything did, with great passion. So unlike the sterile, uncommitted and cynical types she worked with. Maybe she just needed balance. Maybe, deep down, this lively Scottish lass was really a romantic, an artist, in disguise. A creator not a commander. Who knows?

One of Uncle Hughie's more insightful friends had told her, sitting in his small garden on a Sunday afternoon amid a respectable collection of empty wine bottles, that she should grow her hair - that it was beautiful and it shone like the dew on heather. She had smiled, held herself in and later gone home to cry herself to sleep. As she'd lain there, she wondered, between sobs, if she'd lost something of herself or if there was another part she'd been afraid to lose.

-------------------

The next day she had shrugged off all those silly notions and questions and had girded herself in the warrior's black suit. She'd even donned a black tie to prove she was done with all that prissy, crying stuff.

She'd stormed into the office, rearranged the organisation chart and then, when everybody had arrived, she held a ten-minute meeting to tell everyone who was promoted, demoted and moved sideways. She knew that some of the rearrangements weren't entirely logical but decided that the whole place needed a damned good shake-up anyway - keep the buggers on their toes. That afternoon she had formed two new policies that she should have obtained approval from Commonwealth Insurance's Washington head office for, but she wasn't in the mood for all the paperwork, justifications and two months of procrastination, so she went ahead anyway. It was fortuitous that her boss was on extended leave and that his deputy, the chinless wonder of an Operations Director, had a terror of ferocious women and had conceded to Mary's bizarre ideas without a whimper of objection.

The first policy was that no claims, from any client for any reason, would be accepted on first application. Certain minor claims would also be rejected on second application. It saved a lot of paperwork and money and if clients had the gumption to make a claim after being rejected twice, they probably deserved the money and so it was investigated.

The second policy was actually a protection racket, marketed as a pretence of caring for clients. It was a simple matter of creating a new type of policy to cover people who had made claims and didn't want to lose their no-claims bonus - they paid the insurance company a new premium so they wouldn't increase their premiums! The new premium was 12% higher than the no-claims bonus would have been so the company made more money and got more clients who, weirdly, thought the insurance company was caring and protective of them. Of course, Mary had to clear the idea with the statisticians but none of them could fault her logic or maths.

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