Working Wonders

Working Wonders Read Free Page A

Book: Working Wonders Read Free
Author: Jenny Colgan
Ads: Link
10.10 a.m …
    Ah hah, he thought. Not even doing it in half-hour cycles. They must already know who they wanted in or out.
    … for your psychometric testing .
    Oh crap. The last time Arthur had done any psychometric testing, it had recommended he join the army. Although, on balance, how could that possibly be any worse than what he was doing now? Well, he could be shot to death, he supposed.
    I would like to remind all staff that this is simply a cost-benefit-efficiency exercise devised to see how we can get the best out of all public service environments – a goal with which we’re all in agreement!
    Yes, thought Arthur. I would gladly let my family starve and my house get repossessed if it benefited public service environments.
    So, don’t worry and you never know – you might even enjoy taking the test!
    Yours, Ross .
    Cathy leaned over from the next booth, twisting her brooch nervously.
    ‘I get three twenty-five,’ she said. ‘You know, I’m not sure if I will enjoy taking the test.’
    Arthur wanted to be reassuring, but couldn’t think of a way. ‘I’m not so sure, either. Otherwise they’d call it a “party”. Although not one of our Christmas parties. Which are also misleadingly titled.’
    Cathy’s face fell even further. ‘I organize those.’
    ‘Of course you do! Just being …’ he groped for a word. ‘Um, “wacky”.’
    Cathy, not normally a good judge of wacky behaviour (eg: having more than two piercings would count as wacky, as did being gay; filling your house full of china dolls bought on a monthly payment plan however would have crossed her radar as perfectly normal), narrowed her eyes at this travesty of the Trade Descriptions Act.
    ‘It’ll be a piece of piss,’ said Sven, standing up for his twice-hourly trip to the vending machine. He normally timed them for whenever his phone was ringing, which drove everybody crazy. ‘Just tell them you’re not doing it!’
    ‘Yes, well, the only way someone could get away with that,’ said Arthur, realizing he was sounding peevish and exactly like his father, ‘would be to do a job so incomprehensible that no-one understands it, so they can’t fire you. Or your dog.’
    Sven nodded with satisfaction, taking the compliment. His phone started to ring. He ignored it and walked away.
    ‘Yeah. I’m so happy I’m not some generic paper pusher – ooh, sorry,’ was his parting shot.
    ‘I am NOT …’ Arthur took a deep breath, conscious that Sven was always trying to rile him and that it always worked. Also, that whoever the evil consultants might be, they would probably choose a good moment to walk past while he was getting involved in a yelling match. And also, that it was true.
    He sighed and turned back to his computer. Sven came back slopping coffee, and took an enormous bite out of his second roll, spluttering crumbs all over Arthur’s in-tray. Management had discouraged the habit of going out to lunch by situating the offices seventeen miles from the nearest conurbation, so the entire room had a patina of other people’s pot noodles and Marmite.
    Arthur sat in purgatory for the next forty minutes, unable to concentrate. How had he got here, struggling to hold on to a shitty job he didn’t want, on a wet Tuesday in Coventry? School had been alright, hadn’t it? College – fine, fun. Geography, the world’s easiest option in the days when universities had still been fairly exclusive organizations that didn’t include degrees in Star Trek and Cutlery. And, ‘There’ll always be a need for town planners,’ his dad had said, pointing out with unarguable logic that people did, indeed, continue to be born. And now he was thirty-two and wanted to kill someone for accidentally spilling small pieces of bread into a black plastic container that didn’t belong to him, filled with crappy bits of paper he didn’t give a flying rat’s fart about. Hmm.
    At four minutes past ten, he got up as casually as he dared without pondering

Similar Books

DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS

Mallory Kane

Starting from Scratch

Marie Ferrarella

Red Sky in the Morning

Margaret Dickinson

Loaded Dice

James Swain

The Mahabharata

R. K. Narayan

Mistakenly Mated

Sonnet O'Dell