Week 1
The last Wednesday of each month, we have an informal lunch gathering. We're all HR people and all roughly the same age and career stage, although some have moved up faster than others. We call ourselves the Humane Society. Someone, at some point, must have thought that was funny. Charlotte started the thing with a couple of other girls five or six years ago. Now there's a couple of dozen of us, although only half that number to make it to any given meeting.
Charlotte, I should explain, is my husband's boss's boss. I can't say that I like her. He (my husband, Robert), his boss (Anna) and Charlotte all started in HR at the same firm--a big accountancy--at the same time, but while Anna has done well and Charlotte has done very well, Robert hasn't, and I do partly blame Charlotte for that. She's a slippery one, no doubt about it. 'How
is
dear Robert?' she always asks, knowing perfectly well how dear Robert is. Dear Robert is mired in middle management, where she marooned him. He sits all day in a cubicle which she can see from her office, if she feels the urge. Which she clearly doesn't.
Anyway, on Wednesday the lunch-table chatter was all rather gloomy. One of the other big accountants had just let go a quarter of their HR personnel, and there was definite a chill in the air. The banks had finally brought inflation under control, but recession--the Second Great Recession, journalists are calling it--was on everyone's mind. The talk was all of industry-wide downsizing, outsourcing and adapting to AI. Every crisis has its buzzword, and ours is apparently 'consolidation'. So far it's all just rumours, but rumour has it that we're consolidating into a smaller, more tech-savvy and above all different kind of industry. And 'different' is a buzzword too: the one bright light, Charlotte assured us, is the options for LGBTQ+ hiring (a lively argument ensued over what counts as 'plus'). The word from above, she said, is 'Hire queer'. The whole industry is transitioning; the era of the midlevel, mediocre white male is over.
Hmm... who comes to mind as a midlevel, mediocre white male? A bit harsh, I suppose, because Robert's actually very good at some parts of his job, but apparently not good enough and not at enough parts to keep his place as the algorithms keep improving and bright young gender-fluid things come strolling along. This is worrying;
extremely
worrying. There's no good time for one's spouse to lose a job, but now would be particularly bad, as we confront the coming economic blizzard armed with a whopping new mortgage, depleted savings and alarming credit-card balances. And that's even before I bring up my anxieties about when we'll be able to afford to start a family. Robert just can't be consolidated.
I slept rather badly on Wednesday night, and was crabby with Robert all day Thursday. Apparently thinking it'd cheer me up, he tried to initiate sex, and I said some rather unkind things in declining his offer. I felt bad afterwards, but as we both lay in bed pretending to be asleep, a possible way to kill several birds with one stone dawned on me. I'd like to think that I would eventually have thought of it by myself, but it actually popped into my head as I was fuming about what Charlotte had said: hire queer. The whole industry is transitioning. So--why shouldn't Robert?
I should explain something else. Not many husbands will put on a frock or take hormones, let alone go under the knife, just to keep a job they hate, no matter how dire the economic forecast. But in a world that's rapidly becoming different, Robert has the advantage of already being a bit different. He has foibles, as I like to call them. He'd told me about these when we first started dating: how, in certain moods, he likes to get a bit girly. A little lace, a pair of stockings, maybe a dash of mascara. Now, I let him know in no uncertain terms that I had no interest in dating a pansy, and that unless he shoved his sissy alter ego right back into the closet, he'd need to find a less particular girl and raid her closet instead of mine. Not very woke, I realise, but I know what I want, and a fairy isn't it. Even on top form, to be honest, Robert isn't exactly a manly man, and in retrospect I never would have dated him at all if I hadn't been bouncing back from a very bad breakup with a more conventional muscle-bound bully. I did like Robert's gentleness and biddability, but not if it shaded over into transvestitism. I wanted a man, just one who would do what he was told. Is that so much to ask?
To his credit, Robert pulled himself together pdq, and since then we've heard nothing more about knickers. He even studiously avoids passing judgement on mine, although he's clearly fascinated by them. I've always indulged him in that area, at first because I foolishly thought that seeing me in my ribbons and bows would take his mind off putting on his own. Rather optimistic, I know. But still, I'm not a complete idiot, and I worked out early on that he keeps a secret stash of frillies, slipping into them to have himself a good old wankfest whenever he thinks he can. I even know where he keeps them. But marriage is built on love and compromise, so I turn a blind eye. And it has its compensations: Robert is the only husband in our set who knows enough about his wife's clothes to be trusted to do the laundry and ironing, and, since his idea of femininity seems to revolve around service and submission, he does both (and more) on a regular basis. We just don't talk about it.
But that Thursday night I decided it was high time that we did. I also decided that I was going to keep a diary of how things developed, since this looked likely to be one of those turning points. And when, this weekend, I decided to scour the internet for information on what we might end up doing, I discovered--lo and behold--an entire genre of absurdist fiction in which wives transform their husbands into simpering sissies. Socialist realism it's not, and few of the stories I encountered seemed to have even the loosest link to reality. They made me wonder, though, whether I might take my diary, turn it into continuous prose, with verbs, adjectives and all that other fancy stuff, and then publish it and sell it to perverts like you to read--if 'read' isn't too generous a word for what I imagine you're up to. I suspect that my readership is going to be limited, because this is likely to be a sex story without much sex in it. Also, given what a lengthy business transitioning seems to be, it's necessarily going to move along at a slow pace. But never mind. Hopefully you're here for the deep psychological insights, etc. Just keep your hands where we can see them.
Anyway, I decided that Saturday would be the day for Robert and I to have The Talk. He could make us a nice dinner, then after he'd cleared up he could bring me another glass of wine and I would tell him my idea. So that's what happened.
Robert sat up as stiff as anything (in fact, stiffer than certain things I can think of) when I said that I wanted to talk about his foibles. He had that deer-in-the-headlights look that a man gets when he realises that his wife is about to say something which could be really good or could be really bad, but won't be anything in between. I pressed on.