Copyright Oggbashan January 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
+++
To me Helen was a goddess to be worshipped, someone far above me and I was just mortal. Why?
I don't know. She is really an ordinary woman, about six months older than my twenty-four years but she seems far more than that. She is my Dulcinea to my day-dreaming Don Quixote. I would charge windmills for her -- but I know whatever I do, won't affect how she feels about me.
She isn't clever or beautiful. She isn't a paragon of the virtues except she has three in abundance -- patience, tolerance and compassion. She needed all three because of me.
She knew I loved her but she didn't feel anything for me. She could have been cruel and asked me to do things for her while laughing at me. She didn't. She accepted my worship as if it was her due and was kind to me -- all she could offer.
She and I worked in the same office. She smiled at me often and each of her smiles meant more to me than she intended. Although I was slightly younger I had passed my probationary period and she hadn't. All that meant was that I could take actions within specified limits where she had to get a superior to agree before she could act.
At first I was sorry for her. She had come to the office with a glowing reputation and her superior, Andrew, was determined to prove Helen wasn't as good as she was said to be. Andrew's actions were petty. He would reject files put to him by Helen for a minor typing mistake, for example, and she would have to send it for retyping and the typists would usually make a different error...
Anyone else would make an ink correction and send the letter out anyway, but Helen wasn't allowed to. Her workload was the same as anyone else's but because of Andrew's insistence on absolute perfection, she was struggling and her work was piling up, so much so that it was upsetting her. Helen had been complaining to me but I couldn't do anything. My supervisor wasn't hers.
In January she had a week off for the flu. I think her work situation had made her depressed and she didn't want to come back as soon as she might have done.
But I loved Helen. On the first day that she was sick I went to Andrew and suggested I could do a few hours overtime to help keep Helen's work moving. He didn't think about it because he was getting adverse attention. Helen was slowing down the throughput of his section. He agreed that I could do an hour a day, five hours in total. If Andrew had thought at all he might have assumed that in five hours I couldn't make much difference to Helen's backlog because she worked thirty-seven hours a week.
He had forgotten that I was past my probation and had the power to do things Helen couldn't.
During my first hour of overtime I had signed off a dozen files that he had been bouncing backwards and forwards to Helen. One really needed retyping and I did what we were not supposed to do -- I retyped it myself.
By the end of my fifth hour of paid-for overtime, Helen's desk was completely clear. There was nothing outstanding. What Andrew didn't know was that for every hour of paid-for overtime, I had done another hour unpaid -- just for Helen. He wasn't there after normal hours so he didn't know whether I had done one hour or two.
On the Monday morning Helen telephoned Andrew to say her doctor had told her to return to the surgery that morning for an assessment to see whether she would be fit for work on the Tuesday. Andrew came out to see me and tell me Helen might not be back until tomorrow. Could I do another hour of overtime tonight?
"Yes," I said, "If it is needed? Helen's desk is clear."
He was annoyed but couldn't criticise me. I had done what should have been done but he hadn't let Helen do.
"It will be, Ralph," He said ominously.
During the day he filled Helen's in-tray with the equivalent of a week's work for her.
That evening it took me a whole three hours, only one paid-for, to clear that pile.
+++
On Tuesday morning Helen arrived about five minutes before me. She couldn't believe that her in-tray was completely empty. I arrived just as Margaret, one of our older colleagues told her I had cleared it on overtime.
"There was more than a week's work there!" She exclaimed.
Margaret said:
"Ralph loves you, Helen. That's his way of showing it."
"I know he does. But I don't love him."
She saw that I was standing behind her.
"I know, Helen," I said.
"But I can appreciate what you have done for me, Ralph." she said.
She gave me a hug.
"But if I invited you to the Valentine dance? You'd say no."
"Of course, Ralph. Not just because I don't think of you like that, but also because George already asked me. I'm really grateful to you. What you have done is amazing but..."
"Gratitude is no substitute for love?"
"You know it isn't Ralph. I know you did what you have done because you love me, but I can't love you."
"I know, Helen, but I can't help myself."
"Why not ask Joan? She knows you love me, but she doesn't mind."
"She doesn't?"
"No. She's my friend, and yours, ask her."
I was embarrassed. Joan sits opposite Helen and had heard every word.