Chapter 7: Annual Review
As always, thanks for your patience with this rather slow-posting serial. I hope you're all keeping safe and well. I've been very busy with work, but I finally managed to find some productive writing time in the small hours of the morning this week.
This chapter involves consensual non-consent play.
"Hey Sarah?"
"Mmm-hmm?" We were cuddled up on my sofa together, idly fooling around while half-watching old episodes of Making Fiends on my TV.
"Next week it's our one-year anniversary."
"Already?" I thought about dates. "Huh. Yeah, I guess it is. Time flies."
"We were going to do a review of things after a year."
"We were. We could do it now, I guess... actually, I probably should prepare first. Next fortnight?"
Anjali nodded, and I wrapped my arms around her as I considered how to handle it.
I love advice columns. I have a bunch of go-to sites that arm me with social scripts for a wide variety of scenarios ranging from "asking your workmate to turn down their music" to "handling obnoxious relatives at family Christmas". I'd drawn heavily on them when I was planning John's birthday party.
But none of them were able to help me on this one. Searching on "how to conduct an annual review for your mistress" turned up nothing useful. Should I treat it formally, like a job interview? Casually, in my lounge room? Naked, in bed? I was out of my depth here.
* * * * *
"Hi Sarah." I almost jumped. Martin, my boss, had come up behind my desk while I was absorbed in my code. "Can we talk this afternoon?"
"Sure, ah, what's it about?"
"I'll tell you when we meet." And he walked off, leaving me to spend the next few hours wondering what I'd screwed up and how much trouble I was in.
None, as it turned out.
"Sarah, this isn't public yet, but I've got permission to tell you. A couple of things."
After some dithering, the first: "As you've probably guessed, we're being acquired by P-K..."
I had not suspected any such thing, but then I'm usually oblivious to even the worst-kept secrets. I was familiar with Preussler-Kennedy GmbH. They'd contracted our services for the Schiphol logistics project, and evidently they liked our work enough to make it a more permanent arrangement. My default position on such things is "change is bad" but as Martin discussed it, it sounded like a reasonable arrangement: P-K would take over things like publicity, legal, and HR, leaving us to focus on the crunchy maths and programming work that we did best. All in all, it sounded like something I could live with.
The second: "...given my notice for the end of December. Prija has accepted a senior lecturer position at Chulakongkorn and I have some consulting work lined up with the railways there."
"What? You're... you're leaving us?" Nobody ever accused me of being quick on the uptake.
"All good things must come to an end, eh? Prija's parents are getting on, and we want the kids to spend more time with them while they're still around."
"Well. Uh, I hope it's good for you! Do you know who's going to replace you?"
Our company was named OwKeMa because at the start it had just been Owen, Kepler, and Martin. Nobody else had their experience; the rest of us had come in about five years later, as business grew too much for just the three of them to handle. I wondered if P-K would install one of their people.
"No decisions have been made yet, but if you wanted to put up your hand, I'd be happy to write a recommendation."
"
Me?
"
"Why not? You're an excellent mathematician and your people skills have really come along, if the Schiphol trip is anything to go by."
"But I..." I was about to say
I just got lucky with something I'd already prepared
, but I remembered something Edgar had told me more than once, back when things were still good between us:
it's not your job to advocate against yourself.
So I let it go. "Okay, sure, I'll think about it."
* * * * *
Anjali and I met up at the State Library for our review. I'd picked it because it was a nice quiet place and full of books, which fitted both our ideas of a good time. Picking my way past would-be novelists researching eighteenth-century etiquette and high-school students working on assignments, I spotted a flash of red and found my paramour sitting at a desk, nose deep in a book of botanical sketches. She was tapping one hand against the desk rhythmically, one of her occasional habits.
"Afternoon... Lily?"
"Oh! Good afternoon, Miriam." It gave me a little kick. I didn't use the pseudonym as often as she used hers, but hearing it like that felt like permission to take charge.
Lily-Anjali made a move to stand to meet me, but I shook my head and slid into the seat opposite her. "When I took you on, we agreed that we'd come back at the end of a year and discuss whether it was working for us. And now a year has passed."
She nodded, and said nothing, looking at the floor. I wasn't sure what to say myself, but I channelled my inner Miriam for confidence.
"Well then, Lily." Glancing around to make sure nobody was watching us, I placed my hand over hers on the table. "I have very much appreciated our arrangement this last year. What do you say we continue it?"
She clasped her other hand over mine. "Ma'am, I'd like that very much."
"Well, then!" Not so difficult after all.
"Phew. I was worried that you might not want to..."
"Really?" I looked up at her in shock. "It's been fantastic. You've been fantastic." And with the benefit of hindsight, I remembered that the hand-tapping thing was something she did when she was wound up about something. She was still doing it, though.
She glanced up at my face for a moment, as if to see whether I was joking, and then stared back at the floor. "Well. Thank you. I like it too. Erm, but..."
"But?"
She extricated her hand from mine, retrieved a notepad where she'd marked a few points. "I had a couple of things I wanted to ask about. If that's okay."
"Oh? Go ahead."
"I was wondering if I could..." She trailed off.
"Speak up. What is it?"
"Is it possible to ask for a, for a raise?"
I frowned in thought, which she must have taken as disapproval, for she went on: "I'm sorry to ask, only my rent is going up and it's costing a bit to visit my parents and—"
I held up my hand. "How much were you thinking?"
"Well, I wasn't sure... maybe another hundred a fortnight?"