I was in London for the Board Meeting. Every six months we hired a room in an hotel and had a day discussing everything from finance to manufacturing. I was head of R+D, a qualified mechanical engineer. The company made bicycles, quad bikes, ride on mowers; pretty much anything that had wheels but was not a road vehicle, a car or a van or a truck.
We had a good lunch before the afternoon session and a few drinks after it finished at five. Mike Lambert, CEO took me aside.
"Manufacturing's a mess, Sonia. Larry," (Director, Manufacturing), "is going to have to go. I want you to take it on."
We talked about that. My job was full on and to take on the ailing manufacturing side was a lot more work but he was offering a huge pay rise and, to be frank, I relished the opportunity. I asked if I could think it over.
"Of course. But I don't want to hang about. Larry is going to be fired tomorrow and I want succession. Let me know in the morning."
I promised I would. The cab I finally managed to get took me to the small mews in Paddington and dropped me outside the house, called Groom's Cottage, where I had been due ten minutes earlier. I clattered up the slate steps in my heels and rang the doorbell. There was a slight delay and when the door opened, there she was. Christina was about ten years older than I, about 50. She wore, as she habitually did, a grey dress, knee length, black tights, flat black ballet pumps and a warm smile. Her greying hair was drawn back in a tight ponytail.
"Hi, Sonia. A tough day?"
"Not especially. Every day seems tough at the moment."
"Let me take your coat." I put my small overnight bag on the floor of the hallway then I slipped of the beige suit jacket and she took it and hung it on a hook rack on the hallway wall before leading me through to her sitting room where she sat me down and handed me a ready-prepared gin and tonic. We sat and talked in the very feminine room, chintz and brocade, flowers, pictures of bucolic scenes on the walls.
"It sounds like a big job," she said. "Do you need the extra stress?"
"It's pressure, not stress." She raised an eyebrow, she never liked to be contradicted but she smiled. "Pressure I can cope with. If it gets stressful, I know what to do."