This story is inspired by the Troubador's excellent "How High a Price." He invited others to finish the story and many have, with excellent results. However, one of the follow-on stories had one sentence in it which got my goat. So, using the Troubador's theme I have generated my own story.
I walked into the pub and saw my wife Fiona standing in the corner with her boss Ralph, they were heads in and Ralph's arm was resting on Fiona's, probably talking about Fiona's new project. Both saw me, smiled and waved.
It was her company's project management team's bi-monthly get together. Fiona worked as an assistant project manager for a construction company in our town. This get together was a special for Fiona, she had just been promoted to full project manager, something she had been aiming at for quite a while.
It was not unusual to have other halves invited to these doo's, even if only to drive them home afterwards. As I walked towards them I came across Ralph's wife, Carol, she smiled, and as I got to her I said, "Taxi driver?"
She replied "Yup, You?" I nodded back. By then Fiona and Ralph were walking towards us. I noticed that they were now about two feet apart when before they had been standing very close together.
I notice these things, I currently work as a maintenance engineer in a food factory, but in a previous employment I had a secondary job as a maintenance accident investigator. Let me explain, people don't go to work to do a bad job, but sometimes mistakes and accidents happen. It was my job to find out why it happened. Did somebody not follow the correct procedure, or have the right tools, were they distracted, were they cold, wet, tired or all three. It wasn't to find a scapegoat; it was to genuinely find out what went wrong so we could put things in place to stop it from happening again.
My company liked what I'd done and I was off to Derby next week for a few days to teach the techniques to some of the chaps up there. When I was being taught how to investigate these accidents, I was shown how to read body language and facial expressions, they can give so much away. The change from the intimacy of when they were in the corner to walking across the pub struck me as odd. Their faces gave nothing away, in fact, I was pretty sure they didn't know what they'd done.
When they got to us Carol gave Fiona a kiss on the cheek and congratulated her on her promotion, they'd become quite friendly recently.
Ralph held his hand out and I shook it. "D'you want a beer?" He asked.
"I'll have a tonic water if you don't mind, I'm tonight's taxi driver."
I leaned in and gave Fiona a kiss on the cheek, and she returned it with a hug. She was happy, she had just received the promotion she had been working for and she was probably a little tiddly too. That was good, she deserved it; I was proud of her.
Ralph returned with my tonic water, "I was telling her we have a nice little project lined up just for her. You've got a good one here Bob," he said.
"I know," I slipped my arm around her waist, and she put hers around mine.
"She did a bloody good job with that project, dragged it out of the bin."
Fiona had told me this story before, but I had a feeling I was going to hear it all over again. It wasn't a problem; I was proud of my wife.
The project Fiona was working on as an assistant project manager hit a problem when Bill the project manager had a car accident, and it put him out of action for what was going to be a couple of months. There were already some small problems with the project and Bill had a solution which he hadn't fully explained to Fiona about before his car accident. She was asked if she could step up and save the project.
It wasn't a massive project that would've made the company go broke, but no company likes to see a failure on their records whatever the reason. Fiona came up with a plan which she cleared through Ralph first to tell the customer that it could be on time or on budget and they had to choose. Whilst Ralph agreed in principle, he pointed out an error Fiona had made. He got her to go back and check the contract and the change list. The customer had slid in a few changes in without any increase in cost or time.
Fiona presented the customer with a new budget and a new timeline and explained why the changes were needed, the customer chose to extend the timeline.
What impressed Ralph and the management was the way Fiona did it without ruffling the feathers of the customer.
"She did a good job," said Ralph, "The customer was happy and, hopefully, we'll get some repeat business from them."
Fiona said, "I couldn't have done it without you Ralph, I don't know how they slipped those changes in?" As she said this she reached out and touched Ralph's arm, I noticed, but I don't think anyone else did.
Ralph smiled, "I think it happened in the time between Bill having his accident and you taking over, it's something I always do, go back over the old documents to see if there're any loopholes or somebody's missed something."
Fiona told me, although she'd told me before. "I found it as an attachment to an addendum in the main document, there were so many attachments it could easily have got lost, and I think it was a genuine mistake. But I'll keep an eye on that next time."
We circulated a bit and chatted with a few people, and then we decided to head home. Fiona wasn't drunk, but not sober either. We said our goodbyes to most people including Carol and Ralph, I shook Ralph's hand and gave Carol a small air kiss. Fiona gave Ralph a kiss on each cheek, and a hug, it seemed a bit over the top to me, I glanced at Carol, she didn't seem to mind.
We got home, and I cracked another bottle of wine, not that Fiona needed any more.
"That was a bit of an over the top goodbye for Ralph wasn't it, kiss on both cheeks and a hug?"
"But he's helped me so much, and that help managed to get me the promotion."
Looking at her, I said, "Just make sure a kiss on the cheek and a hug is all he gets."
"Is my hubby poos getting jealous?"
"Let me take you upstairs and show you how to overcome jealousy," I did, the love making sex was fantastic, as it often is when a little wine has released her inhibitions.
I headed to Derby on Tuesday evening ready to start teaching Wednesday morning, and I'd planned to drive home Saturday morning to miss the Friday M1, M25 and M3 massive traffic jams heading south.
I phoned Fiona Tuesday evening, just a quick call to let her know I got there ok. I phoned again Wednesday; we chatted about how well things are going at my end and how her new job was coming on. The company had given her another new small project that she could do from the start.