This story is about a young man's infatuation with an attractive, mature and self-assured professional lady. She is the Personnel Manager in the offices of a big London accountancy firm, where Ben starts work after university. Nowadays she would be the Human Resources Manager but I wanted to stay true to the times.
I think of it as a love story with sex. I hope you enjoy it.
Sylviafan
I was twenty-two when I finished at Leeds University where I'd read accountancy. It was as dull as ditch water but I saw it as a means to an end; I'd got my sights set on learning the trade then setting up my own business and retiring at fifty. Forty-five if I could manage it. So I'd worked hard at Uni and I'd got a First-Class honours degree and had come second on my course, out of a hundred and forty-eight.
So when I applied to each of the big six accountancy firms I wasn't surprised to be invited to interview at all of them over the space of a fortnight. The fourth interview was with Bright and Alcott, who would probably have been my last choice, mainly because I knew less about them than the others. This was the early nineties, when the big six took hundreds of graduates on in their big city offices every autumn. This meant that you didn't get much time in an interview to impress. And if you bullshitted them and they found out... I'd heard horror stories of interviews where a managing partner had asked a fearful candidate what distinguished them from the other twenty candidates waiting their turn. One acquaintance had said 'I can juggle,' thinking that such a response would indicate wit, initiative and originality or some such thing. He'd been unprepared for the interviewer producing three tennis balls from a drawer and handing them solemnly over.
Bright and Alcott's offices were firmly in the Square Mile, not far from the Bank of England, and covered three huge floors of a towering office block. The interviews were on the uppermost of the three floors, in an executive boardroom. The interviewee faced a panel across a large rosewood table, bare apart from a jug of water and some glasses. It was intimidating. It was supposed to be. Some of the thirty-something associates in the organisation still thought they were Gordon Gecko.
I'd dressed carefully that morning in my best suit, a sober grey with a faint blue pinstripe and I'd spent some time knotting my tie; I'd even polished my shoes. And I thought that I looked the part in the full-length mirror in the bathroom of my north London flat. Very much the smart, keen young graduate ready to take his place on the City's financial stage. Confident, but not too confident. So as I sat outside with the other candidates I didn't feel particularly nervous, just a slight deliquescence in my stomach as I contemplated pitting myself against the interview panel. I knew I'd get a job with one of the big six so I wasn't worried or needy. And I had certain attributes in my favour, not least of which was that I was generally considered to be a very good-looking young man: abundant black curly hair, deep brown eyes, chiselled features and a faint Mediterranean tone to my skin. Of course, such attributes don't guarantee success, but it's a fact that male and female alike generally respond better to beauty than to plainness. It isn't fair, but there it is.
I was called in at eleven forty-six, an hour and a half after I'd arrived for my ten forty-five appointment. Seated across the table was the panel of three interviewers. The panel's chair, a managing partner, introduced himself as Martin Thomas; he was in his fifties, thin and bony, a ring of grey hair enclosing a shiny, bald pate. Unbelievably he was wearing half-moon spectacles which he looked over at me like some Dickensian clerk.
'My apologies Mr er,' he consulted the CV in front of him, 'Walton. We're running a little late I'm afraid so we should get straight on. This is Mr Leaning, one of our associates,' he looked at the thirty-something man sitting on his right, staring at me with faint hostility, 'and this is Mrs Denholm, our personnel manager.' She nodded slightly and smiled. Mr Leaning did neither. But I hardly noticed, because that was the first time that I set eyes upon Judith Denholm.
I don't believe in love at first sight. Love's too complicated an emotion to be generated in a flash. It's not just about looks either. Probably it's less about looks than personality and spirit and vulnerability and a hundred other traits that make up the human psyche. But I believe in desire at first sight, and my first thought was that Mrs Denholm was intensely desirable, even though she was clearly the wrong side of fifty. It would be easy to say at this point that I've always had a secret passion for older women, which is not unusual, I believe. But I haven't. Or at least, up to that point I hadn't. I didn't remotely fancy my mother, who was probably five or ten years younger than this lady. Or any of my numerous aunts. Or indeed any of my friends' mothers. When I had dated, it had been with my own age-group. And I'd had plenty of dates; my female university contemporaries had not been backward in approaching me nor in any way reluctant, in many cases, to jump into bed with me.
So what was it about this middle-aged personnel manager that was so fascinating? Well for one thing, she was not, by any means, unattractive. She wasn't Ava Gardner or anything like that but she'd got nice, regular features that, when taken together, all worked. Her face was slim, with high cheekbones and a slightly square jaw. A straight nose was surmounted by serious grey eyes and dark eyebrows, which matched her collar-length auburn hair. She was, so far as I could tell from the upper half of her body, slim and well-proportioned with a neat bust and long, slender hands, just beginning to show some faint, brown age spots. The years were also apparent in her face: crows' feet at the corners of her eyes and the beginnings of some vertical lines on her upper lip. But somehow, instead of militating against her attractiveness, it enhanced it. It's hard to describe, and I'm writing about events that happened thirty years ago. All I can say is that as I looked at Mrs Denholm, then forced myself to look away, I was smitten and I knew that I wanted to know this lady. To be her friend, to learn about her and be close to her. And, naturally, to make love with her.
It wasn't a great start to the interview because my mind was initially in a whirl. Fortunately, the first few questions were about my CV so I didn't have to think too much about my answers. Then Mr Leaning started the general questioning and lost no time in putting the boot in.
'It says on your CV that you were second on your course,' he was looking at me rather than the sheet of A4 on the desk in front of him. 'Why weren't you first? Did you make every possible effort to get the top place?' His tone was almost combative and I noticed the chairman stir in his seat.
Right, you bastard I thought, suddenly not caring if I failed this interview: 'I had a bereavement in the family during my finals. My grandmother passed away.' It was a blatant lie designed to embarrass the inconsiderate twat opposite me but the panel had no way of knowing that. Mr Leaning went slightly red and I guessed I'd made an enemy. He seemed about to say something but Mrs Denholm stepped in, the first time she'd spoken.
'And you still got second place,' her voice was calm and clear, middle-class English, no trace of an accent. 'A remarkable achievement.' I nodded modestly and she went on: 'This company has to work with organisations that operate in very diverse fields. Some of those fields, nuclear power for example, give rise to ethical problems for some people. What would your reaction be if you were required to audit a company whose product went against your code of ethics?' It was a great question and not one that I'd rehearsed.