So,
here’s where you come in. I’m giving you a little sneak preview here. Can you
please (pretty please?) comment giving your thoughts on the excerpt (the first
part of chapter 1)? I really need to get back to this novel and your
participation will be a HUGE help.
Eyh,
allyuh be truthful eh! Ah doh mind de criticism.
Power Lunch
By Charmaine
Daisley
Chapter
1 (excerpt)
I wish Rhonda would stop babbling through my cell phone and let me
think straight to write my proposal. I will not, WILL NOT, be late handing in
the first draft of this document tomorrow. Plus she knows I have this
wedding-of-the-year meeting in an hour.
"…and
she said you should bring your laptop to take notes because you're good at
writing things and --"
"Yes, yes, Ronnie. Will do…"
It's already eleven and I want to at least finish telling R.
Walton & Sons how they can increase their sales margin by fifty percent in
the next twelve months, before I leave the office. I rest the phone gently on
the desk and listen to Rhonda warble in the background of my sales-tactics
thoughts.
My office mate, Patricia bounces over to ask the habitual
pre-lunch question.
"So what's for lunch?"
"Three crazy girlfriends."
" Ahh. The best midday fare for stressed-out advertising
professionals."
She nudges her head toward the mouthpiece streaming with
incomprehensible monologue. "Have a wonderful lunch, pally wally."
"… and oh, Marsha, could you bring some
paperclips, we need paperclips--"
I pick up the phone.
"Yes, yes, yes, but I really have to run now Ronnie, I'll see
you guys in an hour."
"… and don't forget to -- "
I hang up. It's the only way I can get Rhonda
to stop talking right now, short of calling someone at her office to gag her
please. Hanging up the phone I figure is much more humane.
The phone rings again.
“Look Rhonnie I really can’t –“
“Marsha? Marsha! I can’t get in to your
apartment.”
Oh my gosh! I completely forgot my mother volunteered
to tidy my apartment for me today.
“Where’s the key? You didn’t leave it under
the mat?”
“Mom, I’m so sorry. I completely forgot this
morning. Listen, you remember Mr. Rogers. He’s usually on the compound around this
time. Can you check his office next to the laundry room? He’ll give you a key.”
My
mother grumbles something about my too busy life and then asks what dinner she
should prepare for me. I take a mental tour of my fridge.
“Maybe
something with saltfish and potatoes? I don’t know. Maybe some saltfish and
potato stew. I can eat that with some pita bread or something later.”
“Saltfish
and potatoes? Who eats saltfish and potatoes stew Marsha?”
“What’s
wrong with saltfish and potatoes?” I counter. “I eat it all the time.” Actually,
that’s a big fat lie. That food has been in my fridge for months. The potatoes
have even grown buds. Ready for planting. And the saltfish I had planned to use
months ago during one of my short-lived cooking spurts.
“Where’s
the vegetables? And you should be eating as much cabbage as you can at your age
you know. It helps with the bones.”
My
bones. This has been a topic of choice with my mother since I turned 30 three
months ago.
The
other day she asks me “Marsha are you drinking enough milk?”
I
drain a bottle of Pepsi as she eyes me accusingly. “I think so, why?”
“I
worry about your diet. I don’t think you eat enough vegetables and you don’t
get enough calcium. You should take calcium tablets. Women your age suffer from
bone loss and shrinking if they don’t get enough calcium.”
You
would think I was a nonagenarian with a crouched back the way my mother
describes my bone situation.
Now
she’s on the phone at me again about not eating enough vegetables.
“Mom,
I eat plenty vegetables. And there’s nothing wrong with saltfish and potatoes.”
“Did
you buy the minced beef I asked you to? I could make a nice shepherd’s pie with
minced beef and potatoes, and if you have a few vegeta –“
Okay.
Do I need this right now? No, I don’t. How is this culinary conversation
helping me decide whether I recommend that R. Walton & Sons market their
new line of ergonomic, designer furniture through a differentiated or
undifferentiated approach?
“ -
- OH honey, here’s Mr. Rogers, hold on.”
Silence.
For a loooong while.
“Are
you getting the key?”
No
response. I’m tapping my fingers on the desk.
“Mom?
Not
a peep.
“Mom?
Mom!”
“Hello?
Yes dear I’m inside your apartment now.”
“Hrrrrrrmph!”
My mother drives me crazy but as a loving daughter I’m supposed to pretend that
she doesn’t.
“My
gosh, when last you clean this place girl? And look, the keys right on the
dining table. Phew, I’m so tired, my bones are hurting - - “
The
bones again.
“Ok
honey I’ll take care of everything. I think I’ll run to the corner and get some
vegetables and minced beef after I clean up. I’ll fix up things good for you.
Enjoy your day, you hear?”
“Okay,
good, good. Thanks a lot mom. Talk to you later.”
I
stroll my fingers down the side of the stack of files on my desk. My mother the
superhero. No kidding. She’s always there to bail me out of every little crappy
situation I find myself in. It’s always been like that. Ever since I can
remember. She’d come into the yard and demand that Priya, our neighbour, give
me my doll back or else go home. Or she’d wring my brother’s ears for taunting
me non-stop. Or she’d call an ex boyfriend and give him a piece of her mind on
my behalf. Really, I don’t know how I would’ve made it through any of this
without her help. The breakup hit hard. I didn’t see it coming. No, that’s a
lie. I didn’t want to see it coming. And when it did I just let myself go and
left a lot of things undone. I was always too sad or too worn out or too busy
or something. Everything was a big, hazy blur. My super hero noticed my depression
right away and offered to help keep the apartment in order and cook me some
food while she was there. I didn’t have the strength to tell her there was no
need, and I figured that if I did, she wouldn’t pay me any mind anyway. My
mother always did what she good and well felt like doing. Good for her.
She’s
so strong. Even after we lost dad six years ago, she remained a pillar to me
and my brother. Although I sense lately she’s getting a little lonely. I should
take her out on Saturday.
Half-hour later and I’m still
drumming away at the proposal. Mr. Walton senior and his clan of wood-loving,
furniture-designing, I-can-see-them-dancing-now-as-I-suffer junior Waltons, are
making my life pretty miserable right about now. But then again, that’s to be
expected of men.
I keep looking at the office door opposite my
desk wherein sits the lord of all he surveys. In other words, Carlton King, the
Operations Manager of my workplace, Paradise Plum Advertising. Can you imagine
me answering the phone at work? “Hello, Paradise
Plum Advertising, how may I help you?” Lordy, lord. The laughs people must
get. If it were me I’d call every day just for laughs. Thank God I do not have Maria’s job of answering the
phone.
So, Carlton King, my immediate boss. Any
minute now I expect him to open his door, peer at me indignantly through
gold-rimmed bifocals and tap his damn watch.
Carlton King is a short man with an even
shorter neck and a temper to match. He wears these always well-seamed pants (my
sympathies to his wife or housekeeper or whoever) and he insists on
perpetuating the sixties’ style of platform shoes. Where he gets those shoes is
a mystery, and a popular lunch room guffaw with the staff. I keep telling
everyone that there must be a very short explanation for it.
***END OF EXCERPT***
I love the characters; after one chapter, and they've already found a way into my heart. Great work, keep it coming.
ReplyDeleteExceptional ... I've already fallen in love with the characters ... and it's just one chapter
ReplyDelete