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HAPPINESS COMES WITH A PAPERUMBRELLA AND A MEASURE OF GRENADINEAliya Whiteley
Here you go, sir. One Happiness, the cocktail of cocktails, served witha twist.
What’s that? A pretty face? It’s kind of you to say, but I think
you’ll find it’s the dim lighting and the glamour of my occupationevoking that illusion. Plus the tiny uniform and the ridiculously high
heels. It’s all part and parcel of the role, one might say.
A slick talker? That’s me, all right. But only since I started
working here. I find it’s done wonders for my chakra. I used to be such
a shy little rabbit, with big frightened eyes and a twitchy little nose,but now I find I have a lot to say, and have no difficulty in saying it. Words flow from my new and amazing confidence – it’s an incredible
transformation. One could comment that I was born for this job.
Do you mind if I rest my tray on your table for a moment? I’ve
got a jug of Happiness for table fifteen, and it’s tiring on the arms.
Not that I’m complaining. Each and every one of these
cocktails sold gives me a personal sense of satisfaction. Would you like
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Let me tell you. Before this evening, before I met you, and back before I began
working as a waitress in a cocktail bar, I was that most downtroddenof creatures, a Clerical Worker. I used to process information for lifeassurance applications, and that gave me access to medical records. I
could see every ailment people had visited their GP about, and apartfrom the usual high points involving sexually transmitted diseases andinjuries involving vibrators or vacuum cleaners, it made for boring
reading. Most people are a lot less unique in the medical departmentthan they would like to think.
The two ailments I saw most often were, without a doubt, back
pain and depression. One in three people, I would say, suffered from
one or the other, and one in five from both. I used to wonder if oneillness caused the other. Did depressed people stoop more? Or didhaving a bad back make a person really glum? How was it possible
that so many people could be suffering from the same diseases? Atthat time, I didn’t suffer from either.
How about you? You look like the afflicted type to me. Pain in the
lumbar region? Worries about the world? Mmm.
Believe me, nowadays, I know where you’re coming from. But I was a different person back then, in lots of ways. I was keen
to succeed in the field of clerical work, and in order to do that I had toimpress one person in particular: Kirstie Kay.
Kirstie Kay was the head of my department, and she was
everything I wanted to be. Kirstie wore expensive black skirts thatmade my grey trousers look like bespeckled victims of a lint attack. Kirstie smelled of perfume that could never have been bought from
the old lady who came to my doorstep regularly, pronouncing her
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Ding Dong catchphrase in a high wheeze. Kirstie had her hair cutmore regularly than just at Christmas and Easter so her mother didn’tcomplain about her fringe getting in her eyes. Kirstie commanded
What’s that? You want another cocktail? You drank that one a
little too fast, huh? I’d be careful, if I were you. These ones have a kick.
But, since you’re doing such a good job of listening, why don’t you topyourself up from the jug on my tray? Help yourself – just don’t say Ididn’t warn you.
Where was I? Oh yes. Respect. I respected Kirstie. I wanted to be
just like her, but in order to climb the greasy pole of management, Ineeded to find a way to gain her attention; a way to make me worthyof her notice.
It was only after watching the way she shrugged off all
responsibility for any actual work by alternately charming andbullying her employees in group weekly update meetings that a
solution came to me. And do you know what that solution was?
Manipulation. I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking that hard work and
puckering to the boss’s posterior might have offered a moretraditional answer, but hear me out.
It was all very well to be mindlessly keying in all day, as
requested, but to rise above the rabble I had to prove I could getresults by analysing to my advantage. After all, that was the point ofhaving a manager, wasn’t it? To get results. And I intended to get the
kind of results that would reveal my intelligence and capability to theworld.
I read up on spreadsheets and put together a database of
gargantuan proportions; one which allowed me to input the age,
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postcode, occupation, pastimes, and alcohol and cigaretteconsumption levels of every person who disclosed both back pain anddepression on their applications. I was determined to find some
common linkage. When I tracked it down, I was going to present it toKirstie Kay, proving that I was capable of thinking outside the box andinside the management mindset.
It took three months of collation before results started to emerge,
and another three months before I was sure of what I was seeing. During that time I worked overtime every day, even weekends, in the
excitement of surreptitiously establishing a pattern, and had givenmyself chronic eyestrain and a permanent pain between my shoulderblades from all that screen staring and keyboard tapping, but thosewere minor considerations in the face of the information my project
was providing. I had uncovered something astounding, and it waswith trembling hands that I e-mailed Kirstie Kay and arranged a oneon one meeting with her for the following Monday morning. I spent an
anxious weekend checking my results again and again; I don’t think Islept at all.
Another cocktail? Mind you, I really don’t think you should. I
wouldn’t advise anyone to consume three in a row. You’re making fastwork of that jug. I suppose I should go and get a refill for table fifteen,but they look pretty out of it. They won’t notice if they wait for a little
To continue – we sat down in her office at 10:45am, facing each
other over her walnut desk, Kirstie sitting with legs crossed in her
leather armchair, me sitting with arms crossed in a standard plasticchair.
‘Well, Leanne, you’ve intrigued me,’ she said. Leanne isn’t my
name, but I was much too in awe of her to correct her. ‘What did you
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I launched into my set speech, trying not to be distracted as she
tapped the fingers of her left hand against the dial of the watch on her
‘What, Kirstie, in your opinion, would be the two illnesses we see
disclosed on life assurance applications more often than any others?’
She leaned back in her chair. ‘Well, Leanne, I wouldn’t know. I
could phone up our Statistical Analysis Department and get an answerfor you.’
It came as a blow to learn of the existence of a Statistical Analysis
Department, but I had put in too much work to refuse at the firstfence.
‘Actually, I already know the answer. It’s back pain and
depression. I calculated it myself – in my own spare time,’ I added,when she raised one fine line of an eyebrow. ‘And I also looked intowhat kind of people suffer from those illnesses, particularly when they
For the first time since we had started working together five years
ago, she looked at me with interest. ‘Oh yes?’
‘And I found out that, according to a database I’ve been
‘…there is a ninety-three per cent correlation between back pain
and depression appearing in tandem on the medical disclosures of lifeassurance applications…’
Her fingers had stopped tapping on her watch. They were curled
into her palms, the knuckles white, and her elbows were on her deskas she leaned towards me. ‘Yes?’
‘…submitted by those people who list their occupation as Clerical
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There was a silence. It stretched on as she stared at me. I shuffled
my papers in embarrassment, and the rustle seemed to prompt her
back into action. She jumped up from her leather armchair and spoke,without her usual eloquence, I have to say.
‘Sit there,’ she said. ‘Don’t move.’
Then she walked out of the office. In the forty-five minute wait that ensued I harboured a number
of fantasies. I imagined she would return with the Managing Director,
a five feet one inch tall Australian tycoon, who would listen to myrevelation and immediately to promote me to head of the StatisticalAnalysis Department. At the half hour point I wondered if she wouldreturn with a media crew from the local television network, and urge
me to divulge to them what I had just told her. At around the fortiethminute I began to feel concerned that she wasn’t coming back at all.
So it was rather a disappointment when she returned with only a
piece of paper, and her usual expression of smooth superiority firmlyback in place.
She started talking as she walked around her desk to the window,
and she looked alternately from the view of Reading high rises to aspot between my eyebrows.
‘I’ve checked with the manager of our legal department and he
asked me to remind you that, under section 17e of your contract, youare not at liberty to divulge any information pertaining to or, indeed,extrapolated from the processing of company application forms, okay
I didn’t even remember seeing a contract, let alone section 17e.
Then a vague memory of Induction Day came back to me – something
had been whisked under my nose, something with thirty plus pages of
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very small print I had duly signed along with the other new starters. Isuppose that must have been the arrival of the shackles, to which shewas now drawing attention for the first time.
‘Nobody needs to know,’ she said, pronouncing each word very
‘But we have to make the public aware about the dangers of
‘No, we don’t.’‘But they need to be told…’
‘No, they don’t.’And then it dawned on me. The company already knew. They knew what illnesses were waiting to befall nearly all their
That explained why the managers got better chair with
ergonomic support built in, and spent more time walking around than
staring at the screen. That explained the long tea breaks and activeholidays. These weren’t just perks. They were measures designed totake care of the employees the company actually cared about.
Kirstie must have seen the moment of revelation on my face. ‘If
you tell a soul, they’ll get you,’ she said, not unkindly, I thought. ‘AndI’m not talking about a lawsuit. I’m talking about revenge. There’s a
I sat still in the chair and thought about it. ‘That’s right,’ she said. ‘Keep quiet. Go back to your desk, delete
that database, and get on with your job.’
I got up. I went back to my desk and picked up the top
application form on the pile, and processed it. And after that one I did
another, and another, and it transpired that I worked solidly, without
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speaking one word to Kirstie Kay or anybody else for that matter, forthe rest of the month.
It was about that time that I was diagnosed with serious
The doctor prescribed Prozac. It’s amazing stuff, giving an
instant lift that is not so much a rush as a spreading sense of
relaxation, and after every pill I could forget what I was worryingabout for a while. And the best thing is, it’s easy to get more, to get ahuge supply by registering at different practices around the city.
The second best thing is that it can be taken in conjunction with a
high dosage of codeine – the codeine keeps the pain from my back andneck problems at bay. Those started when I worked all those overtime
hours, hunched over the computer screen.
Anyway, at the end of that month the company announced a
downsizing initiative, and I was one of the first to go, rewarded with a
lump sum for not making a fuss. I put that money towards my newhobby: drinking. It seemed as good a pastime as any, and fulfilled allthe criteria which a hobby should – it made the time pass more
quickly and gave me a warm glow inside. I had a beer phase, followedby a wine phase, and then I moved into cocktails.
I’ve tried just about every combination known to man, from the
standard gin base – Rickey, Gimlet, Honolulu Shooter – through thevodka based drinks – Moscow Mule, Corniche, Screw-Up – and eventhe most obscure cocktails – Hammer Horror, Munchausen, Cute Fat
Bastard In The Sack – and all of them tasted pretty great to me. There’s something about those little paper umbrellas and precisewedges of exotic fruits that make me feel wonderful, particularly when
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I saw the advertisement for a waitress at this place about two
months ago, and I knew I could do a good job of it. I know by heart therecipe of any drink you can name; that’s something the boss found out
when he interviewed me. He gave me the uniform right after that firstmeeting, and I was working the next day.
I was hardly expecting – and you’ll love the irony of this – one of
my very first clients to be Kirstie Kay.
She was slumped, alone, at one of the tables – in fact it might
have been this very table – and she beckoned me over to order a
clutch of Zombies without once looking at me.
Her choice of tipple told me all I needed to know. Zombies have a
reputation in the cocktail community. They do the job quickly andvery thoroughly. She was out to get hammered.
I drank in her radically altered appearance as I returned, weaving
my way through the tables, with her order. The black skirts had beenreplaced with mustard yellow leggings that showed off rather less than
taut skin tone around her thighs. The designer jacket had beenreplaced with a black tee shirt that was emblazoned with a hot pinkpaint stain over her right breast.
‘Been decorating?’ I asked her as I placed down her order. She took a mouthful of the first zombie before replying, ‘Mmm,’
she said, which I took as an affirmative.
‘New house?’ I asked. ‘Flat,’ she said, and downed her first drink. Then she looked up at
It took a moment for recognition to sink in. She squinted, and
then laughed. ‘Leanne,’ she said. She still had my name wrong, butthis time round I didn’t have the heart to correct her. ‘Leanne. They
downsized me. To a worker. To a sodding Clerical Worker.’
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I had to ask. ‘Back pain?’She winced and laid one trembling hand on her coccyx. ‘Depression?’
She nodded and burst into tears. ‘You know what really gets me?’ she said through the sobs. ‘I’ve
had to sell my house and get a crummy flat just round the corner from
this dump, and I’ve had to apply for a new mortgage to do it. Do youknow what the bank said? They said I had to get life assurance tocover the mortgage. Do you know what the life assurance company –
my employer – said? They said I’d have to pay triple premium becauseof my back pain and depression. The back pain and depression thatthey sodding caused!’
I shrugged as I handed her a paper napkin. I have to admit I
didn’t feel much sympathy for her. ‘Bad deal, Kirstie.’
‘You still don’t get it, do you? It’s no bad deal. It’s planned. It’s all
been planned.’ She downed the second Zombie in one swift
movement. ‘Why do you think the insurance sector is the biggestgrossing business in the UK? Why do you think they employ so manyclerical workers who they encourage to sit on their arses and do very
little work all day? Why have we become a nation of Administrators?’
As I walked away from her table, leaving her to a lifetime of
crippling mortgage repayments and medication, it occurred to me that
she was absolutely right. This was no series of coincidences.
We are a nation plagued with sad faces and bad backs for a
reason. The terrible seating position and the grindingly boring jobs
ensure that our money will be returned, in large, unavoidableamounts, to the people who employ us in the first place.
And from that knowledge, the cocktail known as Happiness was
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No-one but me knows what goes into my cocktail. I made the first
batch that very evening, and gave one to the boss to taste, and he’sbeen selling them like crazy ever since. It’s going to make my fortune.
I’ve already had an offer to go nationwide through a distributioncompany based in Swindon.
You really want to know what goes in them, huh? Well… will you
promise not to tell anybody? You will? Cross your main aortic valve?
Happiness consists of the following ingredients: three measures
of gin, one measure of cherry liqueur, one egg white, one measure of
grenadine, half a measure of whipped cream, one crushed up codeinetablet to be dissolved in the gin, one crushed up Prozac tablet to beapplied around the rim of the glass, one optional squeeze of lemon,one umbrellas and three maraschino cherries to garnish.
Of course, I wouldn’t have told you if I wasn’t absolutely sure that
you’ll keep my secret. Look at you. Such a kind face, as you sleep like ababy, slumped over the table top. I warned you not to drink so much,
but would you listen to a mere waitress at a cocktail bar?
You’re not the first OD we’ve had here, and you won’t be the last.
The ambulance will get here shortly, I’ll tell them you’ve drunk far too
much, you’ll get your stomach pumped, and you’ll probably wake upwith one hell of a hangover and no memory of this conversation. That’s a shame, because I like you. I really do.
First published by Pulp Net (http://www.pulp.net)http://www.pulp.net/fiction/stories/19/happiness-comes-with-.htmlThis file is for personal reading only. No element of this story may be reproduced,resold or retransmitted in any way without the permission of the author.
Malin Lundgren Vad händer med mina Internetkonton efter min bortgång? Allt fler människor använder olika sociala medier. Men vill vi finnas kvar på Facebook och Instragram när vi dör? Och i så fall hur? Idag är väldigt många svenskar uppkopplade på något socialt medieforum som Facebook, Google+, Twitter, LinkedIn och Instagram. När vi dör är det våra nära och kära
For You Mom, Finally, Ruth Reichl, Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated, 2010, 0143117343,9780143117346, 120 pages. Bestselling author Ruth Reichl examines her mother's life-and gives voice to theunarticulated truths of a generation of exceptional women A former New York Times restaurant critic, editorin chief of Gourmet, and the author of three bestselling memoirs, Ruth Reichl is a beloved cultural