10. First Blood

Martin was stuffing marketing materials into his favourite leaflet rack in the banking hall when he saw the top half of a set of people he half recognised enter the back office and make their way round towards the enquiries booths.  Debbs was with them.  As they stopped and turned in his general direction he saw that one of them was Anthony from the video, looking generally much larger and more life-like than he remembered.  He finished his task, inserting the last of the leaflets wherever he could find a place, and hurried through the airlock doors to see what was going on.

The group were talking with Lynn the Back Office Supervisor.  Two of them were wearing what looked like white laboratory coats and Martin hoped for a moment that they were about to haul his line manager into a white van and take her away for experimentation.  He had been expecting this for some time.  Then he noticed that the discussion seemed to be focussed on a small very ordinary looking male person who he hadn’t noticed coming in and who seemed to be a friend of Anthony’s.

“Lynn, I’ve done the POS.  Okay if I take my dinner now?”

Lynn broke off and looked at her watch.  “It’s only twenty to ten Martin.  It’s getting earlier and earlier.  Can’t you wait?”

“Okay.  Hi Debbs.”

“Hi Martin.  How you doing?”

“Cool, thanks. Cool.”

“Good.  While you’re here, this is Anthony and Alf.  They’re joining us today.”

Martin was thrown off balance for a moment by what Debbie said.  He had her down as somebody who had acquired all the usual skills associated with the pronunciation of common Christian names.  Had he been wrong?  Was she not as clever as him after all?

“Sorry, who and Alf?”

“Anthony,” she repeated.  “With a ‘th’.”

“’Fraid that’s how we say it back home,” said the awkwardly pronounced one.  “And you are..?”

“Sure, sorry.  Hi, I’m Marthin.  Very pleased to meet you.”

The short ordinary one who wasn’t Anthony extended his hand.  “Hi there.  It’s nice to be interfacing with you.”  He paused for a moment.  “It’s nice to have interfaced with you and to be in the process of getting to know you :-).”  He smiled in a way that wasn’t exactly natural, but in a way that would soon become all too familiar to Martin and his desk-bound colleagues.  Alf glanced anxiously towards one of the white-coated men who hastily scribbled a note on his clipboard.

“Yes, it’s nice,” responded Martin, “…for me too.  I’m enjoying it…also…”

“Sure...” began Alf, but his conversational repertoire was obviously exhausted and he tailed off, staring vaguely through the glass bandit screens towards Martin’s leaflet rack.

“Good, Martin,” Lynn intervened.  “You seem to have a lot in common so why don’t you show Anthony and Alf round the branch, get to know each other a bit.  After your break you can take him on till.”  She nodded to the copper-top – “bit of experience of working with real customers for you Alf love, alright?”  She waved the party in the general direction of the staff room stairs.

“Cool,” he said, turning to Martin to be led away.

“Alrighty Marthy,” said Anthony, falling in behind Alf.  “Let’s go ;-)”

Did Anthony wink at him?  Martin wasn’t sure.  Was that a normal States thing or was he being let into a personal secret?  Hang on, this guy hung out at drive ins with Debbie.  Surely he was the one with big shoulder pads and a small pointy ball barging through rows of similarly attired gents, not the one with white ankle socks and pompoms jumping up and down on the sideline.

“Lead the way then Martin love,” Lynn prompted the temporarily suspended Martin.  Debbie leant over and whispered something in her ear.  Lynn didn’t look happy about it, but complied:  “Sorry, Marthin.  Off you go then Marthin.”

The party dispersed; Debbie and the two white coated men into the forbidden enquiries booth and Lynn to her desk, where she noticed the corner of a birthday card peeping out from under her desk diary.

“Everybody stamped Rachel’s card by the way?” she broadcast, whipping the card out from its hiding place and waving it momentarily above her head.

“I haven’t,” said Valerie, approaching from the back of the office.

“What do you think that is?” asked Lynn as Valerie arrived.

“It’s a pen.”

“And what do you think you’re doing with that?”

“I thought I might sign the card – it won’t do any harm will it?  Not just once. Surely.”

“Valerie, please put that away.  Take it home with you tonight and do not bring it back.”

“But my stamp hasn’t arrived!  I ordered it on Wednesday last week.  What am I supposed to do?  They said I’d have it Friday.”

“I thought you’d all received them?”

“Mine was written wrong.  I had to send it back.”

“Right,” she Lynn, scribbling an aid memoir.  “I’ll make a note to chase that with Debbie.  In the meantime I suggest you borrow somebody else’s.”

“What, stamp it with somebody else’s name?  How will Rachel know it’s from me?”

“Well … your name will be the only one missing.  So it’d have to be you.”

“Any way, what’s that Lynn?”

“What?”

“That.  In your hand.”

“It’s a pen, what does it look like….”

“You’re all just stupid,” said Valerie, a sudden and uncharacteristic voltage surging through her body.  Her back straightened, her eyes flashed.  The backs of her hands clamped onto her hips like electromagnets.  “You make these daft rules that you don’t stick to yourself.  Banning biros!  I mean how stupid is that.”

“You saw the video like the rest of use,” said Lynn, visibly shaken by Valerie’s outburst.

“You don’t want arthritis by the time you’re thirty-five do you?”

“I’m fifty-one, you clot!”

“Alright Valerie love.  That’ll do.  Let’s leave it there.  I just want to try and make a good impression on the younger staff…”

“We don’t want to be tret like kids - comprehendez?   We’re all adults that can chuffing write – with our hands.  Like we was taught!”  She threw her pen towards Lynn and hurried back into the shadows between the stationery cupboards.

“If anybody else has got any of these please hand them in.  The armistice finished a fortnight back…”  Lynn didn’t have the energy or inclination to finish.  She slumped into her chair, her own pen dropping onto the desk and rolling into a pile of paper clips.  There was an awkwardly quiet moment.  The air conditioning and traffic noise pooled resources the best they could to cover it.  But it was still awkward.

“Lynn,” came a quite voice from the shadows.  “Are you alright.  Didn’t hit you did it?”

“No, I’m alright Valerie love.  It didn’t hit me…”

She picked up her phone and pressed it to her ear.  A few minutes later she became vaguely aware of the fact that she ought really to be either talking or dialing a number.  “Debbie,” she feigned.  “Can you get Valerie’s stamp thanks bye.”

The phone sank back onto its cradle.

***

Just another five minutes, then she’d go back down.  Rachel stared, as she had for hundreds of hours over the last five years, at the only very mildly offensive graffiti on the cubicle door.  It hadn’t changed since she’d started at the branch.  Like a cave painting it simply existed and always had done.  The reasons for it, and the people who had those reasons, were long forgotten.  Apart from Martin is a prat. Sign here if you agree and a single name stamped in red: VALRIE KERSHAW.

She’d already had three customers that morning who thought they were cleverer than the bank.  Why did they insist on making life difficult by asking questions?  The most troublesome of them had asked why the Bank had thought it fit to fine him for missing a payment on his credit card.  She’d reminded him, quite properly, that if you borrow something from someone it’s only fair to give it back as soon as you can.  Or else they might not lend you anything else.  In that case, he’d asked, why did she and her colleagues insist on thrusting a personal loan application form in front of him every time he stepped foot in the branch.  And then he ranted on about the Bank still being rooted in Victorian cap-in-hand values, still expecting customers to be grateful for its services as if it were some kind of benefactor when it’s only purpose in life was to take as much money of its customers as possible (preferably without them noticing) to keep its Chief Executive in Jaguars and its share holders in as many as possible of whatever it was they liked to drive.

Why did the Bank fine him for allowing it to take more money from him.  After all, the bigger his visa debt the more interest they could charge – every month.  Wasn’t that perverse?  She hadn’t known what to do, so thought it best simply to confirm that he wasn’t interested in a personal loan then.  Which had seemed to inflame him further.  She was quite relieved when he turned on his heals and stamped off muttering something about returning with a can of kerosene and a zippo – whatever that was.   But then he came back and told her he was sorry.  It was the Bank we was having a go at, not her.  It wasn’t her fault if she was managed by a bunch of halfwits.

And that would have been okay except for the fact that he was, of course, totally wrong.  As Debbie had said; she, Valerie, Martin, Lynn – they were the Bank. The bricks and mortar – that she suspected was the intended target for the kerosene/zippo thing – was only the branch.  If he’d burnt the branch down then, unfortunately (for him anyway) the Bank would have survived in the guise of the staff.  If they’d managed to get out that is. So was she to blame after all for the customer’s grievances?   Debbie had said that they were the Bank, but that’s only because she’d made them that way.  Is she, and all the other suits at Head Office, wanted them to be the Bank, then wasn’t it their responsibility to make sure they were up to the job?  And if they couldn’t do that (which she was beginning to suspect was the case) then why didn’t they get somebody else to be the Bank?  Or, even better, be the Bank themselves?  Was it so that, when everything went wrong and the whole network was kerosened and zippoed, they could walk away from the ashes and say ‘it was nothing to do with us – they were the Bank.  We just ran it’?  And then, with their reputations untarnished, they could go and find something else to disown, while making a huge amount of money in the process.

She had been pondering this issue for over half an hour, eventually arriving at the usual conclusion that God was to blame, but as nobody was bigger than him she’d just have to live with it, and carry on blaming the Marketing Department instead.

Thank God for the toilets anyway.  After that video she’d begun to worry that even that sanctuary would be taken from her – what with that creepy guy who was going to be everywhere all the time.  They wouldn’t let him in the Ladies would they?  She flushed the toilet and ran the tap for a second to render her exit from it more authentic to the casual on-looker and unlocked the door…

“Hi Rachel.  This is Anthony – from the video – and Alf.  They’re moving in.”

Martin made a mental note never to interact with a woman so soon after the completion of her ablutions.  For, as demonstrated by Rachel, the consequences could be terrible and far reaching.  He added this to his secret library of woman-issues, along with screaming and arm flapping at the prospect of new clothes, holidays or husbands, and that mysterious devilment that was supposed to happen once a month but seemed to afflict his one and only girl friend (now deceased) at least once a week.

“We choose to ignore the potential negative impact of organisational change on human resource at our peril,” said Anthony philosophically.  Eventually, with the help of hot sweet tea and Neighbours (which mercifully had just started), they succeeded in calming Rachel to the point where she would stay sat down unassisted, and the three turned their attention back to the job in hand.

“Okay Marthy, you were giving us a tour I think.”

“Sure.  Well this is the staff room as you can see; seats, telly, kitchen area…”

“You getting this Alf?” said Anthony. “Dedicated human resource leisure and recreational facility with audio-visual entertainment and limited catering provision.  Tell me Marthy, do you have exercise facilities here?”

“Not really.  Unless you count the stairs.  They’re fairly steep and we do go up and down them a lot.”

“Okay, manual inter-elevation device, utilised on a frequent basis,” he translated.  “No purpose-built cardio-aerobic installation.  Do you do training up here?”

“Yeh, sure do.  And we watch educational audio-visual presentations.”

“Sorry, what do you mean?  Videos or something?”

“Yes, videos. PAL. VHS.  With me in most of them…”

“Okay Alf.  Looks like we got a secondary resource enhancement function creeping in here.  Facilitating the delivery of linear, non-interactive media.  With auto-participation of some resource units.”

“This is where we put our coats, bags and that sort of thing,” said Martin moving on.  “You know – resource protective ware and non-job related miscellaneous personal accessories.”  He felt moderately proud that this did not provoke immediate translation.  Anthony remained silent.  With increased confidence:  “And of course here’s the outlet’s resource bio-waste outlet – where the shit goes…”

“For God’s sake,” said Rachel, getting up and heading back into the ladies with her tea.  “I can’t stand any more of this.”  She slammed and locked the door. “The shit’s out there mate, believe me!” she shouted, flushing the toilet to signal her unavailability for further discussion on the subject.  The sound of rushing water partially disguised the soft thumping of a rubber stamp against the inside of the door.

“So the waste disposal facility serves a secondary resource refuge function – cute,” said Anthony.

“:-)” said Alf.

“Hot beverage?” asked Martin.

“I’m sorry?”

“Coffee or tea? Caf’ or decaff’.  Or hot chocolate. Rachel’s got some in her cupboard.  Made with water.  Smells great.  Tastes like shit.”

“Give me a black coffee,” said Anthony, choosing to bypass the usual pleasantries associated with asking somebody to do something for you on a voluntary basis.

“Cool,” responded Alf.

While Martin made the drinks Anthony strode round the room nervously, looking under the furniture, knocking on the walls and repeatedly peering from behind the curtains to check the view of the street below.

“Looks like you’re expecting some bad shit to go down,” said Martin just as the kettle began to boil.

“Shit happens,” said Anthony.  “Know what I’m saying.”

Alf was standing gazing at himself in the mirror – or at least the parts of him that had attained sufficient altitude, namely his nose, eyes and bronzed pinnacle.

“Here you go guys.”  Both took their mugs but neither even attempted to drink from them.

“Is it okay?” asked Martin after several tense minutes of abstinence.

“We don’t drink coffee,” said Anthony.

“You should have said.  There’s tea, hot chocolate…”

“No really, this is fine.”

“But you just said you don’t drink it.”

“We don’t drink it.”

“Well would you like something else?”

“No, thank you.  Drinking is the last thing I’d like to do as far as coffee’s concerned.  There’s far more to coffee than just that.  Right Alf?”

“Sure.”

“What do you do with it then?”

“Hold it, talk about, talk about others like it.  Perhaps smell it, feel it.  Sometimes I look at it.  Can’t believe you guys over here are still so into drinking the shit.  Specially shit like this shit. So basic.”

“No, I agree,” said Martin.  “I hardly ever drink coffee – in fact I hardly ever make it, which I also enjoy.”

“You know Marthing, I sense you’re a whole lot ahead of the game here.”

“Thanks,” he said, picking up an empty coffee mug to join Anthony and Alf while trying to think of what to say next.  This had to be a career opportunity.  But for the life of him he couldn’t think of a response any more subtle than prostrating himself before them and pleading ‘take me with you!”  He was about to fall back on the prostrate/pleading option on the basis that it was better than nothing when his saviors put down their cups in perfect unison (Alf on the carpet tiles under the mirror) and headed for the stairs.

“Time to meet some customers I think,” said Anthony resolutely.

“We have a go on phase one customer interface test,” said Alf, taking out his till key, pulling it to the full length of its security chord and pointing it ahead of him like a tiny jousting pole.

“Come on then gents,” said Martin, feeling his x chromosomes spark into life.  “Let me show you how we do things down town.”

He bound over to the tills, leaping onto his stool and spinning the little sign to the ‘Open’ position with one slick, fluid movement.

“Okay my friend,” he said to Alf who had pulled up a chair to within inches of Martin’s and was obediently observing his every move. “The sign is turned.  What have we earned? We’re here to sell, let’s give them hell – can I help you please!”

An elderly lady approached, parking her wheeled shopping basket along side the till.
“Hello Mrs Timpson.  How’s your husband?”

“Bad,” she reported taking out a huge white purse and straining at the enormous clasp that kept it closed.  “Hopefully he’ll still be with us at Christmas but put it this way I haven’t ordered the turkey yet.”

She removed a tightly wrapped bundle of ten pound notes and extracted her gas bill.  “Can I pay this love.”

“No problem, Mrs Timpson…”

Martin took out the necessary rubber stamps and busied himself with the task.  Then, without warning, Alf stepped forward, yanked out Martin’s till key and inserted his own.

“Ah, Mrs Timpson, can I introduce Alf.  He’s new here …”

Mrs Timpson lowered her purse and gazed into his eyes that had gained a sudden and irresistible intensity.  The flaps of porridge-coloured skin around her mouth became taught as her jaw dropped.

“Oh my God,” shouted Anthony.  “He’s in!  Stop him - somebody stop him!”  He lunged forward but was restrained by Debbie who stepped out from behind her temporary desk.

“Don’t Anthony.  Leave him.  We need to know!”

On the next till Valerie stopped what she was doing and watched with the dumb neutrality of the next cow in the abattoir queue.  Debbie kept a firm arm around Anthony’s shoulders and observed proceedings with a look of grim fascination.  Alf took a step towards the counter and stopped.

A tide of energy surged suddenly outwards from the till position, flowing between the desks, lapping round the waste paper bins, gurgling into the gaps between the filing cabinets and slurping into the stationary cupboards. The soft thump-thump of rubber stamps petered out as staff were taken up in the swell and swung round on their moorings to face Alf and the fateful Mrs Timpson.   An oily calm descended on the back office as the Bank held its collective breath and waited to see what would happen next. Alf spoke, quietly at first, growing in volume as his attack gathered momentum.

“We have a critical cross sell situation on November fifteen nineteen hundred and ninety five.  Product match.  I repeat, this is a product match-positive situation.

He paused for a moment, as though gathering himself.  And then it began.

“Can you confirm that you are Mrs Agnus Timpson, wife of Norman Timpson, of 17 Windsor Close, LS12 4NJ, Account number 7044209?

“I…I…”

“You may as well cooperate Mrs Timpson.  I assure you that your resistance is futile.  Once again, can you confirm that you are Mrs Agnus Timpson, wife of Norman Timpson, of 17 Windsor Close, LS12 4NJ, Account number 7044209.”

“Yes, that’s right…”

“In that case I have no choice but to inform you that the Bank has identified several products for which you are ideally suited but have not yet been sold.  Consequently I cannot allow you to leave this branch without at least giving you the opportunity to purchase one or more of these products.  Do you understand?”

Mrs Timpson began to keel slightly to the left and a string of saliva began its journey to the floor from the corner of her mouth.  Her eyes widened; her pupils darting back and forth like drowning rats in two buckets of milk.

“Mrs Timpson, do you understand your rights?”

“Rights…?”

“The opportunities are based on a detailed analysis of your personal and financial circumstances and are not open to question either by yourself or any third party you choose to speak on your behalf.  Do you understand?”

“Stand…?”

“You have the right not to purchase any of the products I am about to offer on this visit to the Branch, however you will be continually reminded of them as though your refusal never took place on all future visits to the establishment or telephonic conversations with the same.  Do you understand?”

As the urge to die on the spot was already almost overwhelming she could muster little more than a grunt in response.   The group of customers who initially crowded round her to help were backing away, sensing a terrible danger that their involvement could not allay.  Their basest human instinct told them to get away.  Their time would come soon enough, but in the meantime it was their God-given responsibility to preserve themselves and their loved ones for as long as they could.

“Match one.  Circumstance: Husband (aforementioned Norman) due to terminate. Product: Bereavement financial services package.”  His voice suddenly changed: “Insure your baby – and any other family members you value highly. It can’t bring them back but it can make the funeral arrangements a lot more straightforward.  And make the mourning more comfortable. Do it now…”

It was the voice of Mother A from the Life Assurance video, Martin realised.  It wasn’t  Alf in the video was it?  Mind you, most of the shots were distant and in slow motion.   Was that done to disguise the fact that the tall English mother was actually a short American nurd?

“Mrs Timpson, do you accept that you have failed completely to provide the necessary financial cushion for you and your family against this inevitable tragedy?”

“Norman…?”

“Can you come to terms with your inadequacy and callous disrespect for the wishes of your loved ones in their most desperate hour.  Or will you agree to meet with one of our financial advisors next Thursday at 10.15 at the aforementioned address?”

“But I love Norman…”

“Appointment booked.  Match two. Circumstance: Medical records indicate projected husband termination February 14.  Industrial Fowl Index due to rise by 25% by December 24.  Product: Personal Loan to ease seasonal financial burden.”  Once again, Alf’s voice shifted to soothing female tones that reminded Martin of a soap powder advert.  His elocutionary skills were astonishing:

“We all like to do our best at those special times of year.  Those times we have fond memories of from our youth and try tirelessly to recreate on an annual basis.  But sometimes financial pressures mean that we can’t always achieve the massive food surplus that we might want to on these occasions.  But with a FastFunds Personal Loan money is no object – and you can go on reliving those precious moments with every monthly bank statement…”  He faded out and reverted to his usual voice.

“What’s it going to be this year – another economy mashed turkey loaf from Netto?  Or do you think you love your grand children enough to treat them to a whole-bird product with peripheral edible morsels?  For which you’re going to need a new, bigger oven.  It’s going to take more than the usual glitter-me-happy synthetic Christmas tree to keep them distracted from grand dad - who, believe me, will not be a pretty sight by then.  Shouldn’t you really be investing in a tree that sings?  With accompanying luminous reindeer ensemble?  And shouldn’t you be getting your crackers from Marks & Spencer?”

He smiled with the callousness of one who had killed before.  “Can I organise for an application form to be sent to your home, or is second best good enough for Norman’s last Christmas?”

Mrs Timpson’s pupils gave up the ghost and rolled back into her skill.  She managed a perfunctory nod just before her support stockings gave way and her nose hit the bandit screen.

“Good, it’s in the post.   Match three.  Circumstance: evidence of substantial insecure cash retention in large white purse.  Product: Instant Access low interest savings account with QuickCash card. …”

There was a clunk and a clink as the gaping purse hit the floor, sending coins rolling as far afield as the leaflet rack next to the windows.  The retreating customers skipped around them to avoid contamination.  Another tussle broke out in the back office as Anthony attempted to break free from those restraining him.

“Enough.  That’s enough.  Stop it now!”

Debbie positioned herself as a human barrier before him, arms wide apart.  “If we stop it know we’ll never know,” she implored.  “Leave it Anthony.  It can’t go on for much longer.  Look – she’s weakening.”

Mrs Timpson sank down behind the counter, the palms of her hands raised in an attempt to shield herself from whatever it was that was so effectively hastening her end.  She settled into the fetal position – or as close to it as she could manage without undoing her overcoat – and covered her face.

“Match four.  Circumstance: Imminent pay out from Life Insurance Policy held by Timpson, N.  Opportunity for lump sum investment.   Product: Life Begins at Seventy pension scheme.  Wheeled shopping accessory suggests high gullibility factor plus high Sales Vulnerability Rating on account of newly acquired widow status….”

Nobody had been paying very much attention to Martin who chose this moment to fall off his stool, executing a near perfect parachute role which deposited him safely out of sight beneath the counter.   Valerie managed to free herself from the torpor that had rendered the rest of staff inanimate and made a dash for the airlock doors.

“I can’t believe you’re all going to just sit and watch.  She needs our help!  For God’s sake she’s been banking with us for sixty years – we don’t want to kill her now…”

She threw herself against the glass door which failed to yield in the usual way. 
“Who’s locked this for chuffin’s sake!  Debbie?  Lynn?  Somebody…”

Match five.  Circumstance: evidence of bus pass (aforementioned big white purse – now discarded) indicating a public transport dependency scenario. Product: Gimme Gimme Car Loan.”  He assumed an aspirational mid-Atlantic accent.  “As members of a modern and democratic society we take for granted our right to freedom of speech, justice and home ownership.  But there is another right that we believe all our customers should have.  The right to own things they can’t afford…”

Malcolm emerged from his office and was half way across the back office before he sensed all was not well.  The main indicator was the fact that everybody had stopped working and was looking towards the little American guy who was stood at the counter talking to a cloud of thin air at the other side of the bandit screen.  Valerie seemed to be in a hurry to get out and was frantically working the door handle.

“Steady Valerie love, you’ll have that off.  Less speed, more haste.  Here, I’ll do it.”  He applied himself to the door with much the same result.  “I see Alf’s getting some practice in while it’s quiet.  Good idea.”

“Match six.  Circumstance: Reeks Margarine and Fat Smelting Ltd.  Impending insolvency.  Business overdraft facility withdrawal due 18 October.  Current employer of Colin Timpson, next of kin.  Product:  Shit I’m Out Of Work Suddenly express personal loan.”  An octave lower: “He was a man who had everything: a career to kill for, two beautiful kids, a pleasant enough wife and a deceptively spacious three-bedroomed semi.  Until one day his world changed forever…”

“No, that’s not for opening.”  Malcolm gave up on the door.  “All this technology about and the bloody door breaks.  Prisoner in me own branch.  Still, we can always use the fire escape at dinner.  If that’s working.  Haven’t tried it for a bit.”

“You have the right not to purchase any of these products.  However your need for them is an undeniable fact.  You will, therefore, be reminded of the shortcomings of your current existence, and that of your immediate family and dependents, on a regular basis for as long as the need remains, or until the end of your natural life, whichever is the shorter.  Thank you for your time.  Is there anything else I can help you with?  No?  Okay ;-)”

And that was that.  Alf sat back on his stool and the branch resounded with a post cease-fire calm.

“Looking good Alfred,” said Malcolm, curling his arm around Alf as he passed his stool on the way back to his office. “Settling in okay?”

“Cool.”

“Well keep up the good work.  We’ll have you serving real people before you know it.”

“Thank you.  I’d like that.”  He turned towards the line of customers who were edging cautiously towards Mrs Timpson’s carcass.  “Next?”

Nobody moved.

The statuettes in the banking hall were jump-started back into life by a click and a thump as the inner door suddenly opened (the click) and Valerie fell heavily into the air lock (the thump).  The white coated men emerged cautiously from the forbidden enquiries booth applying rubber gloves as they approached the American who was sitting with a quizzical look on his face.

“Is there a problem?” he said.

“Good, well done,” said Debbie stepping forward and putting her arm around him.  “You’ve certainly made an impression.  Time for a break now love?”

“Anthony, that’s cool right?” he said looking to his companion for confirmation.

“Yeh, that’s cool,” he sighed.  “Come on, let’s go.” He helped him off his stool and led him back into the booth.

One of the white-coated men helped Valerie to her feet.  He was a stocky, vaguely distinguished, looking man with a balding head and clumpy white beard which had established a presence on practically every part of his face - albeit clumpily.  His ruddy red cheeks were at least eighty percent obscured leading Valerie to wonder how big a job it was to keep his eyes clear.  His teeth were prominent yet imperfect - in the same way as a druid circle.  This must be what Santa really looks like, thought Valerie as he helped her out of the airlock.  But then she wasn’t feeling quite herself.

“Can someone help me with Martin – he’s been sick.  Someone get the mop for me from upstairs.”  Lynn was attempting to prize the cashier out from underneath the counter.  He didn’t seem to be co-operating.  The technician balanced Valerie on Alf’s stool and turned his attention to the inert Martin who had now been successfully leant against the till drawers. He lifted both his eyelids, and felt his pulse.

Are you lot ared yet?” the bearded one asked Valerie.

“Sorry, are we...?”

“That's right, are you?”

“Are we what?”
“Ared - Are you ared?”

“I’m sorry.  I don’t seem to be quite understanding what you’re on about.”

“Accelerated – ARE – are.  Have you lot been accelerated?”

“Oh the video you mean.  Tennis, picnics,” said Valerie, grasping at straws somewhat.  “No we haven’t yet.  But we’ve seen the video.  Is we supposed – sorry – are we supposed to have?”

“Don’t ask me.   I don’t make the decisions round here – I just do what I’m told.  Ask her.”  He motioned towards Debbie who was trying to stabilise the rest of the tremulous staff through a group change management exercise.  “Debbie”, he called.  “Have these been done or not?”

“No, not yet.”  She cut the exchange short and returned to the folded paper napkin she was skillfully tearing into little white people who were managing to maintain individual characteristics while acting together as a cohesive and effective team (by virtue of the fact that they were inseparably joined at the hands and feet).

“Shit,” he said quietly under his breath.  “Anyway, he should be okay.  Might feel slightly nauseous for a few days, have difficulty sleeping and so on.  Perhaps a slight loss of appetite, but no lasting damage.  Just keep him warm and rested.  You’re his mother right?”

“God no!”

“Well who is?”

“I don’t know.  I don’t think he has one.”

The technician got to his feet. “Anybody here this lad’s mother?”

He was answered with a series of emphatic smirks of denial.

“Don’t worry, I’ll make sure he’s alright,” said Valerie.

“Thanks love.  He should be okay.  I don’t hold out much hope for the drone though.”  A small crowd of customers and passers by had plucked up the courage to gather round the prostrate Mrs Timpson.  A few of them were wafting her from a safe distance with brochures from the leaflet rack.

“Oy!  Get that stuff away from her,” he shouted.  “That’s the last thing she needs.”
“The what – drone?”

“Sorry, customer.”  He seemed suddenly very keen to detach himself from the conversation and from Valerie who had taken hold of his sleeve.

“Excuse me.  Not so fast young man.  What’s this drone business then.  I may be stupid, but I’m not daft!”

“Eric, the name’s Eric. And I’m not that young, but thanks for the thought.”

“Excuse me Eric then – I’m Valerie by the way hello – what’s this drone thing all about then?  You might think I’m daft but I’m not you know.  Oh no.  I was sat behind these tills before you were having hot dinners in your short trousers.  And I know a thing or two about banks. I also know a thing or two about bees (my sister’s husband used to keep them on Guernsey –doesn’t any more – just bantams now) and that’s not a drone.  It’s a customer.”

“Yes, sorry.  My mistake – it’s a bantam.”  He turned away.

“Now you’re just been daft.”

“I mean a customer.  You’re right, it’s a customer – can someone go round there and shut the branch.”

Valerie seized his lapel and thrust her face to within inches of his longest whiskers.  “I am sick to death of being tret like an half-wit”, she said, emphasising each word with a tug on his jacket.  “What exactly happened here?”

“Alright, keep your hair on love.  Index exposure.  Severe dose.”

“Thank you,” she said, struggling to simmer herself down a bit. “That wasn’t too difficult was it.”

She usually avoided physical contact with all but her closest friends.  Today was turning out to be very unnatural in all kinds of ways.  She released his jacket and flopped back onto her stool, suddenly feeling overwhelmed with it all.  She began to cry.  She hadn’t been listening to his answer.  At that moment she wasn’t even aware she’d heard it.  But unfortunately she had.

“I’m sorry. Is your jacket alright?” she asked between sobs.

“Don’t worry about this old thing love.  Worry about yourself.  You’re in the dark aren’t you.  All of you.  It’s not right … Jesus!”

Mrs Timpson suddenly rose up like an apparition from behind the window.  Failing to get a purchase on the glass she slid back down to the floor, her tongue like a free fall slug leaving a mucus trail down the bandit screen.   Martin stirred.

“Feeling better now love?” asked Valerie, descending to his side.

“Debbs” he began to murmur, lolling over to her and nestling his head into her full breast.  “I shall be cometh…fear not my Quark…”

Valerie tried to force him away from her but gave up.  She patted his head with as much affection as she could muster.

“There, there. It’s alright.  It’s over now.”

Then suddenly he sat up bolt upright banging his head on the cashiers’ draw still open above his head.

“There, you see.  You know you’re supposed to close and lock those when you’re not on till.  Now you know why.  That’ll learn you.”

“But I sense a sales opportunity.   We all have fail ‘till we close that sale.  Come Alf my friend.  To the till we go…”

“Passive Index Amnesia – he probably won’t remember a thing,” said the scientist getting up and leaving them together.

“Not Alf.  It’s Valerie love.  Alf’s gone.”

Malcolm passed Rachel on the stairs as he headed up to put the kettle on.  She emerged into the back office and couldn’t believe what she saw.  It wasn’t that none of the staff seemed to be doing any work and were instead watching an origami display by a senior Head Office manager.  Nor was it that the branch doors had been closed trapping a group of customer who were clustered around a low-lying object of particular interest opposite till three.

It was Valerie, who was kneeling, holding a vomit-stained Martin tenderly in her arms.  Even graffiti couldn’t be trusted these days.

She turned and headed back to the cubicle.