THE NEW JOB... & other things (Part 100d)
We
both tried to stay calm so as not to upset my grandfather. I knew
Buddah lived with his parents and was a local. However, I didn’t have
any idea where. Bags lived only a few streets away from my grandfather’s
house so headed there. By then it was approaching 1pm. I knocked on the
door and his mother answered. He was still in bed which told me that it
must’ve been quite a party after I left. I asked if she knew where
Buddah lived and she gave me the directions. Actually, he lived within
minutes of where I lived and it was my next stop.
When
his mother told me that he was off visiting an Army buddy I’m sure the
look on my face was one of shock. I’d seen him just about 12 hours
earlier. I tried not to say something to get him in trouble with his
mother and asked when he’d left. Her answer was that he left at noon and
was due back for supper. There wasn’t much I could say but I left with
some private thoughts.
We were eating our supper when
the phone rang. It was Edith and she was calling from my grandfather’s
house to tell me that Jan had shown up. She didn’t go into detail but
said that Jan was OK and was apologetic. She said that Jan told her that
she’d gotten “involved”. Putting that together with what Buddah’s
mother had told me I couldn’t help but smile.
I wasn’t
looking forward to work on Monday but on my way I got to wondering what
Stasia looked like, hoping for the best. I’d calculated that she was
about 25 years old based on the “dirt” that both Alvin and Inez had fed
me the previous week. However, I couldn’t help but think that in spite
of her young age, compared to just about everybody else, and how
unremarkable they all were she’d be unremarkable too.
I
won’t say I was shocked but was pleasantly surprised when I walked in. I
was one of the first to arrive (Alvin was always the first) and as I
made the turn into the work area I saw an unfamiliar face. The best way
to describe her was “innocent” looking. She almost looked lost just
sitting there at her desk. A little later, from my desk, I took a good,
close look at her without her knowing. Depending on where the light was
coming from her hair went from brown to auburn and was down to her
shoulder blades. It was straight and down to her shoulders and with bangs. (For those of you who saw the movie "Grease" and remember the character played by Olivia Newton John... Sandy... at the beginning of the movie and how she acted and wore her hair... that was how Stasia's hair looked. (See picture.) Remember, the movie story took place in the 60's)
About 5’7“, she was
wearing a dress and I don’t remember it at all except that it “hung“ on
her so that it was basically impossible to see her ”form“. I had to wait
quite a while to see even the faintest smile. When she did I got the
impression that she could possibly be considered cute. One thing I was
looking for was to see how she was treated by the others since she was
classified as an ”outsider“. Since she worked on the side with the
officers of the bank there was little interaction with staff so it was
hard to judge. I did witness one exchange with Mona in which she was
definitely talked down to but, armed with the ”dirt“ that Alvin had
given me about Mona, I sort of expected it. In the week and a day that
I’d been there, after the original introduction, Mona hadn’t even
acknowledged my presence. A real bitch!
It was the end
of the week before I had a reason to talk with her. I was auditing the
mortgage files and two of them were missing. Artie, the mortgage officer,
was away from his desk and since Stasia was shared by all the officers I
went to her to leave a message for him. Aside from looking up from her
typing when I walked up she never looked me in the eyes. I think what
puzzled me was that she was also the receptionist and had to deal with
the public. It seemed to me that in the five years she’d been there she
should’ve been over being shy.
The following week was
more of the same treatment by just about everybody. However, at least Alvin was explaining why I was
doing what I was doing which gave me a reason for the effort. The reality
of it was that I was doing all his ”grunt“ work allowing him to, more or
less, goof off. One other characteristic of Alvin had, by then,
emerged. On top of everything else... he was neurotic. Examples: everything
I touched had to go back in the exact same place as when I picked it
up; whenever I started a project it had to be finished before leaving
and I wasn’t to ask him a question when he was on his lunch hour.
I’d written about how old most of the equipment was but the classic was
the adding machine I had to use. They had no electric adding machines at
all but most were 7 column, hand cranked machines. Mine, because I had
to deal in big numbers when I totaled all the ledger cards up, was a 10 column
machine. The keyboard had 100 buttons and to make an entry I had to
depress a separate button in each column for each number that I wanted to enter and then pull a
crank handle. I’d never operated one and, in fact, had never seen one
before starting at the bank, so it was slow going. All the accounts
Alvin had started me auditing were relatively small and I managed to complete
them before quitting time. But, the big one, all the savings accounts, was
still to be tackled. It was a Wednesday when Alvin gave me that
assignment. When I looked at all the ledger cards that had to be run I
almost choked. By lunch time I knew I was in trouble as I was less than a
third of the way through. I was getting faster though and decided to
skip lunch in hopes of getting them done close to 5pm.
To be continued...
2 comments:
Nothing like working a job you don't like, with people who don't like you. I worked at a job where everyone had a connection with each other,family,friend,or school. It took years to be accepted and some never accepted my presence.
But, when you have three kids it's better than starving... :-)
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