ENDING THE YEAR… Odds & ends (Part 167d)
Things settled
down as the afternoon wore on with the examiners working on their first
full projects and I was able to tackle some regular bank work. Before
they packed up to leave for the day I reminded the lead examiner that
they’d have to vacate the Board room by 2:30pm the following day.
Melissa, the woman I’d had a ‘run-in’ with was standing right beside him
as I made my point. The look she gave me was definitely not a friendly
one. It told me there would be more confrontations before the
examination was over. I gave some thought to trying to have a talk with
Woody but in my present frame of mind decided not to. I was hoping the
following day would be less stressful. It wasn’t.
Previous
examinations had taught me to get to the bank early. I’d been ‘ambushed’
one morning in the parking lot by one of the examiners and it wasn’t
fun. At least, while in the bank and at my desk, I had built in
‘escapes’. I arrived at 8:30am or so and settled in to make sure I had
everything I needed from J J for the mortgage committee meeting. I
figured I had a little time to sort things out and before I really got
started there was Melissa standing by my desk. I quickly looked around
to see if more of their audit team had arrived and saw no one. That’s
when I knew I had a ‘buzz saw’ assigned to me. I looked at her and asked
what she wanted. I was ready to bite my tongue if she wanted to go back
to the same topic she’d attacked me with the day before but it was
something new. She’d been assigned to check how the bank had handled the
transition from ledger cards to being on-line with the service bureau.
I’ll
admit that until we got started with the service bureau I had no idea
of just how much paper would be generated by them. The bank was already
short of storage and we (I) had to come up with a solution. Some of the
reports had to be readily accessible for at least six weeks. Then I had
to find a ‘home’ for the older reports and keep them at least two years.
I had two choices… the attic or the sub-vault in the basement with
neither one being a good one. The accounting department chose the attic.
The one good thing about that was it forced J J to go through all the
mortgage forms that were stored there, cull out the obsolete ones and
then to find a new home for those the department still used. That
process freed up most of the shelves that had been built there many
years before. However, getting the cartons of reports up there was a
problem because the stairs were narrow and a bit steeper than normal.
Mike, the messenger/custodian was tasked with getting the boxes up there
and Bret or I would go up and periodically organize them. The request
from Melissa meant either one or the other of us would have to go up to
the attic to find the reports she needed to do her audit. Bret hadn’t
arrived and the doors weren’t yet open so I ‘bit the bullet’ and headed
that way.
The only access to the attic was through the second
floor bathroom that was pretty much designated as for the ladies. When
you walked in the door the toilet was right here to the right with the
sink next to it. But the door to the attic was straight ahead. This
arrangement had created some embarrassing situations (me included) when
someone was up in the attic and a person using the facilities would
close the door and forget to reopen it. The person in the attic upon
returning would reach the bottom of the stairs and have to open the
door, sometimes only to find someone on the ‘throne’ or in some state of
undress. I’d put up warning signs but like I’d been told, “Who reads
signs?” With Melissa following me I headed up the stairs. Once there I
tried to find the specific range of reports she wanted. It entailed
removing a number of cartons from the shelves and then going through
them while they were on the floor. Once she saw the way the reports had
been boxed combined with the poor lighting she became ‘testy’ and
impatient. I don’t remember how many cartons were on the floor but when
she couldn’t readily find what she was looking for she demanded that I
arrange to have all the boxes taken down to the Board room. I’d been
‘biting my tongue’ up to then but that request was totally unreasonable
and I let her know my feelings. I surprised her with my brusqueness and
she took a step back. In so doing she tripped over one of the cartons
and I stood and watched her fall backwards. It only took a quick second
and there was no time to reach out to try and catch a hand. I, myself,
had to step over a partially opened carton and in the few seconds that
it took I could see she wasn’t moving. I also saw that the way she ended
up was flat on her back on the floor with one leg splayed out to the
side and the other still draped over the carton that she’d tripped over.
There was one other thing… a patch of pale blue intermingled with some
white on top of the grey material that was her skirt. I swear I didn’t
pause for more than a split second as I climbed over her to get to her
head. I could see she was breathing but she definitely wasn’t conscious.
The
bank had a fairly well stocked first aid kit in the bathroom right
below where we were. With so many of the Board members up in in age it
was felt that it was appropriate to locate it outside the Board room.
Knowing this I headed down the stairs to fetch it and to get the
smelling salts I knew were inside the kit. I never gave the closed door a
thought. All I wanted was that kit and to get back up the stairs. I
pushed open the door and there was ‘upstairs’ Sandra with her skirt up
around her waist trying to pull her blouse down. I don’t know if she
yelled or not but I do remember telling her to get the lead examiner
right away and then bolting back up the stairs. Melissa hadn’t moved. I,
again, made sure she was breathing and then popped open the kit. The
capsules with the smelling salts were right there and because I’d
witnessed someone breaking one open had no trouble doing it. Just about
the time I was putting it up to her nose the lead examiner popped his
head through the floor opening. It took Melissa a few seconds before she
started shaking her head to get away from the scent of the salts and
that was what I wanted to see. I stood up to let the guy in to talk with
her and as I did I stepped back. In thinking back on the scene I’m not
sure what she was trying to do but what I do know is that after she got
her one leg off the box she sat up and pulled both her legs up to her
chest... and I didn't look away. The light blue color I'd seen right
after she fell were her panties and the white was her slip.
The
lead examiner had his hands on her shoulders and was shaking her trying
to get her to talk. I was torn between looking at her crotch and trying
to hear what her reply were to the questions she was being asked. It
only took a few minutes for a bunch of other people to show up.
Realizing the examiner was fully focused on Melissa I took charge and
asked for all the others to go back down the stairs. I’m not sure how
long it was before he decided that she was OK to be led down the stairs
but when he did I knew it was going to be somewhat difficult with how
steep and narrow they were. It took a fair amount of time to accomplish
the task and once there we sat her in one of the plush Trustee chairs.
It was decided to have one of the other examiners drive her to the
emergency room at the hospital (back in those days we didn’t have EMT’s)
rather than to call for the ambulance. By then it was after 10am. What a
day! And it was still morning. As they helped her into a car I had no
idea that it was the last time I’d see Melissa. The only thing we were
eventually told was that she was sent home “to rest”.
To be continued...
2 comments:
What do you think the bank and everyone else involved would have to pay out today? Good job of keeping your head, of course you were amply rewarded with some great activity.
OB... good question... a LOT more! :-)
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