Read Sex and Other Changes Online
Authors: David Nobbs
âOh, what a thing.'
She had to be very alert, to work out when he was talking about Nicola's sex change and when he was talking about railway carriages.
âWell actually, Mr Beresford, I don't really mind. I understand.'
âWhat? But the man's turning into a freak.'
âNo. No! That's exactly what he isn't turning into, Mr Beresford. He feels that he's
been
a freak. He says that every time someone changes sex, there's one less freak in the world.'
âSorry. I can't agree with you. If the good Lord had meant him to be a woman he'd have made him a woman. So when is he having the operation?' A dreadful thought struck Mr Beresford. âI hope you won't be wanting time off.'
âNo, Mr Beresford.' For mine, yes, but not for his. God, imagine his face when I tell him about mine. âAnd it won't be for a couple of years. He has to live in society as a woman for two years.'
âGood God! That is completely over the top! That is ridiculous!'
âWell, actually, I can see the point, Mr Beresford.'
âWhat? Oh, no. No, no. No, I was reading down this email. They want us to recall every carriage. Every carriage, for goodness sake! That would be disastrous. Disastrous from a financial perspective. Disastrous from a public confidence perspective. Disastrous logistically. Just plain disastrous. Right, get those carriage numbers and then get on to Balshaw and see if they're from the same batch.'
She went back to her office. She couldn't concentrate on anything until she'd sorted out this business with the Royal Mail. She phoned Mr Gamble from Customer Services.
âNow this complaint,' said Mr Gamble. âIt is, as you'll realise, extremely serious. Do you think it would stand up in a tribunal?'
âNo, it wouldn't, Mr Gamble,' she said, âand neither would I. I made it all up.'
âYou made it up? Why should you do a thing like that?'
âI was in a mood. I have problems at home.'
âI have problems at home,' said Mr Gamble. âWe all have problems at home, that's what homes are for, but we don't all go around making up answers to questionnaires.'
âIt made me angry. I thought the whole concept so stupid. “Would you say your postman was averagely smart?” What nonsense.'
âIt was my idea, my personal initiative,' said Mr Gamble tartly.
âI'm sorry.' Oh heavens, Mr Beresford was peering through the glass door at her. He loathed private phone calls. He seemed to be able to sniff them out. âI don't want to offend you, Mr Gamble, but I just think people with busy lives haven't the time for such things. I filled it in stupidly to make myself feel better. My father posted it by mistake. I hadn't any intention of sending it.'
âI don't believe you. I believe something happened to make you change your mind. Has your postman threatened you?'
âNo! If I'd been serious, would I have written all that stuff about elves and herons? Do you really think I have elves and herons in my garden?'
âWhy, what's wrong with elves and herons?'
In her anxiety, with Mr Beresford still watching her, Alison failed to read the danger signals.
âNothing,' she said, âexcept that they're the most ghastly form of sentimental bad taste.'
âI have five elves and two herons.'
âI'm really sorry, Mr Gamble. I had no intention of offending you.'
He was coming in! Beresford! Oh God.
âLook,' she said. âI have to go now. It was all nonsense and I want you to ignore it.'
Mr Beresford raised his great bushy eyebrows.
âIt isn't quite as simple as that, Mrs Divot,' said Mr Gamble. âYour complaint tallies closely with two others.'
âWhat?? About our postman?'
Mr Beresford was capable of raising his eyebrows more than she had suspected. In the world of eyebrow-raising, he was a giant.
âI'm not at liberty to comment on that, Mrs Divot. Replies are given in strict confidence.'
âMr Gamble, I meant nothing of what I said and I didn't mean to post it. I am making no allegations whatsoever and will write to you to confirm that. So far as I am concerned our postman is wonderful and I can't believe he would ever expose himself to anybody. Now I must go.' She put the phone down and met Mr Beresford's eyes. âProblems with our postman,' she said.
âSo I gathered.'
âI'm sorry to phone in office hours but I had to clear my mind before I dealt with our more pressing matters.'
âMore pressing, Mrs Divot? You really think our little business more important than your postman? Fm honoured. Fm flattered. Fm touched. When you've rung Mercia First Southern and Balshaw and sorted out any problems you may have with flashing milkmen, perhaps you'd run up a draft reply to Mercia First Southern arguing against their ridiculous over-reaction. Do you think you could spare me the time for that?'
The heaviness of his sarcasm, the bushiness of his eyebrows, the flashing of his eyes, it was disturbing to think that only ten minutes ago he had called her Alison.
âI'll get it done straightaway, Mr Beresford.'
âGood.'
He went back to the connecting door to his office, then turned and gave a twisted smile.
âHe won't hold his job with Cornucopia,' he said. âI've played golf with Sir Terence Manningham.'
And he left her to pick the bones out of that.
The
Throdnall Advertiser
leaked the story straightaway. âLeading Throdnall Hotelier in Sex Change Shock.'
And there, near the bottom:
Mr Divot is married with two children. Neighbours said today that they found it hard to believe. “They're such a lovely family, they seem so normal,” said Edith Percival (73), a retired schoolteacher. “We've never had any trouble with them. I could understand it if it was âriff-raff'.”
Mr Divot's wife Alison (40) is personal assistant to Mr Clive Beresford, Managing Director of the besieged Throdnall Carriage Works.
Em was absolutely furious about the article. âYou promised me an exclusive,' she said. âYou promised!' Bloody Mick Perkins getting a front page lead about
my
dad. I'm a laughing stock. Pipped to the post with a story about my own family. I'll never live it down. You promised, Dad, and I believed you. I thought I could trust you now you're becoming a woman. I should have realised you're still a man.'
Nicola protested till she was blue in the face that the leak hadn't come from her.
âWell it was stupid of you anyway to think it wouldn't come out,' said Em. âAll the people who go to your stupid hotel â God knows why â it was bound to come out. I feel such a fool. I feel humiliated.'
Mr Beresford was no less furious.
âI don't like it,' he said. âI don't like being associated with it. And what do they mean â “besieged”? Have they got wind of the broken nuts? Have you said anything?'
âMr Beresford!' she said indignantly. âI am reliability personified. I embody the spirit of confidentiality. You said so yourself.'
âI know,' he said. âI know. I'm sorry. I can't think straight. But what
do
they mean â “besieged”?'
What could she say? She couldn't say, âWell, Mr Beresford, I think it's pretty well-known locally that the carriage works are going through a bad time.' It was the great unspoken fact, which could never be acknowledged.
âWell I don't want it happening again,' he said. âRight â¦'
Cold winds had set in from the east, and Alison could feel a chill of fear gnawing away at her insides. Nicola had been summoned to head office. If she lost her job with Cornucopia, how could she possibly find another one? She would have to come clean about her condition. The voice might have softened, but there'd be no mistaking those large hands.
âDid you get that?'
âI'm sorry, Mr Beresford, I â¦'
âPull yourself together, Mrs Divot. I cannot have a Personal Assistant whose mind wanders.'
âI'm so sorry, Mr Beresford.'
âThese are some notes I've made on safety of rolling stock. Things I should say when I face the Strategic Rail Authority. Knock them into shape, please, and type them up for me.'
âYes, Mr Beresford. Sorry, Mr Beresford.'
She was dismissed. She went to the door. She couldn't believe how often she was having to apologise to Mr Beresford. She wasn't an apologiser. Nick had always been the apologiser in the family. She was forthright, uncompromising Alison. What had happened to her?
âMrs Divot?'
She turned, and saw that he was giving her a rather intense look. She wouldn't have gone so far as to say that his face softened. She wasn't sure if his face was physically capable of softening. But ⦠there was a certain ⦠almost warmth ⦠in his eyes. She wondered if he was going to say something personal â hoped that he would, yet dreaded it.
âYou've become virtually indispensable to me, Mrs Divot,' he said. âI don't know what I'd do if I had to manage without you.'
A threat wrapped in a compliment with the delicacy of spicy meat wrapped in cabbage leaves on a stall in down-town Bangkok. Or was it a compliment wrapped in a threat?
She returned to her office and tried to make sense of his notes, but the words danced before her eyes. Nicola would lose her job. She would lose her job. They'd lose their house. The family would disintegrate. Well, get on with the work, then. Fight for your job.
Rail travel remains the safest form of travel in every continent and every country in the developed and developing such anxiety about our future that I can't sleep, can't eat. No, Alison, stick to the notes, forget your puny little life. The record of carriage makers in railway history is well-nigh unblemished. In two hundred and forty-six railway accidents analysed by the Penfold Rail Safety Research Group only five contained any element of failure of component parts of me long for the sex change, parts of me are beginning to wonder if the sacrifice is going to be too much, the risk too ⦠No! Concentrate. Concentrate, Alison. Component parts of carriages. Checking procedures are â¦
She began to manage to give her mind to the job. She'd finished by twenty to five. The last angry defiance of the sun was still tingeing the sky a livid pink behind Toys
Us. She could sense that outside their centrally heated sauna the world was fiercely cold. She handed the typed-up notes to Mr Beresford. He read them through very quickly, he could grasp a document within seconds.
âYes. Fine. Good. Good. Ah, you've split up the statistics a bit. Good. Effective. Excellent. Well done, Mrs Divot. Mrs Divot?' This in a different tone, again she sensed the approach of something personal.
âYes?'
âWhat do you do about sleeping arrangements?'
âI beg your pardon?'
âYou and your “husband”. Do you sleep in separate rooms now? I'm sorry, you think that too personal?'
âNo, I'm ⦠er ⦠I'm just astounded, Mr Beresford. You've never ⦠you never ask me things like that.'
âI couldn't help thinking about ⦠your predicament. I mean if your husband is living as a woman, then in essence, if you were sharing a double bed you would be two women in one bed, you would be ⦠lesbians!' He spat the word out.
âOh no,' she said. âNot that I have any objection to lesbianism between consenting adults â¦' She wasn't going to be cowed by his prejudice, âbut, no, we ⦠I ⦠we ⦠there is no physical relationship between us, there hasn't been for some time.' She didn't want to be telling him all this, but she refused to be coy with him, and looked him full in the face. âWe do share a bed, we haven't said anything about that being odd, we just take it as a fact. We have no alternative, we haven't a spare room with the two children and my father living with us. It's something we, I suppose, since we can't do anything about it, just don't mention.'
âMrs Beresford and I have slept in separate beds for thirteen years.'
She didn't think she really wanted to know that. Why had he told her? Was it a hint? Was he paving the way for an approach? Oh God, that would make things difficult; it would be harder than ever to tell him.
Oh Lord, he was going to speak again. What now?
âYes,' he said, âI think armed with this little lot I shall face the Strategic Rail Authority with confidence. Thank you, Mrs Divot.'
Alison had never felt so exhausted at the end of a day's work, and it wasn't exactly an evening of sweetness and light at home. Nicola was very touchy because she was nervous about her
impending interview with Head Office. Em was still depressed over Giorgio and still furious about the article in the
Advertiser
. Gray chose that evening of all evenings to announce that he'd been surfing the net for male to female sex changes that had gone wrong, and had come up with a minister in Minnesota who had died of heart failure during the operation, a chiropodist in Ecuador who had suffered a mental breakdown after his body rejected his vagina, and a financial consultant in Kuala Lumpur who had returned to work after an apparently successful operation, only to bleed to death during a seminar on company pensions.