XEROX,
MY A**
Reuben stared in
astonishment at the sight that greeted him in the restroom: two of his staff in
a state of distress and no sign of the third member of his team.
Sam, Reuben’s deputy
manager, leant against the sink, nursing his fist. “You’re looking for Chas? He’s in the end cubicle and he won’t come
out,” he sighed. “I’ve hammered on the door for ages; do you think I’ve broken
a bone in my hand?”
“Quit moaning,” came another voice from the far end of the room. Kent, the office manager, was sitting back on
his heels in front of the farthest cubicle door, peering with keen interest at
a half broken file in his hand. The
other half was lodged in the lock of the cubicle which – incidentally –
remained tightly shut. “I’m impressed by
the robustness of these locks,” he mused, with professional admiration.
“For God’s sake,” Reuben
growled, looking between the pair of them.
“What’s going on? I’ve had to
reschedule the conference call, with half the department missing.” He turned his glare towards the closed cubicle
door. “Chas, can you hear me in
there? Don’t be childish! Come out at once!”
Reuben shook his
head. There was concern in his eyes as
well as impatience. “What’s the
problem? Does anyone know?”
The other guys exchanged
nervous glances. Sam shrugged. “He’s locked himself in the men’s room in
some kind of ridiculous hysteria. What more’s to know?”
“Well yes, of course, I
heard about -” began Sam and the two other pairs of eyes swivelled around to glare
at him. “Nothing,” he said, rather
weakly.
“Tell me,” said Reuben.
“No, seriously, I don’t
know anything really -”
“Tell me,” repeated Reuben,
his tone deceptively calm but with the kind of tone to it that implied any
further repeats would be accompanied by a swift return to the unemployment
office, and probably bloodshed, not necessarily in that order.
Sam paled and swallowed
convulsively. “It was just a joke gone
wrong, or so I understand. It was for
your birthday, Reuben.”
“My…?” Reuben looked nonplussed.
Sam looked around wildly
for some saviour to rescue him, but Reuben had barricaded the men’s room from
the rest of the office staff while this issue was resolved. “He was just taking a picture for you, Reuben. Copying something to give
to you. Something
for fun.” His voice was getting
progressively higher.
Over in the cubicle there
was a strangled groan.
“A picture? What of?”
Sam tried unsuccessfully
to blend himself into the tile work. “Of him. You know…
since you started dating. He thought you
could have a picture of him… keep it with you as a keepsake. A souvenir… a…”
“I understand the
concept,” said Reuben, coldly. “Why are
you making those faces? Are you
constipated?”
Sam glared at his
colleague. He looked back at Reuben,
very flushed by now. “It was… sort of
intimate,” he babbled.
“Intimate.” Reuben made it sound like a criminal
sentence.
There was a gargle from
the cubicle.
“Loosen up, Reuben,”
Reuben ignored him, still
peering at Sam. “In
what way intimate?”
Sam squirmed. He felt like a bug caught on a pin.
“Chas took a picture of
his butt,” he sighed.
There was a sudden
silence in the restroom that would have been worthy of a cathedral.
Reuben’s voice broke into
it with perfect, chilling clarity. “And
how did he achieve this?”
Sam wanted to weep but
thought it inappropriate. It wasn’t like
he expected any corporate mercy. “He sat
up on the Xerox machine. Pressed the copy button.”
“Without his
pants on?”
“Pretty obvious, that,”
muttered
“To take a
picture for me?”
“I know, I know,” Sam was
babbling now. “Absolutely mad, I know, he
said it was a reminder of his student days, or something like that, he was
grinning at the time, even though he had to wriggle to get on, and then half
his left buttock was on the copy tray, but -”
He paused, his mouth clamping shut.
Reuben was laughing. Loudly; without restraint.
So hard that he was doubled up, tears in his eyes, hands pressed on his
knees. “Reuben? Are you OK?”
“The Xerox copier…” Reuben
was hiccupping through his laughter. He
started again. “The Xerox isn’t working
properly, didn’t he know?”
Sam gaped at him.
“There’s an electrical
fault,” Reuben continued. “We’re waiting
for the engineer to call. When you take
a copy, the ancillary services come on as well, without warning; without
request.”
“Print; copy; scan,”
murmured
“And staple,” Reuben
finished.
“And staple!” came an anguished cry from inside the cubicle. “So why the hell didn’t anyone tell me?”
There was an abrupt click
as the cubicle door was unlocked. A
young man’s face appeared out of the gloom, hair tousled and the eyes wide and
wild. There was a gentle tinkling sound
as a few loose staples fell on to the linoleum.
“I’m thrilled to be the
topic of everyone’s amusement,” came Chas’s furious,
humiliated, pain-fuelled cry. “But who
the fuck’s going to go and fetch me a cushion?”