The cavalry stopped short at the castle wall; and by castle wall, I mean Petunia, keeper of the minutes.
Being relatively new at Immortality-Corp, my exposure to Petunia had been mostly exuberant affirmation from colleagues during daily affirmations—mostly pointed at her rule-based precision.
“Seymour,” I nudged him gently in the side; he giggled. “Seymour, I am not playing. I need information.” He put his train aside carefully, tucking it neatly into a metal box.
He eyed me with obvious excitement. Information obviously meant espionage in his mind, which wasn’t far off.
“What do you know about Petunia?” As far as I knew, lobsters couldn’t retract into their carapaces, but he sure tried.
“Stay away from her, Keith. She’s given me four infractions for ‘excessive diffusion of bodily odor.’”
I silently acknowledged the infraction; even if I wasn’t perfectly aligned, I understood.
“I can’t help it, Keith. The TV adverts tell me to bathe in lemon, but it doesn’t seem to work.”
I had noticed the lemon. He had recently started emitting the odor of a seafood platter. That had been left out in the sun. For three days. In July.
“Anything else?” I asked hopefully. Anything would do.
“Not really, Keith. I know she has a thing for forms.” I lit up.
“Here, Keith, take this,” he said, carefully handing me the Royal Scot. “I don’t care if it’s not mint; it’s for safe travels.”
For a moment I couldn't speak, and I fought to keep control of a small lump that was forming in the back of my throat.
It was then that I decided to go to battle not just for Marketh, but for Seymour.
I embraced the new action-packed Keith, and went straight to her desk, arming myself with Form 39-F, Request for Minutes, and Form 78-F, Request for Anonymity of Action under the Persecution Clause, where an employee could access named minutes without identification based on the fear of significant bodily harm. I am confident that lobotomy fills this niche adequately.
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“And why,” Petunia’s voice dripped with contempt, “would I consider your application, let alone give you access to my documents?” I stood my ground. Apparently, Immortality-Corp’s joy KPIs did not extend to gatekeeper roles.
“Well, Petunia,” I added as much venom to my voice as I could, spitting her name out as if it were an unwelcome olive pit. “You will because I will make you, procedurally.” She cocked an eyebrow.
I had one horse in this race. Immortality-Corp had relegated me to a support desk, being either unaware of or disdainful of my professional history.
“Name your terms, employee 113-F.” Her voice had changed—more formal now. She was good; she had not looked at any documents to recall my employee ID.
“A form-off,” I replied coolly. “Right now.”
“Agreed.” She motioned me towards a desk. “Do you need a pen?” she asked, obviously goading me.
The battle began.
My pen hand quivered; years of cultivated skill had brought me to this point. I stared at my opponent. Petunia looked cool, unfazed, but I could already see three holes in her technique.
Her pinky was crooked on her pen hand. That was begging for a repetitive strain injury.
The bend at her wrist? Carpal tunnel.
Her pen-hold was uncoordinated. I did the math: she could achieve a maximum of 66 signatures in one minute, assuming a form flip of 0.3 seconds and a signature of 0.6. Amateur.
That’s not accounting for the mental gymnastics of bureaucracy. The performance started.
My hand blazed, tossing forward and signing 11B: Notice of Request for Company Minutes Under the Clause of Anonymity.
With admirable speed, she returned with [11B - Rejection]: Denial of Request, rubber-stamped.
I winked and whipped out a Notice of Appeal, folding it into a neat envelope and enclosing it with a wax seal.
I stared at my opponent. Her chest heaved. She reached for the letter opener and fumbled; it clattered to the floor.
From nowhere, I produced Form A12-C, Notice of Damage to Office Property, and handed it to her.
Her rebuttal: Form 33-D, Self-Reporting and Repayment of Damage, signed in duplicate.
A power play. She controlled her own space.
But could she handle this? I produced two separate forms:
Form 72-K: Notice of Procedural Inconsistency.
Form 73-K: Notice of Procedural Error.
Her previous form should have been in triplicate, and her pen was the wrong shade of blue.
I noticed a small intake of breath. Her lips parted, her pupils dilated, and she looked at me hungrily. My pen—a finely balanced instrument of bureaucratic dominance.
Well now, isn’t that interesting. I smiled to myself. Administration is nothing if not... flexible.
I flicked my pen up. It arced through the air; and before it landed, I presented her with Form 19-D, Intent for Inter-Office Dalliance.
Her eyes glazed over. And she was done. The pen fell neatly back into my palm in a perfect grip.
I held out my hand to Petunia. She accepted.
“Well, 113-F.” Her breathing was erratic. “You have earned your document, and right to the minutes with full anonymity.”
She dropped a thumb drive into my hand, and I pocketed it.

