I feel the sharp tug of the blade and hope against hope
it won’t bleed. You don’t need a shaving cut when you are already running late
and facing a meeting you’d rather not attend and a day you’d rather not have. I
wait for those few seconds that taunt the unwary bristle-cutter, just long
enough for a little hope to bubble to the surface, before the claret does.
‘Shit, shit, shit.’ I shout in anguish as the
surprisingly vibrant crimson liquid, given how tired I feel, oozes through the
snowy shaving foam.
‘Are you alright in there?’ questions my wife, as I stare
morbidly fascinated at the blood pumping from the cut. ‘Did you want the
laxatives or the Diocalm?’
‘Different type of shit.’ I mutter, as I wipe at the
place in question and a tomato sauce-like smear ruins the perfect juxtaposition
of virgin white and little bleeder.
‘Have you cut yourself?’ She asks unnecessarily as I
slope from the en-suite with a piece of coagulating toilet paper welded to my
face. The options for lacerating sarcasm are endless but there’s been enough
slicing for one morning.
‘Do you want to wear a blue shirt rather than the white?’
Asks my wife, as I try gingerly peeling the hardened tissue from the wound
after breakfast. ‘Does it make any difference?’ I ask testily, as a sharp pain
makes my eyes water when the temporary fix parts company with my face. I wait
again, peering in the hall mirror pessimistically. It takes a fraction longer,
but the blood starts to flow again.
‘Do you ever get the feeling someone up there doesn’t like
you?’ I say rhetorically, as I hurry up the stairs again to the bathroom. I’m
running short of time and my heart is thumping by the time I make the last
step. Something guaranteed to keep the wound open and flowing. A fact confirmed
as I look in the shaving mirror again, to see a tear-shaped rivulet of red
weeping down my face. Too many metaphors to choose from, I think gloomily, as I
wonder how stupid a plaster will look and how much grief I’ll get walking in to
the meeting sporting a flesh-coloured face-appendage. Salespeople are not
renowned for their compassion.
‘Nobody will notice.’ Speculates my wife absurdly, as I
come back down with a blue shirt and an even bluer demeanour. I’ve opted for
another scrap of tissue, one that has now darkened to a crusty brown hue,
rather than a plaster. I hope to peel it off in the car park and pray some
clotting has formed, other than in my heart arteries, by then.
Bad enough facing a bunch of braying colleagues, keen to
fall on the weakest pack member to deflect from their own failing and sales
figure, but I have a string of valuations later in the day. Like the clean
shoes fetish I have and the matching shirt, suit and tie obsession, I know the
slightest perceived slight or oddity can cost you the business. Look wrong, or
look at the wife, daughter or boyfriend wrongly and the business flows away
faster than an opened vein. It’s a bloody nightmare.
‘Hah. Who smacked you in the mouth?’ Laughs H my poison
dwarf of a rival manger, as I slide into the meeting room, absurd circular
plaster on my face after a failed attempt at a clean removal of the blotting
paper-like bog roll, in the car vanity mirror. The blood took a little longer
to rise to the surface but it came in the end.
‘You’re late.’ Snipes the bean counter from the head of
the table, lifting his weasel-featured face from the laptop just long enough to
see who was going in the bad books. Loss column presumably.
‘Angry punter?’ Asks H loudly, to a round of laughter
from the table.
‘Who’d you shaft?’ He continues on a roll, other than the
half- eaten bacon one in front of him. ‘Buyer, owner or their pet?’ I’d like to
impale him with a suitable implement, but the budget hotel only supplies
plastic cutlery and my wit is no sharper than my razor.
Cuts like a knife.
2 comments:
http://news.awdaa.net/how-bad-is-it-really-to-break-these-makeup-rules-p315.html#commeMost of people miss the point that you need to keep them in shape too, better use shoe horns and give your leather shoes some rest, possibly every alternate day to make it work, or else no matter how much your shoes is shining, its weird shape will make it look like old.nt-399
Nice post, wouldn't it be easier just to use an electric razer?
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