Managing Death

Managing Death by Trent Jamieson Page A

Book: Managing Death by Trent Jamieson Read Free Book Online
Authors: Trent Jamieson
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is as neat as an anally retentive pin. I’m more than a little envious of his work ethic. His inboxand out are emptied throughout the day and there’s a well-marked year-planner on one wall. Seven days from now, on the 28th of December, the Death Moot begins. He’s circled that day, and the two that follow it, in thick red marker. I’ve a year-planner somewhere under the mess on my desk.
    This was once Morrigan’s office. Tim hasn’t changed it that much, apart from the photo of Sally and the kids next to his keyboard – I bought him the frame. He’s even using the same daily desk calendar, the one with the inspirational quotes. Everything from Dorothy Parker to Sun Tzu is in there. He and Morrigan shared a deep commitment to work, a fastidiousness about everything in their life, and a love of beer, though Tim has never tried to kill me. But the way he’s looking at me, maybe that’s all about to change.
    Then the pain of the shift hits me in a residual wave.
    Tim waits politely until I finish dry heaving before he starts taking strips off me. ‘Jesus, mate! Could you at least have a shower before coming to work?’
    I shrug. No point telling him how hard it was to leave Lissa this morning. Then I see the bandage on his left hand. ‘Not like you to be out with the Stirrers. Was it a hard stir?’ Sometimes a Stirrer will require more blood than usual to stall it.
    Tim shakes his head. ‘I wish, it’d mean I was out of the office more. No, the door’s being particularly demanding today.’ Number Four may be the only place that demands – well, not so much demands,but takes – a blood sacrifice of its staff on entry. RMs are exempt, most of the time, something I’m pleased about. For me, it’s usually only a tiny pricking of the thumb, and weeks may go past where it asks for nothing. I wonder if the ferocity of Tim’s sacrifice has anything to do with the massive portent I spent part of last night cleaning from the bathroom.
    Tim throws me a small spray can of deodorant. I manage to catch it before it hits my head. Then he hurls a pack of breath mints. Not so lucky with those, they skitter all over the desk. I scoop up a few of them.
    ‘I’m guessing you didn’t clean your teeth before you headed over here,’ Tim says.
    ‘You guessed wrong. Anything else?’ I pop a handful of mints into my mouth, regardless.
    ‘Oh, I haven’t started yet.’ His hands rest on his hips. ‘You cut it this fine again, and you can find yourself another Ankou.’
    ‘Where am I going to find one as good as you?’
    ‘Exactly. Which is why you are never going to do this again. Now, I’ve been thinking about this Death Moot –’
    ‘Is Cerbo here?’ I interrupt.
    ‘Not yet. Wonder of wonders, we’ve actually got five minutes.’
    ‘Good. I had a meeting with Suzanne Whitman last night.’
    ‘And you have only told me this now because … ?’
    ‘Look, it was late. I didn’t want to wake you. At least you can sleep.’
    ‘Still having trouble, eh?’
    ‘Shit, Tim, I’ve been whingeing about this for a month.’
    ‘Pardon me if I’ve been too busy to notice.’ And as if to prove his point, his mobile starts ringing.
    He looks at it. ‘It’s only mildly urgent,’ he says. ‘I’ll call them back.’
    Tim slips his phone into his pocket and smiles at me. ‘Now, this is interesting,
really
interesting. If the US RM is so keen to negotiate, the others can’t be too far behind. What did she want?’
    ‘She said she wanted to help.’
    Neither of us successfully choke down the laugh that follows.
    ‘Said I could do with an ally.’
    Another snort.
    Tim checks his watch. ‘We’d better get to your office. Cerbo will be there in a minute.’ We walk past the desks of Pomps and the hallway that sits in the middle of the office, the one that leads directly to Aunt Neti’s parlour. She’s baking scones or muffins or biscuits; the smell drifts down the hall. Probably expecting a visitor. I can’t help

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