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Please consider this story for posting on a.s.s.m -- Thanks

My Weekend in Portland -- Chapter 1 of 30 (mf ff mff)

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Portland is a great town. In fact, I used to live there until I was 
pushed out of my job for reasons I didn't understand at the time. 
More about that later.

Anyway, I live in San Francisco now, and one day my boss told me to 
get packed and head for Portland. One of our top clients needed some  
serious hand-holding. So I flew north expecting anything up to a week 
of frantic, 12-hour days with the jittery clients.

I was able to quickly get our clients past their big problems and they 
were pleasantly surprised when I cleared up several smaller glitches as 
well. We were  
done by late morning Friday, so I shook hands all around and left with 
their relieved thanks ringing in my ears.

Since I had an open ticket, my grateful boss told me I could spend the 
weekend in Portland at the company's expense. I eagerly accepted the  
offer but soon ran into problems finding playmates.

My old girlfriend had a new guy, and plans for a romantic weekend
on the coast. My best pal was dealing with his fiance's parents, just 
arrived on vacation from the Midwest. Several other friends also had 
plans, including one who still worked for my old company. At least 
he had time to buy me lunch.

I was leaving his office after lunch, heading for the elevators, when 
I ran into another old co-worker, Ruth. In fact, Ruth used to be 
my supervisor. Our relationship had varied from strained politeness to 
occasional moments of genuine warmth, but she was not an easy woman to 
get along with. One day she could be warm and personal, the next cold 
and aloof. We had gotten along fine at work and really had no 
relationship outside the office.

So I was surprised by her reaction when we met by chance. Ruth hauled 
me into her office and sat me down to talk as if I were an old friend. 
She seemed genuinely disappointed that someone had already taken me 
to lunch. Talking with unusual animation, she seemed pleased, flustered 
and perhaps apprehensive at the same time.

After a bit of catching up, she surprised me again by inviting me to 
dinner at her townhouse. In fact, she was insistent. I hesitated, but 
not for long. With all my other friends committed elsewhere, my 
alternative was 
dinner by myself. I accepted Ruth's invitation.

So at 7 that evening Ruth opened her door for me. A New York native, she 
was 28 and educated at a first-class university. She had worked several 
years for an East Coast division of the company before getting an 
unusual transfer to the Portland office. The company rarely transferred 
low-level supervisors all the way across the country.

We talked and drank glasses of wine as she prepared dinner, and I found 
myself looking carefully at Ruth. Her large, brown eyes and dark, 
shoulder-length hair were her best features. Her typical expression at 
work was a bit severe, her thick hair tightly controlled. But when she 
relaxed her face was expressive and quite pretty. At 5'7" and maybe 140 
pounds, she was no fashion model, but then I've always disliked the 
anorexic look.

She had broad shoulders for a woman, and hips to match, but her waist, 
calves 
and ankles were comparatively slender and nicely proportioned. There had 
always been some curiosity about Ruth's body among her male coworkers 
because she dressed for work in clothes that tended to conceal 
everything between her knees and shoulders. Her breasts and buttocks 
seemed large, but nobody really knew. The rumor mill reported she was a 
regular at the downtown YMCA. But that was also uncertain, since most of 
us worked out at a gym closer to the office.

Sitting in her kitchen while she dealt with pasta and sauce, I became 
aware that Ruth seemed quietly but intensely excited, maybe even 
apprehensive.
Her face was flushed, her eyes bright. Her conversation was a little 
distracted, but charming and she displayed flashes of wit she rarely 
showed at the office. She wore a loose, long-sleeved and high-necked 
blouse of some soft, opaque fabric, closed with dozens of tiny round 
buttons. A nun could have worn her brown wool skirt without 
embarrassment, except that it was expensively tailored.

Through dinner the conversation was casual; work and coworkers, my life 
in 
San Francisco, hers in Portland. But when dessert was served, she became 
quieter, seeming even more distracted. Finally we were sitting over 
coffee,
in silence.

I realized she was working up the nerve to say something, but couldn't 
begin 
to guess what. After a few false starts, though, she nervously began 
explaining how -- and why -- she had gotten me run out of my job more 
than a 
year before.

Some time before that, I had taken over Ruth's duties in the Portland 
office while she attended a month-long training session in L.A. She 
returned to find her department running smoothly under my leadership, 
and her boss singing my 
praises. Looking over my evaluations, she began to see me as a threat to 
her 
job. She began a panicky campaign to reduce me in the eyes of her boss, 
and succeeded too well. Orders came from New York to cut costs and my 
job was 
eliminated even though Ruth had regretted her actions by then. She tried 
without success to undo her work and get me retained.

Most of this was news to me, especially Ruth's role, and I got quite 
angry 
listening to her account. I kept my cool, though, for one big reason. I 
found 
a much better job in San Fracisco barely two weeks after being driven 
out of 
the company in Portland. Getting laid off turned out to be a piece of 
luck 
for me, professionally and financially, though I was less successful 
socially in San Francisco. In a way, Ruth had done me a favor.

(End of Chapter 1)


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