My carpetbag isn't the most attractive, is
it? Yet of all the carrying implements in my house, it's the one for which I
have the most sentimental attachment.
I love this bag because I carried it during
my childhood during the rare exotic trips we took as a family.
I am a child of two teachers who were careful
with their money. When I was growing up, there was no such thing as choosing to
eat out when you could cook, or moteling when you could camp. Oh, I'm not
complaining. That model of self-sufficiency has been an asset to me my entire
life.
But once a year we'd abandon frugality, and
I, along with my siblings, would pack a carpetbag full of clothing and books.
We'd board a train for a daylong trip through the Rockies, bound for Golden,
BC. There, we'd dine in restaurants, sleep in a modest hotel, then rise and
make the reverse trip home.
I look at my humble bag and remember family
laughter, the rare sense of cutting loose, and even the thrill of danger. You
see, there's a point in that journey to Golden where the train enters two
spiral tunnels, each over half a mile in length. For breathless minutes you
could see nothing but darkness and feel the immensity of the mountain
surrounding you. I was always a little uncertain about whether I'd make it out
the other side.
Speaking of love and trips tinged with
foreboding, meet the heroine in my latest offering, Cold and Hottie. Liv is about to be reunited with her ex during a
teambuilding exercise in Jamaica. Only he’s the man she done wrong…and he just
became her boss. Oops.
At 4:37 p.m. on Friday, after weeks of dread and just when
I’ve convinced myself I’ve been spared, a dossier bearing the title Jamaica lands
on my desk. Tucker had probably been aiming for my in-basket, but since he’s
standing in my doorway and the basket is overflowing, the folder tips over the
edge and continues its horizontal motion. It comes to rest on the refinery
drawings I’ve been marking up, the right lower edge touching a pump that needs
modernization.
When I find my voice I say, “You’re
kidding me.”
Tucker’s smile is his signature blend
of cynicism and amusement. “If you pull yourself together and need to talk,
I’ll be in my office for another five minutes.” He pivots on a well-shod foot
and vanishes from sight.
I turn the pencil in my hand and use the eraser to tease out
the top sheaf of paper, willing this to be one of his practical jokes. Easy
enough to put a label on a folder and pack it with documents destined for the
shredder. Then to stand in the hall just out of sight, ready to pop in with
a, Haha, Liv, got you good this time.
Alas, this evening brings no such luck.
For there in black and white, issued in the name of one Olivia Prosser, is an
e-ticket for this coming Monday morning. I’m flying from Columbus to Kingston,
via Atlanta.
I use the pencil to extract the next
sheaf. Apparently the resort and I have corresponded, most recently when I
confirmed an ocean-facing, non-smoking room with a king-sized bed.
At least I was smart enough to avoid
having a roommate.
I close my eyes and bend forward to
clunk my head repeatedly on my desk. Having seen fellow staffers open their
envelopes, I don’t need to examine the rest of the paperwork to know what it
contains. There will be a shiny brochure on the all-inclusive resort’s
amenities. (Seven pools! Six restaurants featuring international cuisine!
Unlimited soft drinks and booze in your room’s mini-fridge!) There will be a
listing of optional paid activities, both inside the resort and on the island.
Finally, there will be the handout delineating the source of my dry mouth and
blossoming headache.
I don’t need to look at the handout
but…I stop banging my head and do it anyway, because some masochistic impulses
can’t be resisted.
Three months ago, the company I work
for, HMZ Consulting, was purchased by Wakefield Enterprises. When I say
“purchased,” I really mean “swallowed whole.” We were the krill to Wakefield’s
blue whale. Now the time has come for us to “harmonize our corporate cultures.”
Accordingly, for the past several months, select employees within my office
have been receiving invitations to the upcoming retreat in Jamaica. Once
trained in the ways of the mothership, they—and I guess that includes me
now—will return as ambassadors to the home office, where we will spread the
ways of enlightenment.
Most of the five-day retreat will be
run by Wakefield’s second-in-command, Yolanda Perez. The brochure photo shows a
woman in her early forties with tight black braids and a confident smile. She’s
a psychologist, reportedly half-crazy in her own right, and the rumors about
her outdoor group exercises are downright intimidating.
Then there’s the CEO, Finnegan
Wakefield. I don’t know if his photo has been retouched, but thirty-four looks
good on him. Even better than twenty-four did, if that’s possible.
Finn is giving the Tuesday noon
keynote—one hour is his full commitment for the entire program. Depending upon
how he receives me, that one hour could be all it takes to upend my life.
Find Cold
and Hottie at: Amazon
Find Jan O'Hara's at: Website
Jan, I just love this cover and your handbag! Thank you for being with me today.
15 comments:
What a great story about your bag. I love that it's lasted so long! I love your cover and wish you all the best.
Thank you so much, Melissa.
And the funny thing is, I recently had the carpetbag hung on a banister during a family dinner. To a person, all my siblings exclaimed over it with great fondness.
I re-read Hottie & Coldie again the other day during out deep freeze to take myself to Jamaica for a couple of hours. :) I have this carpet bag I inherited from my grandmother... that my daughter now uses for ferrying her ice skates in!! This post made me all nostalgic...
Hi, Jane! I've never had a carpet bag bag. I have one made from needlepoint scraps that I just love. Thanks for visiting with Jan today.
M. Jane, I'm honored! And that's neat about your daughter, and that we have carpetbags in common.
A lovely, sentimental journey, Jan. Thanks for sharing.
My pleasure, Angela. Thank you for reading.
I, too, have a favorite carpet bag I take everywhere. Great for carrying books.
Hi, Roxy and thanks for visiting with Jan today. With two of you saying how much you like carpet bags, I'm off to see what's online. Thanks for the suggestions. vb
Roxy, really? How interesting. I haven't seen anyone else carrying a carpetbag in years.
Vicki, I hope you found something fun. And thank you for hosting me today. You gave me an enjoyable trip down memory lane.
Nice one! Download GBWhatsapp & VivaVideo Pro
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