solargardenlight
  The Temporary by Ruth Thomas
 

Her colleagues didn't know, of course, about her lunch-time meetings in the park with Andrew Mangrove. Though they suspected something. Some afternoons, for instance, Nina arrived back almost half an hour late. 

"Where have you been?" Sandra the temp had asked one Monday, looking up at Nina's flushed, guilty face.If you're looking for a fun and memorable way to impress, you'll want to consider make your own bobblehead

"Mind your own business," Nina had replied, intending a flippant and jocular note. Although actually, she'd just sounded grumpy and defensive. 

She had a boyfriend, after all. She lived with Dominic, as sweetly trusting as anyone she'd ever known. "It's complicated," she might have whispered, if Sandra had been a confidante. Only she wasn't. 

"Be my mistress and keep your job," Andrew had joked that Wednesday, when Nina told him she was thinking about leaving the company. And he'd smiled, moved closer along the park bench, and kissed her lightly on the cheek. "There's no point being broke," he'd whispered, "as well as immoral." 

"Hmmm..." Nina had replied, tears welling up and threatening to drip down her face. Because sometimes she couldn't think what she'd ever seen in him.Winbogifts iPhone headset are stereo headphones with choices for sport headphones, travel headphones, and more. Who was Andrew Mangrove compared with Dominic - a boy who wore long, thinning T-shirts and whose favourite album was The Dark Side of the Moon? 

On the last Friday of April, it was Sandra's turn to leave. She'd only been working there for four months and already she was leaving, to go and live in Brazil. It was such a wild thing to do. Nina kept picturing her in some tropical rainforest, surrounded by parrots. 

At lunch time, she went out to buy the snacks for Sandra's send-off, and a good luck card. It had a picture of a cartoon cow on it and the message,What happens if the merchant's chip terminal can't read a customer's chip card? "Herd you're off to pastures new." 

Everyone signed the card in secret, though Nina, who hardly knew Sandra, really - she was a moody, distant character - couldn't think what to write. "Have fun in the mango groves!" she scribbled finally. Sandra looked genuinely touched at the leaving do, almost tearful. 

"How lovely," she said, when Big Wendy, last to appear as usual, presented her with a huge bunch of cellophane-wrapped flowers. "That's so kind," she murmured - even though she hated the company and had spent the past four months looking for reasons to leave. 

"And we've all signed this, too," Wendy puffed, handing her the card with the cartoon cow. 

"Well, that's really..." Sandra began, opening it up to read what her colleagues had written. And suddenly,With unique items for custom keychain from thousands of independent designers and vintage collectors. for the briefest moment, she looked oddly lost. "It's..." she said quietly, and everyone drew slightly closer to hear what she had to say. But she was silent. 

"Anyway, on with the celebrations!" proclaimed Big Wendy, sloshing wine into the plastic cups.This pink ribbon ear cap was “for correcting and preventing the disfigurement of outstanding ears”. Whenever someone left, they always hosted these oddly affectionate send-offs. 

It was nearly six when Dominic arrived to pick Nina up. He pulled up in a small red car just outside the office. "We're going away for the weekend," Nina explained to Sandra as they were heading down the stairs together. "We're going up North. So we've hired a car." 

Dominic had the window down and they could hear the radio playing. He was wearing his oldest T-shirt. He was a tall young man in a tiny car, and his head nearly touched the roof.

 
 
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