She ought to be feeling sad about this.
The thought had bumped around her head for the last week or two, since she'd handed in her resignation. The job wasn't
bad, it was now glaringly obvious that it wasn't worth uprooting her life and crossing an ocean for. Farley hadn't made any friends, except one of the receptionists downstairs who sometimes gave her a muffin when she looked exceptionally harassed.
Pausing, she exhaled, hands on her hips as she arched her back and moaned as the tension left her muscles. On her desk was a large cardboard box, almost filled with her worldly possessions. Notebooks, stationary, personal bits and pieces, including Terry, her well looked after aloe vera plant.
There had been no pomp and circumstance. No party, no cake, not even a card but Farley took it in her stride as she gathered up a handful of paperclips and dropped them into the box. Her fingers closed around a leather bound notebook and she hesitated. "No," she told herself, setting it down firmly. It was Simon's schedule. Farley had been his secretary but the job role felt more like "servant." She didn't mind getting him his coffee and sending out his letters but she drew the line at picking out his wife's gifts for him. It had happened once and she was still haunted by the gesture.
"Not my problem anymore," she told herself with a firm nod as she tapped the book and stepped back. Next went in a couple of framed photographs, though suspiciously, not of her family. One was of a large cabin in the woods and the other of a rather hefty Bulldog. The cabin was in Baker City in Oregon, set between tall trees, her escape from the world. The dog was Lucky, who, ironically, was the unluckiest, clumsiest and inelegant thing that had ever walked the planet.
Heaving a sigh, she tangled a hand in her hair as she surveyed the last eight or so months of her life, all condensed into a pile. Farley's slim fingers rubbed her left earlobe, like she always did when she felt anxious, only to find her earring missing. Closing her eyes and asking for help from a higher power, she yanked open a desk drawer and felt around the empty space blindly, looking up quickly as her name was called.
"Harlan?" Farley asked stupidly as she stood up straight, looking guilty despite having no reason to. Clearing her throat, she anxiously smoothed a hand down her pencil
skirt, tilting her her head. Gosh, she hadn't seen him in at least six months. Swiftly, she pointed to her cardboard box by way of an explanation.
"I'm leaving," she said simply. "What are
you doing here?" She hadn't meant for her tone to be so accusatory but having Simon's brother here at any time of the day was odd. Blinking, Farley was still on the hunt for her missing earring before she spied the album under his arm. Aha - wife present. "Do you need me to wrap that up for you?" She offered helpfully. "Simon's not here," she told him, this time unhelpfully. "Something about drinks with the guys?" Pulling a face, she shrugged.