Not Quite Alone At Christmas

I'm a software engineer and a damn good one. I have been working very hard to get a job done. The job is for a military client and is very important to at least the Commanding Officer at a nearby military base.
The Commanding Officer told my management, “If Jason can get the current program delivered and it meets spec, Jason will handle my computer programming, as long as I'm here.”
My management told that me the job I was working on was really important and that I should give it my best effort.
(I always give my work my best effort, and my management knows that. However, they didn't see fit to tell me of the importance of the work. The Vice President's Secretary told me of the CO's dictum, in private.)
The job that I'm working on is basically impossible. A bankrupt company has delivered (more like abandoned) a computer and a suite of equipment. The computer is supposedly a very high powered unit and will solve a lot of problems, if it can be programmed. However, there's no documentation for the machine and the government has decreed, “Generate a useful demo and we will manufacture the machine ourselves. Else we throw it away.”
I have managed to extract documentation from a very unlikely source and I'm well into the process of generating a spectacular demo. I have all of the peripheral devices talking, back and forth and I have taken a smallish flight simulation program and converted it for use in the new computer. A simulated combat aircraft flies across a display screen at very low altitude, pops up and delivers ordnance, then descends back to low altitude and escapes. The simulation is one that is used in a much larger, much more expensive computer and my demo looks even better than the same kind of thing in the larger computer. I'm gonna shine! The CO's gonna shine. The government is gonna get something out of what looked like a financial disaster.
On Christmas Eve, the CO gathers a number of high ranking military types in a computer lab and I run my demo program.
The response is very upbeat. The observers can't believe that a small, relatively inexpensive tactical computer could run such a simulation at such a speed.
After the demo, my management grudgingly promotes me to Project Manager, at a nice increase in salary! I also get my own team to manage.
Floating on air, because of my success, I wrap up the demo, go home, shave, shower up and put on fresh clothes. I have a date with Clarinda, down at the Flame.
The Flame is a local steak house and they have a Christmas Eve special. A lot of people will be there and I have a reservation for my date and me.
I try to call Clarinda, but all I get is her answering machine. The message says that she's out for the evening. I'm left with a feeling of unease. She should be waiting for me to pick her up.
I grab Clarinda's Christmas present and off I go. I drive by Clarinda's place, but it's dark.
I then drive down to the Flame.
I walk into a jam packed room, full of people waiting for a table to open up. I talk to the hostess and she tells me that it'll be at least an hour's wait.
I then see Clarinda coming from the direction of the ladies room I hold out my hand, but she walks by me as if I'm some sort of mendicant, begging for alms. I watch her go over to Handsome Henry and then turn and smirk back at me. I'm alone at Christmas.
I'm boiling inside and I'm about to leave, when Roy waves at me from a large table.

1137962581
Not Quite Alone At Christmas

I'm a software engineer and a damn good one. I have been working very hard to get a job done. The job is for a military client and is very important to at least the Commanding Officer at a nearby military base.
The Commanding Officer told my management, “If Jason can get the current program delivered and it meets spec, Jason will handle my computer programming, as long as I'm here.”
My management told that me the job I was working on was really important and that I should give it my best effort.
(I always give my work my best effort, and my management knows that. However, they didn't see fit to tell me of the importance of the work. The Vice President's Secretary told me of the CO's dictum, in private.)
The job that I'm working on is basically impossible. A bankrupt company has delivered (more like abandoned) a computer and a suite of equipment. The computer is supposedly a very high powered unit and will solve a lot of problems, if it can be programmed. However, there's no documentation for the machine and the government has decreed, “Generate a useful demo and we will manufacture the machine ourselves. Else we throw it away.”
I have managed to extract documentation from a very unlikely source and I'm well into the process of generating a spectacular demo. I have all of the peripheral devices talking, back and forth and I have taken a smallish flight simulation program and converted it for use in the new computer. A simulated combat aircraft flies across a display screen at very low altitude, pops up and delivers ordnance, then descends back to low altitude and escapes. The simulation is one that is used in a much larger, much more expensive computer and my demo looks even better than the same kind of thing in the larger computer. I'm gonna shine! The CO's gonna shine. The government is gonna get something out of what looked like a financial disaster.
On Christmas Eve, the CO gathers a number of high ranking military types in a computer lab and I run my demo program.
The response is very upbeat. The observers can't believe that a small, relatively inexpensive tactical computer could run such a simulation at such a speed.
After the demo, my management grudgingly promotes me to Project Manager, at a nice increase in salary! I also get my own team to manage.
Floating on air, because of my success, I wrap up the demo, go home, shave, shower up and put on fresh clothes. I have a date with Clarinda, down at the Flame.
The Flame is a local steak house and they have a Christmas Eve special. A lot of people will be there and I have a reservation for my date and me.
I try to call Clarinda, but all I get is her answering machine. The message says that she's out for the evening. I'm left with a feeling of unease. She should be waiting for me to pick her up.
I grab Clarinda's Christmas present and off I go. I drive by Clarinda's place, but it's dark.
I then drive down to the Flame.
I walk into a jam packed room, full of people waiting for a table to open up. I talk to the hostess and she tells me that it'll be at least an hour's wait.
I then see Clarinda coming from the direction of the ladies room I hold out my hand, but she walks by me as if I'm some sort of mendicant, begging for alms. I watch her go over to Handsome Henry and then turn and smirk back at me. I'm alone at Christmas.
I'm boiling inside and I'm about to leave, when Roy waves at me from a large table.

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Not Quite Alone At Christmas

Not Quite Alone At Christmas

by R. Richard
Not Quite Alone At Christmas

Not Quite Alone At Christmas

by R. Richard

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Overview

I'm a software engineer and a damn good one. I have been working very hard to get a job done. The job is for a military client and is very important to at least the Commanding Officer at a nearby military base.
The Commanding Officer told my management, “If Jason can get the current program delivered and it meets spec, Jason will handle my computer programming, as long as I'm here.”
My management told that me the job I was working on was really important and that I should give it my best effort.
(I always give my work my best effort, and my management knows that. However, they didn't see fit to tell me of the importance of the work. The Vice President's Secretary told me of the CO's dictum, in private.)
The job that I'm working on is basically impossible. A bankrupt company has delivered (more like abandoned) a computer and a suite of equipment. The computer is supposedly a very high powered unit and will solve a lot of problems, if it can be programmed. However, there's no documentation for the machine and the government has decreed, “Generate a useful demo and we will manufacture the machine ourselves. Else we throw it away.”
I have managed to extract documentation from a very unlikely source and I'm well into the process of generating a spectacular demo. I have all of the peripheral devices talking, back and forth and I have taken a smallish flight simulation program and converted it for use in the new computer. A simulated combat aircraft flies across a display screen at very low altitude, pops up and delivers ordnance, then descends back to low altitude and escapes. The simulation is one that is used in a much larger, much more expensive computer and my demo looks even better than the same kind of thing in the larger computer. I'm gonna shine! The CO's gonna shine. The government is gonna get something out of what looked like a financial disaster.
On Christmas Eve, the CO gathers a number of high ranking military types in a computer lab and I run my demo program.
The response is very upbeat. The observers can't believe that a small, relatively inexpensive tactical computer could run such a simulation at such a speed.
After the demo, my management grudgingly promotes me to Project Manager, at a nice increase in salary! I also get my own team to manage.
Floating on air, because of my success, I wrap up the demo, go home, shave, shower up and put on fresh clothes. I have a date with Clarinda, down at the Flame.
The Flame is a local steak house and they have a Christmas Eve special. A lot of people will be there and I have a reservation for my date and me.
I try to call Clarinda, but all I get is her answering machine. The message says that she's out for the evening. I'm left with a feeling of unease. She should be waiting for me to pick her up.
I grab Clarinda's Christmas present and off I go. I drive by Clarinda's place, but it's dark.
I then drive down to the Flame.
I walk into a jam packed room, full of people waiting for a table to open up. I talk to the hostess and she tells me that it'll be at least an hour's wait.
I then see Clarinda coming from the direction of the ladies room I hold out my hand, but she walks by me as if I'm some sort of mendicant, begging for alms. I watch her go over to Handsome Henry and then turn and smirk back at me. I'm alone at Christmas.
I'm boiling inside and I'm about to leave, when Roy waves at me from a large table.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940152532579
Publisher: R. Richard
Publication date: 12/19/2015
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 155 KB

About the Author

I'm the co-author, with Sunset Thomas, of Anatomy of An Adult Film.

I have 48 novels and over 299 short stories currently published.

I spent my early years in the part of Los Angeles known as the South Central. I was known as Whi' Boy, which was sufficient to identify me in that place. I'm a skilled Kung Fu player, using a system that I learned from a Korean I knew only as 'Pak.' It would be easier to tell you the places that Pak wasn't wanted by the police, rather than the places where he was wanted by the police. Pak's Kung Fu system, augmented by some bits and pieces from some Chinese practitioners is quick and effective, or I wouldn't be alive today.

My early education was mostly obtained by stealing books from the public library (I always returned them and the Librarian even began to provide me with reading lists.) I did go to high schools, but I never really learned anything there. I eventually graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles, UCLA, with a degree in mathematics.

I work as a Systems Analyst and also make a part of my living as a professional gambler (legal in Nevada.) I write science fiction and erotica. My published novels are:
Anatomy of An Adult Film (With Sunset Thomas)
1. Second Chance: God Killer
2. Second Chance: Sky Pirate
3. Second Chance: Scroll Seeker
4. Second Chance: King of The Islands
5. Second Chance: King of Zaya
6. Second Chance: Duke of Averon
7. Second Chance: King of Golomon
8. Second Chance: King Of The Sky
9. Second Chance: Warlord of Ifrequeh
10. Second Chance: King of Ariby
11. Second Chance: King of Mesodania
12. Second Chance: King of Avuls
13. Second Chance: King of Kemet
14. Second Chance: King of Zorran
15. Second Chance: King of Two Worlds
16. Second Chance: King of Averon
17. Second Chance: King's Duties
18. Second Chance: King of The New World
Adventurer: Simulation Problem
Adventurer: Pannar Problem
A Programmer's Gambit
Amateur Stripper
Beach Murders
Bondage House
Corporate Sex Slaves
Friday Night
Go Naked In The Software
Grasshopper Winter
Involuntary Nude
Layoff
Not A Hero
Pirates of The Keys
Summer of Sex
The Lake
The Last Moon Dance
The Nude Adventures of Plain Jane
The Secret Life of Wanda Wilson
Tails of the Pussycat Lounge
To Keep A Job
Topless Restaurant
Toy Whores
Vix: The Marine
Wayward Boy

Short Stories:
A Christmas Visit

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