A Small Formality
Would you mind signing here, please?
I barely looked up from my spreadsheet. The cursor blinked, stubborn and insistent, while the numbers blurred into one anotherI was exhausted. An urgent email was open on my screen, with the department contracts register beside it and a draft report for the Ministry waiting below. The gentle hum of the air conditioner filled the office, making my eyelids heavy.
Standing over my desk was Natalie from the office next door, holding a folder and a paper, yellow sticky tab pointing to a line.
Just here, on the work acceptance form, she said, tapping where my signature should go. The dates already there. We just need your sign-off to submit the report.
I took the paper: “Work Acceptance Statement.” Contractor name, sum, agreement number. The date was from last monththe 28th. My own name, listed below, boxed in as the responsible officer.
Whys it dated last month? I made an effort to keep my voice even.
Natalie smiled in that way people do when theyre hoping you wont overcomplicate things.
Because were closing last months report, obviously. We cant show this as signed in February. It would mess up the audit. Its only pennies, Liv Ms. Green. Purely a formality.
I looked down at the contractors stamp. The directors signature was too perfect, as if copied from a template. I flipped the page and checked the details: “consultancy support provided”all vague, nothing concrete.
Did they actually deliver the services? I asked.
Natalie raised her eyebrows slightly.
Well you saw them around, didnt you? They did some work. Anyway, its already approved. We just need closure. Please sign, or well be here all evening.
I set the form gently on my desk, unsigned.
Ill have a proper look at the contract and correspondence. Ill return it later.
Natalie let out a sigh, as if Id just asked her to run to the next town for water.
Quickly, please? It’s deadline day.
When shed gone, I opened the contract folder. The numbers matched. The contract was for supporting the launch of a system wed never actually got off the ground. In the emailstwo generic status updates from the contractor, plus one instruction from senior management: Sign off and close. Dont drag this out. The instruction was dated after the date on the acceptance form.
A familiar knot of irritation tightened inside me, mixed with dread. Not dread of legal troublenot solely. More the fear of being difficult, of stepping out of line. Id trained myself over decades to be helpful and unruffled. At fifty-three, it sometimes felt like part of the job.
I nudged the form aside, opened my calendar. On the 28th of last month, Id been on a business trip, signing off other documentsquite traceable. If there was an inquiry, backdating a signature wouldnt be a formalityitd be a fact.
I stood up, folder in hand, and went to see my manager.
Mr. Smith’s office was at the end of the corridor, door half-closed. Inside, I caught the rhythm of phone calls, the rustle of paperwork. He was at his desk, still in his jacket despite the warmth, drumming his pen.
Ms. Green, he said, without looking up. What is it?
I placed the form before him.
I was brought this to sign. The date is last month. I need to understand why.
He finally glanced at the paper, then leaned back in his chair.
Because thats whats needed. Were closing the books. If we show it signed later, itll cost us our funding. The whole team would be well, you know.
He spoke calmly, almost matey, but beneath that ease was pressure.
I do understand, I said. But I cant backdate a signature for services I cant confirm took place. And I wasnt here on that day.
He grimaced.
Ms. Green, dont make this hard. Youre our most experienced member. You know the score. HQ want the paperwork. The contractors already invoiced. We sign, close itdone. No one will dig.
And if they do? I asked.
They wont, he said flatly. Then he softened. Listen, this isnt your hill to die on. You dont have to save the world. You just need to keep the ship afloat.
I heard the plea within the order. He was tired, maybe scared too. But that didnt make the signature any safer.
I can sign todays date if we have proof the work was done, I said. Or, we can file a memo explaining the delay.
He chuckled, wryly.
A memo? So they can hit us for late submissions? You know how that goes.
I felt my grip tighten on the folder, clutching it like a shield.
I know how that looks, I said. And I know how a backdated signature looks too.
He leaned forwards.
Olivia, lets be reasonable. Youve been here for years. Mortgage? Credit? Grandkids? I wont pry. But you dont want trouble. Sign, and its over.
Be reasonablein my youth, that meant kindness; now, it meant Dont make life difficult for me.
Ill think about it, I said, retrieving the document.
Outside his door, I stopped by the window. The car park, slate grey, people bustling past with document folders. Everything kept humming along, and it stung; the world didnt pause when your principles wobbled.
Back at my desk, Natalie was already waiting, accompanied by Andrew from our team. He was one I sometimes shared lunchtime news with, cordial, uncontroversial.
Well? Natalie demanded.
I placed the form back on my desk.
I wont sign with a false date. Lets do it by the book.
Natalie rolled her eyes.
Ms. Green, youre making it worse for everyone. We need to file this report.
Andrew just watched, wanting to say something but hesitating.
Liv, he finally said when Natalie turned to the printer. Are you serious? You know theyll pin this on you. Theyll find a way.
I met his gaze.
I know, I replied. But if I sign, Ill be to blamejust in a different way.
No one ever checks, he said, sounding weary. This happens all the time. You must have known.
Of course, I had. It was just more comfortable, sometimes, not to know. I signed things when everything was clean; I asked for supporting docs, checked dates, even argued on occasion. But nothing beyond thatenough that I could tell myself, Im doing the right thing. Then, the boundaries started to shift.
I know it happens, I said quietly. I just dont want it to become normal for me.
Andrew sighed.
Youre not a saint, Liv. Youve well, you know.
I did. Id kept quiet when maybe I should have spoken, signed off agreed on things I hadnt read as thoroughly as I ought, trusted people a bit too much. I had turned a blind eye to others corner-cutting when it didnt hit me directly. Thats why I felt so strongly that one more step would make me into someone else.
At lunchtime, I went to legalnot to dob anyone in,” just to understand where formality stopped, and accountability began.
Helen, our legal officer, about my age, sat behind a desk buried in files. The wall above her was plastered with snippets of regulations. I described the situation neutrally, conference-room style.
Backdating a signature is risky, she said. Especially if you werent there, and theres no proof the work was done. If theres an audit, your name is first in line. Its your signature.
What if my manager says its an order? I asked.
She shrugged.
That doesnt absolve you. You could ask for it in writing. But you know no one will put that in an email.
I felt a coldness settle inside. I had known this. Hearing it aloud made a difference.
What should I do? I asked.
She looked at me carefully.
I cant make your decision for you. But to protect yourself: if the work was done, sign with todays date and document the delay. If not, dont sign. Note down what is brought for signature.
Note it down, I repeated.
Yes. A memo to managementfactual, without blame.
Back at my desk, it felt less like advice and more like a mirror. I wasnt just part of the team; I was a person, with my name and signature.
I sat, opened my email, and drafted a formal memo. My hands shook out of frustration. My message was dry, factual: Please advise on grounds for signing work acceptance statement # dated in the absence of supporting evidence I trimmed the text, kept it to essentials.
Once sent, there was reliefand immediate anxiety. It wasnt just in my hands anymore. Now, it would leave a trace in the system.
An hour on, Mr. Smith summoned me.
He had Natalie and an HR manager with himthe latter someone Id only seen at all-staff meetings. The form was on his desk, pen poised.
Ms. Green, he said formally. We received your email. Why did you send it?
I sat down, knees rigid like a schoolgirl at a viva.
Because I cant backdate a signature without evidence, I said.
HR watched me impassively.
You realise youre missing deadlines? Natalie said, her voice thick with grievance, as if Id refused to help carry her shopping.
The deadline was already missed, I replied. Now youre just asking me to pretend otherwise.
Mr. Smith slapped his palm on the desk, not hard but enough to jolt the pen.
Are you making a stand, really? Were not in court, Liv. This is work.
The rising heat in me matched his. I could have said a lot. About how work became covering up.” About how little things creep up until theyre the norm. But speeches would only get me branded difficult.
I looked at the form, then at the signature line.
Im not signing, I said.
Mr. Smith leant in.
You realise what this means?
I nodded.
I do.
HR finally spoke.
Ms. Green, we will note your refusal. That is your right. But please understand that, for business needs, we may adjust your role. And a review of your position may follow
The words were familiar, straight out of the policies. But I felt an odd clarity. Not triumphjust a kind of steadiness.
Very well, I said. Please note my decision.
Mr. Smith swept the form aside.
Thatll be all.
I stepped out and shut the door. It seemed like everyone was staring, but of course, no one was. People carried on as usual, laughing by the coffee machine, bickering by the phones. Still, I made my way back across the office as if everyone could see the sign around my neck.
My planner was open on my desk, todays date staring back at me. I picked up my pen and wrote, Statement # refused. Email sent. It felt like leaving a marker on a mapheres where you turned.
From there, the day shifted. Natalie stopped popping by just to ask. Andrew barely glanced over. The team chat pinged, Colleagues, urgent signatures needed for statementsplease respond promptly. Underneath was a list; my name wasnt on it.
By evening, Mr. Smith sent me a meeting invite for the next day: task redistribution. Tension welled up again. That might mean anythingfrom sidelining me from projects to quietly building a case.
I gathered my papers, shut down the computer, double-checked my email archive, and slid my notepad into my bag. At reception, the security guard nodded at me, as usual. That nod mattered for some reason: the world hadnt ended.
On the Tube, I stood holding the rail, thinking of what tomorrow might bring. Whispered remarks in the office, Mr. Smiths look, being shifted to a quiet corner, among strangers. I thought about money. At my age, job hunting isnt an adventure; its humiliating lottery.
Still, beneath the fear, something else satquiet, stubborn. I hadnt taken a step Id regret every time I looked at myself in the mirror.
At home, I slipped off my shoes, hung up my coat, and went to the kitchen. My husband sat at the table with his tablet. He looked up.
Youre late, he said.
Had a meeting at work, I replied, putting the kettle on. The familiar motions helped.
More report nonsense? he asked.
I sat with him, palms on the tabletop. I wanted to spill it all out, but this wasnt high dramajust a decision.
They asked me to backdate a work acceptance form, I said. Close the report. I refused.
He pondered.
So what happens now? he asked.
Therell be consequences, I said. They might sideline me or put on pressure. I might have to leave.
He studied mecurious, not blaming.
Are you sure you did the right thing? he asked, more from practicality than reproach.
Inside, doubt flickered again. I was scared, yes, and wished for things to be easy. I could have signed and forgotten, like everyone else. Only I wouldnt have forgotten.
Im not sure itll be easy, I said. But if Id signed, it would have been worse. Id always know it could happen again.
He nodded slowly.
Right. Well, well manage, he said. If we need to, Ill look for extra shifts. Dont let it eat you up.
A lump closed my throatnot tears, but relief. I wasnt facing this alone.
The kettle boiled. I poured two cups, wishing the balancing steam was enough to keep things steady.
Tomorrow, Ill stick to procedure, I said. If theres pressure, Ill ask for written instructions. If they start looking for reasons, Ill be ready.
You always do things by the book, he grinned.
I tried to smile back, but it was weary.
Not always, I admitted. But today, I made a choice not to go further down that path.
I sipped my tea. Ahead lay arguments, maybe losses. But inside, something new had taken roota line Id drawn, not as a slogan but as a boundary Id finally seen, and now had to hold.





