Karen Ross

Five Wakes and a Wedding


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my dad’s got a house up the road, and I was just popping in. I work for the family business. Property management mostly, and boring stuff involving corporate law. We’ve been doing a lot of insolvencies lately.’

      He says this as though it’s a good thing and I can’t help but think of Gloria. If she were with us now, she’d say, ‘You’re the type of lawyer who makes rich people richer. The type of lawyer I never want to be.’

      Disloyally, I realise the idiot would most likely scrub up pretty well if he swapped his jeans and T-shirt for a business suit.

      ‘Do you like it?’ he’s asking me.

      ‘Pardon?’

      ‘My T-shirt. You were staring at it.’ Before I can apologise he continues, ‘I got a brilliant one yesterday. Going paintballing next week, and I came across one in Camden Market that says, Why Should You Date a Paintballer?

      He leaves the question hanging.

      ‘Go on, then,’ I encourage him. ‘Tell me why I should date a paintballer?’

      ‘Because we’ve got a lot of balls. That’s what’s written on the back. Convincing, huh?’

      There’s something about the guileless way he says it that makes me laugh. His company is an unexpected treat on what’s bound to turn out to be another lonely day.

      ‘I’m in desperate need of another bacon butty and more coffee. Say yes this time?’

      ‘Yes,’ I say. ‘Yes please.’

      Just as our refills arrive, something slots into place. ‘Haven’t I seen you before?’ I ask.

      ‘Is that the best you’ve got?’

      ‘Pardon?’

      ‘You’re flirting with me, right?’

      ‘Me? No! Of course not. I have seen you before. On rollerblades. Going past my shop.’

      ‘Which shop would that be?’

      ‘Over there.’ I point towards Happy Endings, sit back and wait for the inevitable response.

      But the idiot proves the exception to the rule. ‘Noggsie’s old shop, right?’ he says pleasantly. ‘So how’s business?’

      ‘Okay.’ I’m not about to confess it’s non-existent. I pause for a strategic mouthful of bacon butty, while I attempt to swallow the accusation of flirting. He’s sort of right. I’m definitely enjoying his company. Since that night with Jason, I’ve started noticing men again. There’ve been one or two who I – admit it, Nina – actually fancied.

      And the idiot makes three.

      ‘I’d better go to work,’ I say.

      ‘Why? Are there some dead people I don’t know about? Did I miss the news story about the avalanche in Tufnell Park last night?’

      ‘You’re a very bad man.’ It’s the sort of remark I’d expect from a colleague rather than a civilian, and the mock shock-horror way he says it is actually quite funny.

      ‘I try not to be. Stay a while.’ The idiot brushes my wrist with his fingers. ‘More coffee?’

      Last time I drank four lattes for breakfast I was still awake at two o’clock the following morning.

      ‘Go on then,’ I say. ‘And why don’t you tell me about the paintballing?’

      He needs no second invitation. ‘There’s this huge woodland site between Edinburgh and Glasgow,’ he begins. ‘All sorts of scenarios. The village hostage rescue looks the most fun. That’s where you get to use the paint thrower.’ He sees my puzzled expression and clarifies, ‘It’s basically a huge water cannon filled with paint. The ordinary paintballs are a mixture of oil, gelatine and dye, and we fire them through nitrogen-powered compressed air.’

      ‘Does it hurt?’

      ‘I have no idea.’ The idiot looks puzzled. ‘No-one’s ever marked me. I always win.’

      ‘You do this a lot, then?’

      ‘Once before. When I was seven. If it works out I’m going to sign up for this place in Oklahoma where you spend a week recreating the D-Day battles. With paint. If you pay a bit extra, you can lead the French Resistance.’

      By the time the idiot has finished telling me about battle packs, paint pods, flag capturing, defensive bunker play, ravine negotiation and a legendary character called The Paint Punk, I’m thinking I’d love to go paintballing. With him.

      And then I realise what’s really going on.

      All this military talk … well, for a few minutes, it was just like old times.

      Old times with Ryan.

      My husband.

      Captain Ryan Sherwood.

      That day I watched him being presented with his Afghanistan Operational Service Medal was one of the proudest of my life.

      And now?

      I’m ashamed to realise that instead of thinking about Ryan’s funeral, I’ve been imagining myself on a date with a man who knows absolutely nothing about the savage realities of military life.

      The idiot has stopped talking and for the first time in more than an hour the silence between us feels awkward.

      ‘You’re not how I imagined a corporate lawyer,’ I blurt out.

      ‘Says the lady undertaker. Sorry … there’s nothing I’d rather do than sit and talk to you for the rest of the day. But it looks like you’ve got a customer.’

      I turn to see a man peering through the window of Happy Endings, then rattling on the door.

      Business at last!

      And a timely reminder that my priority is work.

      Not relationships.

      ‘I’d better dash. Come on, Chopper. Thanks for breakfast. Good luck with the paintballing, and drive that thing,’ I point at his scooter, ‘more safely in future.’

      ‘Bye for now.’ He hesitates. Then, ‘Look, let me give you my number. Perhaps we can have dinner.’

      I punch his details into my phone. Rude not to. Not as if I’m ever going to call him. But as I walk briskly across the street, rubbing the finger that used to wear a wedding ring, I acknowledge the idiot is charismatic in a man-child kind of way. Far too old to be riding a child’s toy, but at least he has good manners.

      And Barclay is a pretty cool name.

       11

      ‘Ah, there you are.’ The man who’s been looking into my shop hears me approaching and turns round at the sound of my footsteps.

      I recognise him. Gareth Manning. Runs one of our neighbourhood’s abundance of estate agencies. I’ve overheard him several times in the street, braying with his colleagues about soaring house prices, boasting that if he learns a few phrases of Japanese he’ll be able to add a further thirty thousand to the price tag of a studio flat. He looks from me to his watch.

      ‘Thought you weren’t coming,’ he says.

      ‘So sorry I’m late.’ I quickly unlock and usher Gareth in through the door. Chopper and I follow. ‘Just give me a few moments,’ I say. I walk Chopper down to the basement and settle him onto his day bed, next to the fridges – which have been behaving themselves perfectly, although gobbling vast amounts of electricity since they have yet to accommodate anyone – and then retrace my steps.

      ‘Gareth, isn’t it?’ I say. We shake hands. ‘So how can I help you?’

      ‘I’ve