He returned to
the booth, carrying a tray with two cups of tea and a piece of dark chocolate cake. Two
forks.
“Do you come
here often?” she asked, cradling the tea cup in her cold hands.
“Often enough. I
put honey in your tea. You still use honey?”
She nodded. “You
remembered. And you remembered I like chocolate cake.”
“It’s only been
four months.” He looked around. “This place has been a coffee shop as far back
as anyone can remember, but Keir over there” – he pointed to the barista – “Keir
will fix tea if you ask. And properly, with leaves in the tea ball.” He smiled.
“This was the place my parents came when they were at university here.”
“Really?” she
said. “Here?”
“This very
table. I come here to study and write sometimes. Sometimes I sit and imagine
the conversation they had with their friends, like Dad bringing Mom and her
brother home for Christmas, and planning the end-of-term fling with The Mikado. I even have copies of a few
of the pictures taken right here.” He grinned. “And I’ve worked out more
problems that you might imagine with the Viking invasions of the 8th
and 9th centuries right here with a pot of tea.”
“Your PhD
defense today was brilliant,” she said. “I wouldn’t have had the nerve. That
array of establishment dons and an audience of – what, 200 or more, including the
press? And you’re there with your thesis to turn the establishment upside down?”
“I was
petrified,” he said.
She laughed. “Then
you fooled all of us. You looked calm and collected. And well prepared. You
took every barb and challenge and turned it back on them so adroitly they
almost thanked you for it. Tommy, you were upending three gigantic academia
egos, not to mention what they had built their careers upon, and you did it
brilliantly. You were absolutely brilliant.”
“The team was
brilliant, Rikki.”
She sipped her
tea. “The team was brilliant because our leader was brilliant. Spending three
months on a remote island like Oran north of Scotland could have ended in acrimony and
something out of an Agatha Christie story. And instead, we proved your theory
and came away feeling we each had accomplished something incredibly wonderful.
And we had. We changed the understanding of the pre-Norman history of Britain.”
Her voice softened. “And our team leader inspired each of us. Don’t denigrate
that.”
He smiled. “I
had inspiration of my own.”
She forked a
piece of the cake to cover the sudden silence.
“I hurt you,”
she said. “And don’t argue. I know I hurt you. And it killed me.”
“Why did you
come today?”
“Well, I
received my invitation, like the rest of the team. And I wanted to see the end
result of all that work we did.” She looked down. “And I wanted to see you. I
wanted to see how you were. And if you looked the same and sounded the same. I wanted
to hear your voice.”
He reached
across the table and touched her hand, still holding the fork. “So do I look
the same?”
Rikki and Tommy on the island of Oran |
She nodded. “You
still have the beard.”
He laughed.
She smiled back
at him. “Although one thing’s different. I’ve never seen you in a suit and tie
before. You look like an adult.”
“I’m feeling a
lot like a little boy right now.”
She glanced at
the big clock on the wall. “I have to catch my train for Cambridge,” she said. “I
have a mid-term oral tomorrow on Beowulf.”
“I’ll walk you
to the station.”
“You don’t have
to do that.”
“Yes, I do.”
He paid for
their cake and tea, and they walked into the late Edinburgh afternoon already darkening into night. She took his arm.
“Can I see you?”
he asked.
“When?”
“This weekend? I'll take the train Friday.”
“Don’t you have
plans? Didn’t I hear something about you going to London?”
“I don’t have to
be there until Sunday night. I’ll come down Friday.”
She leaned
closer to him. “I’m glad. I want to see you.”
“This time,” he
said, “I’ll let you buy the tea and cake.”
She laughed. “Done.”
Darlene at
Simply Darlene has a
flash fiction prompt – a 750-word story (or poem) based on that photograph
of a cup and cake. Visit
her site to see what stories others have written.
Top photograph by Darlene at Simply
Darlene. Second photograph by Linnaea Mallette via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
A teaser for a new book, Glynn?
ReplyDeleteOh my land - sir Glynn!
ReplyDeleteI recognize locales and names. Like miss Susan asked, is this a teaser for your newest book? Well, whatever it is, it's terrifical. Thanks for participating. I waited until I posted mine to read yours… coffee, (and/or tea), cake, and memories abound.
Susan and Darlene - it sort of is and sort of isn't a teaser. It comes from a manuscript about five down the line from the one I'm working on.
ReplyDelete