The pneumonia was a tough bastard, and recovery was
incredibly slow. The doctor had been right to give me a full week's worth of
sick leave. By the end of it I still didn't feel like a hundred percent, but my
blood tests were good and the doctor let me go back to work, provided I didn't
take on any extra shifts, and tried to take it easy. James had been checking up
on me, and had dropped by in the afternoon a few times when he wasn't busy
outside of London. I kept arguing he didn't have to, as I was only getting
better. But despite myself I liked it, and spent most of my days that week at
home hoping I'd hear a knock on the door.
With me
going back to work, and James being busy either filming down in Guildford or
doing interviews and meetings, we didn't have the time to see each other for
over two weeks, leading up to the Christmas party. It was being in a big, fancy
hotel where they'd rented the entire bar, lounge and dining area. Thankfully
ball gowns weren't required, but it was a "frocks and suits" kind of
event, which had resulted in me having to go buy a proper dress. And high
heels. The party was for everyone who worked with Top Gear, from researchers
and scriptwriters to production crew, along with all kinds of people associated
with the show - reps from car companies, people from the stunt and special
effects industry, expert mechanics. In short, it would be a big party with a
wonderful assortment of different people. I hadn't been at a party, or had to
dress up for one, for what felt like years - I felt most comfortable in a
nurse's uniform.
After my
colleague Cathy had spoken to James on the phone she had been very curious as to
who this soft-spoken man who had been taking care of me was. So I told her about
who he was, how we met, and that he'd become a good friend. Not much about
James revealed that he was a major celebrity in England, apart from a nice
house and some very extravagant cars in his garage. When we spent time together
it was mostly just the two of us, and when we had been out and about in public,
I hadn't noticed much fuss around him, apart from a few people wanting to say
hi or get an autograph. Which was absurd for me every time. But even so, I had
kept my friendship with James quiet, not wanting people from work or school to
know that I knew him quite well. I had no experience in being the friend of
someone "famous" and had no idea what to expect, or how to deal with
it. But now Cathy knew. She'd been surprised, and pretended to be offended that
I hadn't told her. Personally she wasn't interested in cars, or in any of the
presenters, she was happily married and found much amusement in teasing me for being mates with a man "who could be your dad". I had also told her about being invited to
the Christmas party, which left her the only person I could drag along for
dress-shopping. She didn't come willingly, and after hours of me rejecting
dress after dress, mumbling constant criticisms of my body and of dresses in general,
she broke out laughing.
"Why is this such a big thing for you?" She
looked amused and exasperated. "I've never seen you be this ambivalent
about anything, apart from which cupcake to choose in the cafeteria. You're
falling apart!"
"This is a big thing, Cathy!" I shouted, getting into dress number twenty-three of the day. "This place is going to be crowded with like... rich people and business people and their snooty little wives. And the press might be there, and I have never been to a thing like this. It's terrifying!"
"This is a big thing, Cathy!" I shouted, getting into dress number twenty-three of the day. "This place is going to be crowded with like... rich people and business people and their snooty little wives. And the press might be there, and I have never been to a thing like this. It's terrifying!"
"Okay, when you put it like that...," she said,
having turned serious. Eventually I settled on a dress, a blue silky one with
an a-line, pleated, knee-length skirt. Underneath it was a strapless, but it
had a see-through lace bodice and three-quarter sleeves, and a big silky bow
tied at the waist. The bow made it cute, but the lace and the skirt length
weighed up for that, making it sexier. When I mentioned shoes, Cathy nearly
cried. Luckily it didn't take long to find a pair of high-heeled blue pumps to
go with it.
Typically, I got held up at work the day of the Christmas
party. Going into work that day was a bad idea on the whole, I probably
would've been better off staying home, relaxing. To make matters worse a
patient, a young woman with cancer I'd known since I started working in London,
suddenly took a turn for the worse, chemotherapy was getting the better of her.
She was terrified, alone and sick, I knew she trusted me and I didn't have the
heart to leave her. I sat on a high-backed chair by her bedside, just keeping
her company as she tried to work her way through pain and nausea. Surreptitiously
I glanced at my watch, but nothing got past her, even in her state she was
eerily observant.
"Didn't your shift end like an hour ago?"
"Hm? Oh yeah, it did, but don't worry about
that."
"You keep checking your watch. You're supposed to be somewhere." It wasn't a statement, just an indisputable observation.
"You keep checking your watch. You're supposed to be somewhere." It wasn't a statement, just an indisputable observation.
"Mm, yeah.." I admitted. "At a big, fancy
Christmas party. At a poncy hotel."
"With tuxes and dresses and champagne?" She
smiled weakly.
"The whole shebang," I returned the smile.
"What does your dress look like?"
"Want to see a photo?" She nodded, and I fished
my phone out of my pocket to find photos of it. She started at it for a long
time, longingly, with a sad smile.
"It's pretty, you will look gorgeous in that. I want
you to go to the party," she said determinedly. "Go and look
gorgeous, have champagne and dance with handsome men in tuxes. As long as you
promise to live a bit for me, as well." I tried to protest, but she
wouldn't hear it. "It's bad enough I'm stuck in here, it's a waste having
you stuck in here as well. Just promise to take photos and tell me
everything."
"I'll tell you what I can remember," I winked
and patted her arm. Cancer patients would never stop amazing me, their strength
and wisdom, and how they could change your perspective on things.
James had offered to get me a ride to the party, but I
had said no, insisting I'd get a taxi. Now that I was running late I was glad I
had. I noted that I was nearly an hour late when I got into the taxi and gave
the driver the address. My heart was beating wildly, I felt hot and flustered
and the drive to the hotel was over too soon. I didn't feel ready. As
gracefully as I could in a short dress and high heels I got out of the taxi,
having paid the driver. The pavement outside the hotel was crowded with
security people, limo drivers having cigarettes outside their cars, chatting to
each other, and of course a small pack of photographers. The photographers all
peered at me, but quickly lost interest when they realised I was a nobody. The
security men took an interest as well, but lazily waved me along when I
held up my invitation.. Nervously I ascended the wide, stone stairs to the
hotel. Apart from a long hotel clerk the lobby was empty. I came to a halt in
the middle of it, looking around, feeling intimidated and lost.
"Can I help you?"
"Um, yeah maybe. I'm supposed to be at this Christmas
party, I'm late, and..."
"Ah!" The hotel clerk lit up, and immediately
showed me the way. More stern-looking security men looked at me sourly as I
approached a huge, heavy wooden double-door. I could hear muffled music,
chatting and laughter seeping through it. Shakily I held up my invitation again and he opened the door without even looking at me. I entered another, smaller lobby where two women in what looked like uniforms greeted me from behind a desk with stiff smiles.
"Can we take your coat, madam?" They asked politely, probably as a response to my confused expression.
"Yes, thank you," I said and slipped out of my black trenchcoat, handing it to one of the women, and I recieved a stub with a number on in return. On the other end of the lobby was another double-door, and taking pity on me one of the women nodded encouraginly at me and then in the direction of the door. I drew a deep breath, straightened myself up and walked through the door. The room beyond was darker, and big, and full of people. They were milling around, holding different glasses according to what they drank, standing or sitting on little sofa-groups chatting. A wide doorway lead onto an even bigger room with more tables, sofas and chairs, and what looked like a dancefloor at the far end. Each room had a big bar. I looked around, scanning the crowd for faces I knew, but I didn't recognise anyone and I felt alone, stupid and anxious. The bar was calling me enticingly, promising how it could soothe my nerves. At least a glass in my hands would give me something to fiddle with. I walked over and asked one of the bartenders for a glass of wine. Suddenly I heard a familiar voice beside me.
"A pint and a cuba libre, thanks mate." I breathed a sigh of relief.
"Richard!" I exclaimed. He looked quickly at me, then did a double take.
"Good lord! Emily?"
"Hello!" I smiled, never been happier to have seen a familiar face.
"Welcome! Wow, you look great, I didn't recognise you!" He smiled and gave me a quick hug. Our drinks arrived, and I seized my glass of red wine and had a swig. "Come on, you have to meet the missus!" He said happily and nearly dragged me through the crowd. A short, blonde slightly bushy-haired woman stood on her own, looking as lonely as I had felt a minute ago. "Mindy! Meet Emily!" Richard said, handing the drink over to her. We shook hands, and Richard quickly recounted the story of how we'd met down in Syria.
"So how did you end up here in England?" Mindy asked.
"I'm taking a class in Tropical Nursing at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. It's part-time so I'm working at University College Hospital most of the time."
"Tropical nursing?" She raised an eyebrow at me.
"Yeah, most humanitarian organisations require that medical staff has that course if they're going to work in third world countries. I've been to Kenya and Uganda, many years ago, and would love to go back someday to work, if just for a little while. Going to Syria didn't change that, I'd still like to do aid work."
"That's really... admirable," Mindy began.
"She went to do aid work and ended up patching together a British tosspot," Richard laughed.
"Who are you calling tosspot?" Jeremy came stomping out from nowhere, having only heard the last sentence of the conversation.
"Not you, for once!" Richard said, even a little surprised himself. Then he pointed at me. "Look, it's Emily!" Jeremy eyed me up and down a few times.
"Wow. You clean up pretty good." He smiled sincerely, and I recognised the comment for what it truly was, even if it didn't seem like it; a nice compliment.
"Thank you, Jeremy. You don't look half-bad yourself," I winked, and he chuckled.
"Have any of you seen the last oaf?" Jeremy scanned the crowd quickly. We all shook our heads. Jeremy's wife Francie joined us and we were introduced. Mindy quickly told her the story from Syria, and before long we were all chatting about work, hobbies and all the normal things people small-talk about. Jeremy got me another glass of wine when the first one was empty. I smiled, laughed, answered questions and was polite, but I was scanning the crowds around me constantly on the look-out for James.
"Can we take your coat, madam?" They asked politely, probably as a response to my confused expression.
"Yes, thank you," I said and slipped out of my black trenchcoat, handing it to one of the women, and I recieved a stub with a number on in return. On the other end of the lobby was another double-door, and taking pity on me one of the women nodded encouraginly at me and then in the direction of the door. I drew a deep breath, straightened myself up and walked through the door. The room beyond was darker, and big, and full of people. They were milling around, holding different glasses according to what they drank, standing or sitting on little sofa-groups chatting. A wide doorway lead onto an even bigger room with more tables, sofas and chairs, and what looked like a dancefloor at the far end. Each room had a big bar. I looked around, scanning the crowd for faces I knew, but I didn't recognise anyone and I felt alone, stupid and anxious. The bar was calling me enticingly, promising how it could soothe my nerves. At least a glass in my hands would give me something to fiddle with. I walked over and asked one of the bartenders for a glass of wine. Suddenly I heard a familiar voice beside me.
"A pint and a cuba libre, thanks mate." I breathed a sigh of relief.
"Richard!" I exclaimed. He looked quickly at me, then did a double take.
"Good lord! Emily?"
"Hello!" I smiled, never been happier to have seen a familiar face.
"Welcome! Wow, you look great, I didn't recognise you!" He smiled and gave me a quick hug. Our drinks arrived, and I seized my glass of red wine and had a swig. "Come on, you have to meet the missus!" He said happily and nearly dragged me through the crowd. A short, blonde slightly bushy-haired woman stood on her own, looking as lonely as I had felt a minute ago. "Mindy! Meet Emily!" Richard said, handing the drink over to her. We shook hands, and Richard quickly recounted the story of how we'd met down in Syria.
"So how did you end up here in England?" Mindy asked.
"I'm taking a class in Tropical Nursing at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. It's part-time so I'm working at University College Hospital most of the time."
"Tropical nursing?" She raised an eyebrow at me.
"Yeah, most humanitarian organisations require that medical staff has that course if they're going to work in third world countries. I've been to Kenya and Uganda, many years ago, and would love to go back someday to work, if just for a little while. Going to Syria didn't change that, I'd still like to do aid work."
"That's really... admirable," Mindy began.
"She went to do aid work and ended up patching together a British tosspot," Richard laughed.
"Who are you calling tosspot?" Jeremy came stomping out from nowhere, having only heard the last sentence of the conversation.
"Not you, for once!" Richard said, even a little surprised himself. Then he pointed at me. "Look, it's Emily!" Jeremy eyed me up and down a few times.
"Wow. You clean up pretty good." He smiled sincerely, and I recognised the comment for what it truly was, even if it didn't seem like it; a nice compliment.
"Thank you, Jeremy. You don't look half-bad yourself," I winked, and he chuckled.
"Have any of you seen the last oaf?" Jeremy scanned the crowd quickly. We all shook our heads. Jeremy's wife Francie joined us and we were introduced. Mindy quickly told her the story from Syria, and before long we were all chatting about work, hobbies and all the normal things people small-talk about. Jeremy got me another glass of wine when the first one was empty. I smiled, laughed, answered questions and was polite, but I was scanning the crowds around me constantly on the look-out for James.
"Hammond,
we better mingle a bit," Jeremy said in a business-like tone, and Hammond
murmured his agreement. Francie announced she better come with them, to keep
them in line and behaving. "You two be all right on your own?" Jeremy
asked.
"Yeah I
think we'll survive," Mindy said carelessly and we waved them off. She had
another sip of her drink and then looked at me curiously. "So, what about
you then?"
"Bwuh?"
"Well, now
you met us all, the husbands and wives. What's your story, then? Have any
significant other? A boyfriend?"
"What? I..
No, I.." I stammered, flustered. How hard could it be to just answer
"no"? It was a simple question, and it had a simple answer.
"What about
James, then?" She asked innocently, raising one eyebrow. She's a witch. What is it with these people
and direct questions?
"I, um...
no, no boyfriend. James and I, we're.. He's a good mate," I stuttered. "Besides,
James is dating someone, isn't he." It wasn't a question, more of a
general observation.
"Is he? Maybe, I don't know," she said with a
shrug. "I know he was, for a little bit, that that was over quickly. The
only one I've heard him talk about
lately is you." I had one of those
heart-stopping, stomach-swooping moments. My first instinct was to grab her by
the shoulders and shake her vigorously, begging her to recount anything and
everything he might've said about me. She looked at me pointedly, and I
struggled with how to reply.
"Oh?" I tried to act calm and somewhat
surprised, but I was sure she looked right through me. I was thinking
frantically, trying to think of a response, but just as I opened my mouth to
speak Mindy straightened up, seemingly having spotted something in the
distance.
"Speaking of..." she smirked. I looked in the
same general direction and her and after a seconds my stomach did another major
lurch. On the other side of the room, in the distance, was James. He was
wearing a crisp white shirt, black suit and a black bow-tie, with those
staggering blue eyes and that floppy, grey-streaked haired I loved so much. He
didn't seem to see us, and Mindy waved frantically at him, he noticed it and
veered towards us. Unaware of it I had sidled backwards in an unconscious
effort to hide behind Mindy. "Oh relax, you look great," she said in
the corner of her mouth and nudged me. I felt a slight blush creeping up my
neck and inwardly I cursed her and her blunt straightforwardness. As he walked
towards us, his eyes were locked on to me, the stare burning me, and I shifted
uneasily. Quickly he said hi to Mindy, they had obviously met earlier in the
evening, then he turned his attention to me. He leaned in, slipped an arm
around the small of my back and pulled me in for a quick hug.
"Hello, beautiful," he said in my ear, so
quietly no one but me could hear it. I felt his warm, shaven cheek against
mine, his breath in my ear, the smell of him and his hair as it brushed against
my neck. My knees went weak, and for a moment I lost what little composure I
had and blushed furiously, averting my eyes. But I had to look at him, I
couldn't stop myself. I smiled and fidgeted with the lapels on his suit jacket
instead.
"Hey, you..." For a moment we just stood there,
fumbling.
"Right," Mindy said loudly, breaking the
tension. "I'm off to find my husband, make sure he isn't completely
plastered already. See you later, Emily. James," she nodded, and disappeared.
"Where is everyone?" James asked, his hand
still resting on the small of my back.
"Richard and Jeremy went to err... mingle," I said with a frown.
"Oh god.." James said ominously.
"Francie went with them to keep them civilised..."
"Francie went with them to keep them civilised..."
"Good," James nodded slowly.
"And then there's us."
"Want another glass of wine?" he asked,
gesturing to my empty glass. I looked at it and sighed heavily.
"Red wine really isn't doing it for me. I know this
isn't very ladylike, but could I please
have a pint?" I begged and James chuckled.
"That's my girl."
"And can we sit down somewhere? I'm used to stomping
around in orthopaedic sandals, my feet are already killing me."
"All right, go sit over there, I'll get some
beers." He pointed to an empty sofa and I headed there. A few minutes
later James sat down next to me and handed me a pint. "How long have you
been here?"
"I don't know, forty-five minutes maybe?" I said, accepting my pint, then looking at him apologetically. "I'm sorry I was so late... I got caught up at the hospital. There's this cancer patient... she was having a really bad day and I just couldn't get myself to leave her." He looked as if he had half a mind to be annoyed with me, but couldn't quite find the motivation for it.
"I don't know, forty-five minutes maybe?" I said, accepting my pint, then looking at him apologetically. "I'm sorry I was so late... I got caught up at the hospital. There's this cancer patient... she was having a really bad day and I just couldn't get myself to leave her." He looked as if he had half a mind to be annoyed with me, but couldn't quite find the motivation for it.
"Do you know how
hard it is to be cross with someone so good-hearted?"
"Very?" I smiled hopefully. "I haven't
seen you around before now, though. Where were you?"
"I was out back... Trying to get hold of you, actually. I
wondered where you were, if something had happened. So I was out there calling
you. And texting you, " he admitted. I found my phone in my tiny handbag,
the display showed 8 unanswered calls and one text.
"Were you worrying about me again?"
".. . no," he mumbled unconvincingly, studying
the mysteries in the depths of his pint.
"I'm sorry, I should've sent you a text, letting you
know I'd be this late. I was just stressed out and the thought didn't even
cross my mind. But really, James. You don't have to worry about me. There's a
99% chance that I'm perfectly fine.. Just stressed and late."
"... which leaves that 1% chance of you lying at
home half-dead from pneumonia, refusing to follow doctor's orders and let
yourself be admitted to hospital," he observed dryly. I screwed up my face
in a grimace.
"I should've seen that one coming," I said
unhappily.
"I know it's ridiculous to be worrying about you.
You're a big girl. Well, not physically," he said, measuring about four feet
off the floor with his hand, ".. but the heels help a bit, I guess."
I nudged him in the ribs and then we broke out laughing.
I was sitting by the bar, fiddling with an empty glass.
My last one for the night, I had decided. It had been a long day, and a long
night, and it was inevitably drawing to a close. The DJ had been gradually
calming things down, having moved over to slow-ish cheek-to-cheek ballads.
Definitely a sign that it's time to go. As the familiar keyboard chords of
"Us & Them" by Pink Floyd faded in, a hand closed around mine and
I felt myself being pulled into the crowd and towards the dance floor. The hand
belonged to James, and he was determinedly weaving his way through the people.
One on the floor he pulled me close and wrapped his free arm around the small of
my back.
"It's my turn now," he said simply.
"Your turn?" I raised an eyebrow at him.
"I've seen you. Dancing with Hammond. And Jezza. And
even Andy," he said in mock affronted tones.
"Have you been spying on me?"
"... a bit," he
mumbled with a shrug, looking down. I slipped my arm around his shoulder and
rested my hand on the back of his neck, and this prompted him to look at me
again. Naturally, like we'd been doing it for years, we started dancing. "How's
your feet?"
"I haven't had any
communications with them for the past hour. Either I'm drunk or I have
permanent nerve damage." We both laughed, a liberating laughter that made
me relax.
"So, have you had a good
night?"
"I have, it's been great,
met lots of people and had fun." This
is my favourite part, though."How has your night been?"
"It became a good one, in
the end," he answered mysteriously. "When were you going home for the
holidays?"
"In exactly a week, on the
22nd."
"How long are you gone for?"
"How long are you gone for?"
"Don't know yet, haven't
booked a return flight. I have like three entire weeks off, I had to because
I've worked too much this year."
"Are you staying in Norway
that long?"
"I doubt it. What are you
doing for the holidays?" I loved being this close, being able to just
stare into those sparkling blue eyes as much as I wanted.
"Seeing family, mostly.
Might get a few quiet nights to fix bikes. Probably going down to Hammond's for
his New Years bash."
"Oh, right. He invited me
to that tonight, actually."
"Oh really? Are you
coming?"
"Haven't decided yet.
Depends on how quickly I go crazy back home," I smirked.
"I have to drop by and give
you your Christmas present before you leave," he said.
"You got me a
present?"
"Yes. Possibly. If you got
me one as well," he said, looking at me inquisitorially.
"Of course I have!"
"In that case - yes." I smiled at him, and he pulled me a little closer. In a moment of daft courage, needing to be closer, I wrapped my arm tighter around him and leaned my forehead against his cheek. For a while we said nothing, just revolved slowly on the spot in silence, heads close, probably looking like two soppy teenagers. James broke the silence by talking quietly, but not moving his face further from mine. "Do you have any idea how beautiful you are tonight?" Again I blushed furiously, and was glad I didn't have to look into James' eyes.
"In that case - yes." I smiled at him, and he pulled me a little closer. In a moment of daft courage, needing to be closer, I wrapped my arm tighter around him and leaned my forehead against his cheek. For a while we said nothing, just revolved slowly on the spot in silence, heads close, probably looking like two soppy teenagers. James broke the silence by talking quietly, but not moving his face further from mine. "Do you have any idea how beautiful you are tonight?" Again I blushed furiously, and was glad I didn't have to look into James' eyes.
"Hmm, no, not really...
" I answered honestly, eyes closed.
"I mean it, you look gorgeous,"
he said with feeling, even more quietly.
"Stop it, or I'm going to
tear up," I said with a nervous little laugh, having to swallow hard.
"No, please don't. You're
always crying around me," he mumbled, I could hear in his voice that he
was smiling a little.
"You know, you look pretty
handsome yourself," I said sincerely and gently patted his back. "Thank
you, James. For saying things like that.. And for worrying about me."
"I thought you didn't like
that?" I didn't answer, just kept my eyes closed and enjoyed these last
moments, knowing the song was drawing to a close. When the song faded over into a
new one, as if on cue, Richard stomped out from nowhere, harassed and panic-stricken
"Jezza may or may not have
fallen over and hurt himself pretty badly. We require a nurse! I think!"
He shouted and looked urgently at me, swaying slightly on the spot,
glassy-eyed. James and I had let go of each other when we'd heard his voice,
and now I looked up at him with an exasperated and regretful smile, which he
returned.
"Come on. Seems I have to
patch up your mate," I said.
"He's not my mate right
now," I heard James mumble behind me.
We followed Richard's lead and
found Jezza sitting in a small, closed-off room, one probably used for small,
private events normally. He had a bloody scrape on his forehead, but it was his
hand, resting on a table, that caught my attention. Francie was there, and
quickly recounted how he'd been out back having a cigarette and somehow
stumbled over his own feet. The fall wouldn't have been so bad if he'd had the
sense to drop his glass before landing. But he had instinctively refused to let
go of his precious drink, causing him to smash the glass under his hand. He was
bleeding, but not profusely. Jeremy looked at me sheepishly.
"I fell over a
bit..." Was all he managed. He sounded mortified.
"I can see that," I
said, giving him a little smile, sensing how I morphed back into my nurse role.
"Ok, someone go to the hotel kitchen or find a staff member, they're
required by law to have huge first-aid kits around for health and safety."
At the mention of H & S, Jeremy grumbled. "Bring the biggest kit you
can find." Francie nodded and strode out of the room, on the hunt for
medical equipment. I pulled up a chair and examined his hand. "God, you're
a bloody mess. Hmm... you have at least
three big shards stuck in there. I don't know how deep they go... You really
should go to the A&E for this."
"What? God no, it'll be
all over the news, Clarkson the drunken
idiot. Not happening, I'm not going." He gave me his most stubborn
expression. I sighed and started to explain.
"The problem is.. These
shards. You're not bleeding so much now, but that might be because the shards
are closing off the bleeds. If I start pulling them out, it can start bleeding
pretty badly."
"Okay, if it starts
gushing, then I'll go to the
A&E," he persisted.
"And possibly bleed out on
the way," Richard slurred, looking somewhat excited at the prospect.
"Hammond has a point, even
if he has drunk his own body weight in beer. All right, fine, on your own head
be it," I sighed as Jeremy still looked at me with stubborn refusal.
Francie returned with a huge, red suitcase with a red cross, and put it on the
table. "Okay, before I start poking around in that... How's your
head?" I looked at the abrasion in his forehead, which looked like a
painful scuff mark but nothing else. Gently I examined his nose, in case he'd
broken it, but he didn't flinch. Drunk people could do that, break things
without even knowing it.
"Head hurts, but nothing
major. I think my hand got the worst of it," he mumbled. I opened the
suitcase it and found gloves, bandages and to my amazement, a few wound care
kits that would have all I needed; tiny plastic forceps, saline, cotton balls
and more gauze. Quickly I opened it, opened a little container of saline and
poured it over the cotton balls, then snapped on my gloves. "Right. Man
up, Clarkson." I picked up a pair of forceps and gently nudged the smallest
looking shard of glass, then pulled it out of his hand. I held my breath,
expecting a rush of blood but it didn't happen. The other two came out just as
easily, they weren't lodged as deep as I had feared. Examining the rest of his
cuts on his hand I couldn't see any more bits of glass, and proceeded to rinse
it with saline. Jeremy bit his lip and drew a sharp intake of breath as the
saline stung. "I said, man up," I smirked and covered his wounds with
gauze pads before bandaging it up. I ordered him to move his fingers and curl
up his hand into a fist, and he did. The scuffmark on his forehead got a quick
rinse and a band-aid. "If there's any change in movement or loss of
sensation, go to the doctor. If that hand goes red, or swollen, or warm - go to
the doctor. Okay? " I shot Jeremy my most authoritarian, militant nurse-look,
and amazingly he seemed to cower slightly under
it.
"Yeah, all right, I will,
I swear."
"I doubt that even can get infected," Francie mused.
"He has so much alcohol in his blood that wound is basically
sterile."
"Get him home, yeah?"
I said to Francie as I snapped off my gloves, gathered up the debris of bandage
wrappings and bloody gauze and threw it in a bin, and she nodded her agreement.
While I'd been sorting Jeremy out James had been standing behind me, watching
with morbid fascination. Richard had gone quiet, he was sitting in a chair with
heavy eyelids, obviously crashing. "Seems like you're about ready to find
a bed too, Hamster," I said and patted his shoulder. He just sighed and
mumbled something unintelligible. "James, keep him awake will you? I'll go
find Mindy." I said good night to Jeremy and Francie, who was trying to
usher her husband out while calling for their driver. I returned the suitcase
to the kitchen, and headed off to find Mindy. She was sitting in a sofa in the
middle of the first room, looking sour.
"Have you seen my idiot
husband?" She snapped.
"Yeah, come on, I know
where he is." On our way back to the closed-off room I hastily told her
what had happened to Jeremy, and this seemed to lift her mood. It evaporated
again when she saw her dishevelled husband half-asleep on a chair, however.
"Thank god we have a room
here at the hotel, imagine trying to get that home!" She pointed at her
husband.
"I'm so glad I don't have
a drunken dinnum to carry home," I sighed with relief. Mindy said
goodnight and somehow managed to get Richard on his feet and marched him out of
the room. I couldn't resist laughing as I watched them go, and rubbed my face
tiredly. "Oh my god, what a bunch."
"You try working with them...!"
He pointed out. I found my phone in my handbag and looked at the time, it was
2am and the party was almost over.
"Now that my job here is done, I guess I can go home," I smirked.
"Now that my job here is done, I guess I can go home," I smirked.
"I'm staying here, at the
hotel..." James said. "I knew it would be late and I'd be on the
piss."
"Probably a smart
move," I smirked. "If I could've afforded it I probably would have
too." He followed me to the lobby where I retrieved my jacket, and then
through to the hotel foyer. There were taxis waiting outside, the hotel had
probably ordered up a bunch as people were going home. James just looked at me,
not saying a word, but I thought I knew what he was about to say. "Yes,
I'll text you when I'm home. Don't worry."
"I will anyway," he
said and pulled me in, hugged me close while he rested his chin on the top of
my head.
"Thanks for a really good
night," I mumbled against his shirt, still being hugged.
"Sorry about my stupid
mates. Thank you for coming, it made my evening a lot better." It felt
like something inside me exploded when I suddenly felt his lips kissing my
forehead gently. Then his lips, and his arms, vanished. We looked at each
other, awkwardly, I wanted him to kiss me so badly, internally I was screaming
for it. Unable to bear the tension I averted my eyes, and when I looked back up
again he'd taken a step back. My heart sank to the floor in a sad, wet puddle.
"Good night, James."
"Night, Emily. See you soon, Christmas gift swap," he winked. I smiled, albeit a little sadly, and walked out the door into the cold December air and hailed a taxi home.
"Night, Emily. See you soon, Christmas gift swap," he winked. I smiled, albeit a little sadly, and walked out the door into the cold December air and hailed a taxi home.
James is going to love that dress.
ReplyDeleteIf he is ever going to show up!! What is keeping the bastard?!
ReplyDeleteHe better show up. If he doesn't it's like hes standing her up. I mean, yeah she did get her own invite but she really only went for him. He can be such a twat sometimes.
ReplyDeleteBrilliant! I love their closeness and how they can never catch a break.
ReplyDeleteI know?! Poor people...
ReplyDeleteAnd I've been refreshing the page whole day today cause I can't wait to see what's going to happen next.*
ReplyDelete*I'm not rushing you. Just sayin'. :)
You're just doing this on purpose now. Stop.
ReplyDelete