I
wait – it’s our second anniversary. Sue
is very late, but arrives just as the waiter comes over for the third time to
ask me if I want to order drinks.
As I look up she steps in from the half lit street lights, into the harsh illumination of the Café
As I look up she steps in from the half lit street lights, into the harsh illumination of the Café
Lamps,
picking her out like a spotlight against the terracotta walls and dark wooden
panels. She walks half defensively shuffling across the wooden floor, her heels
trying and failing to hold her back from completing the final few feet of her
journey.
She
reaches the table and mumbles something about the traffic and her problem’s
finding a parking spot, but even though it’s clear above the background chatter
and clink of glasses, I’m not really listening.
I’ve
been brooding on this for the last 45 minutes - she could have phoned, she
could have left earlier, she could have done something. So now my mood is dark,
as black as that cat in the poster on the wall. I nod my acceptance, and in
keeping with this Anglo-French hybrid, it’s some mixture of a Gallic shrug of indifference and an
English reluctance to cause a fuss.
I
start to stand to greet her, but it’s just a little too slowly and instead it’s
the waiter who pulls the chair back offering Sue a seat, and we both sit back
down in unison, for the first time in months.
“I haven’t ordered anything yet” I say, “I thought it best to wait”.
“I haven’t ordered anything yet” I say, “I thought it best to wait”.
“Oh
that wasn’t necessary” she say’s forcing a smile across her face as she speaks.
“No,
No.” I insist “We’ll I didn’t think it would be a long wait … at first”.
“Sorry”
she say’s again and the slight wince of pain in her expression almost lifts my
mood.
She
gazes down at the dark red Menu laid out in front of her by the waiter, seeking
out something to change the subject and move on. “This all looks very tempting,
but I don’t want to have anything too fattening”.
It’s
an olive branch, my chance to say something nice like, “Oh you don’t need to
worry about your weight” but I’m still sulking, so I let it drift un-responded,
“We’ll I’m going to go for the Steak Rouge” .
The
forced smile again, “That sounds nice, I might just have the Goats cheese salad,
and a coffee, something to warm me up.”
She
starts to ask me about my day, but before she’s finished, the Waiter steps up –
“Would you like to order some starters?”.
We
each gaze briefly at each other, half tempted but feeling will seem like
gluten’s so shake our heads, “No, well go straight to the main course”, I say
“a Steak Rouge and a Salade de Cher-ver-er?”. I struggle over the pronunciation
of the last part and make another mental note against Sue for choosing
something difficult for me to say.
“And
a coffee” she adds, “And two coffees” I correct.

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