The living room was exactly how I’d left it. The remote control sat on the arm of the chair, the curtains were half drawn, and an empty coffee mug was gathering dust to the left of my foot as I sat, coat still on, hunched up in the middle of the settee. My suitcase, once again hastily packed with Vanessa’s things, was parked by the door, and the entire place was silent and still. Through my overtired, jet-lagged fug, I heard doors slamming and horns blowing outside, people shouting in harsh London accents, buses roaring down the main road and splashing in the rain. Because, of course, it was raining. Staring straight ahead out of the window and onto the chimney pots of my neighbours, I curled my hands back into the sleeves of my coat. It felt like I’d never been away.
All the way home, I’d tried to think about what Al had said – how I needed to work out what my next move was, who I wanted to be – but I couldn’t move on with myself until I’d fixed everything with everyone else. First, though, right now, I needed to sleep. I tried to summon the energy to take off my coat and drag myself into my bedroom, but it was too hard. I’d checked the devil’s daughter’s room – nothing had moved in there either, so it looked as though she was still away on her own adventure. There was always the slim chance she’d seen the error of her ways and gone off to become a nun or a Tibetan monk or something. A girl could dream.
‘I could just sleep here,’ I whispered, sliding sideways onto the settee until I was completely horizontal, feet still on the floor. ‘Vanessa isn’t here. She won’t know.’
As my eyes slid shut and I used up my last drop of energy to haul my legs up onto the settee, I heard a rattle at the door. A key in the lock.
Fuck.
It was too late to make a run for my bedroom – there was no way I could get past her in time. I could roll myself into the bathroom and lock the door, but then she’d know I was home for sure. Maybe if I just lay very still on the settee she’d think I was dead already and leave me out for the Alsatians.
‘Tess? Are you in there? I can’t get the fucking key to work.’
Sweet Jesus, Mary and Joseph, it wasn’t Vanessa. It was Amy. It was wonderful, foul-mouthed, fantabulous Amy. I’d taken my phone out to call her a thousand times after leaving the cottage – on the way to the airport, during the interminable three-hour wait in the departure lounge and every two minutes on the cab ride back to the flat. But I hadn’t a clue what to say.
‘Just push it harder,’ I said as loudly as I could manage, face first in the cushion. ‘It gets stuck when it rains.’ Well, that was something.
‘It gets stuck when it’s sunny, it gets stuck when it snows – it’s a piece of shit,’ she shouted. I heard something hard strike something heavy and then a very small person clatter through a doorway and onto the floor. ‘But it doesn’t like being kicked, do you, you bastard?’
I loved that she talked to my door. I loved that she was sprawled across my living-room floor with a Tesco bag in her hand, effing and blinding at an inanimate object.
‘So you’re back then?’ she said, dusting off her skinny jeans and leaping on top of me. ‘I have missed you, you daft mare.’
‘I thought you hated me?’ I tried to find the energy to roll over and hug her, but it wasn’t so easy when she had me pinned. ‘I’m so sorry.’
‘You don’t get rid of me that easily, Brookes.’ Amy wrapped her arms round the back of my neck, contorted herself into a horizontal piggyback and started dry-humping my legs. If we had been naked and covered in jelly, there would probably have been some money to be made. ‘I lost my temper. I’m the one who’s sorry. Anyway, you’re back! It doesn’t matter!’
‘I’m back,’ I repeated, once again freaking out at the overwhelming feeling that I’d never been away. ‘And you’re OK?’
‘It was weird that everything happened while you were away,’ she said, shuffling over until we were comfortably spooning. ‘It was like, if you’d been here, we would have gone out and I would have got drunk and you would have been dead sensible, given me a lecture and sorted me out.’
‘You’re making me sound like a right barrel of laughs,’ I interrupted. ‘I’m not your mum.’
‘No, I didn’t mean it in a bad way,’ she said, slapping me round the back of the head. I shut up. ‘I meant you would have made it better in a Tess way, so I wouldn’t really have had to work anything out on my own. But because you weren’t here, I did. And, yeah, I think it’s OK.’
I pouted into my pillow. ‘What did you do? Or should I be too afraid to ask?’
‘I went for a drink with Dave,’ she said. ‘And it was nice.’
‘Oh, Aims.’ I could see it all now – one too many glasses of wine, reminiscing about old times but conveniently forgetting that time she threw a melon at him in the middle of the big Asda on the A3. ‘You didn’t?’
‘Have a little faith, knobber,’ she replied. ‘Actually, I had one drink, I went to the loo, and I thought, what would Tess do?’
‘So you got on a plane and vanished to Hawaii under an assumed name?’
‘No, I thought, Tess would give him a hug, tell him congratulations, and then go home. So that’s what I did. Via the supermarket for a massive bottle of wine and all the Dairy Milk I could carry.’
‘Wow, that’s pretty sensible.’ I patted her on the head, impressed.
‘I know. I did wonder if we’d accidentally made a wish and, like, swapped bodies or something, but I think, actually, I just had to grow up a little bit because you weren’t here to be the grown-up.’
‘That’s terrifying,’ I said, pulling a stray strand of hair out of my mouth. ‘I haven’t really had that much influence over your decisions for the past twenty-seven years, Amy.’
‘Yeah, you have.’ She shrugged and gave me a squeeze. ‘But I didn’t really give you much of a choice, did I? You were the sensible one and I was the crazy one. Looks like we’d both had enough of our assigned roles at exactly the same time.’
‘You mean, now you’re the sensible one and I’m the crazy one?’ I asked, fighting sleep with every breath.
‘Maybe we could go fifty-fifty,’ she suggested. ‘Let’s be honest, I shouldn’t be left to my own devices for too long.’
‘And as it turns out, neither should I.’ I yawned loudly. ‘What time is it? Can I go to bed yet?’
‘You’re not getting a wink until you tell me everything,’ she said, rubbing my shoulders. ‘Everything. Every word of it. Hot man, Hawaii, photographs, all of it.’
‘Amy, I am literally going to pass out. Literally.’ My voice was thick and even making words was a chore. ‘I swear I’ll tell you everything if I can have an hour?’
‘Fine. One hour, and only if I can watch your Buffy boxset while you pass out,’ she bargained.
‘Fine, but you have to make me a cup of tea first.’ I pushed her off my back and dragged my sorry arse into the bedroom, pulling my suitcase of stolen goods behind me. ‘Sugary. Very sugary tea.’
‘One diabetic builders’ coming right up,’ she confirmed. ‘I’m glad you’re home, Tess.’
‘Well, that makes one of us,’ I muttered, trying to smile as I collapsed on my beautiful bed. ‘Which is better than nothing.’
Jet lag was a cruel mistress. I was fast asleep before Amy could even bring me my cup of tea on Sunday evening, but I was wide awake at the crack of dawn on Monday while she snored beside me, resplendent in my ancient Snoopy T-shirt and a pair of neon-pink knee-high socks that I had to assume she’d brought with her. They certainly weren’t mine. I’d managed to regain consciousness for a short time exactly one hour after I’d fallen asleep, when Amy turned off the telly, started poking me in the arm and didn’t stop until I opened one eye and told her absolutely every last detail of the past seven days. When she was finally satisfied she’d had the whole story, she patted me on the head and turned the TV back on. Just before I went back under, I was pretty certain I heard her say she was proud of me.
Fishing the remote control out of the covers, I flicked off the TV she’d left playing, which explained why I’d had nightmares about vampires chasing me through the ocean, and rolled out of bed without disturbing my sleepover pal, a skill I’d really honed over the past week. Waking up in my own bed, wandering into the kitchen in my knickers and going through the motions of my morning tea ritual didn’t make anything feel better. It was almost as though I’d woken up from a dream but couldn’t quite shake it, only I couldn’t work out which was the dream, London or Hawaii. Or the seafaring vampires. The past seven days felt more real to me than the past twenty-eight years in England. Despite the drama and the anxiety, they had been fun, and I already missed everything about them. I’d been challenged and excited and things had felt new. And for the first time in a long time, in Hawaii, I’d been happy.
‘Post-holiday blues,’ I told the toaster. ‘It was a holiday. It was a break from reality, all of it. It’s done. Back to real life now.’
But the toaster didn’t look convinced.
‘Fuck off, toaster,’ I muttered, taking my tea back into the living room and settling down on the settee to watch the sunrise.
I thought watching BBC Breakfast might help me feel more present, but after two hours of suffering relentlessly smug non-news, I started to feel like it might be a good idea to get out of the house. And so, after my third cup of tea and fifth slice of toast, I showered, dressed as quietly as possible, picked up my bag, still full of my laptop, my passport and five bags of chocolate-covered macadamia nuts, and ventured outside, into London. As I locked the door, I pulled out my phone and patiently tapped and prodded at the shattered screen until it pulled up the number I was looking for.
‘Hello?’ Charlie answered right away.
‘Hi, it’s me,’ I said, concrete feeling very odd underneath my hard-soled shoes. It had been a while. ‘Can you meet me? Starbucks by the office?’
Better to get this over with, I rationalized as I flagged down the bus. And all the better to do it with coffee and cookies, before Amy got involved and while I was still half out of it with jet lag. It was a perfect plan. Get in, get out and go back to bed. Piece of piss. What could possibly go wrong?
‘Wow.’
Charlie walked into Starbucks in his black skinny jeans and the navy blue Jack Wills jumper I’d bought him for Christmas, his hair brushed back away from his big brown puppy-dog eyes and a leather man bag I didn’t recognize thrown across his wiry chest. Without thinking, I stood up to hug him and realized right away that it was a mistake. He looked like Charlie, he smelled like Charlie, he felt just like Charlie, but something was off. I let go, sitting down and grabbing my giant coffee with both hands. That was my second wow in a week. Actually, my second wow ever.
‘You look great.’ Charlie looked genuinely pleased to see me while I struggled to assemble an expression that wasn’t one of complete shock and horror. I did not feel great – I felt sick to my stomach.
‘I look exactly the same,’ I replied, pushing my plait over my shoulder. ‘You just haven’t seen me for a week.’
‘Longest week of my life,’ he said, reaching his hand across the table towards mine. I pulled away and shook my head, eyes trained carefully on my coffee cup. ‘Right. I’m going to get a drink. Do you want anything?’
I shook my head again.
‘What could go wrong? she said. How bad could it be to see him? she said,’ I muttered under my breath. ‘What an idiot.’
I could just imagine Nick sitting at the next table, hiding behind the Guardian, shaking his head at me and Charlie, dying to tell me what a moron I was, what a loser he was. Just imagining his presence, hearing his voice in my head, was enough to make me squirm in my seat. It was almost forty-eight hours since I’d seen him and I still had no idea what to do about the situation.
‘One regrettable shag at a time, Tess,’ I told myself as Charlie wandered back over with a huge steaming cup and two chocolate muffins.
‘I know you said you didn’t want anything, but when have you ever turned down a muffin?’ He pushed one towards me, and, taking a cautious sip of his latte, he immediately started rubbing his eyebrow. I immediately felt queasy. ‘And it’s my bargaining chip. To keep you quiet while I make a proposal.’
‘A proposal?’ I choked on the giant chunk of muffin I had already shoved in my mouth. ‘What?’
‘A business proposal! A business proposal,’ he corrected himself quickly. ‘I don’t know if you got my voicemail, but I said I had news and I really do. Donovan & Dunning has gone under.’
‘It’s what?’ I didn’t think I’d heard him right. Gone under?
‘Closed down. Apparently Donovan has been skimming money off the top for the past couple of years, ever since things went a bit quiet, and, you know, firstly that’s illegal, and secondly, he skimmed too much. HR came in with the bank on Friday morning and sent us all home. You should have seen Raquel’s face – she was so bloody confused. So happy she got to fire a load of people, but then at the end of it, she sort of had to fire herself. It almost made the whole thing worth it.’
‘Wait – so the entire agency has just closed down? It’s gone?’ If I hadn’t felt sick before, I certainly did now.
‘Yeah, gone.’ Charlie nodded. ‘Aparently he tried to get the bank to extend the loans – that’s why they laid you off. He wasn’t allowed to hire anyone, and technically you were a new hire, but when they got hold of the books, they just came in and shut everything down.’
I couldn’t process it. That place had been my entire life for so long. Of course I was still angry about being fired, but to see all my friends out on the streets, to see all my work gone to nothing … It was so sad.
‘But what about all the clients?’ Visions of dancing teaspoons, talking toilet brushes and unrealistically happy furniture shoppers flashed in front of my eyes. All for nothing. ‘Who’s looking after the clients?’
‘I am glad you asked,’ he said with a very self-satisfied smile. Almost Nick-like, really. ‘We are.’
Huh?
‘Huh?’
‘Me and you.’ He waved his hand between us. He was doing his very best to sound confident and together. It had never occurred to me in ten years that he wasn’t really either of those things. ‘And probably a couple of other people, but listen, Tess, we should do this. Wilder & Brookes. Or Brookes & Wilder. Or something entirely different. I’ll handle the accounts, you head up the creative. I’ve already called a couple of the clients – they’re interested. If it’s me and you, they’re keen. Why wouldn’t we do this?’
Why wouldn’t we do this?
I stared at Charlie, my hands tight around my red-hot cup, burning slightly but only enough to remind me that the world outside my mind actually existed. Here was the boy I’d loved for ever offering me the chance to be the creative head of my own agency. To work with him on our own accounts, with our own clients. Professionally, it was all I’d ever wanted. Personally, it was probably the best I could have hoped for – a way to keep Charlie in my life, in my every day, for the foreseeable.
‘Charlie, that sounds amazing, but …’ I tailed off slowly, half stopping myself before I could say something stupid and half stopping myself because I had no idea what I was actually going to say. ‘But I don’t know.’
‘I know things might be weird for a little bit,’ he said, stumbling over his words. He seemed so awkward and young, and I missed Nick. ‘Because I know I messed up.’
‘You slept with Vanessa,’ I clarified. ‘That’s not messing up; that’s shagging Satan.’
‘I’m not talking about that,’ he said. ‘Well, I suppose I am, but when I say I messed up, I don’t mean with her. I mean with you.’
I said it before he could. ‘Because it shouldn’t have happened. I know.’
‘Because it shouldn’t have happened like that,’ he corrected me softly. ‘This past week without you has been horrible. All I’ve done is think about how I fucked up, how I hurt you, how I ruined everything with my best friend, and all I wanted was for you to give me a hug and tell me everything was OK. Because that’s what you do.’
I nodded for him to carry on, concentrated on breathing and let him talk.
‘But you weren’t here to make everything right this time, and I realized that I’ve been letting you make everything right for a really long time. No matter what I do or how I cock up, you always just make it better.’
‘Seems like you and Amy would have been a lot happier if I’d vanished years ago,’ I said, laughing nervously and picking the edge off my muffin. ‘Epiphanies all round.’
‘I can’t speak for Amy, and after the conversation I had with her on the phone, I don’t think she’s speaking to me anyway,’ he said, hunching his shoulders at the memory. ‘Not that I didn’t deserve it. She was right. I am a cockwomble.’
‘She told me she hadn’t spoken to you?’ The minx. ‘And also, wow. That’s her most offensive term. Congrats.’
‘Thanks.’ He laughed. ‘I thought it was colourful. Maybe there’s a future for her at our agency.’
‘Perhaps.’ I rubbed my eyes until I saw little sparks dancing in front of them. This was too much for someone as tired as I was. And I still didn’t really know what he was saying. ‘I’m so tired right now, Charlie. Can we talk about this tomorrow?’
‘We can,’ he said. ‘But I need to move fast on the clients, and most of them just want you. They don’t give a monkey’s whether or not I’m there – you’re the creative genius, you’re my Lady Draper. They just want you.’
‘Always nice to be wanted,’ I sighed, slugging my coffee. Of all the things I’d thought he might say, this was the most unexpected.
‘But in principle yes?’
‘In principle I don’t know.’
He nodded, wisely declining to force the issue.
‘And what about the other thing?’ he asked, speaking slowly. ‘Does that need to wait until tomorrow as well?’
‘Other thing?’
‘Other thing,’ he replied, reaching out for my hand again. This time I didn’t pull away. ‘Me and you?’
‘Hang on, have I missed something?’ My heart was pounding. Had I blacked out during a very important part of this conversation? Me and him?
‘Oh God, I’ve had ten years to get this right and I’m still cocking it up.’ Charlie moved his chair closer to mine and pressed my hand harder. ‘I am a cockwomble. Tess, if you still want to, I think we should give it a shot. You know, going out. Being together.’
‘What?’
I realized I was shouting when the next three tables all jumped out of their seats at the same time.
‘You want to what?’ I hissed. ‘Are you serious?’
‘I’m totally serious,’ he said looking around, a little embarrassed. ‘Weren’t you listening? I’ve had a week to think about it. I missed you so much, and not just as my friend. I know we didn’t exactly start things off right or in any sort of way Amy will ever approve of, but I don’t care. I’m sitting here talking to you and all I want to do is kiss you.’
‘Really?’ I wouldn’t have wanted to kiss me. I looked like shit.
‘Maybe that’s not all I want to do, but we are in public and I think that sort of thing is frowned upon in Starbucks,’ he replied.
Well. I was wrong. Out of all the things he could have said, this was the most unexpected. Not the shagging in Starbucks, but suggesting we give it a go. Me and Charlie. Boyfriend and girlfriend.
‘You’re going to make me wait, aren’t you?’ Charlie pushed up the sleeves of his jumper and pulled his whiny face. It was the same one he gave me when I wouldn’t let him eat ice cream before his dinner, even though I always ended up giving in. But not this time.
‘I’ve waited ten years, Charlie,’ I sighed. All. Too. Much. ‘You can wait until I’m awake.’
I pushed the rest of the muffin away and stood up. He hopped to his feet, towering over me in a way that had always made me feel safe and small before, but as he leaned down to kiss me chastely on the lips, all I could think of was the way Nick’s eyes burned directly into mine in the second before we kissed. And there was nothing chaste about any of his kisses.
‘I’ll call you later,’ I promised. ‘I have some stuff to sort out.’
‘OK, I’ll text you,’ he said. ‘Or I’ll just wait for you to call. But I’ll probably text you.’
I nodded, my brain exploding with too much information as I walked back out into the cool summer sunshine. I was so tired, but so completely wired from the ridiculous quantities of caffeine I’d consumed in the past three hours that I knew I wouldn’t be able to sit still. Checking my phone as I walked down Theobalds Road, away from an office that was no longer there, I saw a text from Amy wanting to know if I’d run off to the Caribbean and could she come with me, and a missed call from Agent Veronica. Of course she’d heard the news. Drawing up every last ounce of courage, I pressed redial and hoped she didn’t have a sniper using my phone as a tracking device. Of course, if she did have me killed, or as she’d so eloquently threatened, strung up by my tits, at least I wouldn’t have to deal with the Charlie dilemma. So that was a plus.
‘Tess motherfucking Brookes.’ Agent Veronica looked exactly how I had imagined. Short hair, fag hanging out of her mouth, dressed in black and wearing very expensive shoes. What I hadn’t expected was for her to stand up as I slunk into her office, walk round her desk and give me a bone-crushing bear hug.
‘Are you going to kill me?’ I asked, my arms pinned to my sides while I nervously folded and unfolded the Wispa wrapper in the pocket of my jeans. It was a shit last meal, but it was all I’d been able to wolf down on my way over to Veronica’s office. ‘Is this like a mafia kiss or something?’
‘Are you fucking kidding me?’ Agent Veronica was apparently insane. ‘I got your photos on Saturday. And then I got a phone call from Gloss this morning. It took me a minute to put two and two together and come up with something other than forty-fucking-two, but I got there. You were the one in Hawaii taking the pictures.’
‘Yes,’ I admitted as Veronica finally let go of me and sat back down. She pointed at the empty chair opposite her. I checked it very quickly for hidden explosives and took a seat.
‘And it was you I spoke to on the phone?’
‘Yes.’
‘Should have known it wasn’t that cockmuncher Kittler. Never answers her phone – always emails. Nasty bitch, that one.’
I wasn’t going to argue with that, but I still felt a bit bad.
‘Veronica, am I in trouble?’ I asked. ‘Paige was furious.’
‘Well, that’s because you shagged her fella, didn’t you? You dirty mare.’ She let out a foul, hacking laugh and slapped the desk. ‘She isn’t happy with you. But I’m fucking ecstatic.’
‘Yay?’ I whispered.
‘Those pictures of Bertie Bennett were amazing,’ she said, suddenly switching gears. ‘As soon as I saw them, I knew Vanessa hadn’t shot them. She hasn’t done anything as good as that since I’ve had her on my books. Even the pictures that made me sign her weren’t as good as those.’
‘I keep hearing about these amazing pictures.’ Fear of violence fading, I relaxed a fraction into the uncomfortable visitor’s chair. ‘Do you have them?’
‘Yeah, they’re in her book – give me a sec.’ Veronica lit another cigarette, clamped it between her bright red lips and spun around to a bookcase full of portfolios. ‘Now, obviously you’re going to be signing an agency agreement with me before you leave this office, since I’ve smoothed everything over with Gloss and I’ve got your first job lined up already.’ She handed me a thin, light brown pleather book with Vanessa’s name printed on the side in silver type. Mmm, tacky. ‘You’re welcome.’
‘I’m sorry, I’m not following?’ I said, flipping through the pictures. I very nearly felt bad saying it, but they really weren’t great. Vanessa was not a natural photographer. ‘A job?’
‘Bertie Bennett, aka your best friend in the entire world, other than me,’ she announced with a flourish, ‘wants you to go to Milan and work on his retrospective. He’s putting together some sort of exhibition with someone. He’s doing a book – the whole shebang. Shenanigans ahoy. He wants you to do all the pictures, document the entire exercise. It’ll be three months at least. Starting as soon as.’
If Bertie’s proposal hadn’t left me speechless, what I saw in Vanessa’s portfolio would have done the job.
‘These are her pictures?’ I breathed out without breathing in again.
‘Oh yeah, they’re the ones. There are, like, four of them? She really caught something there.’ Veronica took a drag on her cigarette and then flicked the ash over her shoulder. ‘Other than an STD, for a change. That’s why I took her on. I thought she knew how to tell a story, but all I’ve had off her since is bollocks.’
I couldn’t speak. The photos were beautiful. The first one showed an old couple sitting beside a pond at sunset, smiling at each other and feeding the ducks. The next one showed the same couple walking off down a country road, holding hands, silhouetted by the low light. The next two were more of the same – a mother and baby smiling at each other, two teenage girls giving each other filthy looks.
‘Intimate,’ she said. ‘Honest. Bit like your Bennett pics.’
‘That’s because I took these,’ I said, my words stilted and uncertain. ‘Veronica, these are my pictures. I took them years ago. They must have been on the memory card when she took my camera.’
‘Fuck. Right. Off.’ She looked absolutely delighted. ‘You’re serious? You’re fucking serious. That sneaky cow.’
‘I don’t know what to say,’ I breathed. It was becoming something of a catchphrase of mine. Perhaps I should get it printed on to a T-shirt to save my breath. ‘But these are totally mine. It’s the mill pond in the village where I grew up. I can’t believe she would do this.’
‘You can’t?’ Veronica didn’t seem quite so surprised. ‘I can.’
‘I just … she knew how much I loved photography and she still took the camera, but to steal my pictures, pass them off as hers and make a career out of it? That’s something else.’
‘Yeah, that’s even more mental than pretending to be your flatmate, nicking off to Hawaii and shagging the journo on the job,’ she replied, leaning across the desk and snapping her fingers in my face. ‘Tess, this is the past. We are looking at the future. Your future, my massive commission. Say yes to the job. We’ll book your flight right now. You get to go and play dressing-up with your mate Bertie and even use your own name. How exciting is that?’
‘It’s so exciting,’ I said, still staring at the photographs in my lap. ‘Um, can I have a day to think about it?’
‘What?’ She didn’t sound nearly as understanding as Charlie had. ‘What is there to think about?’
‘I’m just really tired and jet-lagged, and I think I need a minute.’ I slapped the portfolio shut and threw it onto the desk, suddenly disgusted by it. ‘I think I need some sleep before I make any big decisions.’
‘Your journo friend is back in New York,’ Veronica said with a casual wink. ‘Heard he didn’t take your big reveal that well.’
‘How do you know he’s in New York?’ I sat up straight, my plait swishing behind my head. ‘Do you know him?’
‘Passing acquaintances.’ She screwed up her face and clucked. ‘And he was in on the emails from the magazine. Bennett wants him to work on the retrospective as well.’
‘Has he said he will?’ I could barely sit still at the mere mention of his name. My heart was beating hard, and not just from the jet lag and the caffeine. If we were both working with Al, he’d have to talk to me.
‘He hasn’t confirmed yet,’ she said. ‘Seemed very keen to know whether or not you’d be there, actually. Email him. Tell him your side of the story and see what he says. If nothing else is true, I do know that man loves a story.’
I pulled out my crappy knackered phone and opened a new email. But what was I supposed to say?
‘I didn’t mean do it now, you wanker.’ Veronica clapped for my attention. ‘Go home and cry over your love letter there. You made quite an impression on everyone, you did. Not sure if that’s good or bad, but I do know you’re a fucking good photographer and I want you on my books, Brookes.’
She slapped her desk hard and cackled. ‘Ha! It rhymes. Now fuck off home, get some sleep and call me in the morning to apologize for making me wait an entire fucking day before I book this job.’
I stood up again, nodding like the Churchill dog, and stumbled towards the door in a complete daze.
‘Come on, Brookes,’ Veronica yelled over her shoulder. ‘I’ve just offered you a job and a shag in a oner. How often does something like that come around?’
‘You’d be surprised,’ I said, pushing the door open, and wished I had another Wispa to eat on the way home. Or some crack. I imagined some crack might be nice about now. ‘You’d be really surprised.’