Their hands met palm to palm and stayed together.
‘It’s all right,’ she said.
Later, when they’d been married for some time and Sonny was doing well in London as a boxing promoter, she had a telephone in her own home and talked to her friends on it nearly every day. Sonny was driving a Daimler by then with plenty of room at the back for the children and they sometimes used it to pop down to Tadley Gate, where her father had put up a proper garage sign and often filled up as many as half a dozen cars a day on summer weekends. Sometime between one visit and the next the Post Office took away Kiosk One and replaced it with a more imposing model, all bright red paint and glass panels. They gave it a glance as they drove past.
Stroke of Luck by Mark Billingham
So many things could have been different.
An almost infinite number of them: the flight of the ball; the angle of the bat; the movement of his feet as he skipped down the pitch. The weather, the time, the day of the week, the whatever…
The smallest variance in any one of these things, or in the way that each connected to the other at the crucial moment, and nothing would have happened as it did. An inch another way, or a second, or a step and it would have been a very different story.
Of course, it’s always a different story; but it isn’t always a story with bodies…
He wasn’t even a good batsman – a tail-ender for heaven’s sake – but this once, he got everything right. The footwork and the swing were spot on. The ball flew from the meat of the bat, high above the heads of the fielders into the long grass at the edge of the woodland that fringed the pitch on two sides.
Alan and another player had been looking for a minute or so, using hands and feet to move aside the long grass at the base of an oak tree, when she stepped from behind it as if she’d been waiting for them.
‘Don’t you have any spare ones?’
Alan looked at her for a few, long seconds before answering. She was tall, five seven or eight, with short dark hair. Her legs were bare beneath a cream-coloured skirt and her breasts looked a good size under a sleeveless top. She looked Mediterranean, Alan thought. Sophisticated.
‘I suppose we must have, somewhere,’ he said.
‘So why waste time looking? Are they expensive?’
Alan laughed. ‘We’re only a bunch of medics. It costs a small fortune just to hire the pitch.’
‘You’re a doctor?’
‘A neurologist. A consultant neurologist.’
She didn’t look as impressed as he’d hoped.
‘Got it.’
Alan turned to see his team-mate brandishing the ball, heard the cheers from those on the pitch as it was thrown across.
He turned back. The woman’s arms were folded and she held a hand up to shield her eyes from the sun.
‘Will you be here long?’ Alan said. She looked hesitant. He pointed back towards the pitch. ‘We’ve only got a couple of wickets left to take.’
She dropped her hand, smiled without looking at him. ‘You’d better get on with it then…’
‘Listen, we usually go and have a couple of drinks afterwards, in the Woodman up by the tube. D’you fancy coming along? Just for one maybe?’
She looked at her watch. Too quickly, Alan thought, to have even seen what time it read.
‘I don’t have a lot of time.’
He nodded, stepping backwards towards the pitch. ‘Well, you know where we are…’
The Woodman was only a small place, and the dozen or so players – some from either team – took up most of the back room.
‘I’m Rachel by the way,’ she said.
‘Alan.’
‘Did you win, Alan?’
‘Yes, but no thanks to me. The other team weren’t very good.’
‘You’re all doctors, right?’
He nodded. ‘Doctors, student doctors, friends of doctors. Anybody who’s available if we’re short. It’s as much a social thing as anything else.’
‘Plus the sandwiches you get at half time…’
Alan put on a posh voice. ‘We call it the tea interval,’ he said.
Rachel eked out a dry white wine and was introduced. She met Phil Hendricks, a pathologist who did a lot of work with the police and told her a succession of grisly stories. She met a dull cardiologist whose name she instantly forgot, a male nurse called Sandy who was at great pains to point out that not all male nurses were gay, and a slimy anaesthetist whose breath would surely have done the trick were he ever to run short of gas.
While Rachel was in the Ladies, a bumptious paediatrician Alan didn’t like a whole lot dropped a fat hand on to his shoulder.
‘Sodding typical. You do fuck all with the bat and then score after the game…’
The others enjoyed the joke. Alan glanced round and saw that Rachel was just coming out of the toilet. He hoped that she hadn’t seen them all laughing.
‘Do you want another one of those?’ Alan pointed at her half-empty glass before downing what was left of his lager.
She didn’t, but followed him to the bar anyway. Alan leaned in close to her and they talked while he repeatedly failed to attract the attention of the surly Irish barmaid.
‘I don’t really know a lot of them, to tell you the truth. There’s only a couple I ever see outside of the games.’
‘There’s always tossers in any group,’ she said. ‘It’s the price you pay for company.’
‘What do you do, Rachel?’
She barked out a dry laugh. ‘Not a great deal. I studied.’
It sounded like the end of a conversation, and for a while they said nothing. Alan guessed that they were about the same age. She was definitely in her early thirties, which meant that she had to have graduated at least ten years before. She had to have done something, had to do something. Unless of course she’d been a mature student. It seemed a little too early to pry.
‘What do you do to relax? Do you see mates, or…?’
She nodded towards the bar and he followed her gaze to the barmaid, who stood, finally ready to take the order. Alan reeled off a long list of drinks and they watched while the tray that was placed on the bar began to fill up with glasses. Alan turned and opened his mouth to speak, but she beat him to it.
‘I’d better be getting off.’
‘Right. I don’t suppose I could have your phone number?’
She gave a non-committal hum as she swallowed what was left of her wine. Alan handed a twenty pound note across the bar, grinned at her.
‘Mobile?’
‘I never have it switched on.’
‘I could leave messages.’
She took out a pen and scribbled the number on the back of a dog-eared beer mat.
Alan picked up the tray of drinks just as the barmaid proffered him his fifty pence change. Unable to take it, Alan nodded to Rachel. She leaned forward and grabbed the coin.
‘Stick it in the machine on your way out,’ he said.
Alan had just put the tray down on the table when he heard the repetitive chug and clink of the fruit machine paying out its jackpot. He strode across to where Rachel was scooping out a handful of ten pence pieces.
‘You jammy sod,’ he said. ‘I’ve been putting money into that thing for weeks.’
Then she turned, and Alan saw that her face had reddened. ‘You have it,’ she said. She thrust the handful of coins at him, then, as several dropped to the floor, she spun round flustered and tipped the whole lot back into the payout tray. ‘I can’t… I haven’t got anywhere to put them all…’
She’d gone by the time Alan had finished picking coins off the carpet.
It didn’t take too long for Rachel to calm down. She marched down the hill towards the tube station, her control returning with every step.
She’d been angry with herself for behaving as she had in the pub, but what else could she do? There was no way she could take all that loose change home with her, was there?