If I Never Met You(109)
‘I know. I was worried you’d say, after some thought, you were definitely sure it was over.’
‘That’s exactly why I didn’t call you. I thought, let the silence speak for itself and you can avoid those crushing few seconds of certainty.’
The Manchester icy wind howled around them and Laurie pushed her hair out of her face.
‘What I’m saying is, do you want to try again?’ she said.
‘No, not really, what’s done is done,’ Jamie said. ‘And I’ve had a promising inquiry from a member of Little Mix.’
Laurie was stunned for a moment and then Jamie’s frown cracked, and he started laughing. ‘Your face, hahaha.’
‘You bad bollock!’
Jamie stooped and rifled in his bag.
‘Open this. I was going to post it from Lincoln.’
Laurie fumbled it open with cold hands and found a short note, wrapped around a small cardboard box. She opened it. It was the necklace she’d admired on Steep Hill.
‘I’d got my mum to buy it and send it,’ Jamie said.
She opened the note:
Dear Laurie,
If there’s any chance whatsoever you might change your mind, I want that chance more than anything in the world. I wouldn’t waste that chance. I’d use it for the rest of our lives, in fact.
All my love, Jamie x
Laurie looked up, tears in her eyes.
‘Come here.’ Jamie dropped his bag and grabbed her in a hug. ‘I’m so sorry for what I put you through,’ he said, muttering into her hair. ‘I should’ve told you upfront what had gone on with Eve. Keeping my cards close to my chest became second nature.’
‘You lost your job. You paid enough for it.’
The train pulled into the station.
‘What are you doing for Christmas?’ Jamie said. ‘Do you want to come to Lincoln? I’d not steeled myself to tell my parents we were no more yet. We could get a later train, after you’ve packed a bag?’
‘I could, except I’ve got a wrecker of a kitten that can’t be left.’
‘I’ve got a house sitter for Margaret. We could add your kitten into the deal, pay her extra?’
‘Oh God. It’ll be like Clouseau and Cato!’
‘I’ll tell her to charge me for some pruning gauntlets and sedatives. For her.’
‘Looks like we have a plan, then,’ Laurie said.
Jamie hugged her again and they walked out of the station, hand in hand, only to find Laurie couldn’t get back through the ticket barrier until she’d bought another single.
‘You know, this reunion was written by fate. Hattie said she knew we had a future, as she’s psychic,’ Laurie said, once they’d extricated themselves from the admin.
‘If Hattie’s psychic, why did she date the lad in our twenties who pretended to be an heir to the Farmfoods fortune, and ended up rinsing her savings and disappearing to Worcester, until the fraud squad caught up with him, watching scat porn in a Premier Inn?’
‘Maybe she had to date him, to find her way to Padraig?’
‘Too heavy a price. And I like Padraig.’
Laurie put her hand in Jamie’s free one and pulled him to a stop.
‘Do you know. I’ve had the maddest, craziest idea, and you’ll say LOL NO but hear me out on it seeming hasty. Particularly as I’d like your parents to be there. Do you fancy getting married?’
‘LOL NO!’ Jamie said. ‘Uhm. Kidding. But shouldn’t I propose?’
‘Not necessarily in this day and age.’
‘You’re seriously proposing to me? We’ve only been a proper couple for a weekend!’
‘I’m less respectful of what you’re supposed to do, these days, if you get me. If we discover we’re horrendously ill-suited after two years of bickering about overspending on the food shop and picking up wet towels, think of the fun we’ll have had before we realise? If this is a mistake, think how much fun we’ll have making it?’
‘The speech is writing itself!’
‘And you know, if it’s a no, I will cope fine. It struck me as a thing I’d really enjoy doing.’ She grinned up at him. He had the same look on his face as he did at the final chords of ‘Purple Rain’. There, they had the first dance sorted already. ‘I appreciate I’m asking you to go from someone who despised marriage, to someone charging into one. But that’s me, now. I ask for a lot.’
Jamie reached up and tucked a piece of hair behind her ear. Laurie felt loved, and, more than that, she’d remembered how to love herself. She wanted his answer to be yes, but a no wouldn’t change either of those things.
‘Yes. My answer is yes. I will marry you. Can I ask you back? Feels proper. Laurie Watkinson, will you marry me?’
‘Yes!’
They stopped, embraced and kissed, the Christmas Eve crowds flowing around them, Jamie’s bag at their feet, while they stayed a fixed point, a moment in time. An irritable commuter tutted, in a broad Manc drawl. ‘Get a fuckin’ room.’ And they laughed and carried on kissing.
Many ages of Lauries had walked through Piccadilly, since she was a little girl in fact. She liked this one best. Whatever happened in the future, Laurie would never forget the lessons of these months. She was a survivor of some difficult things, and she was happy.