tuesday evening, 6 april 2004
Edith tugged the ends of her denim jacket down, fidgeting as she stepped just inside the door to the pub, looking for the familiar (and getting more so) face of Fergie. She was meeting him and his mate, on
their pub night, and from what she could discern (from what Fergie had told her), their friendship sounded a little complicated. Charlie--the mate--used to date Fergie’s sister, but was married, but not to Fergie’s sister, but the dating had fallen on either side of that? Honestly it would have been easier knowing nothing ahead of time because Edith was having trouble keeping the timeline straight (which seemed to be something Fergie struggled with, too).
Never mind the whole
and he’s in a band aspect; Edith hoped he didn’t expect her to want to talk about the band, because she hated wrock, on principle, and she didn’t want to make it into a whole
thing, either. It would be a fine line to tread once she started drinking, felt far less inhibition about making her opinions known, minded less about stepping on toes.
Fergie was an adult with a day job so Edith was meeting him at the pub --probably going home with him, she reminded herself as her cheeks grew warm--and she wasn’t late but she wasn’t exactly on time, either. Still, there was no Fergie to find, and she didn’t know what Charlie looked like, so-- She set up camp at the one empty spot at the bar, pulling her backpack into her lap as she ordered a pint of the blonde ale. She rummaged in her bag for a second and pulled out a paperback; she didn’t want to be social before she absolutely had to. (And she might have been a little bit nervous because complicated friendship or not, she still wanted Fergie’s friends to like her.)
She set her book--
Cat’s Cradle by Vonnegut, re-reading it for the third time--down on the bar to pay for her pint, then had a swallow (or two) before picking the book back up. She opened it to the dog-eared page and folded the corner back into place and almost as soon as she had started reading again, she could tell the bloke to her right was also looking at the book; Edith switched it to her left hand and pulled her pint toward her with her right hand, hopefully blocking his line of sight.
The barstool on the man’s opposite side opened up and Edith tilted her chin up and over, looking at him. “D’you mind moving down?†She let go of her glass and used her hand to push her plait over her shoulder behind her. “I’m meeting someone,†she added. They would probably move to a table but she wanted a little more space without having to ask for it.
@Charlie Baker