Read A Passionate Love Affair with a Total Stranger Online
Authors: Lucy Robinson
âYes, you. Bugger off.'
Nothing happened.
âARE YOU DEAF?' I was getting angry now. âBUGGER OFF. I don't want or need your help. Or your interference. Just leave us alone, OK?'
âOf all the ungrateful â¦' Shelley began, in outraged tones.
âPah,' William added helpfully.
They went, shaking their expensively coiffured heads.
I closed my eyes for a split second before turning back to Sam. I needed to be calm while we had this conversation.
But when I turned round, Sam had gone.
My laptop sat silently on the floor, abandoned.
My insides plummeted out of me and down through the stage, landing in a stricken pile in some dank underground wardrobe store. I had just told Sam I was in love with him and he'd fled. I felt my face go red. And then it crashed down on me, an awful, terrible shame.
It took me over. How could I have been so stupid? How could I have believed, for
one millisecond
, that Sam would be interested? I passed my hand over my face. I had to leave this place, fast.
I hauled the laptops into my satchel and slid off into the wings, checking one last time that I hadn't left anything. Satisfied, I turned to go, but something caught my eye.
It was Sam, walking back onstage. âNo, wait, Chas!' He laughed, as if we'd just been giggling over some sherry and shortbread together.
âI have to go,' I said tightly. âForget what I said. Bye.'
I turned and left.
I heard Sam begin to trot after me and, accordingly, I broke into a run. I was not going to allow him to embarrass me any more than he had done. I shot off up the stairs I'd arrived down and made it almost to the top before he
managed to grab one of my mud-caked walking shoes. I pulled against him and the shoe came off; I scrambled up the rest of the stairs towards the door.
âSTOP!' I carried on without my shoe. âOi! Cinderella! Get a grip!'
I sprinted on up but, just as I got to the door, Sam rugby-tackled me. âChas!' he yelled, half laughing, as I crashed to the floor with him wrapped round my middle.
âGet the fuck off me,' I hissed. I wriggled hard but he wouldn't let go.
âFucking stay still!' He was properly laughing now.
How dare he? Did he think this was
funny
?
âCharley,' he said, struggling to contain me, âwhen I said I couldn't do it, I meant I couldn't have this conversation with you online. I wanted to have it face to face!'
âBullshit,' I replied angrily. âYou got up and walked off.'
âFUCKING STOP WRIGGLING!' Sam yelled. âFOR THE LOVE OF GOD!'
I stopped. I had very little fight left in me anyway, plus I couldn't guarantee that the crotch of my dog-walking jeans wouldn't split open if I carried on in this manner. They'd been wearing thin for a very long time.
âThank you,' Sam said. âIf I let you go, do you promise not to run?'
âS'pose.' I sounded so sullen that Sam burst out laughing again. He let me go and pulled himself up, holding out a hand to pull me up too. I ignored it and stood up under my own steam, eyes fixed on the black wall opposite me. This was far too narrow a corridor to be trapped in with Sam.
There was a pause while he waited â in vain â for me to meet his eye.
âChasmonger,' he said quietly. He took my hand and I flinched. âPlease stop being angry. I went to turn off the little camera onstage. Otherwise all of the cast would be watching and listening to us from the dressing-room monitors. Look.' He led me to another private box that overlooked the stage. It was full of screens and dials and switches, and there was a large microphone sticking out of the desk.
âThis is where the deputy stage manager sits,' Sam explained. âShe tells everyone when to change the scene and the lights and the music and stuff. And look, here's the monitor where everyone'd be able to watch us and listen to us.'
Grudgingly, I looked. There was indeed a monitor, showing the empty stage. âOK,' I said. âWell, please tell me what you wanted to tell me and then I'll be off. I need to shower.'
âTell me about it,' he said. âI feel like Malcolm's here with us.'
I tried very hard to keep a straight face but it was difficult. Sam was still clutching my muddy shoe, I was covered with dog hair and both of us had broken a sweat from our wrestle.
And once I'd started laughing, I couldn't stop. I sat down, rested my head against the deputy stage manager's desk and shook with mirth. âI came down and told you I was in love with you using Dad's spaceship,' I cried. âAnd then you rugby-tackled me. And I smell. And we had a
shouting match. Bowes, I'm so sorry. Of course we're not meant to be together.'
Sam laughed, but then stopped. Without warning he stuck a finger out and trailed it down the back of my hand.
It was like receiving an electric shock.
He withdrew it but I continued to stare at my hand, enchanted, as if waiting for a silver line to appear where his finger had been.
Sam was leaning back in his chair, watching me. I tried to look at him but I couldn't. I had no idea what was going to happen.
âYou don't need to say anything,' I said, after a charged pause. âI understand.'
Sam smiled kindly at me.
âAnd no kindly smiles,' I added. âI'll survive this. I've survived worse.'
There was another electric shock, this time on my left hand. I looked at it and saw that Sam had put his over it. He looked nervous but also quite happy. âCharley,' he said quietly. âYou've changed my life.'
âYes yes yes. But you only like small girls. We've been friends too long. Rah rah rah WHATEVER.'
There was a pause. âHave you quite finished?' Sam asked.
I thought about it, shrugged and nodded. Yes, that seemed about enough.
âAnd â Chas, will you look at me, you freak?'
I looked at him.
âAnd stop looking like you couldn't care less what I was saying?'
In spite of myself I was smiling again.
âYour emails made me realize I was wasting my life. Job-wise,' he added hastily. âI'm not taking any shit from you about my Nutella.'
I waved him on.
âBut the rest,' he continued, âthe rest had to change. All because of you. And the thing is, bruv, I did try to fight it, when I found out it was you. No offence but it's not convenient to be in love with someone like The Chasmonger.'
Before I even processed what he'd just said, I was taken back to the letter I'd read this morning from Jack to Granny Helen:
It's not very convenient to love you, I can't deny it. If I were to dream up my perfect girl she probably wouldn't be you. She'd be a bit more bloody respectful for a start!
And then my mouth dropped open as I realized what Sam had said. I looked up at his face, which was suddenly vulnerable. I hadn't known he had a vulnerable face.
I had to be certain. âSorry, Sam. Did you just say it wasn't convenient â'
âTo love you,' Sam said quietly. âYes, you knob. That's what I said.'
I felt a delicious tingling somewhere inside me. Not somewhere rude: somewhere pure and lovely, where cherubs romped. Sam sensed it and relaxed. He gave my hand a squeeze.
âCould you just confirm precisely what you're getting at?' I asked him. My smile was getting a bit out of control.
Sam sighed. âOh, you're a knobber,' he remarked. âBut a funny one. A challenging one, a clever one. The kind of knobber that people can't take their eyes off. You have no idea how much you brighten up a room just by being in it, Chas.' As well as pleasure, I felt relief at his words. Of
course Sam and I could talk to each other face to face. Of course we didn't need emails to communicate. We just needed honesty.
Sam sat forward on his chair again so that he was closer to me. He slid his hands to my forearms, which went a bit barmy. âTo confirm, Chasmonger, I've gone and fallen in love with you. My poor innocent heart has been stolen. By a bloody Lambert!'
Somewhere in the distance, a great cheer went up, followed by the sound of clinking glasses and excitable laughter.
âYou're missing your party,' I heard myself say. I was so happy I might explode. Sam ignored me.
âI think we should do one third scientific experiment,' he announced. âWe've kissed twice already, how's about best of three?'
My insides somersaulted. âGood idea. Although I was pretty sure after experiment number one,' I admitted.
âMe too. What's
wrong
with us? Why the hell didn't we just say?'
Further cheers erupted in the bar downstairs, followed by the rather unexpected sound of running feet. I looked nervously into the still-empty auditorium but Sam reached over and turned my face back towards his. âNo one can find us here,' he said confidently. âThis is our secret science lab. Where we conduct important experiments.'
I shivered as he touched the side of my neck.
There was a long pause, during which I felt as if I was fizzing over like champagne.
âAre we having another standoff?' I asked eventually.
Sam grinned. âNo.' And then he kissed me properly.
It felt right. More than right. I slid my arms round his neck and we leaned in closer, kissing even more deeply. It was the nicest kiss I'd ever, ever had. It was full to bursting with loveliness, with kindness, understanding, humour. It was a little bit beautiful. No, it was extremely, supremely beautiful.
Sam stopped kissing me and hugged me tightly. His head was buried in my not-very-lovely hair, and I could feel his warm breath on my neck, which meant he must be getting whiffs of Malcolm but it didn't matter.
I pulled back to kiss him again, just as I heard a door smash open and a familiar foghorn of a voice yell, âTHERE THEY ARE!'
Sam and I sprang apart, peering over the edge of the box at the auditorium. Shelley was standing at the door, jumping up and down, pointing at us, and pouring in through the doors to her left and right were champagne-wielding audience members. All cheering, whooping and pointing at us.
Hailey came thundering down the central aisle, shouting, âThat was like the fucking Archers on acid! Amazing!'
I looked at Sam, bewildered, as someone started doing three cheers. For a few seconds he seemed as confused as I was but then, finally, something dawned on him. He moved my elbow, which was resting on the stage manager's desk, and grimaced. âOh dear,' he said. âOh dear, dear me.'
âWhat?'
The whooping downstairs was continuing unabated. âHAVE ANOTHER SNOG!' someone yelled. How the hell did they know we'd been kissing?
Sam pointed to a switch with a red light glowing under it. âYou flicked the switch when you did your dramatic collapse on this desk a few minutes ago. That's what the deputy stage manager uses to talk to the audience when they're in the bar. That switch and this microphone.'
I stared in horror at the microphone, which was inches away from where our mouths had been during the preceding conversation. âSo we just broadcast everything across the bar?'
âSod it!' Sam shouted, before I had a proper panic attack. âWho cares? I love you! I want the world to know!' He leaned into the microphone and said, âI repeat, I love Charlotte Lambert.' And then he grabbed me and kissed me again, to thunderous applause. The stalls were filling up: a second standing ovation was under way.
âWho
is
she?' someone yelled.
âMy fucking sister,' Ness yelled back. I didn't think I'd ever heard her swear. âShe's the fucking best,' she added.
Sam tucked my doggy hair behind my ear. âBlimey,' he said, looking at the chaos below us. We both grinned, first at the crowd and then at each other.
âIT WAS ALL MY IDEA!' Shelley yelled hoarsely. Someone had hijacked the sound desk and âI Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day' filled the auditorium. Half the drunken crowd were jigging along, the rest were pointing to the stage demanding we come down and make a speech.
âCome on,' Sam said, taking my hand.
âNo way! Look at me!'
He pulled me out of the box and the door shut behind us, blocking out the music and the cheering.
âI didn't mean “Come on, let's go and make tits of ourselves onstage,” ' he said, breaking into a trot. âBugger that! I meant let's get out of here! They're all drunk, they've got some music, they'll have forgotten about us in two minutes.'
I squeezed his hand. âThank you,' I said gratefully, and he kissed me briefly, doffing an imaginary hat. Even a one-second thank-you kiss gave me stomach somersaults. Me and Sam! Chas 'n' Bowes! My world danced.
Sam smiled at me, then slowed his pace, holding my hand.
He pulled me down some steps and out through the stage door, where a man was listening to Mahler with a burger in his hand. We exploded out into the chaos of Charing Cross Road on a Friday night, with drunk, singing foreigners roaming in packs, brightly lit kiosks knocking out lukewarm pizza; music pumping from rude-boy cars waiting for the lights to change. Almost straight away Sam trod in the remains of a Chinese takeaway and a group of drunken stags lurched into me, sending my satchel flying. We stopped, laughing, to straighten ourselves out, and Sam kissed me again. âI'm excited about us,' he announced, hugging me tightly.
I saw how much he meant it and I felt wonderfully, madly happy. âMe too, Bowes,' I told him, squashing down a funny corner of his hair that had sprung up in the sharp winter wind. âI think we might just be OK, you know.'
âSeconded.' He kissed me again, running his thumb slowly along my jawline and smiling at me in a way that transported me far from the noisy drinkers and revving engines of Charing Cross Road. âCome on,' he said, taking
my hand. He paused, looking left and right with a comically furrowed brow. âAlthough I've got bugger-all idea where to go, Chas,' he said eventually. âFancy a kebab?'