Read The Night That Changed Everything Online
Authors: Laura Tait and Jimmy Rice
âShe fell off a table last night,' Jemma reports. âShow him your bruise!'
âI'm not going to show him my bruise.'
âOh, I have a video. Here, Jamie.' She starts to play it like we're in court and it's exhibit A.
Jamie tries to crease his forehead in a look of concern, but his eyes are laughing.
âTurn it off.' I grab the phone. âAnd stop being such a tell-tale, Jemma.'
âDon't blame her,' Jamie argues. âI brought it up. I was worried and Jemma agrees.' I shoot Jemma a look and she just stares back at me with wide-eyed innocence. âWe're not saying you're an alcoholic. But if drink starts to affect your job or your relationships, or makes you do things you regret after, it is a problem.'
I can only assume his last point refers to New Year's Eve. My cheeks burn.
I need to be an adult and get over that. I've already lost Ben and Danielle â I can't lose Jamie too.
Or Jemma, for that matter. I'm not sure how I would have coped without her. My friendship with her is probably the best thing to have come from my break-up with Ben. It's like the antidote when the pain of Danielle's deceit creeps into my head.
âNo one is saying you should become teetotal,' Jamie continues.
âChrist, no,' shrieks Jemma. âThat would be even worse. I mean,
we
could no longer be friends.'
âBut you've not been yourself lately. We just want you to be happy, so we want you to know we're here for you if you want to talk or anything.'
âExactly,' chips in Jemma. âTurn to us. Not the bottle.'
The humiliated part of me wants to tell Jamie to go feck himself and storm out.
But there's a sensible part of me that acknowledges that everything he just said is true. And that this must have been a hard thing for him to say to me.
The humiliated part means I can't quite bring myself to thank him, though.
He winks at me. âI need to finish setting up. Holler if you need anything.'
âThanks for that,' I hiss at Jemma, when he's gone.
âFor what?' she asks, like butter wouldn't melt.
âAgreeing with Jamie.'
âHe's fit.' She shrugs. âHe could have asked me to help him bury a body and I'd have gone along with it.'
I shake my head but can't help laughing. âLet's go.'
I walk her to the station and give her a quick, awkward hug. âThanks, Jem.' She looks pleased.
âNae worries.' She starts walking up the steps then stops and turns round. âHey, what did you mean when you said you knew what I was playing at? You seemed surprised when I told you.'
âI thought you were giving Jamie your number.'
âHa ha, as if.'
âI thought you fancied him?'
âCourse I do. But you've told me how girls in there throw themselves at him every night. I'm way too insecure to go out with someone like that.'
Then the train pulls in, so I've no time to tell her she shouldn't be.
Monday, 5 January
I head straight to the office from Euston, having boarded the first train down from Manchester. I've been dreading going back to work, though it'll at least be nice to catch up with Russ and Tom.
âGeorge Riley is leaving,' is the first thing Russ says to me.
George works in the post room. We started on the same day, and even though there is more than thirty years between us, he's one of the people I get on with most in this place.
People wondered how long he'd stay on after Dorothy from reception retired last month. It's like when one half of an old couple dies, and everyone speculates that the other half mightn't survive without them. They die of a broken heart. Unless they're like Rebecca, in which case they forget the other one ever existed and carry on as normal.
âWhen did he hand in his resignation?' I ask, wondering why I don't already know about all this.
âHe didn't. Richardson has asked
me
to hand it to
him
. He says the new receptionist can sort the post now.'
âThey're binning him?' I say, stunned. âThis place!'
Russ nods solemnly, then spots my bag and asks where I've been.
âUp north for a few days,' I tell him. âSee the family.'
I had to get out of London. I was so angry with myself. I don't know where all those words came from. I admire Jamie more than anyone else I know, and to say what I said . . . I've been cringing ever since. And the stupid thing is everything he said was right. I
should
be trying to turn breaking up with Rebecca into something positive, because it
has
made me realize how much I hate my job.
I just needed to get away for a bit for all of this to sink in, and now that it has I know exactly what I need to do. I'm going to spend the next three months looking into new careers and saving as much of my wages as possible, then I'm quitting.
âI got back from my sister's yesterday,' says Russ. âI had the best New Year ever.'
âHow come?'
âBabysat my nephews.'
I look sceptical.
âSeriously,' he says. âThere were no twatty bouncers on the door, no one looking repulsed when I tried to kiss them at midnight.' He rips a piece of paper from his notepad, screws it up and throws it on to Tom's desk for no apparent reason. âI didn't have to dodge any vomit on the street. Although, actually, Jackson was sick on his bedroom floor after the second pack of wine gums.' He goes all smiley at the memory. âThey were supposed to be in bed at nine but I woke them up to watch the fireworks from their bedroom window.'
âThat actually does sound like the best New Year,' I tell him, slightly moved. âHow about you, Tom? What did you get up to?'
âAvril and I walked up to Primrose Hill with a blanket and a flask of peppermint tea.'
âAlso sounds awesome,' I say. âThe fireworks must have looked incredible from up there?'
He hunches his shoulders.
âHe never saw them,' says Russ. âAvril got annoyed at all the people so they went home and listened to the countdown on Radio 4.'
âRadio 4?'
âAvril doesn't have a telly,' Tom says. âShe says it pollutes the mind.'
âOf course she does,' I say.
Once my monitor finally stops flickering I catch up on my emails, the most recent of which is from Delilah, the office manager, complaining about the food that was left to go mouldy in the fridge over the break, and saying that from now on any food left in the fridge at close of play on Fridays WILL BE DISPOSED OF. The email subject line is:
The Year of Clean
.
âSome people need to have a word with themselves,' I say to no one in particular.
âThe year of clean?' says Tom.
âYeah.' I delete the email. âI'm going to make this the year of getting out of this place.'
âI'm going to make this the year of leaving stuff in the fridge on Fridays,' says Russ, leaning back in his swivel chair. âThat and meeting my future wife.'
I contemplate a joke but decide against it. âHow about you, Tom?'
Tom sucks his teeth like he hadn't seen the question coming at all.
âSack off Avril?' suggests Russ.
Tom objects with a tut and then, as though he doesn't want Russ's words to linger in the air, immediately provides an answer. âI hope this year I have an exhibition, for my sketches.'
Russ raises the mug he keeps his pens in. âHere's to me and my future wife visiting Tom's exhibition for his sketches.'
Tom and I raise our stationery mugs. As we're clinking I catch a whiff of Brut. Richardson is standing beside us with an impatient smile.
âWe were just asking Ben what he's going to make this the year of,' says Russ.
Richardson puts a hand on my shoulder. âClosing down the ticket offices, I expect?'
He mimes pulling down the shutter at a ticket office and chuckles to himself, because hundreds of people losing their jobs
is
amusing. For some reason I find myself thinking about George Riley. He was the one who told me about the starlings turning back the time on Big Ben.
âNo, actually,' I say.
I see Richardson glance at Russ, whose face goes rigid with the effort of not cracking up, and then at Tom, whose head now hangs over his keyboard like he's got something really important to type.
âWhat do you mean,
no
?' says Richardson, hooking his thumbs into his trouser pockets like a chubby butcher.
âPrecisely what I said: no.'
I sense disbelieving eyes homing in on me from across the office.
âWell, thankfully you don't have much say in the matter,' says Richardson, circulating a self-satisfied grin around the increasing number of onlookers, and for a few seconds I hesitate.
I think again about all the things Jamie said on New Year's Eve.
âActually, I do.' I stand up, adrenalin streaming around my body. âI quit.'
Richardson guffaws. âWell, as you know, if you want to quit you need to write a formal letter of resignation.'
His tone is priggish and his smile smug.
âI'll tell you what,' I say, holding out my palm as if it was a piece of paper. âHow about I mime you one instead?'
Jamie and I haven't seen each other since I stormed out of the bar, and he looks slightly puzzled when I walk through the door.
He is standing alone at the foosball table. On any other day I'd go over and try to guess from the trajectory of the ball which City goal he was recreating, but there are things that need to be said first.
I drop my bag and I'm about to launch into it when I hear the toilet flush. I notice a pair of stilettos by the door.
âHave you got a girl here?' I say.
âNo.' He's still got the look of someone who wasn't expecting me. âWell, yes, butâ'
The bathroom door opens.
âOh.' Danielle stops momentarily before walking awkwardly towards the foosball table. âHi, Ben.'
It's the first time I've seen her since the break-up, and it takes a second or two for the words to come out. âHi, Danielle.'
I stand there, not quite sure what to say. Jamie glances at me, then at Danielle, then back at me, and his second glance compels me to speak.
âWhat's the score?' I oblige.
Jamie doesn't answer, so that Danielle has to.
âI don't know,' she says. âWhat
is
the score, Jamie?'
âI'm really not sure myself,' he says.
Danielle cackles and turns to me. âHe's losing eightâtwo.'
âEightâtwo?' I walk over to observe. âJesus, Jamie.'
âTo be fair,' he says, âmy guys keep getting distracted by
that
.' He uses the hand controlling his goalkeeper to gesture towards Danielle's cleavage, which is exposed by her low V-neck jumper. I avert my eyes before awkwardness descends on us again.
âAnd she keeps singing,' says Jamie.
âThat's what people do at football,' she says. âThey sing.'
âWhich is why I'm never taking you to a football match.'
Danielle explains that she's working from home until her meeting in Greenwich a bit later on. She points towards her laptop. âI have to keep moving the mouse so it looks like I'm online.'
âShouldn't
you
be at work?' Jamie asks me.
I hesitate so that by the time I answer they're both staring at me. âI just quit.'
They let go of the handles.
âJeez, Ben, surely this should have been the first thing you said when you walked in?' says Jamie.
âActually, the first thing I was going to say when I walked in was sorry, but then . . .'
I look at Danielle and when she smiles it occurs to me how much I've missed this. Hanging out as a group. I've been so busy missing Rebecca that I hadn't really thought about it, but Jamie obviously has, and it didn't take me long to understand that that's why everything came out at New Year, because he's frustrated at the situation.
âYou know I don't mean those things I said. You're my frigging hero when it comes to work. It was just my bruised pride talking, but I know that everything you said was spot on. I do masticate too much.'
Danielle releases a dirty laugh, but tries to disguise it as a cough when she realizes neither Jamie nor I are amused.
âLong story,' Jamie tells her, picking up the tiny ball from the pitch.
âBasically,' I say to them both, âI was a total dick, and I'm sorry.'
âYou don't need to apologize at
all
,' says Jamie, studying the ball instead of looking at me. âI was a total dick too, so let's forget the whole evening ever happened.'
He holds out his hand and I shake it, and now we do laugh.
âSo what the fuck happened at work?' says Jamie, and the two of them lean against the foosball table while I sit on the couch and go over what happened.
âI hadn't planned to do it
today
. I was going to give it a month or two to save up a bit, but then Richardson came over and said what he said and I just thought,
Fuck it
. I mean, nothing's going to concentrate my mind like being unemployed, right?'
âFollow your gut,' says Danielle.
Jamie looks at her. âNormally I'd be with you on that,' he says. âBut not with Ben. His gut has a very poor sense of direction. His gut is pre-satnav.'
âHe's right,' I agree. âBut one thing I do know for sure is I need to get my own place.'
âYou don't have to do that, mate,' says Jamie.
âOn the subject of apologies,' I say, ignoring him and turning to Danielle. âI'm sorry I haven't been a very good mate lately. I know this whole thing has beenâ'
âIt's OK,' she cuts me off. âI know you had to put Rebecca first.'