Lucy Oliver
Mint Tea
The
flowers were unexpected.
Phil never sent me flowers when I was his girlfriend, Amy thought, looking at the pink
and white roses from her favourite florist. Smiling, she touched the blooms,
brushing soft petals against her fingertips. Briefly, she was able to forget
her tears of the last week; the hours spent on the sofa cuddling her mobile
phone, willing it to ring.
Arranging
the flowers in a vase, she picked up her mobile and typed a single word,
THANKS. Her finger hovered over the send button, but the phone suddenly beeped
and erased the message. Maybe it was too soon to call? She glanced at
the cupboard that still held his books, at his coat hanging by the door. She
hadn’t tried to return them. He would have to come back - then they could talk,
sort out the argument that had started petty, but escalated into something far
more damaging. Amy touched her phone, aware that she had been working too late,
coming home irritable and expecting him to have cooked dinner.
Closing
her eyes, she dozed.
The
rattle of the letterbox woke her and as she moved, Amy looked down to see her
phone nestled against her heart and realised she must have picked it up in her
sleep.
An
envelope lay on the hall floor. It held a ticket for a romance film- the type
she loved, and Phil hated.
Well that hasn’t changed, she thought, looking at the single
stub.
Amy
sat in the dark cinema, wondering if she would find him behind her - smiling,
saying he was sorry. Her phone beeped a couple of times, annoyingly at the
romantic bits, but never rang. She put it on the chair beside her and it
stopped beeping, seeming happier. She assumed Phil would be waiting in the
foyer, but he wasn’t and she drove home feeling angry and a fool. Why had he
left her sitting alone?
A
card waited on the doormat when she got back - a special delivery envelope from
an internet company. It had a picture of a blue teddy holding a mobile phone.
Inside,
it was blank except for a single printed heart. Amy smiled, Phil had always
joked she loved her phone more than she did him. Maybe he intended the cinema
ticket as a gift; a film he thought she might like to see.
She
took a deep breath and called his number. Oddly, her mobile switched off,
remaining silent in her hand.
Battery,
she thought, picking up her landline and dialling.
‘Amy!’
Phil said. ‘I wanted to call, but I was afraid of making things worse. I love
you.’
‘I
love you too,’ Amy said, looking at his coat hanging beside her, reaching out
to touch it.
‘Do
you fancy celebrating Valentine’s Day with me tomorrow?’
‘Yes,
I would.’
‘I’ll
pick you up at eight. Oh, and you might want to check with that florist you use,
they’ve put a transaction on my credit card, but I haven’t ordered flowers
since Mother’s Day.’
Amy
put the phone down and then jumped as she heard a loud bang behind her. Smoke
drifted up from the sofa and she gasped, staring at the charred remains of her
mobile phone. The cover had exploded outwards, forming two flaps in the shape
of a burned out heart.
Bio:
Lucy Oliver is published in Take a Break and
Stories for Children magazines, as well as various anthologies. She won Stylist
magazine's Micro Fiction competition and is currently working on a historical
novel.
Aaaw, like it!
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