by Jo Dearden
café latte
Jenny
drummed her fingers on the steering wheel. She watched the rain sluicing down
the windscreen, the wipers rhythmically sweeping back and forth. Traffic was at
a standstill. She was going to be late. Up ahead, she could see people getting
out of their cars, craning their necks.
A
siren blared in the distance. An ambulance roared past at an alarming speed.
Eventually the traffic started to move. About a mile down the road, she could
see a police car with a flashing blue light. The ambulance next to a car upside
down in the ditch. It didn’t look good.
She
arrived at the station car park as her train was leaving. She looked at the
train timetable. The next train to London was in half an hour. She went into the
station café and ordered a large latte. She took the paper cup of steaming
coffee to a table at the far end, having noticed a dark-haired man, about her
age, sitting by himself at the other end. She glanced at him, but he didn’t look
up.
She
got her phone out of her handbag. No new messages. She texted Will her boss to
tell him what had happened, and she would be late. He responded with a curt
reply:
‘Set
your alarm earlier if you want to keep this job.’
Katie
sighed as she put the phone down on the table. She had been late a few times
with various excuses and although this was genuine, she doubted it would be make
any difference. Her phone started to ring loudly. In her hurry to pick it up,
her right elbow knocked over the almost full cup of coffee. Brown liquid shot
across the table puddling on to the floor. She scraped her chair back and went
over to the counter. The attendant was nowhere to be seen.
‘Here,
let me help you,’ she heard a male voice. She turned round to see the man she
had noticed, armed with paper napkins striding over to her table.
‘Would
you like another?’ he said smiling. He patted his pockets.
‘Sorry,
I seem to have spent my last change.’
‘Oh,
let me buy you one. You’ve been so kind. So clumsy of me. I’m late for work and
my boss isn’t too happy.’
The
bar attendant came back. Jenny ordered two coffees.
‘Don’t
suppose I could have a bacon sandwich too?’ he said.
‘Um,
sure.’ She looked at him quizzically.
‘I’ll
pay you back.’
‘Ok,
great. I’ll have one too.’
‘What
do you do?’ he asked her as they sat down with the coffees and sandwiches.
‘I
work in an advertising agency. PA to the guy who runs it, but probably not for
much longer.’
Jenny
sipped her coffee.
‘How
about you?’
‘Oh,
this and that,’ he said vaguely. ‘Been away for a while, so like you might be
looking for something else soon.’
They
started to eat their sandwiches. Neither of them seemed to know what to say
next.
The
loudspeaker on the platform crackled. The next train to London would be arriving
at Platform 2 in the next few minutes.
‘Well,
thanks. Really kind of you,’ he said.
He
picked up his rucksack and swung it over one shoulder and sauntered out of the
café door onto the platform.
Jenny
went over to the news stand beside the café counter. As she paid for the paper
she had chosen, she heard the train arriving. She rushed on to the platform. The
man seemed to have disappeared.
She
stepped into the nearest carriage and found a seat. Still no sign of him. As the
train pulled out of the station she looked out of the window and thought she saw
him walking towards the exit. She opened her newspaper. On the inside page there
was a photo of a man that looked like the man in the cafe. Above was a
headline:
Man
escapes from Belmarsh Prison.
In
smaller type underneath: Police warn not approach him as he may be
armed.
About the author
Jo Dearden trained as a journalist with
the Oxford Mail and Times. She did a degree in English Literature with creative
writing as a mature student. She co-edited her local village newsletter for
about ten years. She also worked for a number of years for the Citizens’ Advice
Bureau. She is currently a member of a creative writing group, which is
stimulating her writing again. Jo lives in Suffolk.
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