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The Birds and the Bees(35)

By:Milly Johnson


‘It's up to you.'

‘Well, the, thriller's got good press,' she suggested, hoping he would  say that he was off to see The Strangulator and would meet her in the  foyer after the film was over, but ( bugger! ) he simply said, ‘Aye,  that'll dae then.'

Stevie rummaged in her bag for her purse but he said, ‘I'll get these. You awa' and get the popcorn.'

‘Okay,' said Stevie, thinking, Popcorn? This is looking too much like a  real date! However, she then realized that he didn't want her to think  she was getting away with not paying for anything.

‘He thinks I'm a freeloader!' she said to herself. ‘Right, I'll show him!'

She was served, just as Adam appeared with the tickets. She was  struggling with a ‘small' popcorn the size of a mop bucket and a ‘large'  which was roughly a skip, and had cost as much. She had plumped for the  special offer and got two drinks as well. Not having a clue what he  wanted, she had chosen Diet Cokes seeing as a gallon of Bells and Irn  Bru wasn't an option. He had the nerve to look taken aback.

‘I wes actually joking,' he said.

‘Well, unfortunately I'm not yet fully acquainted with the nuances of  your wit,' said Stevie, grappling with a sweet smile as well as with the  enormous feast.

‘So which is mine?' he grunted.

‘This big one, of course!' said Stevie. Is he joking or does he think  I'm a hog? She had just found out it was possible to dislike him a  little more.

‘Ba' Christ, it'll take me aw night to eat this.'

‘I didn't want you thinking I was mean,' said Stevie purposefully, with a  tight smile. It was, after all, his race renowned for parsimony, not  hers. ‘Which brings me around to say that I do very much want to get the  financial side of our arrangement sorted soon too. I don't want to be  in for any nasty shocks.'

‘Aye,' he said without elaboration, then turned his back on her and led the way into the darkened cinema.

‘Here,' said Adam, picking one of the big cushioned seats with the row  in front of them a distance away. ‘I paid extra for the superior seats.  Ma legs get aw crunched up in the ordinary wans … ones.'

He did have very long legs, thought Stevie, who reckoned both hers  placed end to end must equal the length of one of his. He must have to  go to special shops for his jeans. ‘Big Ignorant Scottish Bastards 'R'  Us', possibly.

The lights dimmed and the adverts and trailers came on and Stevie took a  long look around. The place was full of couples, silhouettes of their  heads coming together as they passed a joke or a sweet nothing, so it  felt odd to be part of them, and yet not part of them. How many others  here were sitting with people they couldn't stand, and who they knew  couldn't stand them either?

She and Matthew loved the cinema. Quite a few times he had rung her from  work to say, ‘See if Kate can babysit and we'll go and see a film.'  Then they would invariably make a night of it and have supper somewhere  afterwards and blow the expense. Like he would do with Jo now.

A rush of tears blindsided her and she coughed them down. Then she felt  Adam MacLean nudge her to inquire if she was choking on popcorn. It was  like being hit by a bus.

‘No, unfortunately for you, I'm fine,' she said, and he laughed a big ‘ha'.

They munched and watched in entertained silence. Denzel was gorgeous and  the plot was twisty and thrilling. It was obvious from the off who was  the bad guy but that fact didn't detract one iota from the enjoyment. At  the end, the lights came up and Adam got up, stretched, and knocked all  the stray knobs of popcorn off his shirt into his container. Between  what he and Stevie had left, there was enough to feed a third world  country for a week.

‘That was quite good – well picked,' he said.

‘Yes, I enjoyed it,' said Stevie. ‘The film, I meant,' she added. Just in case he thought she meant his scintillating company.                       
       
           



       

She really doesn't like me very much at all, he thought with faint  amusement, although he couldn't for the life of him think why that was.  Had he not treated her with anything but absolute courtesy, that first  meeting excepted? None of this situation was his fault. He had gone over  his relationship with Jo with a finer than fine-tooth comb in his head,  but he still couldn't work out where he'd gone wrong. It was torturing  him, not knowing why she preferred a prick like Matthew Finch to someone  who had treated her like a queen. It was Miss Stroppy Drawers here that  hadn't made Matty Boy happy and he had strayed. It was her fault, not  his. Slatternly, verbally abusive, prone to violent outbursts when she  was drunk, and they were just at the beginning of the list. If she was  adamant about flinging blame about, she should look nearer to home.

He led Stevie out and back to the car, where the cheesy seventies CD  blasted out ‘Wig Wam Bam' and ‘Do You Wanna Touch'. It seemed to her  that his music taste was as dubious as everything else about him. They  both sat in stone-faced silence, each wanting to get away from the other  as soon as possible.

‘Want me to run your babysitter hame … home?' he offered, as they turned into Blossom Lane.

‘No, it's all right, thank you. I'll get her a taxi,' said Stevie, a bit too quickly.

He was laughing now and shaking his head. The nicer he was to her, the  more it seemed to annoy her. That made him want to be even nicer,  because getting under her skin was the only bit of fun he was having at  the moment.

‘Okay, spend your money,' he said, ‘but don't say I didnae offer.'

They pulled up outside the cottage. The lights were on downstairs in Matthew's house and the curtains were still open.

‘We'll sit here for a wee minute,' Adam MacLean said, ‘and give them a chance to see us.'

Great! thought Stevie, but then again, the sooner they were seen, the  sooner it would all come to whatever head it was going to come to and be  over.

‘After aw,' Adam went on, ‘that's what lovers dae … do, isn't it? Sit in the car and talk and kiss and stuff.'

‘There's no way I'm kissing you,' said Stevie, horrified.

‘Don't worry yerself, lady,' said Adam, jerking backwards. ‘I'm just  trying to make this as realistic as possible. Without stooping to bodily  contact. Agreed?'

‘Agreed,' said Stevie.

He grunted.

‘Would this be a good time to talk about money then?' said Stevie.

‘Look,' he said, sounding a little bit strained, ‘I'll work out some  figures. I certainly can't afford to pay for the entire cottage and my  mortgage for very long … '

‘I'm not asking you to! That's my point!' Stevie burst out.

‘Stop yer blethering, woman! I know you're no' asking me to!' he  snapped, then made an open-palmed gesture that suggested he was trying  to calm himself. He had massive hands that looked more than capable of  landing a painful wallop.

‘Look, if it bothers you that much, I'll make it my priority, okay?'

‘Yes, it does bother me, Mr MacLean,' said Stevie, ‘so I'd appreciate it if you would, thank you.'

‘My name's Adam, by the way. Might sound a wee bit odd if we're trying  to convince people we're a couple when there's you calling me by my  title and surname.'

‘Okay … Adam,' she said. It sounded rather intimate to call him by his  Christian, or rather heathen name, especially after she had gotten used  to calling him ‘MacLean' for so long. Well, that and a selection of  fruitier alternatives.

‘So, is Stevie short for Stephanie?'

‘No, it's just Stevie. Like the poet.'

‘Stevie Smith?'

Crikey – he's heard of her. ‘Yes.'

She's surprised I've heard of Stevie Smith. She thinks I'm bloody  illiterate! Cheeky wee … Adam tried to contain his annoyance but it leaked  out in the way he drummed his fingers on the steering wheel in an angry  little tattoo.

They waited a tad longer, but there was no activity from across the  road. Matthew and Jo had probably gone to bed and left the light on in  their hurry to get upstairs and bonk each other's head off. Both she and  Adam started to say together that maybe they should go, and likewise,  together, they thought, So this evening's been for nothing, after all.

‘Maybe better luck next time then,' said Adam.

Oh, God forbid a next time! Although that thought was quickly pushed out  of the way by a more serious one as Adam got out of the car. Where's he  going? Oh, please don't tell me he wants to come in for coffee!                       
       
           



       

However, he was only doing his gentlemanly-type duty in opening the door  for her, then he got back in the car after a gruff and sarcastically  toned, ‘Good night and thanks for the popcorn!' and after doing a  three-point turn in the little lane, he zoomed off with a  frustration-laden squeal of tyres. Stevie flinched. She hated loud  noises of any kind – bangs, shouts, pops – they upset her, made her feel  insecure, took her back to childhood days she would rather not think  about. He couldn't wait to get away from me, as much as I couldn't wait  to get away from him, she mused, staring into the space his car had just  occupied.