I make my way into the living room, grabbing my keys from the bowl on the coffee table where Nick insists we keep the keys, ready to make a dash for it before his girlfriend arrives, because if there’s one person I like even less than Nick, it’s Heather, Nick’s current bird.
‘How do I look?’ I ask Nick, who is stirring something over the cooker.
‘Not like you’ve got terrifying tights on, kid,’ he tells me, which I think is a compliment.
Nick has called me kid since pretty much the day we met. At first I thought it was just one of your typical terms of endearment used by Yorkshire folk, but then as we realised we were never going to get along, and he started comparing me to an immature child, I realised that he probably called me kid because he thinks I am one. I call him much worse, so it’s fine.
‘How does the food smell?’ he asks.
I walk over and peer into the pan, but its contents are not recognisable to me, not by sight or smell.
‘Erm, what is it?’ I ask.
‘It’s vegan stew. Will you taste it for me?’
‘That’s a thing? I’d rather close the fridge door on my head,’ I reply.
I watch as Nick takes a spoon from the drawer, scooping a little out of the pan and tasting it. As he does, a little drops down and it lands on his apron, which he promptly begins cleaning. It’s only now that I’m looking at his apron that I notice the slogan: meat is murder.
‘Taste good?’ I ask him.
‘Yeah, I mean, it’s not the same as meat, but as long as Heather likes it.’
‘Boy, she’s got you whipped.’
Nick pulls a face.
‘No she doesn’t.’
‘So I suppose you’ve made yourself a meat version, then…’
‘Look, I don’t expect you to understand, but this is what you do when you’re in a relationship, you make sacrifices. If Heather doesn’t want me to eat meat in front of her, I won’t. She’s happy for me to do it when she’s not around.’
‘Bullshit kind of vegan she is then,’ I reason. ‘That’s like a policeman who is OK with murdering people, so long as you don’t do it in front of him.’
‘So you acknowledge it is murder,’ I hear Heather say victoriously from behind me.
I jump out of my skin, I’d no idea she was here.
‘How did you get in?’ I ask, accusingly.
‘Nick left the door open for me.’ She gets back to the subject at hand. ‘So you acknowledge that they’re both murder?’
‘That is not the comparison I was drawing and you know it,’ I tell her.
Heather shrugs, walking over to Nick and kissing him lightly on the lips.
‘Looks delicious,’ she tells him.
‘I know I do,’ I laugh. ‘Shame about the food though.’
Neither of them laugh.
As I head for the door, a notification comes through on my phone. It’s from my date, asking if we can meet an hour later because he’s run over at work.
‘Ah, crap,’ I say out loud, to no one in particular.
‘Language,’ Heather scolds me, before backtracking. ‘Sorry, teacher reflex. Although you probably shouldn’t swear, it’s not very becoming of a lady. You’ll do better on dates if you’re more ladylike.’
I plonk myself down on the sofa. No point leaving yet, I’ll be far too early.
‘Thank you, Cilla Black, I forgot you were the expert – remind me how you two met again?’
‘Nick was my sister’s obstetrician,’ she tells me, giving me the refresher I didn’t actually need.
‘Oh yeah, how romantic,’ I say sarcastically. ‘That means he saw your sister naked before he saw you naked – and they say romance is dead.’
‘Don’t tell me you’re not going,’ Nick interrupts before Heather has a chance to reply. ‘We’ve planned a night that doesn’t involve you.’
‘Mate, as much as I’d love to stick around for a Friday night of cardboard stew and the missionary position, I’m still going, I’ll just be too early if I leave now. But you know what that means.’ I adopt a faux enthusiastic tone to my voice. ‘I get to make small talk with you guys for even longer.’
‘Oh joy,’ Heather says, with an equal amount of sarcasm.
Heather Johnson is exactly the kind of girl I would have expected Nick to wind up with, in fact, she’s perfect for him. They both have sensible jobs (Heather is a primary school teacher), they both watch what they eat and, most importantly, they’re both so, so incredibly boring.
Heather takes a seat on the sofa next to me. Nick, whose crap stew clearly doesn’t require any attention at the moment, wanders over and sits in the chair next to us.
‘So you’re going out like that?’ Heather asks me.
‘I am,’ I reply, all smiles. Heather likes me about as much as I like her, which is not at all. She never really gave me a chance, I think she just dislikes me because Nick dislikes me – she’s also a monumental bitch, which also has an effect on her people skills. Still, if she thinks she can upset me, she’s wrong. ‘What’s wrong with it?’
‘I can see your bra,’ she tells me.
‘Good,’ I reply. ‘It was expensive.’
We sit quietly for a moment before I decide on a silence-breaker.
‘I actually heard a vegan joke the other day, would you like to hear it?’ I ask her.
‘Oh, go on then,’ Heather replies, scooting to the edge of her seat, ready to laugh.
‘How do know if someone is vegan?’ I ask.
‘I don’t know, how?’
‘They tell you,’ I reply, slapping my thigh. ‘Funny, right?’
‘So what you meant is that you heard a joke about vegans, not a vegan joke,’ she corrects me.
‘Same diff., right, miss? I can’t imagine vegan-friendly jokes are a thing – vegan-friendly food is barely a thing. And vegans aren’t known for their sense of humour, are they?’
‘Well, I won’t be telling that one at Vegan Club,’ she says with a frown.
‘Holy shit, Vegan Club is a thing?’
‘Of course it is,’ she replies. ‘We meet every Sunday at Baa Bar Blacks. All welcome.’
‘Wow. So I’m going to guess the first rule of Vegan Club is the opposite of the first rule of Fight Club,’ I joke.
I’m not sure if Heather doesn’t get the reference or just doesn’t find me funny, but she ignores me, turning to Nick.
‘Darling, what do vegan zombies eat?’
‘What?’ he asks, without much enthusiasm. I can tell he’s just enduring the seconds until I leave, so they can get on with their boring night.
‘Graaaaaains,’ she replies, laughing her head off. ‘And you said vegans didn’t have a sense of humour, Ruby.’
‘I did say that, didn’t?’ I reply, pulling myself to my feet. ‘But it was still nice to have you confirm it to be true. I’m going to get going, enjoy your night, you crazy kids.’
Neither of them say goodbye to me, but as I head out through the door, in the seconds before I close it I overhear a snippet of their conversation.
‘How long do you think this bloke will stick around?’ Heather asks Nick.
‘Not long,’ he replies. ‘They never stick around for long.’
Chapter 4
‘Hey, babe,’ the large, muscular blond-haired dude towering in front of me says as he pulls me close, planting a kiss on either side of my face.
‘Hello,’ I reply, my voice sounding funny thanks to his exceptionally tight embrace. He’s got that sort of Lenny from Of Mice and Men strength going on, where I don’t think he realises just how tightly he’s hugging me. One of my many Matcher rules (Matcher is my dating app of choice/force because I’m oh-so single) is to never go on dates with dudes who look like they could/would strangle me, and Lenny here could choke the life out of me with ease if he so chose. I’m hoping that he won’t though, because this guy is kind of a celebrity around here. His real name is Deano Gamble, and he plays for the Leeds Lions rugby team. He’s a hooker, apparently. No idea what that means but I laughed for way longer than was cute when he told me during our first phone call. I started talking to Deano on Matcher and we’ve been 21 stcentury flirting ever since; Whatsapp-ing, Snapchat-ing and FaceTime-ing. That was until three weeks ago when I started dating Jonathan and went cold on him. Luckily when I reached out to him again, he still wanted to go on that date we’d been talking about.
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