Sometimes the April skies / Will suddenly bring showers
Spring had started slowly. For most of March there were daffodils everywhere, but there was not a lot of sunshine. And there was still an icy-cool breeze. And then, halfway through April, it suddenly changed. The sun came out. The mercury rose. And the streets of London were once again filled with people.
Pete had been to visit The British Museum when, from out of an otherwise blue sky, the first few jumbo-sized raindrops arrived. Pete didn't have an umbrella. He didn't even have a jacket. And the rain was getting heavier.
Pete spotted a canopy over the entrance to an anonymous-looking office building. Time to pick up the pace, he told himself, and by the time he reached shelter he was a contender for the final of the 100 metre dash.
'Boy, where did that come from?' he said to the young woman who was already sheltering under the canopy.
She smiled. 'Sometimes the April skies,' she said.
Pete frowned.
'Pat Boone,' she said. 'He was one of my grandmother's favourites.'
'Pat Boone? The singer?'
'Crooner, my grandfather used to say,' the young woman said. 'But if I remember correctly, the song does have a happy ending.' And she sang: 'Rain to grow the flowers for her first bouquet.'
'So all's well that ends well,' Pete said.
'I guess so,' the young woman said. 'But now I think there has been quite enough to grow a few flowers. Time for the rain to stop.'
Pete laughed. 'Grow a few flowers? Or perhaps drown a few flowers - given the size of these raindrops.'
'Well ... yes,' the young woman said. 'Also, if it doesn't stop soon, I'm going to have to call off my trip to the gallery.'
'Gallery? Oh? Which one?'
'The Hansford.'
'The Jack Merriman show?'
'Yes.'
'I thought that I might have to go and see that. I'm Pete, by the way.'
'Chrissy,' the young woman said.
And that's how they met.
The rain continued long enough for Chrissy to learn that Pete was a design tutor at the Stephenson Institute and for Pete to learn that Chrissy was in her final year of a BA in English Lit. 'And after that?' Pete said.
'Not sure,' Chrissy confessed. 'My original plan was to go back to Wiltshire and do some teaching. But now I'm wondering about journalism.'
'Journalism. That's a tough gig in this day and age,' Pete said.
Chrissy didn't disagree.
And then, as abruptly as it had started, the rain did stop. 'So ... what's the plan now?' Pete asked.
'I think I might flag the exhibition and try again tomorrow.'
'In that case, I might see you there,' Pete said.
'Oh. Then give me a time,' Chrissy said, 'and I'll meet you out the front. It might be fun to see the show with an art expert.'
Pete laughed. 'Three o'clock?' he said. 'And I'm not sure about the expert part.'
'Three o'clock it is.'
The following day dawned bright and sunny, but the forecast was for occasional showers, and when Chrissy and Pete met up outside the Hansford Gallery they were both carrying umbrellas. 'Now that we're prepared, what's the betting we don't see a spot of rain all day?' Pete said.
'Well ... still better to be prepared,' Chrissy said.
The exhibition was not what either of them had expected. The painting shown in all the publicity was typical of Jack Merriman's work. An update on the Scottish Colourists' school. But much of the rest of the exhibition was quite a departure. 'I can't make up my mind,' Chrissy said after they had stood in front of five or six paintings.
'He's definitely taken a step or two away from his usual style,' Pete said.
'Are they good steps?' Chrissy asked.
'Umm ... you know ... I'm not sure. Artists have a right to explore. That's not an issue. But I'm not altogether sure that the products of their explorations should always be foisted upon the public.'
'So it's not just me,' Chrissy said.
Pete laughed.
Chrissy and Pete spent the best part of an hour contemplating and discussing Jack Merriman's works. 'What now?' Pete said when they had had their fill. 'Do you have time for a coffee?'
'Yeah. Why not. Do you know somewhere?'
'There's a little place on the other side of the square,' Pete said. 'Or my flat is just around the corner.'
'You live right here in Bloomsbury? That's pretty cool,' Chrissy said.
'It's just a small flat,' Pete said. 'But I do have an espresso machine.'
Chrissy smiled. 'Sounds good to me,' she said.
Pete's flat was above an antiquarian bookshop. It was small, but it had everything that Pete needed. And it had a rather nice view out over the garden square.
'This is nice,' Chrissy said. 'And so central.'
'How do you like your coffee?' Pete asked. 'Espresso? Latte? Americano?'