The first time that Pamela and Marcus met was on a Saturday night in a bar called The Blue Moon.
Marcus had accepted an invitation to a dinner party at the home of a couple he'd known from university days. Edward and Susie probably thought of Marcus as a friend. He, on the other hand, thought of Edward and Susie as no more than 'a couple he knew'. If Marcus hadn't been quite so preoccupied when Edward had phoned with the invitation, he probably could have thought of a plausible reason to 'decline with regret'. But he had been preoccupied. And, before he had realised it, he had said yes.
And so there he was, en route to the dinner party, stopping off at The Blue Moon for a glass of Dutch courage, aka CΓ΄tes du RhΓ΄ne Villages.
It was only just after seven, but the bar was already busy. While Marcus sat at a table off to one side, nursing his glass of wine, he noticed Pamela carrying a glass of white wine and apparently looking for somewhere to sit. 'This seat is free,' he said, nodding towards the empty chair on the other side of the small table. 'If, umm, if that's what you're looking for.'
'Oh. Yes. Thank you. Are you sure?'
Marcus stood up and moved the table slightly to make it easier for Pamela to slide into the vacant chair.
'Thank you. I haven't been in here before. I didn't expect it to be this busy,' she said. 'A bit surprising - you know, considering how early it is.'
Marcus nodded. 'I expect that most of these people are on their way to the Albert Hall. Give it another three-quarters of an hour ... the place will probably be empty.'
'Oh, yes. Yes, I expect you're right. Is that where you're going? The Albert Hall?'
Marcus shook his head. 'On my way to a dinner party. Just girding my loins.' He nodded towards his wine.
Pamela smiled. 'Yes. Me too. I suppose. One of the women with whom I work ... she's set me up with a blind date. She says that it's not a blind date, but there are going to be three couples, and me, and a chap who I've never met before. That sounds like a blind date, don't you think?'
Marcus laughed gently. 'It does,' he said. 'But you never know, this chap, who you've never met before, could turn out to be a Prince Charming.'
Pamela nodded. 'I suppose so.' But she didn't seem convinced. 'Oh well ... I can but hope. Cheers,' she said.
For the next 20 minutes or so Marcus and Pamela sipped their wine and chatted away, agreeably, about nothing in particular. And then Marcus announced that he had probably better get going. Pamela glanced at her watch. 'Oh ... yes. I don't think that I can put it off any longer either.'
'Well ... nice to meet you,' Marcus said. 'And thank you for your company.'
'Nice to meet you, too. I hope that you enjoy your dinner.'
'Thank you. And good luck with Prince Charming.'
They both started walking - in the same direction, as it happened. And then, when they came to the next corner, Pamela paused and laughed. 'Well ... now I guess it really is goodnight. I'm just down here.'
'Ha! Not number 11 by any chance?'
Pamela frowned. 'Umm ... yes, as a matter of fact. How did you know?'
'Well, I suppose we had better go and ring the bell. Oh, and I'm Marcus by the way.'
'Marcus?' Pamela frowned again. '
The
Marcus?'
'Well, certainly
a
Marcus. Marcus Browning. And I guess that makes you Pamela.'
And then they both laughed. And they were still laughing when Edward answered the door. 'Oh! Gosh! Both of you? Together. At the same time. Gosh.'
'It would seem so,' Marcus said.
Now it was Edward's turn to frown. 'So ... you two ... umm ... you know each other? We didn't ... you know ... realise. Neither of you said.'
'Well, we didn't - know each other, that is. But now we do,' Marcus said.
'Right.' Edward continued to frown but nodded slightly.
Edward and Susie's dinner parties were famous for the way in which they progressed, with a sort of inevitability, from slightly old-fashioned formality to not-so-slightly drunken chaos.
For the first hour or so, Edward and Susie behaved like a couple of the upstairs characters from Downton Abbey. But then, as the wine flowed, Edward, at one end of the table, took on the persona of a happy hooligan - a happy and very opinionated hooligan. And Susie, at the other end, became more and more disapproving of everyone and everything. By the time the port decanter had circulated a couple of times, Susie had usually fallen asleep, something which Edward generally took as a sign that he should open another bottle of champagne. On the night that Pamela and Marcus met, that was exactly what happened.
By 11:30, everyone had probably had more to drink than was strictly wise. And Edward and Susie had had
far
too much to drink.
Piers and Monique were the first to leave. 'Babysitter,' Piers explained. And shortly after that Dana and Graeme also announced their departure.
'I really should be going too,' Pamela said, noting that the witching hour was fast approaching.
Edward, who was standing in front of the fireplace with a champagne flute in one hand and a bottle in the other, frowned and tried to look at his watch without spilling any wine. He failed. 'Huh! Can't see the time, but I'm sure that the night is still young. I'm sure there's many a sip still to be supped,' he slurred.
'I think Susie may be ready for bed,' Pamela suggested.
'Just resting her eyes,' Edward assured her. 'Probably just needs a glass of fizz. Liven her up a bit.'
'Well ... whatever.'
Edward frowned again and swayed slightly. 'I could phone for a minicab. But they're not very ... ah ... reliable at this hour. Bloody foreigners, you see. You're probably better off walking to the end of the street and flagging down a black cab. Up to you, really.'
Pamela said that she'd walk to the end of the street and look for a black cab.
'I'll come with you,' Marcus said. And less than ten minutes later Pamela and Marcus were climbing into the back of a cab.
'Where to, Guv?' the cabbie asked.
'Good question.' He turned to Pamela: 'Where would you like to go?'