Dr. Edward (Dreg) Gresham looked up from his newspaper as the sound of a key in the Yale lock heralded the arrival of one of the friends with whom he shared a very comfortable and spacious detached house in a leafy street in West London, belonging to Sir Henry and Lady Antonia Gresham. He could visualise the scene all to easily, without the need to stir himself from his comfortable position, stretched out on the leather sofa in the sun-filled lounge, surrounded by decor that was soft and pleasing on the eye and furnishings that achieved both elegance and functionality. He heard the shoulder-bag hit the parquet floor with a dull thud and the sound of a coat being hung up on the rack. He could see the exhausted expression on the face of Tamsin Tierney, a 28-year old girl who was gradually being worn to a frazzle playing her part in keeping aircraft apart in the skies over the Home Counties.
Tamsin had made a powerful impression upon taking up residence by announcing that she would personally re-structure the delicate anatomy of anyone with notions of using any nickname suggesting the remotest link to motorcycle races in the Isle of Man or Country and Western singers from Tennessee, and this without the comfort of anæsthesia for the victim! A suitable compromise had been reached when Edward had threatened to take over the running of West Drayton Air Traffic Control Centre for a shift unless she conceded on the anæsthetic. Reluctantly, and extremely uncustomarily, Tamsin had yielded and was known, thereafter, to her housemates as Miss Sin, or just plain Sin.
She had been living in the Greshams' London property for nearly two years, in the company of Henrietta (Harry) Carpenter and Stephen (Sprog) Warner, both of whom held seriously classified positions at the Ministry of Defence and were currently battling the elements and midges on the Knoydart Estate, in Western Scotland. The relationship between the four residents had been very comfortable and even the personal storms that had followed major social upheavals in Edward's and Tamsin's lives at almost exactly the same time, approximately 8 months previously, had been weathered without any repercussions amongst them. Thus it was that Edward, a 36-year old Senior Registrar in Orthopædics, found himself waiting to hear the latest horror stories from the 21st century Battle of Britain taking place daily above the safe Tory seats of the Home Counties.
Tamsin drifted through the lounge door and headed straight for a very comfortable armchair that was bathed in late afternoon sunshine.
"Hi, Sin, another good day at the Flying Circus?"
Tamsin rolled her eyes upwards and sighed deeply...
"Don't ask, Dreg!"
"That good, eh?" Edward retorted quizzically.
"Yep, how's life down at the Bone Factory?"
"It was fine," replied Edward, "until the pile-up on the M40."
"Oh, I saw something about that at a news-stand by the Tube station. Looked nasty."
Edward put his paper down and looked across towards Tamsin, one arm of his spectacles resting in a position at the angle of his mouth that suggested that he was deep in thought.
"You remember those puzzles you used to get in your better class of Christmas cracker."
Tamsin smiled and interjected with a hint of sarcasm.
"Sorry, Dreg, you may have seen them at Gledholme Manor, but we didn't see many of them in the back-to-backs in Gateshead!"
She smiled again and looked almost as if she was about to apologise for interrupting, but Edward wisely dismissed the idea of waiting for this to happen, as they both had lives to lead.
Edward feigned injury to his honour, before reciprocating the smile and taking up where he had left off.
"...anyway, as I was saying, they used to put those odd-shaped sets of pieces in a little plastic bag and you had to see how they all fitted together."
"Sorry, Dreg, all we had was plastic porpoises and corny jokes about chickens and roads."
Tamsin smiled again.
"Oh dear, Dreg, I didn't mean to interrupt, honestly."
Edward overlooked the two glaring falsehoods and continued...
"Well, I've spent most of the day with no lesser a person than god himself."
"Wow..." interjected Tamsin," ...not Prof. McMahon, surely?"
"The very same, Sin. I spent most of the day with god, trying to work out how different pieces of leg bones fit together and then trussing the poor guy up in steelwork that would have made even I.K. Brunel proud. The chap's legs now look like the centre span of the Forth Railway Bridge."
Tamsin made a huge effort and started to lift herself out of the chair.
"Well, Dreg, I can't sit here talking bone, blood and sinew with you all evening. I'm starving and I need a shower."
"OK, Sin, what do you fancy? I was thinking of one of my pasta concoctions and a bottle of Chianti."
Tamsin addressed him with her negotiator's look.
"Are you offering that garlic and herb tomato sauce with it?"
Edward paused for an unnecessary minute, since he had no idea how to prepare any other sauce apart from opening a tin, before closing the deal.
"Actually, I cheated. I made the sauce before I got called out this morning."
Tamsin looked at him knowingly.
"I thought there was rather a hint of garlic in the air and I know you cleaned your teeth last night because I and half of the rest of the street heard you gargling afterwards."
Tamsin's exit from the room was just swift enough to take her out of range of the cushion that flew in her direction.
Edward stood up and walked across to the door as scampering footsteps disappeared up the stairs. He walked to the foot of the stairs and called up.
"Do you want a cup of tea?"
"Please..." came the distant reply, from amidst sounds of zips being undone, clothing being scattered on the floor and drawers being opened and closed.
"OK, I'll leave one in your room while you're in the shower."
Edward walked slowly along the corridor and into the cool, modern kitchen. At a leisurely pace, he set about making a pot of tea, whilst footsteps upstairs and the sound of the shower pump motor gave notice of the stage Tamsin had reached.
A few minutes later, Edward headed up the stairs, carrying a large Donald Duck beaker full of tea. He walked across the landing and paused by the bathroom door.
"I'll leave it on your bedside table, Sin, is that OK?"
At the second attempt at communication, his message found its way to the recipient through steam, running water and cascading bubbles of shampoo and Edward entered Tamsin's room, where he placed the steaming mug on the bedside table. He stepped gingerly over strewn garments of various descriptions and was unable to prevent his gaze from lingering for a few moments on a beautiful plain white bra and a pair of brilliant white brushed cotton French knickers set out on the duvet, waiting for the wearer to return. Edward smiled to himself, took a deep breath and headed back downstairs. He collected his tea from the kitchen and went back to the lounge, where he made valiant efforts to displace soft, alluring female underwear from his mind with turgid columns of anglicised Greek and Latin medicospeak in an incredibly boring learned paper a colleague had asked him to read. Edward actually wondered if the aim was to see if the paper would send him to sleep as well!.
The battle was soon lost and Edward sipped his tea slowly, leaning back against the cushions and allowing his thoughts to surround Tamsin and many aspects of her life. He put the mug down, closed his eyes and drifted slowly into a reverie.
He was not sure how long he had been dozing, nor what it was that had awoken him from it, but he could clearly hear the sound of muffled sobs from upstairs. He frowned and then cast his mind back to the letter that had arrived that morning, written in a hand that he thought he recognised as that of Simon Dewry, a young 'something in the City' who had been a resident until 8 months previously and who had left, rather hurriedly, after it became apparent that Tamsin was not the only person in whose territorial waters he had been fishing.
Edward deliberated for a few moments before making up his mind as to what would be the best course of action. He and Tamsin had developed a close sense of trust, mutual respect and loyalty as friends, based not least upon a healthy rivalry in terms of their ability to think up outrageous jokes and puns.
After he had picked up his mug, Edward made his way quietly out of the room and up the stairs. He walked almost on tiptoes across the landing before knocking very gently on the half-open door to Tamsin's room.