Note: This is a sequel to my earlier earlier sequence of stories, "An Apology in the Morning", "The Education of Mrs Jones", and "Demagnetisation". You don't have to read them all, or even read them in sequence, but things will probably make more sense that way.
*
She was waiting for him on a bench across the road at the end of his working day, and when she saw him emerge from the building's front door, she hurried across to intercept him. "Ed," she said, "we need to talk."
"Oh, hello, Becca," he replied, looking a little surprised. "I'd heard that you'd left the company. Weren't you going back to college?"
"Yeah -- I start next week. But that's not want I'm here about."
"Then what do you want to talk to me about? As I recall, the last thing that you said to me, outside of absolute unavoidable work conversation, was that you were sleeping with my son. And then you made it clear that you wanted no more to do with me."
"Yeah, well, it's about that, Mr Smug Bastard Friar. Did you set me up with your Nick?"
He looked at her for a moment. "What makes you think that I did?" he asked.
"I've only just put it all together," she said. "But it all fits. I was in that pub because of something you said, and Nick comes in and says he's seen me at the office -- though I've never seen him before, I'm sure. He chats me up, and tells me all about himself -- but he never mentions you, or his surname. I only guessed who he was because I remembered that picture that used to be on your desk. In fact, he never said anything about you, right up to when I dumped him. And you didn't look too worried when you saw me again."
"And that's your evidence?"
"Yeah. God, I feel stupid. I thought that I was messing with you, and all the time, you just wanted me off your neck, and your son was getting a good shag out of it."
"Okay, you got there in the end -- and okay, you have the right to a bit more of an explanation. But I'm too old and it's too cold to stand here having arguments in the street, so I suggest that we go down to the coffee shop down the road and talk about this. But there are two conditions."
"Yeah?"
"First, no shouting and no scenes, at least in the coffee shop. I want to be able to go back there, and I think we should both behave like adults. And second, I'm going to be completely honest with you, so I want you to promise to be honest with me about anything that's relevant."
Rebecca glowered, but then she nodded. "Okay," she said, "I'll play your little game, for now."
He smiled, and led off. At the coffee shop, he bought them both cappuccinos, and they found a free table with two seats.
"Okay," said Ed, "you're perfectly correct -- Nicholas and I did set things up rather. He has been in the office, but not for many years, and I wasn't expecting you to remember that picture; I put it away a while back, when I ... realised that it showed Nicholas as a child, which he isn't any longer. You must have craned round to my side of the desk to see much of it, or been round there when I was out, and it was smart of you to recognise him from it. He has changed quite a bit."
"Sod all that. You knew that I was interested in you, and you used that to pimp me to your son!"
"Actually, I'd say more that I pimped Nick to you. But it was his idea, mostly, and I admit that he didn't complain about it. Nor did you, at the time, from what you said."
"You bastard. You did all that to get me off your neck." Rebecca was still keeping her voice level, Ed was please to note; the coffee shop was filling up, with one new arrival sitting back to back with Rebecca.
"You were being very persistent, and I had to find some way of distracting you. I liked you, but I didn't fancy a messy office affair, and you're just eighteen..."
"Nineteen. It was my birthday last week."
"Oh, well, happy birthday. But anyway, I had the feeling that you were looking for a father figure. None of that stuff was my style."
"You could just have nicely told me to back off."
"I could, but I don't think you would have listened. And I thought that you needed something more than a disappointment; you needed, well, a positive alternative to me."
"Screw all that!"
"Quite." Ed couldn't resist the quiet verbal jab.
Rebecca paused for a second, and coloured. But she ploughed on with her original line of attack. "You were just being selfish, the pair of you -- thinking about yourselves."
"Actually," said Ed, "even if that's true, we weren't the only ones. I'm sorry, but you're pretty wrapped up in yourself sometimes. You'd locked onto me, but despite all the personal questions, you never asked me if I was attached. And, well, did you ever ask Nick that, on that evening you first met him?"
"He was chatting me up. Okay, I assumed not, but even if he was, he'd have lied."
"Actually, I doubt it. Nick is many things, but he's very truthful. And he is seeing someone regularly, by the way. If you'd asked him straight out, he'd probably have told you. Even though it would have made what he was doing much harder."
She gaped at him. "You set all that up -- Nick shagged me for two weeks -- and he had a girlfriend all along? You're sick, the pair of you!"
Ed just smiled. "Perhaps you need to meet Louise -- Nick's current girlfriend. She likes him a lot, but she has no illusions about him. Sex is a hobby for him, frankly, but he
is
very truthful, and actually not very selfish. If any woman actually asked fidelity from him, he'd very politely run a mile. And any woman who actually tries to get to know him soon understands that."
Rebecca deflated, still glowering at Ed. "Men!" she snarled.
"I know, love. Bastards the lot of 'em."
The comment came from the woman who had been sitting immediately behind Rebecca, in a position to hear much of what she'd said; Rebecca had never been shouting, but her anger meant that she hadn't been keeping her voice down either. The newcomer was now looking over Rebecca's shoulder, nodding with an expression of sympathy.
"Do you mind?" snapped Rebecca. "This is a private conversation."
"Sorry, love, but it was hard to miss some of it. Anyway, my advice is to use
'em up and dump 'em when they start to annoy you." The newcomer grinned and turned away, and Rebecca scowled.
"Which is something you did happily enough with Nick, I believe," Ed went on. "But tell me -- before you did drop him, did he ever tell you his theory about confidence?"
"What?"
Ed shook his head. "I'll tell you what he told me. Nick
is
very successful with women, you know, and like most other men who see someone like that in action, I began to wonder quite how he did it. But being his father, I was able simply to ask him. And he told me it was all about confidence.