More background and plot development. Introducing the main theme. Feedback would still be very welcome. ;)
*****
Ray and Angela had, after several failed attempts, finally managed to align gaps in their respective workloads for today so that they could make it out for lunch. The family owned cafe where they had traditionally held these informal meetings had bowed to economic pressures and closed late the previous year. After this the unit hadn't been left to stand empty for long before it was snapped up by one of the usual chains. They had fitted it out as yet another ticky tacky coffee shop serving trendy flat whites and flavourless plastic sandwiches to the local footfall. Unexpectedly this had turned out to be a good thing for the two of them, if not for the staff and owners of the late lamented little independent.
Angela and Ray though, having been denied the complacency of their old routine, were forced to change up their pattern. Nowadays when they went out to eat they would try to find somewhere different each time and today's venue had been picked out by Angela. It was a very traditional pub only two minutes from the bus stop but on a side alley off the west end of Fleet Street. The beloved lunchtime sanctuary of generations of jobbing lawyers and journalists. The kind of wooden panelled, leather upholstered temple where you might reasonably expect to find a standard menu of various reheated bar classics to accompany the ubiquitous starchy chips.
Here though London's multiculturalism was paying some of its dividends and the microwaves and deep fat fryers had been stripped out. The whole lot had been replaced by a very competent, if incongruous, Vietnamese kitchen and the new menu was packed with bun hue, ban mi, and pho. All of these were figuratively, as well as literally, a foreign language to Ray but Angela knew the territory well. She'd lived in the Little Vietnam area of Manchester while at university (that was after all why she had picked the spot in the first place) and so she had been able to steer Ray around the options to find something which she'd enjoy.
"I was expecting it to be like Thai for some reason," said Ray. "Probably just because I don't know a lot about that side of the world so I tend to bundle it together. This is very different though, better actually I think."
"Yeah, it's good stuff. Lighter than Thai mostly, more refreshing in the hot weather maybe. So anyway it seems forever since we caught up properly hon'. How's married life. Still sickeningly lovely I imagine."
Ray grinned, "Yes still just as wonderful I'm afraid. Kind of much the same as it was before really if I'm honest, although maybe even a little nicer in a way."
Angela had known Sarah for almost as long as she had known Ray, and she'd watched Ray as she had started to fall in love with Sarah. She'd known what it was even before Ray had understood what was happening to herself.
"It was never going to make that much difference for you two I suppose." she said. "You have always been so close you might as well have been married from day one. Well even before that really."
"I'll tell what has surprised me though," Ray said. "How much I've enjoyed the name change. When we were stuck with doing all the paperwork it seemed like an awful lot of effort for no good reason, but actually it has turned out to be brilliant. Like a constant opportunity to boast you know - look what I've got. I've been feeling generally smug for quite a while now."
Angela nodded her appreciation of this, "And really the wedding was perfect Ray, it was totally worth doing. The party afterwards was spectacular as well."
*****
Angela and her boyfriend Andy had been among the few close friends who had made their way from London down to the farm Ray's family owned in Somerset for the celebration. There Ray's cousins, her aunt Jennie, and Jennie's partner Lynne had taken charge of hosting and organising the whole thing. They had all the space they could possibly need to hold a party on the farm. So, instead of hiring a room elsewhere for the reception, they'd taken the opportunity to renovate one of the old timber framed barns and laid it with boards for the dancing. Their major expense in the end had been bringing in local caterers to manage the kitchen and the bar.
Invitations to the ceremony itself had been limited to a very select group of friends and immediate family. The one real surprise for everyone had been that Ray's mother had not only replied to the invitation they had sent (the one they'd sent to Sarah's family had received, as anticipated, no response) but had actually confirmed she would be coming as well.
Ray hadn't seen her mother since she was a child almost a decade before and she had been very worried about seeing her again now. In part this was because she was fully aware that, according to the strictures of her mother's adopted moral code, she had strayed a very long way from the fold by now. Equally though she was feeling personally guilty according to her own standards for having left it so long before trying to get back in touch herself.
When she finally arrived Ray was waiting in the farmhouse kitchen for her. Slouched, as if trying to make herself physically smaller, she stood as far away from the entrance as she could get without actually fleeing the room. Jennie had practically had to drag her sister Grace through the door as well and having done so she raced off as quickly as possible. That left the two of them standing there, neither of them entirely sure what to say. Ray was surprised to see how small her mother had become over the years.
"Hello Mum," she said. Not breaking any world records for creativity, but at least cutting through some of the tension.
Grace was holding her bag in front of her with both hands like a shield and Ray was shocked when she realised that her mother was at least as nervous as she was. Despite this the older woman managed a cautious smile.
"Rachel my darling," she said, "I don't think I'd even have recognised you if I hadn't known. You're so tall now, and you look so different, your hair..."
She had been in a pinafore with pigtails when they had last seen each other, and only then starting her adolescent growth spurt. Now she was in jeans and a tee shirt, her hair cropped short and spiked, and standing taller than her father.
Reaching out her hand to touch her daughter's arm Grace hesitated. Ray finally took the initiative, as children always must in the end, and closed the gap to hug her.
"I'm glad you came," she said.
"I'm so happy to see you Rachel." her mother replied.
"I don't really call myself Rachel now, you'll have seen on the invitation," Ray spoke into the air above her mother's head. "Although just occasionally Sarah does, and I suppose you of all people have the right. She calls me her darling like you do as well."
"It should be Ray if that's what you prefer now. And I'm pleased to know you've found someone else who will call you darling too. Is Sarah here? I've been looking forward to meeting her again, but she was treated very badly back then, by everyone really, and I didn't know if she'd want to see me."