AUTHOR'S NOTE: This short series is both a prequel and a sequel to Heather's Busy Week (HBW). It is not, however, the immediate follow-on, and can be read independently (although new readers are more than welcome to try out the first series!!). Heather's Hectic Weekend, picking up where HBW left off, will follow in the not-too-distant future.
*****
CHAPTER ONE
(Michaelmas Term 2001)
Heather saw the sign on the departmental notice board, a week into her final year at university.
ARE YOU A WOMAN WANTING TO TRAVEL THE
WORLD? KEEN TO MEET NEW PEOPLE AND
EXPERIENCE DIFFERENT CULTURES BUT . . .
AFRAID OF THE HORROR STORIES YOU READ
IN THE DAILY MAIL!!
EVER THOUGHT OF TRAVELLING IN NUMBERS?
COME MEET IN THE UNION BAR (FAR LEFT
CORNER) THURSDAY 11TH AT 8PM.LIKE-
MINDED WOMEN WILL BE THERE INCLUDING
GRADUATES FROMTHIS UNIVERSITY WHO WENT
OUT AND DID IT!!
LISTEN - DISCUSS - ASK - LEARN
JOIN UP FOR NEXT TIME!!
Fresh from summering in Kettlewell, the idea of seeing the world seemed great. It also seemed to be the perfect time to start planning. Heather had considered travelling before, without doing anything to make it happen. The closest she'd come was to sound out Mary Rose when they'd had a week away together in Majorca, last July. Since then, things had changed.
Oh yes, hadn't they just!
Last July, fuelled with sangria and pina colada, Mary Rose had been all for it. This July they'd had ten days in Ibiza and Mare had already been head-hunted, more than a year before she graduated from her ivy-walled university. And by a classy City of London law firm at that, not some provincial hicks. She had a start date and was, to say the least, hot to trot. The alternative . . . months on end sharing a tent with a sweaty girlfriend and two pairs of hiking boots . . . was so not going to happen it didn't get mentioned.
The meeting on the eleventh drew about fifty women and half a dozen blokes (the blokes presumably either couldn't read or had just come to look at the talent). Heather knew several of the females from her various sporting activities. She also recognized faces from LGBT and other, less formal "women's groups". But, as far as she was aware, most of the attendees were straighter than straight. So maybe breaking away from the undergraduate boyfriend was a factor for some of them.
And weren't there a lot of overseas students there, wanting to travel!
For that first meeting Heather was happy to just sit and listen while others asked, several discussed and quite a few pontificated (which hadn't even been on the list!). About the only thing she and anyone else learnt that evening was that a whole year travelling wasn't going to come cheap. The world might have become a global village, but it seemed to be a very expensive village to travel through.
She almost didn't bother going to the follow-up meeting a fortnight later. The expense wasn't a worry (Dad would fund that, out of her inheritance), it was the thought of having to listen to the same bunch of timewasters going over the same ground. Again. And again and again. In the end it was Edith who persuaded her to go. And just as well, seeing as this time there were only eighteen attendees, all of them female, all of them reasonably serious about joining up. This time there were plenty of sensible, practical questions, tons of constructive discussion and much felt to have been learnt. Heather was one of the fifteen converts who signed up there and then, on the dotted line.
Meetings continued fortnightly up until Christmas, with attendances varying from as few as a dozen up to twenty-five, as new prospects arrived late and others dropped out. The last get-together of the year happened early December, in a Union Bar decked with tinsel and holly. Roy Wood and Noddy were there on the juke box, goodwill was thick in the air. At that point there were two organizers and ten others irrevocably enlisted. The biggest matter in hand had been deciding between travelling in three teams of four or two teams of six. By then they had all got to know each other and the debating was warm and humorous.
Normally the meetings lasted an hour or so and ended with everyone drifting away. That one finished with festive drinks at the bar; heaps and heaps of festive drinks. Enough to make a crowd of already relaxed students chilled to the bone; enough to lead Heather into making an inappropriate suggestion to the best-looking of her would-be companions.
Oops!
Although she didn't get her face slapped, Heather had been left in no doubt her approach was not welcome . . . which was a crying shame. Ingrid was truly scrumptious and had come to the first couple of meetings with Rachael, the driving force behind a very high profile "Girls' Society". Someone with connections like that should have found her suggestion very appropriate indeed, considering the time of year.
*****
Leaving the Union, Heather made her way along semi-lit corridors, eventually arriving outside Edith's suite of laboratories. Or, rather, the suite of labs where Edith spent most of her waking hours.
Blooming Ingrid, she thought, still smarting from her rejection. She shouldn't be allowed out and about looking like that. Not when she's hetero.
The labs were subject to varying degrees of security. The way Heather understood it, the deeper you went in, the harder it got to proceed. And, of course, Edith was bound to be buried somewhere in the deepest depths, protected by locked doors, CCTV and goodness knew what else.
'She's probably splitting atoms,' Heather murmured. 'So it's probably for the best.'
Edith was actually a research chemist ("Good at Stinks," as Mary Rose would have put it). She often worked into . . . or through . . . the night, losing track of time and forgetting to eat or drink. As her self-appointed mentor, Heather often turned up unannounced, ready to call time.
The first security barrier wasn't a problem. Heather knew the code and tapped it into a keypad on the wall. And open sesame! The lock clicked and she let herself into a deserted reception area. A quick glance at the sign-in sheets verified her assumption was correct: everyone else had long since gone home, leaving Ede in here on her own.
Somewhere.
Heather went to the next barrier and entered another code, gaining access to a large, relatively low-tech lab. That was as far as she could go unaccompanied. In fact, strictly speaking, she shouldn't have gone as far as she already had. It was time to phone a friend. But, before she could reach for the nearest internal handset, a door opened and the lady herself appeared, carrying a coffee mug.