SUGGESTION: The principle characters in this story are fifty-four and sixty-nine. If you find descriptions of sex between older people offensive then you may prefer to give it a miss.
'You took an awful long time to clean that table Jenny,' said Joan, 'and only one person sitting there.' She was smiling. We're best mates, and we've been running the little Tea Room at Gunshill Gardens for nearly eight years. She's ten years older than me, which makes some folks think she should have retired. Don't suggest it to her though, or you may be on the receiving end of a bit of a tongue lashing from the 'dear little old lady'.
'Some tables are just more difficult to clean,' I said, trying to keep a straight face. 'Of course you wouldn't know about it, as you never get out of your nice warm little kitchen.' Lots of the tables are in the open area of the garden, and the one I was 'attending' was on the grass about fifty metres away from the kitchen.
Joan was teasing me because I'd spent time talking to the table's sole occupant as, to be fair, I often did, and she had noticed. The table's occupant was a respectable-looking man whose age we estimated at about late sixties, and he was one of the volunteers who helped keep the garden a beautiful and productive place, growing a whole variety of fruit and vegetables as well as a wide range of flowers.
'Perhaps he's lonely,' Joan wondered 'Although he seems quite content with his own company, and he likes to work alongside some of the other volunteers.'
'Oh I don't think you should feel sorry for him. He's very self-contained. I like talking to him because he usually comes out with something a bit unusual, if you know what I mean. It's not just weather and comments on the produce.'
'Such as?' asked Joan.
'Well this morning he was talking about insects: describing some of the weird and wonderful ways they pollinate and provide food for species higher up the ladder. But another day it might be clouds, or rivers, or his longing for a coastline within easier reach, children, farming, teaching, occasionally politics: anything really. I'm surprised I ever manage to get away from him when he gets going!'
'Not the kind of thing we hear from most of our customers,' said Joan, 'I can see how it might be a change from the normal standard chat.'
I laughed, thinking that I'd love to have more of it, not shut him up. The odd ten minutes when neither of us was busy wasn't enough; but I wasn't going to confess that to Joan at the moment.
Better tell you a bit about myself, I suppose. I was born in Shropshire in 1969, which makes me fifty-four I think, but I don't worry much about age - there seems plenty of time to do that, I sincerely hope, and anyway being old isn't necessarily all bad.
I haven't travelled widely: London a few times, and Cornwall for several holidays when we could bear the 'are we nearly there' cries during the six hour journey. My husband, Jeff Mattox, is very confident and competent; he spent fifteen years managing the area's biggest agricultural supplies outfit. We did take one camping holiday in south Brittany, not realising that it's climate is much like ours. You could say it was a washout, but we did have a few fine days, although not enough to encourage us to go again. Anyway, we all decided that Scarborough had most of what any of us wanted, and knocked a couple of hours off the Cornwall journey and we stuck to it until the children were old enough to look after themselves, and we could please ourselves.
Unfortunately, self-confident as he is, Jeff was not keen on tangling with foreign languages or food, which meant that my only European trips after Brittany had to be with a couple of girl friends who loved the sun and everything about being abroad. Three was enough to be able to look after each other, so we had a lot of fun! I surprised myself, avoiding wickedness by a hair's breadth and an inbred tendency to behave what my mother would call 'half sensible'. It seems she had long ago decided that being fully sensible was beyond my generation, and perhaps not wholly desirable anyway.
The 'children' Mandy and Danny are now 23 and 21 respectively. They are very close. Jeff thinks too close, but I say 'what the hell, let them get on with life the way that suits them'. They know that we are there for them if they lose their way, but so far they seem to be sorted.
If you want to know what I look like I think 'unexceptional' might fit it. On the whole I'm a cheery person, but I've come to realise that I have unusual curiosity: I want to know the how, why and where of every aspect of life I encounter. Unusually for one of my sex I'm not that bothered about sharing every detail of my own life; instead I might ask a lot of questions. This sometimes leads to very one-sided conversations, and I have on occasions received (in confidence, of course) much more information than I needed or wanted. Even more rarely I've been told to mind my own business.
So who was the mysterious solitary customer for our Tea Room services? Much of this I've needed to gently prise from him because, like me, the one subject he doesn't naturally hold forth on is himself, Peter William Munson, born 1953, so he says, somewhere in the southeast of England. He grew to be above average in height, but he says that he has now shrunk quite a lot. He's balding like a monk's tonsure; his hair was obviously light brown, but is now mainly mid grey. I think he must be quite fit, because he often does three hours of gardening and doesn't complain too much of aches and pains. But then he doesn't complain much anyway, except to regret the foolishness of mankind, trashing the planet and determined to wipe each other out. It makes him super-appreciative of the good people though, and that's another reason I have fellow-feeling for him.
'Are you going to take this then?' asked Joan, 'or shall I take it to him myself?'
'No, I think I can stagger down to table twelve thanks Aunty Joan.'
'Well don't be long. There are three more orders will soon be ready.' Joan tried to sound fierce, but she knew that I knew she was just a fluffy pussycat.
'I'll be really quick, but I can't be impolite if he wants to talk.'
'Nonsense, just kick his shin and tell him you've work to do.'
We had variations on this conversation every week, but it didn't seem to make any difference, except that I waited 'til there was a lull and went to talk to him again, me standing with hands on the back of a chair. On this occasion, the pause came about twenty minutes later. He was sitting reading a magazine by then. I asked him what it was he was reading.
'Reintroducing beavers in Shropshire.' He put the magazine down. I was tempted to ask him to tell me about beavers and why they were going to be introduced, but that seemed like a conversation for another time.
'What time will you finish tonight?' he asked, somewhat to my surprise.
'It's usually about half past four by the time we've cleared up. Why, do you want to take me into the woods and ravish me?' I don't know what came over me. I gasped and put my hand over my mouth. I needn't have worried.
'Well, I confess I hadn't been thinking of that, but I am now!' he laughed. After I'd apologised he went on, 'I know that you usually have a lift with one of the gardeners, but I wondered if I could take you home tonight, for a change? I live in Curkshall, and I think you do, so I won't be going out of my way.'
'Yes please, that would be great; Matthew has to go out of his way a bit to drop me off, so he won't mind. I'll come and find you in the car park - you'll probably be the only one there by then.'
With Joan's words ringing in my ears, and still deeply embarrassed by my outburst, I hurried back to the kitchen to collect and serve the next order, and work the afternoon out. I did have a moment to pop over to Matt and let him know that I wouldn't be needing a lift that evening. He was a shy boy, and didn't show any surprise or interest - probably pleased that he didn't have to try to listen to my chatter while he drove me home.
We were finished soon after 4.30 and I hurried round to the car park. I hadn't let on to Joan that I was going home with Peter, partly because we were busy, partly because I didn't want the inevitable teasing which would follow, and also because embarrassment for my howler about ravishing in the woods had made me self-conscious. Joan's son had come to take her home ten minutes earlier and I had shooed her out and told her I'd finish clearing up and lock up the Tea Room. Relief.