"Oh yes Alan, I was going to ask whether you were married, but I don't think I will," I replied, rather lyrically I thought.
"Why not?" You asked.
"Because I don't need or really want to know, do I? I mean we are only having a drink aren't we?"
"Yes I suppose we are," you said looking slightly crestfallen.
I had felt a big buzz walking through the pub to the loo and back. I loved the sense of incongruity, if that's the correct expression, I felt from all the young bucks showing out to me, as I then walked towards you, a man old enough to be to most of them their father. 'What the fuck is she with him for, must be out with her dad,' they were probably thinking as they watched me sit down across from you.
"Hi, I'm back," I said perching myself on the edge of the chair, letting my skirt ride up almost to panty level and leaning forward, straining the thin cotton of my blouse, suggesting strongly to the assembled young bucks that you were far from being a relative!
"See I did come back didn't I?" I said sitting down and looking you right in the eye. "Pleased?"
"Yes of course I am, thanks."
Under the table I felt your leg touch mine. My first reaction was to move, but my second one was to leave it where it was. I went with the second one.
"Not at all, thanks to you for the drinks."
"I wondered if you thought I was trying to get you drunk," you said, flashing that nice smile that I found quite appealing.
"Now why on earth would I think that, and why would you want to get me drunk?" I smiled, actually enjoying the slight pressure of your leg on mine. 'Accidental' I wondered
"Well you know," you replied, maybe regretting saying it.
"Do I?" I smiled looking over your shoulder and nodding.
You saw that and turned your head just in time so see one of the bar staff arriving at our table with a second bottle of wine.
I leaned forward, quite forgetting the cut of the blouse and my lack of a bra, and placed my fingertips on the back of your hand, my red painted, almost square cut nails contrasting with your tanned skin.
"I hope you don't think I'm trying to get you drunk," I smiled as the barman filled our glasses. I looked up at him smiling. "Thanks."
Smiling even broader than me, his eyes reluctantly it seemed moving up to meet mine, the young Aussie said. "Thanks ma'am."
"And to think I only bought a bottle of wine."
"Yes but he thanked you for letting him pour it," you smiled.
"Oh shit," I said sincerely, worried that my top was gaping so much. "I shouldn't have worn this blouse like this."
"Not at all, I think it looks lovely as it is."
"Men," I snorted, feigning disgust and mild annoyance.
"We just can't help it can we?"
"So it seems," I replied reaching out and clicking my glass on yours "Bless 'em, we often hate them, but couldn't do without them."
Smiling, you replied. "Thank God for that."
We both laughed.
"Tell me more about your job Sammi?" You asked quite out of the blue as you leaned forward resting your chin on your hands.
I rabbitted on for ten minutes or so about writing copy for ads, posters and brochures mainly for small companies on a freelance basis.
"It's bloody hard at the moment getting work."
"I bet it is, I used be in marketing and we used freelance staff like you. Well, not exactly like you Sammi, I mean writers."
"What you mean not young birds like me."
"Where are they mainly published?" You went on slightly changing ther subject.
"Oh the press, radio, billboards, some on TV, local and regional papers and trade magazines."
You asked a few more sensible questions and then said. "How do you get the business?"
"That's the awkward bit."
"How do you mean?"
Well I have a few contacts and some regular clients, mainly ad agencies, but when they change or new agencies ask to see me it's difficult."
"How?"
"Well supply exceeds demand with copywriters."
"You mean there's more of you than there is copy to write?"
"Yes Alan, that is what supply exceeding demand means," I said rather unnecessarily cuttingly.
"So that pushes the price down does it?"
"Yes and makes persuading copy chiefs to appoint you rather traumatic?"
"How?"
"Some expect more than just a low fee, get me?" I said wondering why the bloody hell I was going down this road.
"Oh I see," you said tentatively, your leg again touching mine under the table.
"And especially when the copywriter is a young bird like me," I replied, not moving my knee away.
"What's that got to do with it?" You asked, increasing the pressure on my leg.
I took a slightly too large swig of my wine. "Men tend to think women like that, like me, are simply gagging for it." I smiled, looking into your eyes and thinking, 'I'm being pulled' as we both left our legs pressed together.
Beaming a big smile you said. "And aren't you? Oh bugger."
I laughed. "You know what I mean. In fact, in a couple of agencies they call me the ice mistress, and think I'm lesbian, because I don't put out for them."
We drifted away from my old hate, the way I am almost expected, but don't, to prostitute myself to get work, and discussed the job you had retired from a year or so ago. It had been in banking, one of my pet hates, so I changed the subject quickly.
I knew I would have to leave soon for it was almost three-thirty and I had things to do, but I really didn't want to. I was enjoying myself. And doing that with a man who really, I had just met, was a rarity. I almost never met new men, other than at work and that didn't really count, and it had been ages since I'd had a spontaneous drink like this.
You had told me you were in London for a meeting, but I couldn't recall how long you would be staying
We finished the bottle, both visited the loos and left the pub, the afternoon air immediately going to my head.
"I think you succeeded," I said as I had the nice feeling of your hand on my elbow as we made our way through the crowd standing outside the pub.
"At what?" You asked.
"Getting me drunk."
"You laughed, yes two bottles of decent wine on an empty stomach, isnt' too good an idea, unless you can simply lay down and nod off."
We made our way towards Leicester Square tube station.
"Perhaps we could remedy that?" You said.
"What me being tipsy?" I joked.
"No, not having anything to eat."
"How?"
"Well maybe you would join me for lunch."