Read Cloudy with a Chance of Love Online
Authors: Fiona Collins
âSo you've said,' I said brightly. âAnd Will, it's absolutely fine, it really is. Please don't worry about it. Look I'll see you soon, for coffee and cake, or something.' Yes, we could do that, I supposed. That was the friendly status we could return to, one day soon. When I'd got over him being the prat with the flowers. âBut I've got to go now, my friends are waiting.'
âDarylâ¦'
âBye, Will.'
And I walked over and got in the back of Sam's car, leaving Will standing there on the pavement, rain cascading like a waterfall over him and his perfect flowers.
We screeched off like Thelma and Louise and a rather stunned but pretty pleased-with-herself third passenger.
âWho was that man, Daryl?'
âWas that
Will
, your hunky neighbour, Will?'
âWhy didn't you take the flowers?'
âI hope you know what you're doing, Daryl!'
The car was whizzing round the corner, like a not-very-good getaway car. I leant forward and stuck my head in between the front seats.
âBloody hell, what a night! Thank you for rescuing me, you two! You've saved my life. I've got no idea how I would have got home otherwise.'
âNo problem!' This was Peony. She looked all bright and fresh, in the passenger seat. She was wearing a chunky cream roll-neck and had her hair in a cute ponytail. âWho was the guy?'
âBelieve it or not, that was my neighbour, Will. He wanted to give me a bunch of flowers to apologise for kissing me and I'm rather proud I didn't take them.'
âI don't understand,' said Peony.
âSo, it
was
that Will!' Sam interrupted, navigating a cyclist and two London buses.
âDon't go in the bus lane, Sam,' yelled Peony. âYou'll get nicked!'
âSpoilsport,' said Sam, pulling out of the bus lane again. She had a raincoat on and an Alice-band I'd never seen before. It was slipping off the back off her head and she was moving it back up again, with one hand. She turned to face me. âDaryl, that was
Will
. I
told
you he fancied you! Why didn't you take the bloody flowers?'
âHe doesn't fancy me! And I don't want sympathy flowers,' I said. âI don't want apology flowers. I don't want guilty-neighbour-regrets-Halloween-kiss flowers.'
âHang on, you kissed your neighbour!' exclaimed Peony. âI presume he's the
hunky
neighbourâ¦'
âYep,' I sighed. âI kissed him last night. Or he kissed me, or whatever. That was him. And, yes, gorgeous, isn't he?'
âWell, I couldn't get a
really
good look at himâ¦' said Peony.
âOh, trust me, he's gorgeous,' I moaned. âToo bloody gorgeous. I was over at his for Halloween. We saw off all the neighbourhood kids, then we kissed, then he told me it was wrong, and I went home.'
âBlimey,' said Peony. âI
have
been out of the loop.'
âYes,' scolded Sam. âThe sooner you get married, the better. We need you back as a fully-functioning member of our gossip circle.'
âRight, what else has been going on I don't know about?' Peony asked. âFor god's sake, Sam, use two hands!'
âSorry,' said Sam. âIt's this bloody Alice-band.' She pulled it off and hurled it onto the back seat.
âWell, it's been quite a week,' I sighed. I had one hand on each headrest, for balance. I knew what Sam's driving was like. âHere's a potted summary: Sam did a love forecast for me on Sunday, which told me I had a ninety-nine percent chance of falling in love with someone by Friday â which has resulted in me, since Monday, kissing three different guys, going speed dating and cookery dating, attending a posh party in Richmond, and generally being out every night like some sort of dirty stop-out. It's been exhausting.' I
was
exhausted, and I was still reeling from my encounter with Will, to be honest. I leant my forehead against Sam's headrest.
âOh right,' nodded Peony, taking it all in. âBlimey⦠three guys, in a week..? So, was one of them the bloke from the speed dating? The one you went on a date with on Tuesday? Ben, wasn't it?'
âYep, Ben,' I said, sitting up again. âToo much of a party boy. Not for me. Number two was not-so-Sexy-Dex the slimeball, at Wednesday's cookery singles night, who stuck his tongue down my throat without asking.'
âEew.'
âAnd number three was Will.' It was obvious to anyone that out of the three he was the best, by far. Especially to me. But nothing would never ever happen with him again. I almost had the flowers to prove it.
âRight. That's it,' said Peony, folding her arms. âI'm
so
getting back in the loop. The wedding planning's virtually done now. I promise we're going to get back on track and get together
loads
more from now on.'
âGood girl,' I said, then I looked to Sam. âSam, why did you say you hope I know what I'm doing? When I first got in the car?'
âBecause I hope you do.'
âWell, what do you mean?'
âDaryl,' she sighed. âI know you think that forecast thing was a load of old hooey, but
have
you fallen in love this week? At all?'
âNo, of course I haven't!'
âAre you sure about that?'
âYes, of course I am! Hey, watch out for that man!'
Sam veered suddenly to the right and beeped the horn. A cyclist, in Lycra, gave her the finger from beyond Peony's window.
âSorry!' Sam shouted then she indicated to turn right. âDaryl, Daryl, Daryl,' she exhaled. âYou're a bloody idiot!'
âWhat?'
âWhat?' This came from Peony.
âYou've fallen in love with Will, haven't you?'
âNo, I
haven't
!
âYes, you have, and he's in love with you.'
âWhat the hell! What the hell are you going on about, Sam?'
âYes, Sam,' said Peony turning to her with an amused look on her face. âExplain what the hell you're going on about.'
âLook,' said Sam, âA man doesn't just walk around in the rain, looking for a woman, when he's not sure where she'll be and when. He didn't
know
you'd be outside Caspar's at that exact time of night, did heâ'
ââ well, no, I just told him I had the graduation and the dinner â I didn't say where or whenâ¦'
âSo he came looking for you. A man doesn't come looking for a woman at this time of night â in the pouring rain â with flowers unless he likes her.
Really
likes her'
âBut the flowers were an apology,' I protested. âBecause he made a mistake. He said so. He saidâ'
âI heard what he said. I heard it all. Is it within the realms of possibility that he made a mistake because he
stopped
kissing you, because he let you go�
âNo, not at all, not at all, Sam. I know he regretted that kiss. It was a bad idea, itâ¦'
âDo
you
regret that kiss?
âNo.' I sat back against the seat and closed my eyes.
âI saw how he looked at you, Daryl. He doesn't regret it either.'
âOh, Sam,' I said, opening my eyes again and shaking my head at her. âAre you sure you've not got your head in the clouds again? Are we venturing into mumbo jumbo territory? Are you going to start going on about the stars?'
âNo, I'm not. And I haven't got my head in the clouds,' said Sam. âMy feet are firmly on the ground. But you, my friend, have got your head in the sand. He likes you, I'm telling you. The whole searching-in-the-rain-with-flowers thing would not have been happening otherwise.'
âI must admit, I agree,' said Peony. âWho would
do
that, otherwise?'
âI don't knowâ¦' I said.
âOh, stop being so bloody obtuse,' snapped Sam, but she was grinning. âYou really like him, don't you? Tell the truth, Daryl.'
I leant further back against the back seat and sighed. âOh bloody hell, Sam, you've got me bang to rights.' (And I did feel a bit like an American criminal, actually, in the back seat of a car like this, being driven by my two interrogators â good cop, bad cop; it was obvious who was whoâ¦) âYes, I do bloody like him. I like him more than I've ever liked anyone for a very, very long time.'
âRight, thenâ¦' Sam indicated left and turned onto a road that seemed to have a million kebab shops, all with extremely bright lights. ââ¦Stop being so bloody stupid and let's get you home.'
It was still absolutely chucking it down when Sam pulled up outside my house. I'd done a lot of thinking on that journey. After my admission, Sam and Peony had chatted amongst themselves about work and I had stared out of the window into the rain and the streets flashing by. Was Sam right,
did
Will really like me? It did seem to make sort of sense what she said, about the flowers, and Will wandering the streets trying to find me, and it
was
a really nice bunch of flowers. Why had he gone to all that bother if he just wanted us to be friends and neighbours? I thought about it. I know he didn't normally work on a Friday afternoon and evening, he'd told me so, so he could have been in that area
specially. Especially for me. Then again, he could have been on call tonight, he could have got the flowers from a very glamorous petrol station, he could hate me and my kisses and the bouquet really was just an empty gesture to undermine the fact he'd made a huge mistake and felt bad about it⦠Could Sam really have determined all that
romantic
stuff by the flowers and the look on his face?
âDo you really think he likes me, Sam?' I'd asked her as we'd driven through Wimbledon and down towards my road.
âYes, I do,' said Sam. âAnd if you're still not convinced, why don't you go and ask him? You could knock for him, when you get home.'
I laughed. âYou're full of it, tonight,' I said. âAnd we're not
fifteen
. God, I don't know. I don't know if I could do that. I don't think I'm brave enough.'
âWant us to come with you?' Sam looked at Peony and grinned.
âAs I said, we're not fifteen â but thanks for the offer.'
âNo worries.'
âWill you be all right?' asked Peony. âTonight.'
âYes, I'll be absolutely fine.'
âWe can come and tuck you in?'
âNo, I'll be fine. You've done more than enough, really. You rescued me. Thank you so much.' I really meant it. I loved these two. So I once had a friend who had betrayed me in the worst possible way, so what? I also had these two absolute gems in my life, who I knew would always be there for me and would
always
come through for me. I appreciated it more than they could ever know.
Sam turned into my street. We drove down it, past the Victorian semis, and all the cars parked outside. All was quiet. All was still. The rain continued to plummet down. The windscreen wipers were going like the clappers.
âOh, hello!' she said. âThere appears to be a man on your doorstep.'
âLove you, Daryl!'
âLove you guys, too. I'll call you tomorrow.'
âMake sure you do!'
I shut the car door and walked slowly up the drive. Will, not a bunch of flowers in sight, was sitting in my porch, on my front doorstep. He still looked completely wet through, but as he was out of the rain, his hair was no longer dripping torrents into his eyes; it was swept upwards in a damp approximation of its usual style. It looked cute. Really cute. And so did he.
âHello, Daryl.'
âHello, Will.' I stepped into the porch, aware of not wanting to trip up in my heels. I pulled down the hem of my dress self-consciously, but at the same time I was glad I was wearing it. My bag and my half-a-cape were clutched in one hand. âThis is a surprise.' I realised I was shaking; my mind all over the place. What was he doing here?
âI promise I'm not going to try and give you flowers again,' he said. There was certainly no sign of them. It was just Will. Will in his smart trousers and shoes and his dark grey overcoat.
âOkay.'
âAnd I'm sorry if I startled you, approaching you on the street like that.'
âIt's okay,' I repeated. I felt so unsure of myself. I didn't know what he was going to say; I didn't know what
I
was going to say. I was half excited, half bloody terrified.
âI'm glad you got home all right.'
âMe too,' I nodded.
âWere those your friends? Who picked you up?'
âYes. My two best friends.'
âGreat. Good.' He placed his hands in his lap like he didn't know what to do with them. His eyes were all big and brown, and framed by eyelashes that were damp. âSo how was the graduation? Were you okay? Freya's dad, your ex-husband was there, was he?'
âYes, he was. And his new girlfriend who used to be my best friend.'
Will raised his eyebrows. âAh, is that a story for another day?'
âIt could be.'
Would
it be? âAnd yes, thank you, I was okay.'
âThat's good. I was a bit worried about you.' He moved his hands from his lap and motioned towards the door. âAre you going in?'
âYes.'
âWould it be okay if I came in⦠as well? I'd like to talk to you. Try to talk to you again. If I may.'
My heart started beating in my chest. He wanted to come in. He wanted to talk to me. Was Sam right?
âOkay,' I said. âYes, that would be okay.'
âOh. Here.' Will stood up and held out a multi-coloured envelope. âSome more post came to me by mistake, this morning. That rookie postman still can't read, I'm afraid⦠it might be important⦠Sorry, it's a bit wet. I'd left it in my porch to remind me to give it to you.'
I took the envelope from him. His fingers were cold and slightly damp but they lingered on mine for a fleeting second. Our eyes met then I looked away. Oh, it was only a bit of junk mail. A charity thing with a free pen; I could feel it through the envelope.