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‘Need a lift?’

‘No thanks. I’ll catch one up with Fred.’

‘Good man,’ Maeve boomed. ‘The usual okay for breakfast?’

Alfred has a ‘usual’ at Maeve’s place?Annie thought to herself.

‘You still got that extra thick bacon?’ asked Alfred.

‘Absolutely. Can’t do without it.’

Alfred nodded approvingly and said no more; the deal, it seemed, was struck.

‘Mind if I help myself to another soup?’ Maeve had turned her attention back to Annie. ‘No, no. Don’t get up, I can do it. I’ll pop the cash straight into the till.’

As expected, the cafe filled back up the moment the last firework had fizzled down into the sea. Even with the prep Annie had put in earlier, there was no way she could keep up with taking orders and serving.

‘Maeve, you couldn’t jump on the till for half an hour, could you?’ Annie called.

‘Not tonight, I’m afraid. Didn’t bring my glasses with me this evening. Blind as a bat up close.’

‘I’m driving her home tonight,’ said Gemma, as though to put Annie’s mind at rest. ‘Why don’t I help you?’

‘If you don’t mind, that would be great,’ said Annie.

Gemma, it turned out, was a natural. Her friendly disposition made her an excellent calmer of out-of-towners who might otherwise have huffed and puffed about the wait. Annie mused that if she were still at The Pomegranate Seed, Gemma would be just the sort of person she would hire for front of house. She picked up how to use the till almost at once and could remember who ordered what without any problems at all. Annie was in no position to be paying someone to help her out but equally, she would lose customers if the service was bad; word of mouth could make or break a small business, as she well knew. Before she could talk herself out of it, she said, ‘Gemma, if I were to take someone on part-time, would you be interested? School hours only, of course, so you could drop off and pick up the kids...’

Gemma’s eyes instantly welled with tears and she threw her arms around Annie, almost knocking the milk jug clean out of her hands.

‘I’d love to! Just say the word.’

‘It won’t be much,’that’s for damn sure, ‘but I’ll make sure your hourly rate is above the minimum wage...’

‘Fine, fine, fine.’ Gemma was waving her arms about. ‘Just let me know when I can start.’

‘Brian won’t mind?’ Annie asked. The couple had, after all, agreed that Gemma should be a full-time mum.

‘He won’t mind at all and if he does, it won’t make any difference.’ She looked at Annie, her eyes big and intense. ‘I need this,’ she said with barely controlled desperation. ‘I need a job.’

‘Then it’s yours,’ said Annie. ‘Give me a few days to sort out the finances...’Sell my body, she thought,sell a kidney, maybe two.

‘Honestly,’ Gemma broke in. ‘Whenever you’re ready. Just say the word.’

And just like that, Annie had staff.

Later, when everyone had left and Annie was clearing down, Paul and John came blustering in, bringing the cold with them, blowing on their hands and still laughing at a joke which had begun before they’d arrived. They smiled as they greeted her, and Annie felt strangely self-conscious under their joint attentions, as though she were a scarlet woman sandwich. Memories of her disappointing fumblings with Paul made her cheeks hot. She reminded herself that she was a grown-up and could have sex with every eligible bachelor who passed her door if she so wished. But it didn’t diminish the awkwardness she felt. She wasn’t sure what worried her more: the possibility that Paul would tell John that they had shared a night of passion, or that he might divulge that it had been rather a damp squib. Annie realised that it was very important to her that John think she was good in the sack.

‘What can I do you for?’ Annie asked. ‘Great fireworks by the way.’

The pair looked pleased.

‘I was wondering if you had any soup left I could take away?’ asked Paul.

‘Sure,’ said Annie. ‘It’s the least I can offer you after such a fabulous firework display. You can eat it here if you like? As long as you don’t mind me cleaning down around you.’

‘Thanks, but I’ll take it to go if it’s all the same. I’ve got an early start, got to talk to a man about a fish,’ he said.

Annie looked at him quizzically.