Alas, she was the owner of no such ease. Instead, as the lecturer entered the room, she lost herself in her usual daydream, managing to make inadequate notes that she would struggle to revise from later. The story she told herself was always similar: He approached her out of the blue as she walked home to her shabby rented flat. He had noticed her too. He called her name to get her attention. He knew her name. The feeling like being winded when he reached out to touch her as he spoke, the gentle resting of his hand against her shoulder acting like a direct blow that forced the air out of her lungs. The anticipation of being kissed by him making her so heady that she must have wavered slightly on the pavement, causing him to stoop down, to look up into her face, to check she was OK. To smile. To pull her in.
Roused by the movement around her, she realised that the lecture room was beginning to empty and hastily shoved her dog-eared notepad into a bag on which the zip had long-ago given way. The sun was shining as she left the college and she decided to treat herself to half a cider before the long walk home.
At the local pub she took up residence on an empty bench in a corner of the beer garden without realising that he was there. Only when his shadow fell across the table did she turn to look. He held out a clammy hand with chewed finger nails to introduce himself and when he smiled at her surprised expression, his teeth were stained. He straddled the bench to face her as he spoke and she caught his scent of damp washing and dirty coins. He had noticed her. He knew her name. It began to drizzle and she made her excuses.
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