‘Fabulous,’ agreed Bev. ‘Though I hope there’s a nice pub or takeaway nearby. You’re not out hiking all weekend with packed lunches in backpacks, are you?’ Dan was well known for his love of outdoor pursuits.
‘Hah, well there will definitely be some hiking involved, but I have checked out the local village online and it has a Chinese takeaway and a good pub by the looks of it.’
‘Good girl.’ Bev smiled.
Their glasses were nearly empty.
‘Right then.’ Emma stood up. ‘I’ll go in and fetch the next round of drinks. Same again, girls?’
‘Ooh, yes. Thanks, Em.’
She entered the back door of the pub from the beer garden. It took a few seconds for her eyes to adjust with it being so much darker inside. It was fairly busy in there. Sounds of chatter filling the air with people making the most of a pleasant spring evening, and holidaymakers out for their supper and enjoying the atmosphere of a traditional English pub. The Fisherman’s Arms had been here at the harbourside for centuries, heard and seen the tales of the local fisherfolk, witnessed hard times, and good times.
There was a guy at the bar and Emma stopped in her tracks. She felt goose bumps all over her body. Luke! Memories flooded her mind. That same dark-blond hair, something about the curve of the back of his neck. The clothes were a bit more casual than he might have worn but … yes, Luke. Oh my God. She felt giddy, strange. Dropped her purse, as her hands began to tremble, bent down to see where it had fallen. Damn, it had gone right under a chair at someone’s table.
‘Sorry,’ she apologised to the couple sitting there, as she fumbled for it on the floor.
When she stood back up, she looked towards the bar again. He’d gone.
She scanned the room. No sign. It was as if he’d never been there. Was she hallucinating? Was it just wishful thinking? But for a split second it felt like Luke was really there. It was probably just some tourist who looked a bit like him. But blimey, it was like seeing a ghost.
There was a part of her that wanted to run out, check if he really was there, if he might be walking around the village right now. But she knew that was just plain crazy. She had seen Luke laid out, kissed his cold, scarred forehead on that mortuary slab. It was a doppelganger tourist at best, and a figment of her imagination at worst. She must have been working harder than she’d thought – she was overtired or something.
Emma headed for the bar, still feeling a prickly sensation just heading to the space where he had been. But yes, all was okay, she told herself, she needed to just chill out with a half pint of cider and her friends.
‘Hi Danny, can I have a G&T, a half of Fosters and a cider, please.’
‘You certainly can.’ He stopped for a second and looked at her. ‘You okay, Em? You look like you’ve …’
Seen a ghost, Em finished in her mind.
‘Well, you look a bit pale,’ he continued.
‘Yeah, I’m fine, Danny. You?’ she asked, neatly deflecting the question.
‘Great. The good news is that the pub’s up for an award – best coastal pub in the North East. We’re on the shortlist.’
‘Cool. Well done. You deserve it. It’s lovely here. Fingers crossed for you.’
‘Cheers.’ Danny busied himself getting their drinks ready.
Em scanned the bar area and tables. No one at all that looked like Luke. She must have been having a ‘moment’.
The landlord Dave appeared next to Danny. ‘Evening, Em.’
‘Hello. Well done on the short-listing for the award, by the way, that’s great news. Well, so far so good, anyhow.’
‘Yeah, it’s fantastic, isn’t it.’
‘You’ll be putting Warkton-by-the-Sea on the map.’
‘Hopefully.’
And hopefully people would find a gorgeous chocolate shop while they were there too! Emma mused. She was genuinely pleased for the pub. It was great that local businesses were doing well and it was such a nice place to come and chill out; log fires in the winter and the pretty beer garden overlooking the harbour in summer. Fish and chips and their scrummy crab sandwiches, no wonder it was popular there. In fact, ‘Danny, can I put in an order for two lots of crab sandwiches and a large bowl of chips too, please.’ She hadn’t had any supper as yet, and just the thought of them with freshly made, crispy chips was making her tummy rumble.
‘I’m on to it.’ He jotted the order down on his pad and handed it to the waitress to take to the kitchen for him.
‘Thanks.’
Emma paid, then made her way back out with their drinks. She couldn’t resist a scan of the harbourside and the pavement that led away from the pub but there was no one there who looked the least bit like Luke. Of course there wasn’t …
She placed the drinks before her friends at the picnic bench. ‘There you go, ladies.’
‘Cheers, Em.’
‘Thanks.’
She wouldn’t even mention the incident in the bar or her ‘sighting’ for fear of sounding slightly loopy. Instead, she needed to relax and make the most of a chilled-out evening. Still, it had left her with an odd prickly feeling at the back of her neck.
‘Oh, bloody hell, guess who’s sliming his way across the street?’ Holly was pulling a face.
Emma looked up from the counter to see her landlord, Mr Neil, outside. Her blood went cold. It was never good news when he turned up out of the blue. She tried to stay calm and smile as he entered the door, managing a polite ‘Hello.’
‘Good morning, Emma. How’s business?’
It always seemed to be a bit of a leading question from him.
‘Fine,’ she answered, keeping her reply purposefully vague. If she sounded too positive, he might decide to put up the rent again. Who knew what schemes were going on in that greasy little head of his? ‘Would you like a coffee?’ Better keep him sweet. This place was her life and soul, and he held her future in his hands.
‘Yes, thank you, I will.’
‘I’ll make it,’ Holly offered. Em thought she might just be looking for a way to escape the room. The guy certainly had a knack of sucking the air of the place. Or maybe her young assistant was thinking of putting salt in it or something. Em gave her a stern glance just in case she had any such antics in mind. It wouldn’t do to annoy him.
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