Saturday, 4th February
Im still smiling at how the day turned out but let me start from the beginning.
Are you honestly going to spend your entire Saturday sorting out the junk in your garage? The whole Saturday? Sophie raised an eyebrow at Max, the tall ginger bloke slouched across from her, a chunk of lemon drizzle cake perched on her fork.
Max leaned back in the battered armchair, wrapping his hands around his cappuccino, steam already fading.
Sophie its not junk its treasure from my childhood! Somewhere in there is my collection of Football Crazy stickers, you know. Imagine what riches await!
Oh, spare me. Youve kept stickers? Since when?
She snorted, barely swallowing her laughter. This cafe with its worn-out aubergine sofas and perpetually misty windows had become their unofficial stomping ground. The waitress, Claire, didnt ask for their order anymore. Shed simply bring over Maxs cappuccino, Sophies latte and whatever cake was on special a ritual polished by fifteen years of friendship.
Alright, confession time. Max raised his mug in mock salute. The garage can wait. And so can the treasures. Sam invited us over for a barbeque on Sunday, by the way.
I know. He spent three hours yesterday looking up new BBQs online. Three hours. Honestly, I thought Id die of boredom.
Their laughter blended into the gentle clatter of the coffee machine and hushed conversations around them.
There was never any awkwardness or lingering silences they knew each others stories like lines on their own palms. Sophie remembered how Max, a skinny year eight with shoelaces perpetually undone, was the first to talk to her in her new class. Max remembered she was the only one who didnt laugh at his thick-rimmed specs.
Sam, Sophies husband, had accepted this friendship from day one. Hed always watched the two with that rare, calm confidence you get from knowing exactly what and who you care for. On Friday board game nights, while Monopoly and Uno got fiercely competitive, Sam always laughed the loudest when Max lost once again at Scrabble, topping up mugs of tea while those two bickered about the rules to Charades.
He cheats, thats why he keeps winning, Sophie once declared, tossing playing cards in her husbands direction.
Its called strategy, darling, Sam replied, poker-faced, gathering the scattered cards.
Max would watch them, a wry smile tugging at his lips. He genuinely liked Sam solid and dependable, humour so dry it took you a second to notice it was a joke at all. Sophie was softer, happier, when Sam was around, and Max felt content for her in that unselfconscious way only true friends do.
It all changed the day Emily turned up.
Emily Sams younger sister arrived on their doorstep a month ago, eyes red and determined to start again. Her divorce had wrung her dry, leaving an ache where routine and order used to be.
That first night, as Max dropped by for the usual board games, Emily glanced up from her phone and fixed him with a look. Something clicked as if a long-forgotten switch flipped. Here was a man gentle, steady, smiling in a way that made you want to smile as well.
This is Max, my old school friend, said Sophie. And this is Emily, Sams sister.
Lovely to meet you, Max said, offering his hand.
Emily lingered on the handshake for a second longer than strictly necessary.
The pleasures mine.
From that moment, Emily showed up everywhere always at the cafe when Max and Sophie were there, always appearing with biscuits when Max dropped round, always sitting so close during games that their arms inevitably brushed.
Could you pass me that card? shed ask, leaning over, hair brushing his neck as if by accident. Oops. Sorry.
Max would politely edge away, muttering something apologetic. Sophie would exchange helpless glances with Sam but Sam only shrugged. Emily was always a little much.
The flirting grew less subtle. Emilys eyes lingered, she found excuses to pay compliments, to touch his hand, to laugh at his jokes until Sophies ears rang.
Youve got such elegant hands. Pianist? she once asked, holding his hand above the pile of counters.
Er software designer, he managed.
Still lovely hands, she said.
Max carefully pulled his hand back, burying himself in his cards, ears glowing red.
After the third coffee invite just to chat, as friends, Max gave in. Emily was bright, open, very alive. Maybe, he thought, if they tried dating, things would calm down the staring, the tension and life could get back to normal.
For the first few weeks, it actually worked. Emily was radiant, relaxingly happy; Max found himself at ease. Board game evenings went back to being simply that.
But then Emily noticed what shed rather not: the way Max lit up whenever Sophie walked in. The change in his face, the easy back-and-forth, the way they bounced off each others jokes. There was something there a closeness she couldnt touch.
Jealousy put down roots.
Why are you always with her? Emily stood, arms folded, blocking Max in the hallway.
Because shes my friend. Fifteen years, Emily. Thats
Im your girlfriend! Me! Not her!
Arguments followed avalanche after avalanche. Emily weeping, accusing, demanding. Max placating, explaining, promising.
You think of her more than me!
Thats not true, Emily. Were just friends.
Just friends dont look at each other like that!
When Max was with Sophie, his phone would ring constantly.
Where are you? When are you home? Are you with her again?
He started muting it, but she caught on, turning up at the cafe, at the park, outside Sophies house wild-eyed, overwhelmed, trembling with outrage.
Emily, please, Max massaged his temples. This isnt okay.
Whats not okay is you spending more time with someone elses wife than with me!
Sophie was exhausted, too. Every meet-up with Max felt like a minefield. They never knew when Emily would arrive, what accusation shed throw, what scene shed create.
Maybe I should see you less Sophie ventured.
Absolutely not, Max cut her off. Youre not rearranging your life because shes cross. None of us should.
But Emily had made up her mind. If she couldnt win honestly, shed try another way.
Sam was sitting in the kitchen when Emily swept in.
Sammy… I have to tell you something. I wish I didnt, but you deserve the truth.
Bit by bit, sobbing at the perfect moments, she spun her story. Secret meetings. Oddly intimate glances. The way Max would hold Sophies hand when no one was watching.
Sam listened in silence, face unreadable.
When Sophie and Max came in an hour later, the air in the living room was thick like treacle. Sam was sprawled in an armchair, expression expectant.
Sit down, he nodded at the sofa. My sisters just shared a rather dramatic tale of your secret love affair.
Sophies step wavered. Maxs jaw tensed.
What on earth
She claims shes seen some rather compromising things.
Emily hunched down, eyes fixed on the floor.
Max turned to her so sharply that she recoiled.
Enough, Emily. Ive had all I can stand.
His face was chalk-white with fury. Calm, patient Max was gone, replaced by someone done with being pushed.
Were finished. Right now.
You cant
This time, the tears were real.
Its her, isnt it! Emily jabbed a finger at Sophie. Its always her! You always pick her!
Sophie let the silence sit, letting Emily spit out her venom.
You know, Emily, she said at last, if you hadnt tried to control every second of his life and picked fights over nothing, none of this would have happened. You destroyed what you were fighting so hard to keep.
Emily snatched up her bag and slammed the door behind her.
At that, Sam burst out laughing right from his gut, head thrown back into the chair.
Thank God for that, he grinned, pulling Sophie into a side hug.
You didnt believe her, did you? she asked, burying her face in his shirt.
Not for a heartbeat. Ive watched you two for years youre like bickering siblings arguing over the last biscuit.
Max sighed shakily, the tension finally giving way.
Sorry for dragging you into all this.
Nonsense. Emilys an adult her choices are hers. Now, shall we eat? The lasagnes not getting any warmer, and Im not reheating it for anyones melodrama.
Sophie laughed, softly, from deep relief. Her family was intact. Her friendship with Max had weathered the storm. Once again, her husband proved his trust was unshakeable.
They gathered in the kitchen, beneath the golden glow of evening bulbs, the smell of lasagne filling the air. The world felt familiar again, as though nothing had ever threatened to tear it apart.












