This is the twenty-second part of a fiction serial, in 800 words.
Colin was far from impressed with Thailand so far. It was too humid, and when it wasn’t just humid it was raining cats and dogs and humid. The hotel was pretty good, but then considering how much he had paid for the introduction trip, it should be. Bangkok was bloody noisy, and it seemed to him that nobody ever went to sleep.
The representative from the agency was a woman in her fifties who had met him in the hotel lobby the morning after he arrived. She spoke good English but her accent was so strong he had to keep asking her to repeat herself. She told him she would be back after lunch to take him to meet the first lady he had expressed a liking for, but she warned him to be respectful to her, and not to make suggestive remarks of any kind.
“Her family will be there to chaperone, Mr Richardson, and you will have two hours to talk to her and to see if you like each other”.
He couldn’t see the point of whether or not she liked him. As far as he was concerned, she should be snatching his hand off to be invited to live in England in a nice house and with a very presentable man who had a good job. But he didn’t tell the agent that of course.
At least the car taking them was air-conditioned, so he wouldn’t look like a wet dishcloth when they arrived. The agent took him to the door of a decent house inside a walled compound decorated with exotic plants and flowers.
“I will come back and collect you in two hours. Then you can tell me what you think of her. After that, I will telephone her and see what she has to say. She is well-educated and speaks good English, enough to get by. But her mother and sister do not”.
An old woman with a bent back answered the door. She had an incredibly wrinkled face and gave him a smile that showed most of her teeth were missing, She did a little bow and waved him inside. A chubby woman in her forties sat on a cane chair and didn’t get up when he walked into the room. She waved at some fruit and cold drinks on a low table. “Please. You drink, eat”. He guessed she must be the sister.
Declining the food, he sat on a wickerwork sofa opposite her and picked up a glass of fruit juice. Five minutes later, his choice arrived. Fah was supposedly thirty-six and single, but she looked younger, and very pretty in some kind of traditional dress. He stood up when she came into the room.
“Mr Colin, it is my pleasure to meet you, I am Fah. Please sit again, please don’t worry about my mother and sister, they are only here to observe the propriety”. He liked her immediately, and was impressed by how well she spoke Englsh. Certainly better than the agent he had been dealing with.
But before he could say what he had planned to say, a boy came into the room and bowed respectfully at him. Fah smiled. “My son. He is nine. He wanted to meet you too, in case you decide to become his new daddy”.
Colin put his head in his hands. What part of ‘No children’ did they not understand? He stood up, keeping his temper.
“Sorry, but I specifically stated no children, so this is unacceptable. It was nice to meet you, but I will be leaving now”. He had to spend almost ninety minutes on the corner of the street waiting for the agent to come back. So he went through what he was going to say to her when she showed up.
Lee and Kerry were up early to finalise the arrangements for the party later that day. Dean’s girlfriend Stacey was coming to help, but Dean was still in bed, fast asleep. Kerry wasn’t bothered about that, as he would only be wanting breakfast, and a shirt ironed, and she had too much to do to run around after him this morning. For one thing, she was going to clean the house throuroughly. She didn’t want any of the neighbours looking down their noses at her.
Jenny hit the shops in town as soon as they opened. She wanted to buy a new one-piece swimsuit. Alan had said he wasn’t going in the hot tub, but she was determined she would try it later. The bikini she had worn on their last holiday abroad showed a bit too much for comfort though.
Not so bad on a Greek beach that you would never go to again, but definitely too much for neighbours you would see all the time.










