The snow was crackling under his feet, breaking the silence around him. He had forgotten to take gloves and the cold was intense, forcing him to rub his hands one against the other in an attempt to keep a little warmth. The policeman had always loved winter but tonight he would have given anything for not being out in this weather.
He had been walking for nearly half and hour when he noticed a coffee shop still opened. The windows were covered in mist and a discreet smell of coffee was floating around. He dived his hand in his pocket, looking for some change and entered the place.
A young, Caribbean man was standing behind the counter, looking up at the news broadcast on the television. He turned his head to the new-comer and cast him a brilliant smile. Doing the night shift was usually boring, but he always tried to do his job the best he could. Those who would come in the shop in the middle of the night were usually desperate and, at this time of the year, frozen so the waiter considered it his task to bring them a little warmth and comfort, even just for a minute.
"What can I get you sir ?" the young man wondered.
"Anything burning hot." the detective tried to smile despite his gloominess.
"An americano maybe ?" the waiter suggested, pointing toward one of his coffee pot.
The policeman nodded before handing the younger man a five pounds note.
"Take a seat, I'll bring it to you in a minute." the Caribbean winked before collecting the money.The only other customer in the house was a youngish woman sat near the window, apparently lost in her thoughts. Greg sat on the opposite table, absent-mindedly glancing at the news. Nothing had change in the world apparently. The bad guys were still running the states and the climate was still being wrecked. The world was still the same and it was making the detective so angry. He wanted to scream to everyone that nothing was going to be like ever before. He wanted to squall his pain and angriness. He wanted to punch the show anchor until they stopped smiling fatuously and acknowledge that everything was doomed to change, but he did none of that. Instead, he felt the first tears rolling on his cheeks. Gregory Lestrade was not one to cry easily but as he was brought his coffee he just couldn't stop the tears from rolling out.
"May I bring you a tissue ?" the waiter gently asked, not willing to feel intrusive.
The policeman nodded slightly, grateful for the young man's attention. At least, someone out there acknowledged his pain and wasn't pretending that everything was going all right.
"Here." the Caribbean shyly smiled as he handled him a box of tissues.
"What is your name ?" the detective asked between two tears.
"Jessy sir." the waiter answered.
"You are a good man Jessy." Greg thanked him as he dried his eyes. "It's a shame that you have to work at night with nutters like me."
"I won't do that my all life, don't worry sir." the young man smiled. "I have great dreams and one day I will have the money to pursue them. And like it here, you meet all kind of people, get to be a little part of their night or of their life, it's rewarding."
The policeman was to add something when Jessy's phone started rigging, and he excused himself before retreating to the back of the shop to answer, leaving his customers alone in the room, the silent now only broken by the muffled sound of the night news.
Greg took a sip of his burning beverage, starting to feel the warmth coming back to his fingers as he clutched the cup with his two hands. He was still feeling sad as a stone and hopeless but refused to think of the future. All what mattered at that moment was that he was safe and sound in this coffee and the snow and cold was already long gone. The shop would be his stronghold, even if just for a second and it was all he needed to care about.
As he was lost in his thoughts, he suddenly felt a touch on his left arm and nearly jumped out of surprise. Slightly panicked, he emerged of his dreaming and turned his head to where the touch came from. The young woman he had seen sat on the opposite table was now standing beside him, looking rather contrite to have scared him.
"Sorry for disturbing you." she quickly apologises, biting her lower lip in discomfort. "I just couldn't help but notice that you seemed sad and well, I ... I don't really like seeing someone sad without asking them if I can help them out. I know it's not my business and Mum always tells me that I should mind my own business instead but well, I just can't repress myself you see ..."
Her explanation were pretty confusing but Greg could feel that she had nothing but good intentions. Smiling through the unsound tears still running on his cheeks, he invited her to join him at the table. They stayed silent for a little while, both feeling quite awkward and the detective took advantage of the situation to try to deduce a few things about the stranger.
She looked young, maybe in her mid-twenties with long, auburn hair attached in a pony tail. If it wasn't for her presence, alone and pensive, in a coffee at nearly two in the morning, Greg could have easily mistaken her for a student. She wasn't wearing any makeup or jewellery but still had that very feminine and motherly feeling about her which gave her that truthfulness feeling.
"You don't look like someone who is usually out late at night." the woman finally remarked in a soft, warm voice.
"I don't have the opportunity to go anywhere by myself usually." Greg admitted with a sad smile.
"But today you can." the stranger completed. "That's make two of us."
"What brought you here ?" the detective questioned, glad to divert the attention from his misery.
"Insomnia. You are going to tell me that coffee isn't the best cure to insomnia but this was the closest place open at night and I really didn't want to stay alone in my flat." she explained, somewhat ashamed, like a little girl caught in the act.
"What are you afraid of, if I may ?" the policeman wondered, genuinely curious about what could push a young woman to run away from her flat in the middle of a December night.
"I see brackish things every day but sometime, when they are especially horrible, I suppose they come back at night to haunt me." the woman clarified. "I'm an assistant pathologist you see. What about you ?"
"It was too cold outside to keep walking." Greg shredded, trying to seem braver than he was.
"Where were you going in the night ?" the pathologist questioned convinced that the man before here wasn't usually a night walker.
"Anywhere." the detective admitted, sheepishly. "I'm waiting for a new day to start and then God only knows what."
"What happened ?" the young woman sympathized, feeling the distress of the policeman.
"She threw me out for someone else." the man muttered out of anger. "She threw me out with nowhere to go in the middle of the night. But she was everything to me. The children were everything to me ..."
"You have children ?" the pathologist asked, not finding anything else to say. She was tempted to pat the hand that the detective had left on the table, but she wasn't sure he would like that.
"Three, the last one is just a baby..." the detective nodded, sadder than ever. "He need his father, they all need their father ...."
They stayed silent for long minutes, looking at the snow falling by the windows, before the pathologist suddenly proposed : "Would you like to rest at my place ? I have a spare bed for you to use if you want."
"Why would you do that ? You don't even know my name ..." the policeman remarked, surprised.
"You seem like a good man left in an unfair situation and with nowhere to go if this coffee. That's enough for me." the woman retorted, smiling shyly.
"I'm Greg." the man nodded.
"Molly." the pathologist smiled wider before leading him outside.
He had no idea why he had accepted to follow and tell his misery to a complete stranger, but he felt nice and warm around her and that was enough for the night to go by. What was he going to do the next evening, e had no idea but at least, he would make it to the morning, and he supposed that when you were in his situation, that was already something to take.
Molly also had no idea why she had invited the stranger to her place. She had always been quite a careful woman and it wasn't usual to her to invite anyone but good friends to her place, but she had felt that the man was desperate for care and that she had a duty to save him. She always had wanted to save people, ever since she was a child, and it had been the main reason for her to enrol into the medicine faculty after she had graduated from high-school. Her mother used to say that she had a heart big enough for two and, even if she had always been quite unsuccessful with the boys, she believed that this little extra-care for the others was what made her useful to this world.Greg couldn't help but to remember this story every time he would walk by the San Marino coffee shop on Shoreditch high-street. After all these years he still had no idea what Molly had seen in him that led her to be so kind and caring, but he was forever grateful that she hadn't turned a blind eye.
Even in his darkest days, he always forced himself to remember all what she had done for him and that he has no right to destroy all what she had built.
The pathologist had sheltered him on that night and the night became weeks which in turn became months. They had grown closer and closer and one day the policeman had finally felt strong enough to move out and start his life again. She had helped him find a flat and moving in. She had been there when he had been called to court for the divorce. She had been there when he had to say goodbye to his children after an always to short visit. She had been there in every important moment since that day and Greg had tried his best to be here at hers.
Somehow, they had found a brother and a sister in each other, a soulmate, someone who wouldn't judge you whenever you were being stupid but who was able to row at you when needed. She had helped him rebuilt his life, and he had tried his best to make hers easier and happier.
Through the windows, he waved to the not-that-young anymore Caribbean man behind the counter before turning on the corner, being expected somewhere else.
YOU ARE READING
I am not lonely [Mystrade]
FanfictionMycroft Holmes is apparently a very happy man. He have an important job, a stable relationship with a Scotland Yard officer since a couple of years and a -slightly annoying- little brother to take care of. But what if he was missing something ? What...