When Laurel gets to the office she finds sheโs the only one not wearing a Christmas jumper.
โWas there a memo?โ she asks Helen.
โYes,โ says Helen, who is wearing a jumper with flashing fairy lights somehow built into it and has red baubles hanging from her earrings. โLast week. It should be in your inbox.โ
Laurel sighs. Sheโs sure it was. Sheโs sure she must have read it. And then edited it out somewhere in the tangles of her life.
โHere.โ Helen throws her a piece of tinsel. โPut this in your hair.โ Laurel twists the tinsel into her hair and smiles. โThank you.โ
There are carolers in the shopping center today; she can hear them from her desk. Theyโre singing โGood King Wenceslas.โ The management have invested in a job lot of mince pies from Waitrose and at 5 p.m. thereโll be Secret Santa and sherry.
She canโt wait to get home.
She goes into Waitrose on her way to her car that night, buys two bottles of champagne, two scented candles, and two boxes of chocolates. Sheโll work out what to give to whom tonight when sheโs wrapping them.
Everywhere she goes that day she hears Blueโs words of doom echoing portentously around her head. When sheโd been talking to Blue this morning sheโd fully believed all sheโd said. Yes, sheโd thought, yes, this all makes perfect sense. Of course Floyd has a dark aspect. Of course heโs pretending to be someone heโs not.
But as the hours pass and Floyd sends her silly, festive text messages adorned with Santa Claus emojis and bunches of holly, as the carolersโ repertoire sinks into her psyche and the sherry softens the edges of her consciousness, her fingers push the blades of the scissors back and forth through the shiny paper on
her living-room floor, and the lights of the neighborsโ Christmas trees flash their reflections on to her windows, it starts to seem bizarre and dreadful.
What a strange girl Blue is, she thinks to herself, turning off her lights, slipping off her clothes, untwirling the tinsel from her hair. What a very strange girl indeed.