black and white. Iâve learned to read the language of the courtroom, predict the lulls and the flurries of action, interpret the Masonic whispers between counsel. Iâve built up a rapport with certain barristers, got expert at reading the faces of juries and quick at slipping out before any angry members of the public gallery can follow me and tell me they donât want a story putting in the bloody paper.
As I swill the remains of the foul coffee, bin the cup and head towards Court 1, I hear a timid female voice behind me.
âExcuse me? Are you Rachel Woodford?â
I turn to see a small girl with a halo of straw-coloured, frizzy hair, a slightly beaky nose and an anxious expression. In school uniform she could pass for twelve.
âIâm the new reporter whoâs shadowing you today,â she says.
âAh, right.â I rack my brains for her name, recall a conversation about her with news desk which now seems a geological era ago.
âZoe Clarke,â she supplies.
âZoe, of course, sorry, Iâm a bit brain-fugged this morning. Iâm doing the murder trial today, want to join?â
âYes, thanks!â She smiles as sunnily as if I had offered her a walking weekend in the Lakes.
âLetâs go and watch people in wigs argue with each other then,â I say. I point at the retreating Gretton. âAnd beware the sweaty man who comes in friendship and leaves with your story.â
Zoe laughs. Sheâll learn.
5
At lunchtime, I open my laptop in the press room â a fancy title for a nicotine-stained windowless cell in the bowels of Crown Court, decorated with a wood veneer desk, a few chairs and a dented filing cabinet â and check my email. A message arrives from Mindy.
â
Can you talk?
â
I type â
Yes
â and hit send.
Mindy doesnât like to email when she can talk, because she loves to talk, and sheâs a phonetic speller. She used to put âVwalah!â in messages to myself and Caroline, which we assumed was a Hindu word, until under questioning it became clear she meant âVoilà â.
My phone starts buzzing.
âHi, Mind,â I say, getting up and walking outside the press room door.
âDo you have a flat yet?â
âNo,â I sigh. âKeep looking on Rightmove and hoping the prices will magically plummet in a sudden property crash.â
âYou want city centre, right? Donât mind renting?â
Rhys is buying me out of the house. I decided to use the money for a flat. Originally a city centre flat from which to enjoy single-woman cosmopolitan living, but the prices were a wake-up call. Mindy thinks I should rent for six months, get my bearings. Caroline thinks renting is dead money. Ivor says I can have his spare room and then he has a reason to finally kick out his flaky, noisy lodger Katya. As Mindy says, he could do that anyway if he âfound his cojonesâ.
âYeees â¦?â I say, warily. Mindy has a way of taking a sensible premise and expanding it into something entirely mental.
âCall off the search. A buyer I work with is stinking rich and sheâs off to Bombay for six months. Sheâs got a place in the Northern Quarter. I think itâs a converted cotton mill or something, and apparently itâs uh-may-zing. She wants a reliable flat-sitter and I said you were the most reliable person in the world and she said in that case sheâll do you a deal.â
âErm â¦â
Mindy quotes a monthly figure which is a fair amount of money. Itâs not an unfeasible amount, and certainly not a lot for the kind of place I think sheâs talking about. But: Mindyâs encroaching madness. Itâll probably come with an incontinent Maltipoo called Colonel Gad-Faffy who will only eat sushi-grade bluefin and has to be walked four times a day.
âDo you want to come and see it with me, after work?â Mindy continues. âShe flies