(Please note: I'm British and my stories are written in British English. I write whatever comes to me and in whatever way feels right to me. Some of my stories are down and dirty, some are slightly more restrained. They are all a part of my imagination and I don't censor my muse to fit any aesthetic. You might find that you like some and hate others. That's perfectly fine. I genuinely enjoy writing all of them and hope that each will find its intended audience.)
Lillian Montague felt like screaming as she listened to Stanley Sears, a friend of her late husband Kurt, drone on endlessly, almost tearful as he told her how much he was going to miss him.
She'd arranged a lavish repast at a local hotel after the funeral and everyone who had attended it had had the decency not to come back to the house afterwards, except Stanley.
He'd insisted on seeing her and her twenty-one-year old son William home, despite the fact that her son had driven her in his car.
Stanley travelling behind them in his black Rolls Royce had been too much of a reminder of the long queue of cars that had followed the hearse with her husband's remains earlier in the day.
His friend had given no thought to the fact that she had been the one with the main responsibility of arranging her husband's funeral and therefore had to be totally exhausted now. And despite 'missing' her husband, Stanley hadn't offered to help with even the smallest task.
He'd only known Kurt for three years. Yet he was acting as though he'd lost a childhood friend.
If he thought that she was going to offer him one of the spare bedrooms for the night, he was sadly mistaken.
Although she suspected that it was probably
her
bedroom he had in mind.
Her son had initially planned to drive back to the flat he shared with his girlfriend Bridgette in Oxford once he'd driven Lillian home safely, but he'd suddenly changed his mind.
She suspected that William hadn't been comfortable with the idea that she would be left alone in the house with Stanley after the emotional upheaval she'd experienced in the last ten days.
After the repast, Stanley had attached himself to her side like a limpet as she'd said her goodbyes to relatives and friends, giving himself an unwarranted position of importance.
He'd heard her persuade her parents to go home and rest, rather than spend the night keeping her company.
And he's suddenly decided that there was no need for her son to drive her home himself and delay the start of his journey back to Oxford.
William had firmly told the older man that not only did he need to ensure that his mother got home safely, he had study materials at the house that he needed to take back with him.
But when they had arrived at the house, William had decided that he was too tired to make the journey after all and would leave in the morning.
The older man had been wrong footed by William's change of mind, but he'd clearly come up with a new game plan.
He knew that her son had a morning exam in two days' time and couldn't further delay his departure. He also knew of William's habit of sometimes leaving very early in the morning to avoid the worst of the traffic on the motorways.
Everyone today had remarked how well her son had taken the news of his father's death and how incredibly brave he was being for not putting off taking his end-of-year exams when the university would have allowed him to sit them at a later date in view of the tragic circumstances.
Her son had always been a meticulous planner, but Lillian hadn't been sure that he would be up to the task of taking three of his exams after receiving the news of his father's sudden death, attending the funeral and then going back to take the rest.
William had assured her that he'd prepared in advance sufficiently and would be just fine.
His main concern had been leaving her to make the funeral arrangements alone. Once she'd assured him that her parents would give her the support she needed, he'd agreed to concentrate on his exams.
He'd driven down last night after an exam and would have driven back immediately after he'd dropped her home.
Now because of stupid Stanley, her son had had to change his plans.
Lillian wasn't worried about repulsing any lecherous advances Stanley would make. She'd successfully fended off dozens of them when he'd come to the house on the pretext of checking to see if she was okay while Kurt was in Afghanistan.
The trouble was that she was too tired to listen to the man extol all of her husband's virtues. The laughable thing was that Kurt had thought the man a prize idiot and had only tolerated him because Stanley came from money and had connections to clubs and places that Kurt had been barred entry.
Lillian felt tired to the marrow of her bones. She'd been up before dawn every morning for the last ten daysโever since the day Kurt's commanding officer had broken the news of his death to her. Now that the funeral was over and she had nothing pressing to take care of, she'd planned to catch up on the sleep she'd missed.
She was not about to let Stanley stay the night or get up early in the morning to make him breakfast!
"I think Mum needs to rest now, Mr Sears," her son William said firmly, removing the man's jacket from the coat rail and coming to hand it to him.
"You're probably right," the older man replied, getting to his feet with clear reluctance. "It's just that I know how lonely it can feel after the death of a spouse. I had no one around me when my wife died."
"My mother has me," William reminded him, sounding so much like Kurt that Stanley did a quick double take as he took the jacket and moved towards the front door.
"Call me if you need anything," he said over his shoulder as William practically shoved him outside.
"I'll be fine," she replied, stifling a smile. "Don't worry about me, Stanley."
She would have eventually gotten rid of him, but she would have felt compelled to do so in a more refined mannerโalthough the man would probably not recognize refinement, even if it bit him on the butt.
"Thanks, my darling," she said, smiling in relief as her son came back to the large sofa where she and the man had been seated, his hands holding both of hers.
"He would have been here for another hour at least, if I hadn't shown him the door."
"Everyone but him understood my need for some peace and quiet, even your grandparents." Her parents had been concerned about her being on her own, but she'd promised that she would call them immediately if she felt the need for company. "I don't know why he thought his company was so special."
"He was probably hoping that you would offer him something to drink, so that he could claim to be over the limit and unable to drive home tonight."
"You realized that?"
Lillian laughed. Her son had always been very perceptive.
"I saw his eyes light up the minute I said that I was going to drive back to Oxford tonight."
"Darling, you didn't have to stay because of him," she replied. "I would have eventually sent him packing."
"I know," he said. "But I decided that I wanted to stay with you anyway."
"Thanks, sweetheart."
She wouldn't have been upset if William had gone back to Oxford, but she would feel better tonight knowing that he was in the house.
Her son leaned over and kissed her forehead. "Go to bed, Mum, you look exhausted."