
Dinah was a little ashamed to admit that money was no longer a concern for her, not because she had any, but because she had grown used to having none. It had become nothing more than normal and although her middle England, middle-class upbringing meant that she always fought to pay her way she had grown accustomed to the fact that she couldn’t always do so – at least without slipping into the kind of time-scale that could accommodate the death of an entire galaxy. Being with Shaw, she had become resigned to things being the way they were, just because that was the way they were. It was the way that things went with Shaw – she always knew that something would turn up before disaster knocked. Or at least before it knocked too loudly. She billed clients for their services whenever she could: some of them paid and some of them threatened to sue, and she went through Shaw’s pockets whenever the opportunity presented itself in search of long-forgotten dog-eared cheques and any manner of tender that, in any way, could be described as legal. At times she felt as though she was single-handedly keeping their heads above water, but she had learned that there was nothing to gain from trying to make Shaw face up to reality, to confront issues of which he was blithely unaware. He was even more annoying when he tried to put things right. It was a tacit agreement: she worried about paying the bills and he worried about… well, nothing really.
To be fair, he had buckled down in some respects recently and had started to take on what Dinah referred to as ‘proper cases’: investigations requested – and paid for – by people who had found their agency on Facebook without encountering the slanderous truths expressed by some of their ex-clients, but he still had a tendency to wander off – distracted by a paradox of which only he was aware – to solve instead a conundrum that nobody else knew existed. She would have been far happier if he could have – even just once in a while – managed to solve the case he had been asked to solve by the person who was willing and able to pay them for results, but loathe that she was to admit it, she was happy – even the way things were. She wouldn’t have changed anything much… well, she probably would have changed everything other than the strange, ramshackle, absent-minded stick of a man she had somehow hitched her cart to. He maddened her and gladdened her by equal measure, and somehow, when she was at her lowest ebb, he always managed to come up with the goods. Seldom the right goods, but a girl can’t have everything…
…He wandered into the office as she was half-way through putting her coat on to leave for the evening. He was examining a stick of celery as though he had never seen one before. “I’ve been thinking,” he said.
Dinah groaned inwardly and slumped down into her chair, forgetting the caster that Shaw had assured her he would mend, pirouetting like the plastic ballet dancer in a child’s jewellery case behind the desk. This was never a good sign. Shaw’s ideas seldom took heed of consequence. She steadied herself, somewhat lopsidedly, against the desk and looked up at what the door proudly declared as her ‘parnter’. “Go on,” she said.
“Sorry?”
“You said you were thinking.”
“Yes, I was,” he affirmed proudly.
“And?”
Shaw looked at once bemused and alarmed. Nothing unusual there. Even after the time he managed to accidentally shave off both his eyebrows he still managed to look perpetually shocked. “I’m sorry, I… what do you mean ‘And?’”
“You said you were thinking,” said Dinah. Shaw nodded. “So what about?”
“About?” Dinah’s turn to nod. “Well, nothing really, I was just thinking. At least I don’t think it was about anything. I forget…” He returned his attention back to the celery. “Do you know, you use up more calories in eating celery than it contains. The more you eat, the thinner you get.”
Dinah stood and pulled it from his hand. “Then I don’t think it’s a good idea for you, is it? If you get any thinner, you’ll disappear. Why can’t you be like normal men and eat pies and chips and chocolate?”
Shaw pouted. He would have stamped his foot if his shoes had been up to it. “The woman downstairs gave me that!” he said.
“What woman downstairs?”
“She said she was looking for ‘Shaw and Parnter’, said she had a job for us.”
“And she gave you celery?”
“Not straight away.”
“After you accepted the case I hope.”
Shaw had the good grace to look decidedly sheepish. “I told her we’d think about it.”
“Well,” said Dinah, “We’ve thought about it. We’ll accept it… What is it?”
“I’ve no idea. She never said.”
“So how were we going to think about it?”
“Good point,” conceded Shaw. “Could we ring and ask her?”
“Yes!” Dinah clutched her phone. “What’s the number?”
“Ah.”
“You did get the number, didn’t you Shaw?”
“What sort of a question is that to ask of a fully grown businessman?”
“You didn’t get the number, did you?”
Shaw shook his head apologetically. “I got distracted by the celery,” he said. “She had bags full of it.”
“Why would you have bags full of celery?”
“That’s what I asked her.”
“And?”
“She didn’t say. I expect she was going to make soup. I expect she havered when Raj asked her what she wanted. You know what it’s like if you go into Raj’s without knowing exactly what you want.”
“She got the celery from Raj?”
Shaw nodded. “I expect she went in for an onion…”
Dinah rushed towards the door, grabbing her coat from the chair which, exhausted with its attempts to remain upright, collapsed and died on the office floor. “Come on,” she shouted. “Quickly!”
Shaw looked over his shoulder as if expecting to find that Dinah was actually addressing somebody behind him. “Me?” he asked as Dinah fled for the stairs.
“Is there anybody else?”
Shaw thought it wise to check one last time, but he was definitely alone, so reluctantly he started to follow Dinah out into the street. This was the trouble with Dinah, he thought, all action and no time to fully think things through. “Where are we going anyway?” he asked, when he eventually caught her, using up what little remained of his breath following his ten yard sprint.
“Raj’s,” she said. “He’ll know who she is. He’ll know how to get in touch with her. We need this case Shaw – whatever it is. We need to pay the rent , we need to pay the electricity and you need to eat something that doesn’t actually make you thinner that you already are.”
“But…” he ventured as Dinah tumbled through the jangling greengrocer’s door ahead of him.
“The lady with the celery? Oh yes, I remember her quite clearly,” said Raj. “Unusual for somebody to buy so much of it. Do you know, it uses up more calories eating celery than it contains?”
“Yes. My learned friend here as explained that to me. Now Raj, think carefully, who is she and where does she live?”
“Not a clue,” said Raj. “Never seen her before. She came in here looking for you, so I told her that kind of information doesn’t come for free.”
“You made her buy celery?”
“I did her a deal. To be honest, it was wilting a bit… Didn’t she come to you?”
“She did, but my gangly partner here managed to let her get away.”
“Ah.” Raj looked genuinely concerned for the about-to-be-tearful Dinah. “Here,” he said handing her a banana that looked like it had gone twelve rounds with Tyson Fury. “On the house.”
Speechlessly she took the banana and left the shop with a forlorn Shaw trailing behind her. “You’re not going to cry, are you?” he asked.
“No Shaw, I am not going to cry. I refuse to cry. I am going to go home and drink cheap wine. I would buy a kebab if I had any money.”
“Ah,” said Shaw. “Is that the problem? Here.” He passed Dinah a roll of cash which he pulled from the inner depths of his threadbare greatcoat.
“What’s this?” she asked.
“Oh, has all my training been in vain…” he said before catching a faint flash of barely submerged anger in Dinah’s eyes. “It’s money,” he said, seeking protection in the blandly truthful.
“How much?”
“Not a clue,” said Shaw who had quickly passed his humdrum concerns threshold.
“Well, where’s it from?” asked Dinah, already unrolling and counting the polymer bundle.
“The celery lady. She called it ‘a retainer’. She said she would be in tomorrow to discuss the case…”
“Why didn’t you say before we went to Raj’s?” asked Dinah taking Shaw by the hand and simultaneously tucking the cash down into the very darkest recesses of the carrier bag that was as close as she came to a handbag these days.
“Well I… I don’t know,” he said. Things just…” He thrust his hands deep into his pockets and followed Dinah up the stairs to the unlocked office. ‘Some people,’ he thought, ‘are never happy.’
Dinah turned to him, the barest hint of hopelessness in her face. “You will try to concentrate on the case won’t you Shaw?” she asked.
“Of course,” he said.
“Promise?”
“Promise.”
“Good,” she said. “You know we need this.”
“Yes, I understand,” he said.
Tension swept out of Dinah’s body. She felt suddenly serene. She was a jellyfish.
“There’s just one question,” said Shaw, and bones crashed back into Dinah’s frame as she prepared for the ceiling to fall in on them.
“Can I have my celery back now?…”







