The Little Teashop in Tokyo. Julie Caplin
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Digging her hand into her pocket, her fingers rubbed over the smooth ivory of the netsuke, the little carved figure that would once have been worn as part of traditional Japanese dress. The little rabbit carving travelled everywhere with her, the only thing she had from her father who died when she was a baby. It had inspired a vague, loose interest in Japan, so that when the competition had been announced, even without the prompting of her bossy friend Avril, she’d been tempted to enter. Avril had pushed temptation into action.
And now here she was for two weeks. Two weeks of experiencing everything Japan had to offer, including a mentoring programme with one of the best photographers in the world, Yutaka Araki. She’d worked hard on her application form and whether she believed it or not, she deserved to be here.
Her fingers itched to retrieve the carefully folded white piece of paper in her bag, for the reassurance of reading it just once more. Stop, she told herself, you know it quite clearly says that you’ll be met at Haneda International Airport. Someone with one of those neat little whiteboards bearing your name will be here any minute. It might even be the famous Yutaka Araki, himself. Her hand closed over her phone, nestled next to the little rabbit in the deep pocket of her mohair coat. No, she wasn’t going to get her phone out and check her messages. There was bound to be another text from her mother with an update on her blood pressure this morning. It regularly rose whenever Fiona did something her mother didn’t quite approve of.
Focusing on the airy space surrounding her and gazing around the crowded arrivals hall, she tried to analyse what made it so different. Thankfully some of the signs were in English as well as the fascinating but baffling Japanese calligraphy. Not being able to read basic information had been one of her biggest worries, along with the fact that she had never mastered using chopsticks and had never even tried sushi before because she really didn’t fancy raw fish. What on earth was she going to eat?
She swallowed hard. What if no one turned up? What would she do? A rising tide of despair began to take hold and she sighed and shifted to her other foot, gazing hopefully at approaching newcomers. Everything felt alien and uncomfortable. Although she could make out the Coca-Cola logo in the outsized vending machine opposite, the contents of all the other brightly coloured cans were utterly incomprehensible.
Her eyes lit on someone half running, half walking down the concourse towards her, his coat flapping. As he came closer, she narrowed her gaze. It couldn’t be. She was imagining things.
Oh, flipping heck with multiple bells on it.
It was.
She almost did that comedic, exaggerated eye-rubbing but there was nothing wrong with her eyesight. Realising it was definitely him, she ducked down into her coat like a turtle.
Gabriel Burnett, Times Photographer of the Year, Portrait of Britain winner, Wordham-Smith winner, and recipient of a gazillion other awards for his amazing photographs. The man had talent in spades, not to mention charm, looks and charisma by the bucket load, and had once been quite the media darling.
What was he doing here? No. He couldn’t be here for her. It had to be a complete coincidence. But things were adding up in her head. She’d won a photography competition. He was a photographer. She was supposed to be met. He was in the arrivals hall.
He. Could. Not. Be. Meeting. Her.
Despite expressly forbidding herself to feel anything at all, her heart stopped dead for at least ten seconds before erupting into action like a train bursting out of a tunnel at a thousand beats a minute. Gabe Burnett. Heading straight towards her. Pushing his hand through dark hair that flopped forwards onto his forehead with those quick jerky movements she suddenly remembered so well.
If she could have turned and fled she might well have done, except her feet seemed to have turned into great lumps of clay that she didn’t know what to do with. He drew alongside the barrier and pulled out a sheet of white paper with a series of bold slashes. FIONA H. Her name was written as if he’d been in too much of a rush to get the surname down but was at least concerned enough that there might be another Fiona that he’d added the H. Would he recognise the name? It had been ten years. Would he recognise her? Highly unlikely. He must have tutored hundreds of students since then. In those days, she’d been much more flamboyant and confident, with a predilection towards Bananarama dungarees, cropped T-shaped jumpers in primary colours and paisley scarves with which she bundled up her hair. Fiona could pinpoint the exact moment that her confidence had shrivelled like an aged walnut. It had a lot to do with the man now standing ten feet in front of her holding up the scruffy bit of paper with her name on it, glancing nonchalantly around the crowded terminal with the style and ease of someone who felt at home anywhere.
‘That’s me,’ she said, putting up her hand like a school girl and nodding towards the piece of paper, ‘Fiona. Fiona Hanning.’
‘Great. Been waiting long?’ He stuffed the makeshift sign into his pocket and, to her surprise, dropped his head and upper body in a quick fluid bow.
She stared at him, putting away the hand she’d held out for want of anything better to do, twisting her mouth slightly at the complete absence of an apology. He was half an hour late. But then, people like him didn’t apologise to lesser mortals. They didn’t need to.
‘I’m Gabriel Burnett. Gabe to most people. Nice to meet you.’ He bowed again but then did hold out his hand and she had to scrabble her hand out of her pocket to meet it. ‘People bow in greeting here.’
She knew that because she had done some mugging up. She just hadn’t expected it from him. ‘You get used to it very quickly. They also love a business card. If you’re offered one, make sure you take it with both hands and treat it like a revered object. Whatever you do don’t stuff it into your pocket. Make sure you put it carefully in your purse, wallet or whatever. Treat it with respect. They’re big on respect in Japan.’
‘Right,’ she said, bemused by his deluge of information. She remembered him as being rather reticent and a man of few words, although expansive when he was talking about his work. But then, she hadn’t seen him for ten years. And she’d certainly changed – hugely – in that time. With a sudden smile, she remembered Avril’s last words to her before she’d dropped her at the airport. ‘Quit the wallflower act. No one knows you there, be who you want to be.’ Which was great in theory, especially when you were a super-confident breakfast TV reporter married to the love of your life and had the most adorable two-year-old. Since their press trip to Copenhagen, Avril had become one of Fiona’s closest friends.
‘This your stuff?’ asked Gabe interrupting her reverie.
She nodded lifting her chin slightly. She wasn’t eighteen any more.
‘You travel light.’ He raised an eyebrow in question. ‘This all you have?’
‘Yes,’ she said.
‘That’ll make it easier on the monorail.’ And with that he took charge of what she thought was a huge case and led the way.
Packing for two weeks for a place you’d never been to before had been a minefield, saved only by Avril coming to the rescue with benign bullying. If Fiona had stuck to her original wardrobe plans of jeans and T-shirts her case would have been half the size.
Keeping up with Gabe, weaving through the crowds and taking in all the unfamiliar sights and sounds, took all of