The Guest Room
Maurice and Tim had known each other for over forty years. They met in 1978 at a labor union conference in Sheffield. Two regional reps with weathered suits and sharper opinions, both skeptical of the top brass, both more at home in the pub than the plenary. Maurice, wiry and fast-talking, had the kind of grin that got him into trouble. Tim was broader, quieter, already a widower with a young daughter he didn’t know how to talk to. Something passed between them back then—a glance held too long, a joke that landed too intimately—but neither reached for it. Neither dared. They saw each other every few years—always professionally, always in crowded rooms filled with sandwiches curling at the edges and men who spoke too loudly about things they didn’t quite understand. But there was a moment in ’86, at a summer conference in Cardiff, that stayed with Tim like a bruise under the skin. The changing rooms at the leisure centre were communal, utilitarian—just rows of lockers, benches, and a ro...