“I’ll pay for them.”
Chris. I glanced at the clock. The gym would have closed about fifteen minutes ago.
“You don’t have to,” I began as he ordered one for himself, too, and handed over money to the barman.
“My treat. I hear you all did great today.”
We took the drinks back to the table and Chris got a grateful toast when he congratulated the group. He didn’t want to join the party, though. “Can we have a chat?” he asked me.
“I can give you a few minutes,” I said. I didn’t want to leave my friends yet. We found a corner seat as someone else left and sat half facing each other at right angles.
“So, you want your sponsor money now?” Chris asked, smiling.
“Just sort it out online,” I said. “Goes straight to the charity.”
“How did the race go?”
I told him, told him my time, described what it was like to run all that way, in that crowd of people. I know he was only making conversation, but I liked talking about it. I suspected I’d be talking about it for weeks to everyone I met.