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Alan Jefferies The Wedding Rice Still eating the wedding rice months after the big day. Not that we needed to, mind you, there was just so much of it, a year’s supply maybe. Remember the night we spent filling tiny sandwich bags, neatly wrapping each with crisp yellow ribbon? It’s not hard to imagine there’s still a lot of sweetness there, cooked into these pearly grains of rice saved from the summer, so full of promise, so full of love. untitled by day the shop on the corners selling red globules of meat pigs trotters, liver clusters by night bright red paper lanterns Ice You came back and wanted to buy ice for some reason which seemed obvious to me at the time. I knew where you could buy ice, at a place just around the corner — there were great big blocks of it sitting inside the factory. So we went there, I leading the way and you intent on following me. When we arrived I ran into an old friend who was there for a similar reason. We were both surprised to see each other, but that wore off after a few minutes and we were left looking around at these huge sheets of ice hanging around the walls. You soon became one of the workers in the factory, looking after the ice, acting like you’d been doing it all your life. And that was the last I ever saw of you. I looked for the ice factory around the corner sometimes but never could find the same place again. No one had heard of it. Someone suggested that it might have melted, but I knew that nothing could be that simple. ![]() |
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