For the last two weeks I have been in the Isle of Wight dealing with the aftermath of a scandal. I can feel your reel away from the worried that this will be another maudlin piece about missing P. However, this time I was not on my own: I had a “junior”.

As your career as a trial lawyer progresses, the cases that you are assigned become ever more complex and require ever greater quantities of paper to analysed. Inconsiderately, the day never gets any longer, sticking dogmatically to its policy of never consisting of more than 24 hours. At first you are able to keep up because as you acquire experience you become a little more efficient. Then you surrender your weekends. Then you cut back on sleep. Then you start scheduling your working week so that even trips to the lavatory are allocated 6 minute slots. Then you start eating at your desk and missing family birthdays and finally you end up standing dazed on a railway platform with no idea where you are and with ketchup in your hair.

It is at this point that it dawns on you that a junior would be a good idea: Someone to whom you can allocate tasks so as to create time in which you can re-acquaint yourself with the sorts of personal hygiene practices that others supposedly consider essential. It is not always easy to persuade the solicitor instructing you to pay for another barrister. It helps that we have members of chambers who are still, technically, in training and are therefore charged out at an hourly rate that is comfortably less than that of any hairdresser that does not include “demon barbering” as part of their repertoire.

Sat with me on the catamaran ferry to the Isle is R. R is bright, efficient and has a sense of humour that is drier than the Atacama. She has never been a junior before, I have never been a leader. Some leaders are an easy ride. They never adjust to allowing others input and use you to make tea and proof-read. Others go on holiday and phone you from seaside restaurants to enquire whether the case is ready. This week I get to find out what sort of leader I am.  

It turns out I am a “good delegator”. As I hand file after file to R she takes them from me without complaint and sets about delivering what I have asked for. She has yet to learn the first rule of junioring. You should always let your leader down early. Do something wrong. It should be easily remediable but it should be enough to shkae their confidence even if only subliminally. If you do not do that they will keep handing you work until inevtiably you fail spectacularly, irremediably and at the door of the court.

I suspect that if I could read R’s mind what is bothering her is not the quantity ofthe work that I am giving her but another, previously undiscovered character trait of mine. Part of me has apparently decided that since young R is still crawling around in the dewy-fresh morning of her practice, she would benefit from being exposed to my “wisdom”. I find that I have an infinite pool of excellent advice from which to draw. I know that despite her glazed look and her endearing habit of digging her fingernails into the table and gritting her teeth that she values what I have to offer.

Since we are working closely together, I am gratified to discover that there are very many opportunities for me to hold forth and precious few for her to distract me long enough to roll out of a second storey window and make off into the dusk.

We arrive at our hotel. It is late on a summer afternoon. The hotel is close to the sea and, as our taxi pulls up outside we find ourselves in the middle of a regatta crowd. There are men, faces flushed from lunches in the City, their hair slicked back, their bellies resting on top of their belts, calling to their wives. The wives are in their early fifties and have, through a life devoted to sailing, had their skins cured brown. Their faces are like teak with lines scratched in with a bradawl. They too are shouting but in the baritone of a county wife. They are shouting at their children who are darting about in wetsuits and dragging dinghies back and forth.

As the cab door opens and R and I step out, I feel as if we are draining the sunlight from the scene. We are dressed in black. Beside us at the hotel entrance are our cases. They too are black and inside them are our black files in which a thousand pages of photocopied black and white allegations and evidence await our attention. Contented fathers sat on the hotel’s terrace look up from their beer and lose their smiles. All eyes are on us as we walk towards reception. We are Darth Vader striding into Princess Leia’s ship. We are Lee Van Cleef arriving in a small town on the Western frontier. We are buzzkill. We are bad news. Highly paid unhappiness. We have come to ruin someone’s day. Sharing this experience R learns something about the life she has chosen I had not felt up to telling her.

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Three days ago I woke up at 5:30 am. It was my second day of less than 5 hours sleep and I found myself scratched by a familiar sensation. My thoughts scattered about, colliding. I could not return to sleep. Nor could I bring myself to open my eyes. I bunched the sheets in my fist and felt the wave break across the bedstead and engulf me: misery.

For two days I have been a chain hotel in Bristol surrounded by my temporary kin. I know that, within the hour, they will all be found together at breakfast. Each of them will be guiltily finishing a plate of bacon that was cooked much earlier and left to warm under serving lamp. They will be exhausted from the effort of kidding themselves and the strain of holding on to hope. They hope that by taking an apple from the breakfast buffet they will fend off the heart attack that their waxing obesity is foreshadowing. They hope that not putting on their ties will somehow allow them to forget they will soon resume work. They hope that by appearing engrossed in a book or newspaper others will not notice that they are alone: or that they will not notice it themselves. They hope that the midnight call to their wives will dull the ache of missing them rather than sharpen it. They hope to get the deal, make the sale, move up, get on and acquire seven habits that will mark the out as highly effective people.On their bedside table are pulpy books written by Americans with middle initials which promise to help them plumb, harness, focus and otherwise leverage their inner warrior/conciliator/facilitor or artist.

My misery is loneliness. To be away from P, sat in my underwear at 3 am typing out paragraphs of law at the cramped piece of MDF that passes for a desk, pulls the joy from my life in a single, shin-cracking, explosive decompression. I love her and the breezy and insincere bonhomie of the reception clerk is no compensation for the the mood that missing her conjures.

The case over, its a trip back home through the disintegrating chaos of our glorious transport system. As I arrive home the sky is pink and hatched with orange clouds. I open the gate and find my niece and nephew running in the garden chasing a football. Little Sam sees me and shouts “Uncle Moobs, we are all in the garden having fun!” He promptly trips onto his face and gets up laughing. My heart is full again.

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P and I are packing for our bliptrip to Washington and points East. I am bringing my brand new and achingly sexy little Vaio so I hope to do a little bloggin while I’m there.

See you in the other side.

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