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Sleeping Beauties Page 24
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‘Even better,’ she said brightly. And then she handed him a £20 note and said, ‘You must have a proper lunch on the train. It’ll be something to do.’
Both Danny and The Girlfriend looked at her as if she were mad then. She had forgotten, of course, that when you are young and in love you have no need of things like cheese and pickle sandwiches to help you pass the time. She supposed they were in love. They never seemed to show it. Or say it. Just for a moment she remembered how it felt to be in love and envied them. You did not need youth to be romantically inured to the pleasures of an Intercity buffet. Love could hit you at any time. No point in telling them. Her stockings and suspender belt bore silent, historical and bravely laddered witness to that. Any time. Douglas, she remembered, for a little whisper of time, but she quickly dismissed the thought. That was the past. Before her was the future. The future seulement. And she would not, really, choose to be young like them, or crazily in love, as she had been at forty, ever again. Just at that moment and having forgotten her breakfast, she would have settled for the cheese and pickle sandwich.
‘Thanks,’ said Danny. He pushed the note casually into his jacket pocket, where it fluttered precariously, which made Pamela blench, but she did not say, Put it somewhere safe. He also drew out from that same pocket, in wonder, as if he had forgotten its existence, a crumpled cheque. He stared at it for a moment. And then he smiled a smile of such crystalline beauty and lightness that her heart turned over. ‘Dad’s cheque,’ he said, waving it around. ‘Be able to get a car now.’
‘Put it somewhere safe,’ she said, hating herself. But she went on smiling. ‘That was kind of him, too, wasn’t it?’
Peter, she thought. Father Christmas. It still rankled. Of course Margie, childless but nevertheless self-appointed fount of all knowledge, warned her about it all those years ago when she was first divorced, and the warning had proved true. It never ceased to hurt that Peter could afford to swan in with largesse while she swanned in with refusals of the second Liverpool kit that season, but nevertheless, today, she could begrudge her son nothing in his happiness. If only he was happy. It was always so difficult to tell.
Emotions. Muddled emotions. Suddenly she wished Peter were here. If Peter were here, she would have sobbed into his shoulder, she was sure. He used to be very good at holding her in the old days. Or she would have had a cathartically furious row with him. Something he was not at all good at in the old days. Instead she must bear this alone. Today was the celebration of the first day of her life (thank you, Margie). But twenty-two years, not including the nine months in the womb, and her son could appreciate a sodding mobile phone and a car so much more! He couldn’t even put his arms around her in front of The Girlfriend. Let alone say anything of an emotional nature. Dear God, what had she bred? And what, in the name of pigeon shit, was she doing wishing Peter were here? Suddenly, after all these years? It didn’t bear thinking about and was clearly some form of maternal dementia.
The train jolted and jerked. It was going to move. Danny stared at his phone dumbly, then at his mother. The world suddenly seemed to stand quite still. Breathing stopped. Now or never, said the air around them. A pigeon flapped. A guard called. Then Daniel leaned out as far as he could, put his arms around her neck and nearly choked her. Or something did. A large grapefruit seemed to have lodged itself among her tonsils. And then he was gone. Waving and waving, even The Girlfriend was waving, as if waving was the release of everything they had so carefully held back. Wave, wave, wave all the way down the line – and then – it was over.
Everything suddenly seemed very small. Except the ladder in her stockings, which grew larger and larger as she stared at it. Of all the crazy memories, she thought again, dropping tears all over the platform – of all the crazy and inappropriate memories – Douglas. Douglas and how he loved to hook his little finger into a ladder and rip the whole nylon to shreds. She was appalled to remember it at a solemn time like this. It was like laughing at a funeral. Peter? And Douglas? And why not little Dean Close, too? Just to be completely absurd.
The past is another country. She sniffed, swallowed and tried to be brave. She felt so alone. She looked back at the empty track, washed and hazy with her tears, and thought in a thoroughly pleasurable rush of pathos that she was alone, entirely and completely alone, and that there was no one, now, to offer his chest for the dampening of, or stick his finger in her hole and pull, or smile at her with complete incomprehension because of the age gap. All she really wished, feeling so small and silly standing there, was that she had taken Jennifer’s sensible advice and booked a facial and a massage. It would have been very nice to be touched by someone in that gentle and intimate way. Even if she spent the entire hour sobbing into the couch.
This is not really me, she thought. This is temporary emotion. It will pass. I will be fine. She turned and walked back up the platform. More trapped pigeons flapped in amongst the girders of the roof. She tried not to think about their futilities. Any minute now, she thought, and it will overwhelm me. I shall then be found tearing my hair, beating my breast, and wandering the Marylebone Road.
So she straightened her back, clenched her hands, and decided that she would go home and take Margie’s advice instead. Drink to Freedom. But, unlike Margie, it would only be one glass. She had a couple of clients to visit that afternoon. In that respect she was not entirely without understanding of Peter’s absence. After all, they had both done the same degree at design college, met there, in fact. She was in the business, too. Though now, of course, while he did the grand projects in the grand manner and lived in almost theatrically cool elegance in Bayswater, she had a small interior design shop in West London where people liked curtains and new lamps to express their change of mood – not the raising, in designer terms, of Lazarus.
Not until the following weekend, on a muggy August morning, did she have time to experience both her loss and her gain. In no hurry for anything, having declined Jennifer’s invitation to dinner and Margie’s to drive down to Hampshire for drinks and bring the dinner, Pamela, mother of Daniel, patrolled her territory.
She opened the airing cupboard. Where once the neat stack of sheets and pillowcases and towels had filled the shelves, now there was space. She closed the doors, sighed, pursed her lips and went and stood in front of a closed door. I have fitted out their marriage bed, she thought (not that they seemed to be interested in marriage). What more can a mother do? A faded, half-peeled transfer on the door’s outside panel said BEWARE and a half-remaining Batman sticker, fist rampant, made the point. She pulled this off determinedly.
Inside the room, if ever she had needed it, was the final proof. Nothing of the techno-world remained – not even the clock radio. Computer, stereo, television, electric keyboard – all gone, leaving only dusty marks on the benches, pits in the Coca-Cola stained carpet, vaguely human smells about the room. Orphaned posters hung limp or flapped from the black and red walls, and the wardrobe, when she swung it open, contained a few bent metal hangers and lifeless, unfashionable garments.
She let the ritual sadness do its work, touched a school blazer, much worn at the collar, a striped tie still in its knot, some threadbare trousers and an old check shirt almost too faded to proclaim Levis across the breast pocket. There, still, were the pristine, non-U jeans she once bought him in Kensington Market. She had been so delighted to find stone-washed.
‘Mum. How could you?’ And the inevitable rolling eyes.
She let the door swing shut and sat on the end of the narrow bed looking at the red blind he demanded she make him. Which he had then slashed and pinned and festooned with chains. Secretly she was rather admiring of it. She stroked the single black duvet cover and heard him – positive, pompous:
‘I ought to have a double bed.’
‘No shoulds, no oughts, Danny.’
‘I want, then.’
‘Can’t have.’
He might never have gone if she had given in to that. Ambiguous thought. Sh
e began to wish that she had.
Remembering the cats she had kept over the years helped. Remembering how they carefully nurtured their kittens for the allotted time and then suddenly, one day, wham – they batted them around the earhole and sent them on their way. I have given you as much as I can and now it is up to you. It made it a little easier knowing that this was as right in nature as it was in a Victorian semi in Disraeli Road. That any other route was false and stultifying. That economics did not make it right. That those who could not leave home because they could not afford it were doubly damned.
She did not feel quite so certain now, despite the woman at number thirty-nine who had recently got her divorced son back after fourteen years of marriage. She was washing shirts again, like a tired washerwoman in a Brueghel, just as she had got her husband pensioned off and only wearing three a week. And Pam had read that somewhere in Italy a son had sued his mother for throwing him out. He was thirty-four. Pause for thought all right. She put her hands in her lap. Alone. It was an odd word. Challenging. Frightening. Margie called it Enhancing.
She would. But Margie never called it Enhancing when discussing, late at night and over a bottle or two, her own Alone.
She caught sight of herself in the long mirror, cheeks pink, eyes blue-bright and misty, fifteen per cent grey hair flying all over the place and, strangely, at nearly ten o’clock in the morning, still in her Japan-Air Happy Jacket. Looking, she decided, every one of her forty-eight years. She refused to acknowledge that she also, at that moment, looked remarkably like her mother. The stage, she knew with alarm, before being like her mother.
Danny had gone. Really gone. He would never come back, except as a visitor. Not like the university days. University had been a temporary respite, punctuated by weekend visits with dirty washing and long vacations of loafing about or intermittent employment. Getting a flat and a job in Liverpool, and selecting a mate, was for ever.
She eyed the horrible black and red walls. It had been a long time coming. And she was not altogether sure it was what she wanted. She tried a few bars of ‘The best is yet to come . . .’ And hoped it was true. She also hoped that Age brought Wisdom. The understanding that you could only go on for so long travelling in hope. One day you had to realize that this, really, was it. You had already, probably, had the best.
She shook her head. In Daniel’s mirror she eyed the greyness sprouting through her curls. Well, overdue at the hairdresser. Time to take herself in hand again. Had the best of what? she asked herself. Maybe the best of her body, which was a bit saggy, maybe the best of her hair, which was a bit grey-ey, maybe the best of her brain where ideas about design were concerned. But not in every department, surely? Oh, no. She held on to Margie’s admonition. Life beckons, it beckons. ‘ . . . and, babe, won’t it be fine . . . ,’ she trilled. She could not remember the next line. Did the song writer say it would or it wouldn’t?
She went out, shutting the door firmly. On the landing she looked in the washing basket. One silk shirt, hers; two brassieres; and four pairs of knickers. Now that was more like it. No Mrs Brueghel for her. She was untrammelled, free. She tried the next line again but it still would not come. So she whistled it. And wondered, as she went back down to the silent kitchen, if she was not perhaps whistling in the dark?
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Mavis Cheek was born and grew up in Wimbledon. She began her working life with the contemporary art publishers, Editions Alecto. London was lively and creative in the ‘sixties and when Editions Alecto opened a gallery in the West End of London, Mavis worked there with artists such as David Hockney, Allen Jones, Patrick Caulfield, Gillian Ayres, Bridget Riley – from which she learned about modern and contemporary art. After twelve happy years at Editions Alecto, Mavis left to study at Hillcroft College for Women from where she graduated in Arts with distinction. When her daughter Bella was born shortly after graduating she began her writing career in earnest. Journalism and travel writing at first, then short stories, and eventually, in 1988, her novel Pause Between Acts was published by The Bodley Head and won the She/John Menzies First Novel Prize. She has published fifteen novels and her short stories are in various collections.
Mavis has served on both PEN and The Society of Authors committees and was for three years the judge of the McKitterick Prize for Fiction. She is a Fellow of MacDowell Colony, USA and has been the Royal Literature Fund Fellow at both Chichester University and the University of Reading. She is also the Founder and Patron of the Marlborough Literature Festival which aims to put authorship, rather than celebrity, back at the heart of literature festivals. It has proved a resounding success and proves that good writing will always be admired and cherished.
Since 1989 Mavis has run residential courses for the Arvon Foundation; for the Centre for Literature at Ty Newydd in Wales; at Dartington; at Stratford on Avon, Beverley, Charleston Festivals, among others, and at Marlborough College and various other venues and institutions at home and abroad from palaces to prisons. She lives and works in London.
ALSO BY MAVIS CHEEK
Pause Between Acts
Parlour Games
Dog Days
Janice Gentle Gets Sexy
Aunt Margaret’s Lover
Sleeping Beauties
Getting Back Brahms
Three Men on a Plane
Mrs Fytton’s Country Life
The Sex Life of my Aunt
Patrick Parker’s Progress
Yesterday’s Houses
Amenable Women
Truth to Tell
The Lovers of Pound Hill
This edition published in 2016 by Ipso Books
Ipso Books is a division of Peters Fraser + Dunlop Ltd
Drury House, 34-43 Russell Street, London WC2B 5HA
Copyright © Mavis Cheek, 1996
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You may not copy, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (including without limitation electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, printing, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
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