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Sunday, September 10, 2017
Monday, August 14, 2017
Love Whitby
I would like to dedicate this blog post - and the following story - to Love Whitby. Love Whitby is a Facebook page, run by the gorgeous Carol Hixon. It's a love and celebration of all things Whitby; the jewel of the North Yorkshire crown. Anyone who knows me - or is familiar with my writing - will know that I am a Whitby obsessive. To visit the place is to fall in love.
As I sat outside the beautiful holiday cottage, paper and pen in hand, I thought about what this quirky seaside town means to people. I enjoy reading the posts on the Facebook page. Generations of families have holidayed there. People got married there. People spent their honeymoon there. I read with great interest where people are staying, what their favourite view is, what they have been up to. I came up with this short story and, though some themes are sad and difficult, I believe that it shows an understanding of what Whitby means to people - and why.
Pearl’s Ode to the
Seaside.
I have always loved the seaside: the sound of the squawking
gulls, the sand between my toes, the smell of the hot, fried sugared doughnuts.
I first went to Whitby as a small child. My older sister, Vera, had spooked me
with sinister tales of blood-sucking vampires. I was quite frightened as the
train pulled in; thinking that Count Dracula would pounce and puncture my young
neck. I struggled to sleep on that first night. When I awoke the following
morning, and saw the beautiful view from the window, I let go of my worries
completely. We headed to the beach and splashed excited tiny toes in the North
Sea. It was absolutely freezing initially, but it soon warmed up. We buried our
youngest sister, Nellie, in the sand. We hunted for fossils and begged for ice
cream. We lusted after the gigantic jars of colourful, sticky sweets in the
enticing sweet shop window. I had the best of times; giggling with my sisters
during the nights. Mother incessantly fretted and told us to be quiet.
“Vera, Pearl, Nellie. Not all the hotel guests want to
listen to you, you know.”
It was different as I grew a little older. I still looked
forward to our visits to Whitby; even if I was a somewhat cynical teenager. By that
point, it was all about flirtatious smiles and eyeing the attractive older boys
on the beach. Mother watched me like a hawk, though she needn’t have worried. A
smile was just that and nothing more ever happened.
Though, not much longer after that summer holiday, I did
meet a boy. Back home in the city where I had been born and still lived. My Frank.
Smitten is the word, though it doesn’t remotely do my feelings justice. We had
met at a dance at the Community Hall and I couldn’t take my eyes off him. Gosh,
he was so handsome and he had the most bewitching blue eyes. His pals were a
rowdy bunch, but Frank stood out and he seemed different to them. He was
quieter and so considerate. I fell head over heels. It was a whirlwind romance,
as they say, and after just shy of six months of courting, we were engaged to
be married. A date was set for the following spring. My sisters were to be my
bridesmaids.
I wore my mother’s wedding dress and how her eyes leaked
rivers the first time that I tried it on. It must have brought back memories of
her own wedding day. Happy flashbacks of love and commitment, though now
peppered with sprinkles of woe as my dad had died many years ago. My mother had
been pregnant with Nellie at the time. I studied my mother as she dabbed her
eyes on a handkerchief. Greying hair and lines beginning to appear around her
eyes. I felt sorry for her. As awful as this sounds, I hoped never to be her –
foolishly believing that I somehow had a choice in the matter; that I could
hang on to both my husband and eternal youth, simply because that was what I wanted.
Our wedding day was lovely and we were lucky with the
weather. After a truly horrendous downpour the day before, the sun kindly
decided to poke its way out of the clouds for us, just in time for the wedding
photographer to snap, snap, snap away. We didn’t have a party, we went for a
nice meal at the local pub with close family and friends, because we had a
train to catch. We were going to Whitby for our honeymoon. Frank had never been
before, and he knew how fond I was of the place, so he didn’t take much
persuading.
I was both excited and nervous on the journey there. I was
overwhelmed with joy of being Mrs Siddall. I was also a little fractious about
our wedding night. Vera had said that she’d bled, and that it had hurt her at
first. Although, it was nice after that, it was all rather messy. I blushed
crimson at the mere notion of it. As we checked into the hotel and were shown
to our room, I blushed rather more. A double bed with crisp, white sheets. But,
also, a view out to sea – all the way to Sandsend – and my giddy heart galloped
at the sight of it. I felt a rush of nostalgia for my childhood holidays. I knew
that Whitby would always be my special place.
In the morning, once the deed was done, I felt like a woman
for the first time. Did people know? Could they tell? It was surely written all
over my face? I definitely noticed a new inner confidence, and perhaps a sense
of a quiet authority. We climbed the hundred-and-ninety-nine steps and we
walked around the dramatic ruins of the Abbey. I was in love. In love with
Frank. With life. With Whitby. I cried when we had to return home and our
magical honeymoon was over. Though, I would soon be busy turning our tiny
terraced house into our first home.
A year later, I was pregnant and our first child was born. A
beautiful baby boy. But, he was still and silent. There was no cry. He had died
inside me. We called him William and marvelled at his crop of dark hair, but he
was quickly taken away from us and I was left more bereft than I could ever
have imagined possible. There is no greater pain. That first year of pining for
him was particularly brutal. Frank took me back to Whitby but, looking back. I don’t
even remember hearing the noisy gulls. I was locked inside a private bunker of
grief and agony. I sobbed, tears mingling with the sea and the never-ending
Yorkshire drizzle. At least the weather matched my mood. Sunshine and blue
skies would have been some sort of betrayal. We stayed in a small, quaint
cottage that time, all alone and nestled away down a secretive little ghaut. I could
see the harbour from the window and I would watch the little boats bobbing up
and down upon the choppy water. It was about the only thing that could soothe
my soul. The violent silence of William’s birth was still ringing in my ears
and it became the sickening soundtrack to my childless life.
Back home again, I longed to fill the rooms with noise, the
quietness and the nothingness was deafening. I distanced myself from Mother for
a while. I had to. Her platitudes, despite being well-meaning, engulfed me with
rage. I could not stand to hear that he just wasn’t meant to be. My heart ached
out of pure love for my son. And then there were the sentences about time
healing all things etc. Well, he wasn’t a thing. He was a beautiful boy. And the
questions terrified me. When was I going to try again? Could I risk another
pregnancy? Would I lose another baby? Would it be as though I was casually
replacing William? It was all too much. So, I withdrew from everything and
everyone. I was broken.
I dreamed of Whitby frequently, though it was several years
before I visited again. I waited. I waited until I could enjoy all its quirky
charm again. I finally found some courage and determination and I conceived
another child. I gave birth to the prettiest little girl in all the world:
Jennifer. The second she was born, she cried that loud, startling new-born cry
and it was so alien to my ears, yet so vastly reassuring that I quite broke
down. She looked so much like William and I felt too many emotions all at once.
Once Jennifer could toddle around unaided, we booked our
first family holiday. We stayed in a cheery, homely B&B up on the West
Cliff. We helped her build sandcastles on the beach and we took her out on a
boat trip. She saw a seal and it was all she talked about for days. My seaside
days were blissful again and Whitby was, once more, the backdrop to many of my
happiest and most treasured memories over the years.
We didn’t really talk about adding to the family. I would
never get over losing my boy. And Jennifer was the sweetest and funniest girl. I
just don’t think that we had the heart. Anyway, the option was soon taken away.
I went through the menopause rather early. I was only in my thirties. I’d had
an inkling that something was a bit off and it was while we were away, enjoying
another family Whitby holiday, when I started to join the dots together. We’d
been walking along the pier, nothing too strenuous, and I felt so odd. I was
suddenly much too hot and sweat started to drip down from my forehead and I
could feel it pooling at my back. I excused myself and made my way to the
public toilets. I looked in the mirror and I was shocked. I looked terrible. I was
wearing foundation make-up, but the beads of sweat on my face mingled with the
beige cosmetic and I looked like an eerie waxwork of myself. My skin was
scarlet. A pitiful moan escaped from my lips. I was quickly getting old before
my time. The grey hairs were no longer merely a few sporadic strands that I could
tuck behind my ears. I remembered vowing never to be like this: old, ageing;
but here it was and there was nothing that I could do about it.
Jennifer blossomed into a beautiful young woman. Yes, I am
biased perhaps, but her long, curly auburn hair and those mesmerising blue eyes,
that she’d inherited from Frank, meant that she turned heads everywhere we
went. It was her turn. It was her time. Mine had ended. I would blur into the
background now, largely unnoticed as women of my age largely are. I passed on
the baton of womanhood to my daughter and I donned the cloak of invisibility.
Jennifer married Stuart, a local mechanic with a friendly
face, kind brown eyes and a polite manner. They, too, honeymooned in Whitby,
keeping the seaside tradition alive. Grandchildren arrived, two little boys.
Jake and Samuel. I went to Whitby with them a few times and it was always
tremendous fun to see the seaside through their young eyes. Donkey rides,
crabbing, salty chips in cones accidentally dropped to the ground and the frenzy
of the greedy gulls. I watched them eagerly push their collected copper coins
into the slot machines in the arcades. But, I was getting older and I could
feel it. It took me a long time to reach the top of those
hundred-and-ninety-nine steps. The pain in my hip and legs made my eyes water. Though,
I always cherished the view from St Mary’s Church. I must have photographed
that same view a thousand times, but I never tired of seeing it.
Frank began to slip away. He had developed a horrible cough.
I said that the sea air might help, lord knows it helped me sleep. Nothing helped.
It got a lot worse. By the time that he’d had enough of my constant nagging and
finally made an appointment to see the doctor, there wasn’t much that could be
done. It was too late. He was dying. I watched on, terrified, as this once
strong man became gaunt and weak. Frank deteriorated quickly. I tried to hang
on to the more favourable images in my head. My handsome groom. Frank the
father, racing around the garden with a little, giggling Jennifer on his back. I
couldn’t always grasp on to them. They would fade too, much like old
photographs. Colour drained and we were left in Sepia.
I lost him. My Frank had gone. I was devastated, my head
reeling and I couldn’t help but feel angry with him for leaving me all alone,
rattling around that house. The weeks were a blur. Black. Mourning. Cards. Flowers.
Sentiments. Platitudes. Dishes of homemade casserole. Checking to see if I was
alright. I was not alright. Half of me had vanished and I would never see him
again. The bed was huge and cold and lonely. Waking up and remembering that he
had died was torture. I declined numerous invitations to return to the seaside
with Jennifer and her family. I wasn’t ready to see the breath-taking views
without him. I thought that I would struggle to make it up the steps without his
strong and steady arm.
Some people say that you can die from a broken heart. I thought
about this a lot, and I decided that I agreed. It was a slow demise; weeks
crawled into the pockets of months and the first-year anniversary of Frank’s
death loomed on the horizon. I could feel myself slipping away and I doubted
that I would even reach that particularly painful milestone. I was fading. I could
feel it. Sepia disappearing into nothingness.
I asked Jennifer to take me back to Whitby. As I hadn’t shown
any interest or enthusiasm for anything for months, she was delighted. I felt
cold to my bones in that North Yorkshire wind. I wept like a small, frustrated
child once I realised that I couldn’t walk up those steps. I instructed
Jennifer to go up without me and take a photo of the view for me. I felt
wretched.
On the drive back home, I fell in and out of sleep. Snippets
of dreams of William and Frank were remembered, other strands were forgotten. I
had never felt so weary when I shuffled out of the car and back into my house. Jennifer
kissed me on the cheek and said that she would ring me tomorrow. I simply
smiled and nodded, but I knew that I would never hear the ringing of the
telephone, nor would I hear my beautiful daughter’s voice again. I had given
up. I was ready. I was old and it was time. I didn’t feel upset or frightened. I
felt a calm and welcoming acceptance.
My darling, Jennifer. If you are reading this, then I have
passed and it was my will to do so. I have been so tired and so full of sorrow
for all that I have lost. You have been the best daughter that a mother could
have wished for. I know that I leave you happy, settled and content with your husband
and your children. This is my story. My ode to the seaside. Climb up those
steps again for me, dear, and sprinkle my ashes at the edge of the clifftop,
right by my favourite bench, to the side of St Mary’s. You know the one. My silly
old legs wouldn’t let me go up there yesterday. This way, I will always be in
my most favourite spot in the world.
All my love, forever and always,
Mum.
xxx
You can find the Love Whitby group here: Love Whitby
If you enjoyed my writing, my first two novels are set in Whitby, too. They are available on Kindle and as paperbacks. You can find them here: Black Eyed Boy and here: Green Eyed Girl
Thanks for reading.
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Bowie: Soundtrack of My Life.
Ground control to Major Tom.
I didn’t think about
the words.
I played with My
Little Pony toys,
Jem dolls.
Action Man seduced
Sindy,
Under the covers and
in the bathtub.
Put on your red shoes and dance the blues.
My first pair of high
heels:
Poppy-coloured with a
large bow.
I liked the
clickety-clack sound
They made on the
pavement.
I still do; a
life-long love affair.
Rebel Rebel, your face is a mess.
Sixteen. I thought I
knew everything.
I knew nothing.
Stranded in seedy
nightclubs.
The floor would spin.
Where was my purse?
All we need is music, sweet music.
And we made our own.
I listened to the
words
As we wrote our own
song
And fell in love;
Head over scarlet
heels.
Nothing’s gonna touch you in these golden years.
Motherhood calling.
Confidence rising.
Sleepless nights and
milky smiles.
A love and bond so
strong,
My heart could burst.
Time may change me. But I can’t trace time.
Children growing,
learning, blossoming.
Pride and
contentment.
I think I have found
myself,
Nestled within the
scribbled pages
Of my own written
words.
Monday, January 2, 2017
Post-Christmas Blues
Dear Christmas Holiday,
It is with a heavy heart that I write this farewell letter. You
have been good to me and I will never forget your kindness. Thank you for
allowing me to switch of that absolute bastard of an alarm clock for an entire
seventeen, most precious days. The lack of the battle of the snooze button has
been a real treat.
Not having to do the school run, wash uniforms and PE kits,
sort lunches, sign relentless permission slips and remember to pay for a vast
array of school-related things has been a true blessing. Not having to be Mrs
Bad Cop and remind / force children to do their tedious homework has also been
a key delight.
Oh, Christmas holiday, how I had yearned for you. How happy I
was to see you. But, alas, I now must say goodbye, and that sucks.
I’m not ready. I’m not prepared to take down my pretty
Christmas tree and see the living room look so plain and dull. I’m not ready to
stop eating Ferrero Rocher for breakfast, and be back at work, so far away from
my fridge. My fridge. Somehow, it still contains all the cheese in the world. I
can’t remember the last time that I walked by said fridge without nibbling on
some calorific snack or other.
And the booze. Oh, how I have enjoyed the booze. The extra
glass or three of wine that I would never be able to handle or justify on a
school night. And when the wine got an upgrade and became a rum. Because, who
cared? It was the beloved Christmas holiday. I’m holding back the tears as I consider
the fact that I must face reality again in the morning. I will greet it with a
string of highly-creative expletives, two raised fingers and a face so mardy that
Grumpy Cat will fret that her career is over.
I will pine for my fluffy dressing gown. We have spent so
many wonderful days and nights together, sat on the sofa, doing fuck all. And
it has been magnificent.
Until we meet again.
I love you.
Hugs and kisses,
Laura.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Angel
Joe stayed out of the way, hiding in the shadows, but he
could hear the raucous crowd count down, and then the cheers and celebration as
the Christmas lights were switched on in the heaving city centre. He tried to
smile at the notion that families were together and having a pleasant evening,
but he couldn’t find one. It had slipped away from his dirty face before it had
started. He pulled his tattered bit of blanket towards him. It was still sodden
from the horrendous downpour the night before. It would have been easy for
tears to fall at that moment. Not that he cried very often at all; the
exhaustion and the ice-cold wind were just too much for him at that moment. Last
night had been typically terrible. Saturday nights always were. But the rain
hadn’t stopped. It had gushed down the streets and he had ended up soaked
through to his skin. Drunken revellers had been particularly cruel and
vindictive. It had started with juvenile jibes; which Joe had completely
ignored. The quips were far from intelligent and the drunkards were unable to
offer anything witty or that he hadn’t heard a thousand times before. But then
they started to throw their glass bottles in his direction and one had gashed
his arm. He refused to retaliate. He’d only end up in the shit. They were,
somehow, considered to be real people in the world because they had jobs and
houses, bank accounts and Wi-Fi passwords. He was a homeless man; invisible,
worthless, destined to draw last breaths upon these tired streets. And then one
of them had unzipped the fly of his crisp, new jeans and proceeded to take a
piss on Joe. A spray of warm, yellow urine had covered his shoes. He had wanted
to tell them that he used to be a real person too. But, what was the point?
They wouldn’t listen. And nobody ever cared. They wouldn’t even make eye contact.
They would deliberately look in the opposite direction. Or incessantly at their
phones. They did that all the time now. Living in a pretend way.
Tap-tap-tapping and swiping. Not seeing the reality in front of their faces.
He had been real once too; existing on paper and even owning
a roof over his head. He’d been an English teacher at a secondary school. He’d
been married. He’d had a daughter. And when that beautiful, funny,
sweet-natured little girl had been diagnosed with Leukaemia, things had swiftly
begun to fall apart. Jo-Jo was as ill as anyone could be. The treatment had
robbed her of her golden ringlets and it had left her so wiped out that she
could barely sit up most days. Suddenly, there was a lot of vomit and
melancholy. He had promised her that she would be okay. But she wasn’t. And she
had died. And the angry recriminations arrived quickly. And a marriage
collapsed. And a job dissolved. And there wasn’t any help. Joe had been rapidly
beaten up by the benefits system. Their point-collecting test had deemed him
capable of work because he had thought to comb his hair for his appointment. In
truth, he wasn’t capable of anything. Not even killing himself, there had been
several unsuccessful suicide attempts. How many of us bring children into this
world? And how would you feel to watch them die? It’s a life-long mourning. No
first teenage kiss. No jubilant or despairing exam results. No first job. No
future. Nothing. Just a funeral and too many flowers. So many flowers that they
quickly become and personify the stench of death itself. Never to be purchased
again. Never to set foot in a florist to be greeted by that horrific, poignant
aromatic reminder. Because it’s too much. And it remains too much.
Joe’s stomach angrily growls and he can’t remember when he
last ate. Mainly because he isn’t even able to remember the days, other than
Saturday when he wonders if it will be the end for him. He would mostly welcome
that. He’s worn-out and consumed by grief and regrets. It might have been
Thursday. But Thursday might have been Wednesday. Or Friday. He only knows that
he is starving hungry, and the sensation is only becoming worse by the minute
as the wind carries the scent of the Christmas market in his direction. He can
smell chestnuts. He thinks of Christmas dinner with his family. Christmas
crackers, sprouts and a turkey crown. Smiles and stockings and waiting for
Santa the night before. He is so far away from this world now and he knows that
he won’t ever be able to find his way back. Joe’s tired and the hunger pangs
are making him feel sick, so he shuts his eyes and hopes to succumb to sleep.
The cold weather has made him ill. He has a cold and it has
gone to his chest. He rattles as he coughs and splutters. He thinks he has
pulled a rib as the pain is so severe. It’s Saturday again, and he’s too weak
to deal with the drunken bullies. He must get away. He needs to move from this
subway. He’s too much of an easy target here. Though he doesn’t know where he
will go. Certainly, not the park. Another homeless man was stabbed in there
last week. He’d seen the ambulance and then read about it in a discarded
newspaper. As much as his body ached, he would have to walk for a while.
He had ended up at the gardens. He wouldn’t normally visit
this place. He didn’t like feeling as though he was exposed. He didn’t want the
families with children to see him. But, this is where his feet had taken him,
and he felt a little brighter just at the sight of it; this urban greenery
tucked away amongst the grey of the buildings. He liked the water features and
the lights at night-time. And as his dark brown eyes scanned the area, he saw
an actual angel. At least she looked like one. Ethereal in white lace and soft
blonde curls. Her lips were painted pink and they smiled and smiled, as did her
eyes. A sigh escaped from Joe’s mouth. She posed for the camera and pure joy
radiated from her pretty face. A bride. A beautiful bride on her wedding day.
She was perfection; heavenly and divine. He looked to see who the lucky groom
was. He wasn’t quite sure at first, they all looked the same in their suits. He
realised that all he had to do was follow her adoring gaze. It was a tall chap,
serious looking. He smiled too, though not with his eyes like she did. Her
smile could light up the darkest room.
She shivered now, the early December air nipped at her
through her thin white bridal gown. Though, the groom didn’t seem to notice.
Joe suddenly wished that he had a nice jacket, so that he could be a gentleman
and offer it to her. He would place it around her thin shoulders so that she
could feel warm. A lady in lilac, wearing an ostentatious feather hat, began to
usher everyone across the way. The bride offered her slender, pale hand,
reaching out to grasp and entwine her new husband’s fingers. But, again, he
didn’t notice, as he laughed with his friends and swiped at his phone. Her hand
went ignored and Joe saw the crestfallen look upon her face. He longed to see
her smile return, and it briefly reappeared once she realised that her guests
were watching her, but it wasn’t real.
He felt bad. He had accidentally witnessed a private moment,
a secret thought, that wasn’t his to see. Because her beauty meant that he
couldn’t take his eyes away from her, he had become a kind of voyeur. He made
himself turn away then, and he was going to stand up and walk away until he
suddenly felt as though someone was now watching him.
It was her. It was the angel. She studied him from the other
side of the artificial stream. He felt his cheeks burn crimson. He had
forgotten this feeling, he was embarrassed. He half-enjoyed the old warmth in
his face. She smiled at him; her real one, and his cheeks reddened with the
heat further still. Before he could even think about it, a hearty beam spread
across his face. She tried to coax him towards her with her hands, but he
didn’t move. He didn’t understand. She pointed to the building behind her. The
wedding party were filing in and disappearing from his view. Was she inviting
him inside? Because that was madness. She tried again, pointing to the
entrance, but he shook his head from side to side, he couldn’t possibly accept
her invitation. Her special day. Her fancy party. He stank. He was filthy. He
was a mess. A coughing fit abruptly halted his train of thought, as he held on
to the bench beneath him for support as the pain in his ribs jabbed at his insides.
When it finally started to ease off, he looked up, and the angel had gone.
Joe struggled to his feet, and how his bones ached as he
shuffled up the path and even more so as he fought to ascend the steps. But, to
his amazement, there was a prize waiting for him at the top. She was back, and she
was even more truly exquisite up close.
“If you won’t come to me, then I’ll come to you,” she said.
She had two paper plates, one in each hand, and they were
both laden with buffet food. There were tiny sandwiches and mini sausage rolls,
petite pastries, and crisps. She popped them down on the nearest seat.
Even her voice was alluring; silky and gentle, it matched
her face.
He was flustered as her kindness was so unexpected.
“You should get back to your party,” was all he could
mutter.
“You’re welcome to join us. There’s more food than we could
eat and you look as though you could do with warming up.”
“I won’t fit in, but thanks for asking.”
“Who cares? It’s my wedding, I can invite who I like,” she
announced, her hands on her hips.
“Angelica, what on earth are you doing out there, talking to
that tramp? Come back inside,” her new husband bellowed his order.
She winced at his choice of words.
“I’m going now. Enjoy the rest of your evening,” said Joe.
“Sorry,” she whispered, with the merest hint of tears in her
eyes.
“Don’t be. I’ve been called a lot worse. Thanks for the food,”
he said, accepting the tempting treats.
He turned away and walked down the high street. He felt sad
that he had caused a scene, even though he surely hadn’t intended to.
Joe wondered if he would ever forget her. He thought that he
probably wouldn’t. She had been such a mesmerising sight. He smiled that she
had the word ‘angel’ in her name. So fitting.
Another week had passed and the Christmas shoppers were
flapping in a blind panic now. He thought of how excited his daughter, Jo-Jo, used
to get at this time of year, though his brain fought not to, as the pain was
unbearable. He worried about the harm he was doing as he bottled up the
feelings and tucked them away. Some nights, he would wake in a sweat,
struggling to conjure up the image of her sweet, freckled face. He knew there
were freckles, at least. But, she was slipping away further still, even after
her death. Lost in his thoughts, he didn’t realise that someone had sat down
beside him.
“Penny for them,” came a familiar mellifluous voice.
The angel had returned. And he couldn’t help but smile. It
was such a gift to see her again. He noticed the garish, bright red Christmas
jumper she wore, a big reindeer with a pom-pom nose, and it amused him.
“I was wondering if you’re wearing that jumper for a bet,”
he laughed.
She put some pound coins into his palm and grinned at him.
“It’s a work thing, for charity,” she explained.
He nodded, he had seen a lot of festive jumpers just lately.
It must be a new thing, he mused.
“How are you? Has that cough got any better?” she asked him.
“I’m not sure it ever really goes away,” he said, with a
shrug.
She looked sad then, and he wished that he had offered her a
different answer, a better one. He couldn’t stand to see the pain in her blue
eyes.
“I have been thinking about you a lot, and I don’t even know
your name.”
He blushed that he had been in her thoughts, that had quite
made his day.
“Joe,” he replied.
“I made you some soup,” she announced, pulling a large flask
out of a rucksack.
“Gosh, that’s very kind. Thank you.”
“In fact, all of this is for you. You can just take the bag.
There’s a blanket, and some socks and a few other bits I thought you might
need.”
He was astounded. He wanted to say something magnificent. He
had once taken great pride in his vocabulary and word choices. Now, he had
nothing, and he felt frustrated by his silence. And the silence continued to
grow until it almost became a third person upon that bench, sitting between
them.
“If you don’t want them, I won’t be offended. Oh dear. I’m
sorry, have I done the wrong thing?”
She was visibly upset now and he hated himself at that
moment. He collapsed under the emotion, tears leaked down his dirt-stained
face. It was as though she had opened something inside him; unlocked an old,
abandoned door, turned on the stiff, rusty tap.
“I am not used to this level of kindness, you must forgive
me. You are an angel. A real angel,” he wept.
She threw herself in his direction, dabbing tissue to his
wet face, hugging him fiercely as though it could fix all that was broken. And
they remained huddled together for a long time, crying quietly into the night.
He cried for Jo-Jo. He cried for his old life that had cruelly disintegrated.
He cried for this beautiful young woman who had chosen to help him. It was late
when they parted, and he couldn’t help but question why she had elected to stay
with him for so long, what with her new husband surely waiting for her at home.
Midway through December, Joe was flagging. He was tired. Exhausted.
His bones ached and his legs were incredibly stiff in the morning. Someone had
hit him last night, he had been punched in the face by a drunken stranger. No
explanation was given. The young man merely stumbled away afterwards, as though
it had never happened. His mind kept travelling back to marking English
assignments, the taste of mulled wine and Jo-Jo opening the windows of her
advent calendar. He didn’t think that he could do this any longer. He wanted to
fall asleep, under those stars, and never wake up.
As though she had read his thoughts and peered into his very
soul, the angel returned once again. She’d brought boiling hot coffee and mince
pies for them both. They talked a lot. He told her about his daughter and his
failed marriage and when he had been a real person with a job and a mortgage.
She got cross with him and told him that he was the most real person that she
had ever met. She sobbed at his tale of woe, especially when he described Jo-Jo
taking her final breaths and that, as hard as he tried, he couldn’t remember
her funeral.
He asked her what she was doing for Christmas and her whole
body stiffened. She became anxious and prickly and didn’t want to talk about
home, so he left it. If she didn’t wish to talk about it, he certainly wouldn’t
push her. He could only guess that the new marriage wasn’t going so well. That
devastated him as he vividly recalled her smile and the love in her eyes when
she had been that bride, only weeks ago. He felt this more when it was time to
say goodbye. She didn’t seem to want to let him go and he knew that he would
worry about her until he was lucky enough to see her again. She had promised to
come and find him next Saturday. He would make sure that he was aware of the
passing days. He would count them. He had something to look forward to for the
first time in a long time.
True to her word, there she was. She was wrapped up warm in
a white winter coat, fur around the hood, and she still appeared angelic and
magical to his eyes. She had brought croissants and hot, sweet tea today. She
was fretting about a presentation that she had to give at work. He went over
her notes and corrected her grammar, which only served to amuse her to see that
the teacher in him hadn’t disappeared at all. They talked about Christmas
traditions and they laughed as they compared their childhoods, which weren’t so
different really. At one point during the afternoon, there was a long pause in
their conversation, which seemed somehow to be her doing. They simply listened
to the sounds. The city centre had become a miniature fairground. They could
hear the laughter of children, and it didn’t hurt him as much as it once would
have. He could handle it because she was there. Joe could handle anything if
Angelica was there. She brought him comfort, hope and joy.
The week before Christmas, he felt himself pining for her
company. He thought of her wrapping presents, a glass of wine and carols on the
radio. Her face illuminated by the lights on the fragrant Christmas tree. He
hoped that she was happy. More than anything in the world.
Time dragged horribly as he didn’t see her at all. Where was
she? Was everything okay? He didn’t know where to find her, so he was stuck in
this terrible limbo of waiting, waiting, waiting.
It wasn’t until Christmas Eve that she turned up, and he
could immediately see that all was not well. She had been crying. Her eyes were
puffy and red, her face was blotchy. He was on the ground in the subway and she
scurried underneath the blanket and he tried to share all the warmth with her
that he could.
“Angels shouldn’t cry,” he whispered into her forehead.
“It’s over,” she sobbed.
He didn’t need to ask. He understood. He had half-expected
this kind of news.
“Then, what a mammoth loss he shall suffer,” he said.
“You talk about real people, Joe. Money doesn’t make you
real. Having a heart makes you real. And you must stop believing that I am some
kind of angel, because I’m not. Not at all.”
“You will always be an angel in my eyes.”
“He isn’t real, Joe, he’s not like you.”
He wanted to tell her something sensible, some sage advice
about patching things up. But he couldn’t. The very second that he had seen
them on their big day, he had known that this man had not deserved her.
Perhaps, no one did.
“It’s Christmas soon,” he said.
Angelica looked at her watch.
“In about an hour. Can we just sit here for a while?” she
asked.
“Well, I would have to cancel my meal at The Ritz, but,
sure, anything for you,” he grinned.
She laughed then, a sincere hearty chuckle, and she snuggled
in closer and closed her eyes. He tried to stay awake, to wish her Merry
Christmas and send her back to her home with central heating and a bed, but he
fell asleep too. Cosy contentment was a heady concoction.
He awoke to her sharp elbow, digging into his side, jostling
him awake.
“Morning,” she said, “Happy Christmas.”
“It’s the happiest Christmas I have had in a long time. Come
on, get up, get going. I won’t let you spend your Christmas here.”
“I won’t let you spend your Christmas here either,” she announced
staunchly, hands on hips and a determined look in her eye.
“I don’t have much choice,” he reminded her, “However, you
do.”
“I want to go to my mum’s house.”
“Wise choice, she hides the sprouts underneath your mashed
potato,” he smiled at the memory she had told him about.
“Come with me.”
“I can’t. Look at me.”
“I just see a brilliant man. Maybe, he could do with a hot
bath. I will make sure you get one. I want you to have a Christmas dinner, Joe.
Mum always makes too much food. But, more than anything, I want you to be with
me. Please, Joe. You wouldn’t come in to my wedding reception. Please, come
with me now.”
She stood up and extended her hand, her eyes pale, large,
and appealing.
He was scared. Petrified of what this could all mean. But,
more than anything, he desired to be at her side today. And so, he took her
hand.
I have been increasingly saddened, by the growing number of
homeless people on our streets today. I always stop and chat and offer what I
can, despite not having much to give myself. Nobody should be in this position,
and it breaks my heart. My story has a happy conclusion, one that most people
don’t get. This story comes with a promise. Myself and my daughters will be
wrapping up Christmas parcels of warm socks and festive food. We will be giving
them out to homeless people in the days before Christmas. Thank you for
reading. Christmas is a time for giving. Let’s give to those who need it the
most.
Author of Black Eyed Boy & Green Eyed Girl.
Sunday, October 30, 2016
Whitby Inspiration.
As the autumn leaves dance through the air and I, once
again, turn to my favourite jumper, I think about my beautiful holiday. At the
very end of summer, I returned to my favourite destination: Whitby. This North
Yorkshire coastal town calms my very soul. I feel better. I sleep better. And I
am always inspired to write something when I am there. The views and the
atmosphere are so incredibly rousing if you have a creative mind. My first two
novels are set here.
Once more, Whitby Holiday Cottages provided me with a
perfect base. I stayed in a gorgeous cottage, on Cliff Street, named Abbey
View. The booking process had been simple and easy. On arrival, we were greeted
with a tray of complimentary drinks and biscuits. Fresh flowers were in several
rooms. I knew that I was going to have a brilliant week.
Whitby’s magic had me enthralled immediately and we did so
many fun and interesting things over the course of those wonderful seven days. And
when it grew dark and we all started yawning, we headed back to Abbey View with
smiles on our faces. The view from the living room window was exquisite. I miss
that view and I think of it often. I also miss taking my cup of coffee and
writing pad out into the front yard in the morning, knowing full well that
words would find me and they would soon be caught on to that blank page. And it
didn’t take long.
One morning, I looked up at Whitby Abbey and it began to
disappear as a fog seemed to descend from nowhere. It appeared rather spooky
and my head was coming up with all kinds of ghostly notions. I thought of Bram
Stoker and some of the key scenes of Dracula that were set on those winding
hundred-and-ninety-nine-steps. As a fan of horror, I quickly came up with an
idea. And I scribbled and scribbled away until I had finished.
As it’s almost Halloween, it seems the ideal time to share this
with you. Here is my short Whitby story, very much inspired by my stay at Abbey
View. Thank you, Whitby Holiday Cottages, for another marvellous holiday.
Midnight.
As the bells rang out from St Mary’s, deep into the night,
the creatures of the darkness were summoned from their hiding places. Fog
circled the Abbey, concealing the dramatic ruins from view. Snow-white seagulls
soared through the ebony sky; so starkly bright that they almost appeared spectral.
Even the buildings huddled together, over on the east side, as though they were
conspiring to veil some ancient secret. Old whisperings crept along thin
ghauts, leading into the still harbour and high up into the clifftops.
Rain splashed the cobbled streets. The narrow strips of
pavement glistened along Church Street. This street attracted masses of
tourists by day; it embodied the notion of the hustle and bustle of a popular
seaside town. Though, it stood eerily empty and silent by night, and it was an
entirely altered place by midnight.
The humans inside the cottages slept soundly and could not
be roused from their deep slumber. Come the morning, they would comment upon
how well they had slept and proclaim that the sea air had been responsible.
They never knew or understood that the sea air had so little to do with it and,
in fact, they had been under a Whitby spell; a deep-rooted and profound trance.
The creatures of the darkness could run amok these antiquated streets with wild
abandon, and after hearing the proud chime and cry of the church bells, they
stirred from their ramshackle graves. Arms outstretched and the low hum
beginning, clawed hands scratched and scooped at the soil. The awakening had
begun.
Hums became chants, quiet yet strong and purposeful; a
synchronised rumble of growing noise. Tales of former glories, a pretty face
and maritime adventures. Bodies emerged, in varying states. Skin was gashed
open, revealing bone. In some cases, limbs were lacking. Clothes were tattered
and spattered with blood.
The rhythm grew stronger, louder, much like the beat of a
heavy drum. As Whitby slept, the creatures marched down the
hundred-and-ninety-nine steps. The chant became a roaring sea shanty and it
lost its echo to a past well-lived and it became a despairing sonnet of
recollected pain. A ballad of anguish and agony that had long been forgotten.
But they remembered. The creatures. They both recoiled from the harrowing
flashbacks and embraced them. They were important. Lives had been lost, so many
of them, and although the horror was relived on a nightly basis, it could not
be accepted. So, they lingered, night after night, repeating this haunting
process with no closure to end their suffering. How could they move on? They
hadn’t found him. He didn’t have a final resting place as they did, and it
simply wasn’t right. Not for a lad so young.
His father, the captain of a once great ship, lead the line
of ghostly sailors. His pale blue eyes were drowning in melancholy, but a
flicker of determination still resided there. He hobbled along on injured legs,
and his remaining arm swayed at his side. A long, cruel gash ran down the
length of his torso, but he didn’t appear to feel the physical pain. He only
felt the eternal love in his heart and the sickening loss of losing his
precious son. And he felt the guilt, always, it burned his soul and swallowed
him whole. He never should have allowed his only child to step aboard that ship
on that fateful evening.
The captain thinks of his poor wife. He imagines her all
alone, consumed by grief, and he vows to find her. It’s the same sorrowful
story each night. But he never finds her. She’s long gone. Shuffling along the
deserted streets, the captain’s hefty, black boots stop dead on Grape Lane. The
others stop too, leaving a respectful distance between them.
His timeworn eyes leak tears and they race down his weather-beaten,
gruff face. What was once his home, is no more. The building remains, and when
he closes his eyes, he can hear his son right there on the street. He’s
laughing and playing; he’s full of life. He can hear the sweetness in his
wife’s voice, as she gently guides him back inside the house in time for
supper. As he opens his eyes, they are gone, and only some kind of shopfront
looks back at him. He peers closer. Books. It’s a bookshop. And he cannot
fathom how this could be. Where is his wife? And where are the remains of his
dear young son?
An ear-splitting, pitiable moan roars from his throat and
into the cold air. He cannot rest until he finds them. Though, he senses that
this will not occur tonight. It’s late, and now his bones are beginning to
ache. So, on he goes, bypassing the other men as they fall into an orderly
single line behind him. The ballad of torment builds once more. The sonnet of
memories plays as they stride back into the hush of Church Street. The chanting
grows stronger as they ascend the many steps, slowly fading to a hum as they
climb back into their aged graves, covering themselves up with the earth.
The captain takes one last glance out to sea. It faintly
shimmers, though it’s nothing but a blanket of thick, black darkness out there.
He too settles back down, deep into the ground, as the boisterous gulls shriek
overhead; the only witnesses of the ghostly sailors and their tragic, nocturnal
mission.
You can book your own fabulous Whitby holiday here: Whitby Holiday Cottages
My first novel, set in Whitby, can be found here: Black Eyed Boy
The sequel can be found here: Green Eyed Girl
Happy Halloween!
Monday, May 9, 2016
Jean
Eccentric quirkiness
Delights and amuses.
Constant chatter
With kooky tangents,
Like growing tree branches
Or a busy map;
Lines lead
And cross over.
A long and interesting life
Makes for many stories.
Tales of dear friendships
And a Sheffield childhood.
Tales of art and creativity
And the Cathedral.
Sometimes, she’s naughty
And eats crisps
And chocolate,
But we laugh
Because we’re just the same.
Similar in so many ways:
Excitable conversation
And moments of inspiration.
She doodles on envelopes,
The pen comes alive
With her lively drawings;
Skilled illustrations.
But she talks of going,
Of fading now.
And tears sting my eyes.
I can’t imagine that.
I have never met anyone like her.
Eighty-four and full of vitality.
And a wonderful mischief
Dances in her eyes.
I like to watch her smile
And love to hear her laugh.
She’s unique.
You won’t find another Jean,
Even if you searched the world,
Until the end of time.
Caring for feline friends,
She has a beautiful soul.
And she is loved,
And that is why I can’t –
And won’t-
Imagine a world without her.
I don’t think she knows
That she plays such a big part
In mine.
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