The Sweets kept tropical fish in an
enormous glass tank in their living room.
She did not particularly like fish and
suspected that Hazel could also take or leave the guppies, puffers
and loaches gliding inanely back and forth. They were a quirk of
Martin’s, along with his passion for corned beef and tinned potato
salad; intractable hostility to holidaying abroad; and refusal to
move house. Hazel fancied a change (something a bit larger and
more in the country…) but Martin clung to their Pendle Street
semi like a turtle to its shell and only death or divorce would shift
him.
The Sweets had offered her a lift to
an emergency executive meeting at the St John’s Ambulance hut and
as Martin revved the engine of the green Renault she decided that it
was perhaps wise not to pry into the secrets of other people’s
marriages.
Gone were the pre-Paul days when she
and Lynne would burn the midnight oil, draining the last of Lynne’s
home-made wine and subjecting the relationships of their friends and
enemies to forensic scrutiny. Marriage to Paul had made her extremely
accommodating towards the choices of others.Hazel and Martin had
virtually nothing in common apart from two teenage children, the
Party and hatred of the Butchers – but what of it?After sexual
attraction had waned, she suspected that most couples chose to lump
it. And divorce would be so disruptive.
I can’t think why you agreed to
it….you’ve just played into Clare’s hands!
Hazel’s voice had an irritated tone
and remonstration was pointless. The meeting had been called to
discuss the astronomical costs incurred by the team
overseeing the Laceybrook by-election – in particular the hiring of
a photographer at an extortionate sum for a day’s work ‘on
location’; two glossy leaflets and unaccountable bills submitted
for restaurant meals and expensive bottles of wine.
During the course of an election, all
monies were at the disposal of the Agent – and Dickon had been
disposing with a vengeance.
Martin reversed into the hut car park
and said nothing, but his back in its grey elephant cord jacket
heaved resentfully.They entered the room in silence.
The hut had been the venue for her
first Party meeting and as she looked at the comrades, poring
over her leaflets and handing round receipts, she wished that it had
been her last. Everyone was there, from the Butchers to Gail Pitt and
even the elusive Darren Peabody was clutching his bic pen with
an air of authority.
Everyone -- except Dickon Cleave.
They were out in force for a witch
hunt.
Two hours later, the Sweets dropped her
off at home and for once she was delighted that Paul was entertaining
John and Kathryn Nuttall to his latest favourite tipple – Highland
Park single malt whisky – a Christmas present from Eric who had
brought back a case after a recent trip to the Orkneys.
For once, the sight of her husband,
pipe in one hand, whisky tumbler in the other, holding forth to the
Nuttalls from the vantage point of the wheel-backed chair failed to
provoke more than a twinge of the customary irritation. It was a
relief to be home and if the sight of Kathryn Nuttall; pale and
earnest in a cream shift dress and Birkenstock sandals was
provoking, then at least she was not Clare Butcher. Or Ron Butcher.
Or any of the loathsome people that, after this election, she was
determined never to set eyes upon again.
Brian Pelleroe, twitching uneasily in
yet another red fisherman’s jumper (how many did her have?) had
chaired the meeting, but the real inquisitor was Clare Butcher;
imperious and foreboding in a shapeless black boiler suit.
In the absence of the Election Agent,
it was only fair that the candidate be asked to justify the enormous
amount of money that had been lavished upon a completely unwinnable
by-election in a Tory stronghold.
She should make it plain from the
outset (glaring at the comrades; daring them to dissent) that the
Party had absolutely no intention of reimbursing either the candidate
or the Agent for a quite astonishing display of utterly capitalist
gluttony.
Of course neither were expected to
campaign on an empty stomach – but tea and sandwiches should have
sufficed instead of champagne and turbot.
Dickon could have taken the photographs
himself instead of hiring the most expensive photographer in
Gridchester whose promotional material included a Harpers and
Queen shoot with Penelope Tree.
And on the topic of leaflets...
Each member of the committee had been
supplied with copies of her literature – the introductory Lady
Loves Laceybrook -- and the second.
The Lady Loves Laceybrook came in for
criticism; it was thin on policy (Ron Butcher) and
expensive – should have taken a tip from Derek Kingsmill (Fred
Hoy).
The second leaflet was greeted with
unanimous opprobrium.
Twenty-three years later she could see
why. Even then it had been hard to defend the four-page A4 glossy
colour collation of photographs under the umbrella headline
Laceybrook - A Bird’s Eye View!
The good burghers of Laceybrook were
invited to cast their own eyes on the candidate leaning dreamily over
the bridge of the brook (in a wet-look T-shirt)
caressing the arch of a country church
(causing her skirt to ride up her thighs) and sitting on a
pony (in a skirt).
Amongst other unspeakable poses….
The photographs were captioned with her
name, an injunction to vote and contact details of her Agent.The
Party was mentioned in small print at the bottom of a page.
I think she offered hesitantly
that Dickon was aiming for a more
modern take on the traditional leaflet – something to make them sit
up and take notice….
Oh they’ll do that all right,
retorted Clare. And so will the rest of the world if the
Tories have got any sense and pass this muck straight to The Crier.
There had been more – in fact, much
more in the same vein and when even Gail Pitt had queried the expense
combined with the absence of a canvassing schedule
(vetoed by Dickon as an invasion
of privacy), she had become desperate.
It was all she could do to stop herself
crying and when she had excused herself from Paul and the Nuttalls,
pleading a headache, that was exactly what she did.
The next few days were infused with a
sense of impending doom – exacerbated by the fact that Dickon –
so attentive over the turbot – had suddenly decamped to London,
pleading an alteration to his lecture schedule at the Courtauld.
She had telephoned his home, expecting
sympathy after her ordeal in the hut only to be informed of a change
in his plans by Jessamy. Had she imagined it, or was the intrepid
Greenham feminist slightly chilly – even abrupt?
Of course, she swings both ways,
commented Hazel when they convened with Sylvia and Gail for a girls’
night out the day before the election.
But then she’s had a lot to put up
with over the years and maybe women are less threatening?
They were sitting at a corner table in
The Balti Bowl, Gridchester’s cheap and cheerful curry
house, sharing the contents of the popadom pickle tray. The meal was
Hazel’s idea; partly , she suspected, to break the ice and repair
the friendship after the terrible emergency meeting - and also as an
excuse to skip corned beef hash at home with Martin and the fish.
It was a step up from corned beef hash,
but certainly not haute cuisine, nor fine dining with its
mandatory posh crockery and exorbitant prices.
It was all right.
It was a night out with food and she
ought to enjoy it, but neither the rubbery king prawns nor the
conversation were to her taste.
She was not sure that she wanted to
know what Jessamy had been forced to put up with over the years, or
that Dickon had conducted a rake’s progress the length and
breadth of the nation with such Hogarthian gusto that no female over
the age of consent was safe from his clutches. He was apparently
Byronic in more ways than one...
I mean (said Hazel between
mouthfuls of sag aloo and lamb korma)
He even had a go at ME (looking
at Gail and Sylvia for confirmation) at Maureen Booth’s fish n’
chip supper!
With the best will in the world , the
idea of Dickon engaging in rampant coitus with the 13-stone Hazel,
complete with curly perm and a dress sense best described as mumsy
was a step too far. But if her friend could only stomach sex with
Martin by summoning up an imagined grope with Dickon over fish and
chips at a Party fundraiser – then who was she to object?
I thought you liked him she said
as she paid her part of the bill and rummaged in her purse for a tip.
Well, he’s wonderful of course
retorted Hazel smugly, but his sort should come with the warning
‘Look but don’t touch!’
The day of the Laceybrook by-election
remained stubbornly in her memory, much as she had tried to erase it
over the years.
She had woken early; pressed and
rejected two suits and a sleeveless red body top and finally settled
upon a white linen dress sprigged with rosebuds. Red shoes and
matching bag completed the outfit and as she applied lipstick and
pinned on her rosette, she felt, albeit briefly, like a candidate.
Paul finished his coffee, patted the
children and Splosh and stated that he had asked Christine to
babysit. For one glorious moment, she thought that this meant that
her husband would be by her side at the count and said so.
Paul laughed:
Oh really darling! You’ll have to
imagine I’m Trotsky; airbrushed out of the picture! You can’t
expect me to hang around some godforsaken church hall or wherever
they have these things, on handbag duty?! Isn’t Mummy silly, Ness
Ness?
Vanessa chortled, Richard beamed and
Paul kissed her for luck before grabbing his briefcase and
making his exit. He was hosting a departmental dinner; she was not to
wait up…
Dickon had offered to give her a lift –
but for some reason, she declined and made her way to Laceybrook on
public transport; a train journey followed by two bus trips. Apart
from a handful of assorted pensioners and mums-with- toddlers, she
travelled in splendid isolation and it was surely only a matter of
time before the bus routes were scrapped on economic grounds.
However, when the mind is free, the
body’s delicate and as the bus traversed the country lanes, she
contemplated the day ahead with mounting horror. What did you do,
as a candidate on an election day? Whatever it was, she would be
doing it solo because as far as she could ascertain, the comrades
would be voting with their feet and staying at home.
The leaflet row had supplied the
perfect excuse.
She spent the day drinking coffee in
high street cafes; rosette stuffed firmly in her handbag, hoping
nobody would guess who she was; debating how long she could
reasonably stay in one location without being suspected of loitering
with intent.
By 5 pm, she had exhausted every
respectable outlet and when the roar of an engine announced the
presence of the MG roadster, she felt a remarkable kinship with
Captain Oates.
Comparisons with the failed Antarctic
expedition were brought sharply into focus at the count.
The venue, a village hall that had seen
better days, was unfortunately situated next to the church where she
had posed so provocatively, and the barely suppressed mirth from the
eminently respectable group surrounding the Tory candidate suggested
that they too had made the connection.
Sir Emrys Bowcher’s successor,
Stanley Dexter- Leppard; portly, balding and aged seventy plus,
suited the place, its tea-rooms and its stifling rurality to
perfection.
Judging by the 1,960 people who had
voted for him, Laceybrook agreed.
She had won the allegiance of just
twenty-three people.
And I bet they were all perverts!
(She thought)
She was sitting with Dickon in a pub on
the outskirts of Gridchester. She had cried; angry tears of
humiliation and now she was drinking. Too much. She did not want to
go home. She did not want to face Paul, the children, the Party or
even the dog.
She wanted to die.
Dickon, by contrast displayed a
remarkable equanimity in face of adversity. And of course, he looked
remarkable in his stone coloured Calvin Klein jeans, crisp white
shirt with a green thread and tailored black jacket. Indeed, the only
extenuating factor about the whole abortive business was being seen
in public in the company of such an attractive man.
The attractive man who now seized her
hand, telling her that the only reason he had volunteered to be Agent
for such a lost cause was the chance to spend time with her.
So it had been worth it - all twenty-
three votes of it - and why didn’t they go on spending time
together?
He parked in a lay-by on the way home.
For the next four days, she performed
domestic and work duties in a mist; jumping to attention at the sound
of the telephone and taking Splosh on lengthy walks. In the bedroom,
she repelled sexual advances with a series of excuses and did not
care whether they were plausible or not.
Four days became seven and then
fourteen. After three weeks, sensations of misery had replaced the
tremors of excitement she had nurtured during the dog-walks as
certain events came insistently to mind.
She snapped at Paul and the children
and left without saying goodbye before taking the familiar walk, past
the spice factory, to The Duke for the Party meeting.
The back room was suffused with air of
more than usual gloom – and there was something else – akin to
the type of shared horror that gripped a nation when the enormity of
Peter Sutcliffe’s crimes was made public.
How could she justify raiding the
Deposit Account – lovingly accrued after many a meat auction, fish
n’ chip supper, car boot sale, church hall rummage, cake stall and
Tupperware Party for a paltry 23 votes? She looked for Dickon, who
was absent, and then, raising her eyes from her shoes said:
I’m sorry…
Well, I think we all are said
Brian Pelleroe, who had unaccountably abandoned his fisherman’s
jersey for a funereal lounge suit.
But the question is what do we DO
about it? You missed the earlier discussion. Vince (with a nod to
the trade union delegates) and the majority of comrades feel that
calling in the police would damage the Party – but I have to say
(his voice rising angrily) as far as I’m concerned it goes
against the grain..
She glanced at Hazel who looked away -
and gripped her chair as the room and everyone in it spun before her
eyes.
The police? For 23 votes? She had to
get out – anywhere – away from there.
Ned Pitt blocked her exit and shouted
angrily:
You see? THIS is the damage! THIS is
what happens if we brush it under the carpet and do a whitewash -
sorry Vince but it’s got to be said! Bright, new members will jump
off board like rats leaving a sinking ship! And if you haven’t got
the guts to ring the police about Ron Butcher then I will!
Sylvia brought the drinks to their
table at the Malmsey Head and she wished that the landlord would do
something about the jukebox.
I’m on Fire by Bruce
Springsteen was on its third outing in an hour and she didn’t think
she could take much more of With or Without You from The
Joshua Tree album either. In fact, the insistent music was
extremely irritating and perhaps it was time for a change of venue.
You can never tell what goes on
behind other people’s closed doors opined Gail, whose
long-suffering nature induced her to see the best in everyone.
Poor Clare – that Deposit Account
was her LIFE – I’m sure she’s more upset about that than the
loss of Ron – bastard that he is.
Ron Butcher, husband of Clare;
custodian of Party principle; self-righteous bully and hairy ginger
prig had left his wife and his job at the Peacock Heating Company and
had run off to live with a customer in Lowerbridge.
The week beforehand, he had made a
fulsome speech at a friend’s wedding, praising the joys of married
life with particular reference to Clare.
And he had stolen the contents of
the Deposit Account to finance his new love nest.
The Laceybrook by election and her
ignominious role in it had been totally eclipsed by the Butcher
affair and the impending court action. Ron had been tracked down
swiftly and could expect a brief custodial sentence; Clare had not
been seen in public and was not answering the telephone and the local
paper had splashed the story.
Bastard is too good for him
pronounced Hazel, tucking into smoky bacon crisps with a relish that
forecast the failure of her recent enrolment at Weight Watchers.
But – men are all the same – the
only difference between Ron Butcher and, say, Dickon Cleave is that
Dickon’s got more opportunity for obvious reasons.
The mention of Dickon Cleave found her
rummaging in her bag and hoping that nobody had noticed that she was
breathing more quickly.
And of course Jessamy’s been left
holding the baby again – or not, in this case!
I mean we all knew he put it about –
but getting a student pregnant!! He might lose his job!
He’s certainly losing his touch,
said Sylvia sagely.
Since I’ve known him he’s gone
through virtually all the available women in the Party and some of
the not so available – but I thought he knew how to use a condom!
They don’t always. That’s why I went back to the pill after Ida.
But getting back to Dickon – I
doubt we’ll see him again. How did you get on with him (taking
one of Hazels’ crisps) at that by-election? We all wondered if
he’d have a go - especially as you’re new. Bit of a challenge I
expect!
She decided that it would be wise to
have an early night in view of a heavy teaching schedule tomorrow at
Gridchester and told Hazel that she would take the bus home.
And as for Dickon Cleave – nothing
could be farther from the truth.
I don’t think I’m his type,
she said.
3 comments:
I loved this! It made my bus ride to work speed by. Your writing reminds me of the great Jilly Cooper - zesty, quick paced and clever enough to give plenty of detail without being dry. Bravo!
I like it too. Emma B has got something here.
Is Dickon Cleave based loosely on me?
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