Authors: Amanda Prowse
âFirstly, this morning I wish I had married one of those; I could do with the rest. Secondly, you are covering this bed in crumbs!' He groaned.
âMatthew, we are on our honeymoon. You can't moan about me wanting lots of sex or eating biscuits in bed. You can only be miserable after we've been married forever and I repeat myself and you have to wee every five minutes and you have one of those bloated fat tums that old men have, tucked under a belt with your jumper pulled over it.' She popped the other half in her mouth.
Matthew propped himself up on his elbow. âI could never moan at you. You're amazing. I think I'm the luckiest man alive. Don't you ever change.' He ran his thumb over the inside of her arm.
âI won't. Apart from getting wrinkly.' She grimaced.
âI shall love each of your wrinkles.' He leant forward and kissed her knee.
âAnd I shall love your little fat tum and skinny legs!'
âI object! I haven't got skinny legs!'
âNo, but I've seen your dad in shorts and I bet you
will
have. You are going to turn into him, I can see it.' Jessica reached for another biscuit.
âBlimey, and you still married me?' He laughed, pulling her on top of him until they lay skin to skin, letting the warm Majorcan breeze flow over them.
Jessica wriggled down the bed until her head rested on her husband's chest. âI didn't know another person could make me this happy.'
âMe neither.' He smiled.
Jessica pressed her body against his.
âOh God! This is going to mean sex again, isn't it?' Matthew closed his eyes and sank his head back into the pillows.
âI'm afraid so,' she confirmed. âJust lie back and sing “Jerusalem” and with any luck it should all be done and dusted before you've got through the second verse.'
With her basket on her arm, Jessica picked her way down the steep path and on to the shingle beach. She looked up at her husband, who, more confident of the route, had strolled ahead, carrying the towels and a thick blanket to lie on. She hesitated, pausing to shield her eyes against the sun and to stare at her man as he placed the rug on the ground and spread the towels on top. She knew this was the most perfect time in the most perfect place. Her face ached from smiling, but she couldn't stop. She was filled with happiness and excitement.
Looking over at Matthew, her heart skipped and joy bubbled up into her throat. He was in his shorts and flip-flops, going from corner to corner, crouching down, making the makeshift sunbed the neatest and comfiest it could be. Jessica pushed her sunglasses further up her nose and gazed at him. He looked beautiful; the sun lit him from behind as he stood in a golden haze. It was a moment of realisation that her whole happiness lay in this man's hands. It felt like a fragile thing that might, if wrongly handled, take flight. The thought, the idea of him turning off the love that poured from him was enough to make her feel sick. His love was like an addiction, a drug. He was so much more than her. Smarter, posher, better looking. Just better. And she realised in that moment that she was vulnerable and that the happiness she had found could be taken from her with nothing more than a change of heart. This thought terrified her. She remembered taking Matthew to the pub to meet Polly for the first time and hurrying to the loo so she could get her feedback. Polly had leant on the sink and said, âBloody hell, Jess! He's Manchester United!' She knew what this meant: out of her league and it wasn't only about looks. It was so much more than that.
âHere we go, madam.' Matthew bowed. âYour bed for the day awaits!'
Jessica giggled, depositing her basket by the blanket, their lunch of freshly baked bread, slices of Serrano ham and a small punnet of olives safely wrapped inside. She kicked off her sandals, abandoned her sunhat and strolled to the shoreline, letting the lapping waves foam over her toes.
âOoh, that water's quite chilly!' She stepped backwards.
âRubbish!' he scoffed. âYou just have to be brave.'
âI'd rather be warm than brave,' she said over her shoulder.
âIs that right?' he asked as he removed his sunglasses and threw them down near the basket.
Jessica screamed in anticipation as he covered the space between them at speed, his head bent low, like a bull on the charge. Before she had time to protest, he had grabbed her around the waist and was hurtling into the water, taking her with him. The salt water was kicked up in an arc, soaking them both before he lost his footing and sank down into the sea, dragging his squealing bride with him. They immediately bobbed to the surface, Matthew laughing and Jessica spluttering with the shock. She raised her fist to thump him but he caught it, pulling her close, lifting her like a baby until she rested in his grip with one head on his shoulder and her legs dangling over his arm. He swirled her around in the water as the waves gently broke over them, leaving a salt residue on their skin and their hair plastered to their faces.
âSee, it's not cold, not once you are in.' He smiled.
She nodded. He was right.
âDon't ever leave me, Matt.'
âI'll never leave you.' He kissed her nose. âLie back. I'll hold you.'
Matthew moved his hands to the small of her back as Jessica slid down and lay flat on the water with her arms outstretched and her head back in the sea. She lay very still as the small waves lapped over her ears. With nothing more than Matthew's gentle support keeping her up, Jessica looked up towards the mountaintops.
âI feel like I'm flying,' she breathed as he moved her gently across the surface.
âFly high, golden girl. I've got you.'
Jessica arched her back slightly, pushing back further into the water and enjoying the feeling of weightlessness. She was overcome with a sense of peace. She wished they could stay like that forever.
14th March, 2012
Some days I feel as though I am inside a small box. Everywhere seems airless and claustrophobic, particularly when it's sunny and bright outside. If I could scratch away my skin to get out, I would. There is no quiet space I can hide and no place I can be by myself to think for any length of time.
The dining room smells of bad breath, old food and boiled vegetables. It reminds me of a school canteen and although I am sure I will get used to the smell, I haven't yet. Today, I was given a helping of corned beef with a couple of limp salad leaves that had stuck to the warm plate. I stared at it and the woman in the hairnet who had given it to me said, âWhat's the matter, Rapunzel, did you want something different off the menu?' If only I could, but she was just being mean.
People have regular seats on the benches fixed on either side of the long, thin dining tables â some groups huddle together, whispering, others laugh and chat. I sat alone at an empty table as usual, but a woman lowered herself onto the bench opposite me, following my every move. She was desperately thin and drummed the tabletop with stained yellow fingers; her long nails made an unattractive click. She was wearing a misshapen grey T-shirt with the word âNagasaki' in peeling raised print on the front. Her arms were stick-like and hung from the gaping armholes like spaghetti. âGot any baccy?' She grinned at me and I could see little black stumps instead of teeth as she flicked her lanky fringe from her face. I just shook my head and did my best to ignore her. It's not as if this kind of thing hasn't happened before. It's just that sometimes I can keep a hard shell fixed around my heart, and sometimes I can't. Today I couldn't and I felt scared. Sick and scared.
When I was growing up, it didn't matter how rubbish my day was or how overwhelmed by life I felt, I always thought my mum and dad could fix everything, because they did! Stepping inside the front door of our little house in Hillcrest Road, Romford was like being wrapped in a warm safety blanket. I don't remember being aware of the seasons; in our house it was always warm and cosy. My dad would peel me a clementine, removing all the white pith that I hated and singing âOh my darlingâ¦' and no matter when or where I fell asleep, he would put a blanket over my toes and draw the curtains.
But on the day I followed the policeman up the path and into the hallway, the day I lay on my bed and listened to my mum screaming and swearing as my dad held her down, the day my heart beat so fast I thought I might die too, I realised that my mum and dad had failed. There was no safety blanket. They couldn't keep us safe and I knew this because they had let Danny die. And I lost my faith in them.
I have considered the possibility that they were being punished. Maybe they had done something wrong and so Danny got taken from them. Like there is this unseen force totting up the good and bad and making everything balance. That's how the world works sometimes; it is cruel, hard and difficult to live in.
It was dusk in London and despite being September, when winter pawed impatiently at the break of dawn and blew its cool breath over the sunniest of afternoons, there was still the lingering promise of a warmer day tomorrow.
Matthew felt a swell of pride every time he placed the key in the willow-green front door of their red-brick Edwardian terrace on Merton Avenue off the Chiswick High Road. Having a key to his very own front door â their first house â felt like a huge deal. It was more than enough to counteract the gut-churning worry that preoccupied him at three in the morning when he got up to pee and thought about the size of the mortgage that they had taken out and the hefty deposit they had been gifted by his parents.
Anthony had made his fortune buying then renovating houses and building new ones, lots of them. He was adamant that homeownership was the only way to safeguard his son's future. With that in mind, not long after their engagement, the equivalent of Matthew's yearly salary had been transferred into his account without comment. His parents had of course insisted it was a gift, but Matthew felt it was in some way a test. Would he pay it back? Could he?
Jessica had fallen in love with the property the moment they had arrived, before the estate agent had even opened the front door. She ran her fingers over the pale pink dog rose that clung to the trellis at the side of the front door and hung in a heavy bower over the lintel. It gave off a heady scent as they entered the house.
âJust think of all the people who have walked through this door since it was built.' She turned to Matthew, beaming. âI can see women standing here waving their men off to war and I bet they had a street party for the Queen's coronation!'
Matthew nodded, knowing that she was right there and then picturing herself walking through this door in all seasons, planning how she would greet Polly and her parents from the other side of the etched glass panels.
Jessica had then leapt and squealed her way around the house, shouting, âI love it! I absolutely love it. Look at the space! And it's so light, I can work here. Oh, Matt, look at this place!' So much for appearing cool and indifferent in front of the estate agent, the better to try and negotiate a favourable price. Matthew smiled as he remembered that day.
It was also the day they had met their next-door neighbour. The woman had loitered around the mini wheelie-bin behind her gate, wearing a green cardi, brown tweed skirt and what looked like men's shoes. Her movements were slow. She seemed to be taking a very long time to deposit the half-full carrier bag, clearly hoping for a glimpse of the young couple, if not an introduction. Jessica waved at her as they left, full of excitement at the prospect of the house becoming theirs.
âI have lived here all my life. This was my mother's house.' This was her opener, delivered with narrowed eyes and without even the hint of a smile.
âWell, lucky you. It's such a lovely street!' Jessica beamed, trying to win her over.
âUsed to be.' The woman tutted, jerking her head towards the opposite side of the road, which left Jessica and Matthew wondering who had moved in and put an end to the good times. The woman was tiny, in her seventies, not quite five foot and of slight build. She had a blunt grey bob and wide fringe that from a distance looked like a helmet. Her lips were almost non-existent and her eyes tiny behind her John-Lennon-style frames.
âI am Mrs Pleasant,' she said before scuttling back inside.
Matthew and Jessica had fallen around laughing when they'd got back to their flat.
âAt least we know we won't be living next door to a crack den and I shouldn't imagine there will be many sex noises coming through the walls,' Jessica said.
âAt least not from her side!' Matthew quipped.
âShe creeped me out.' Jessica shuddered. âThe way she announced “I am Mrs Pleasant”; that was just weird.'
âI tell you what's weird â her name, when she is one of the least pleasant people I've met!'
âI know, right! It only works if her first name is Not-Very!' And the two fell onto the sofa, laughing some more.
Matthew now hovered at the door of the sitting room, watching his wife, who sat curled into the window seat. One leg was tucked underneath her bottom, the other stretched in an elegant arc with her oversized sketchpad resting on it. Her thick hair was in a messy ponytail on top of her head and her leggings had gone baggy around the knees from sitting in her favourite pose all day. It was on days like this that he thought her most beautiful: no make-up, no fancy clothes and lit from within, consumed by the task in hand. Her face was contorted with concentration; a little crease had appeared at the top of her nose and her tongue poked from the side of her mouth. She had been taken on by a freelance agency and this was her first commission. Jessica had excitedly read the brief aloud. âA children's book!' she'd squealed. â“We are looking for woodland creatures both male and female that should be appealing and non-threatening and will incorporate elements of nature in both their physique and costume.” How brilliant is that!'