Twelve
She fixed herself some scrambled egg and a cup of tea, flopped down on the sofa and turned on the television. Three hours to kill before David came home and ten minutes to go before the Oprah Winfrey show. It was still raining outside and quite cold in the flat so she pulled the red sleeping bag close about her legs, balancing the plate of scrambled egg on her knees and the cup of tea on the upturned cardboard box (put out many months ago to pack away her few remaining possessions for when she went to live by the sea â with or without David). If the worst came to the worst she could get a bus to Bluewater and look around the shops â that would while away an hour or so. She didn't much like the shops â too much stuff, too many people and you had to beware the beauty counters â but she liked to follow the little river map on the floor, read the poetry on the walls about old father Thames who kept rolling along down to the mighty sea, and look at the statues carved out on the ceiling of gods and goddesses and strange mythical beasts. âThat unicorn's real,' David had teased her once. âIt's stuffed, from a museum,' and she'd almost believed him for a second! Sometimes they walked hand in hand just looking at everything, pressing their noses up to the glass like a pair of street urchins; sometimes they went to the cinema. She hadn't seen many films before David, she'd preferred reading books because in books you could see what you wanted to see whereas films were right up there in your face and you couldn't even pretend that the heroine looked like you! Now she loved the hot and stuffy popcorned darkness, the people all crammed together, crunching and swearing and giving little running commentaries on the film. Once they'd seen a film and the old man sitting behind had kept asking âHas it begun yet?' He just sat there the whole way through waiting for the film to begin. That's how he got through a ton of popcorn and ice cream â just waiting for the film to begin, though it never did for him. It must be like waiting for death, Marly had thought, when you're as ancient as he; life was the adverts, the popcorn and the ice cream; death was the feature film.... She sipped her tea, stared at the rain and wondered if the Christmas rush had started. Quite possibly. It seemed to get earlier and earlier every year â soon no doubt they'd have jingle bells dashing through the snow in the middle of the summer holidays. The Dartford town centre already had its Christmas lights up and the shops were merrily belting out the merry Christmas tunes. Last year Santa's grotto had opened up on October 5th â she'd made a mental note of it because it had seemed so foolish. You could even get Christmas crackers in the January sales for the following year though you might not live that long, you might not even be here. (No wonder the old man in the cinema was confused. Come to think of it, he'd probably been talking about Christmas!) She understood the feeling though, of getting things done earlier and earlier â occasionally, when David went home to visit Anne and Michael effing Angelo, she ended up having her supper at 4 o'clock in the afternoon! If she'd had a cat she'd have put him out for the last time at 11am, the poor thing. Give her a few years and she'd be buying her crackers in the January sales with the other bargain hunters, just to be sure she had them in time, safe and tucked away in the cupboard under the stairs with the dusty fairy lights that never seemed to work and the second-hand bits of old wrapping paper she thought might come in useful. (How very much like her mother she could be.) âMy life's just an old Christmas cracker,' David had muttered last year in his Harold Steptoe voice, after too much rum punch and too many mince pies, âtear me apart and all you get is a bad joke, silly hat, plastic moustache and bangless bang!'
The Oprah show was on. They were doing a quiz about relationships â very simple, just five easy questions, yes or no answers, the expert said, and you would know if he or she was the one. Marly leaped up, grabbed a pen, paper, library book and cushion to lean on, flopped back down on the sofa and peered at the television, listening for all she was worth.
âIs he reliable?' the expert began, standing next to Oprah Winfrey and articulating very clearly.
Oh yes, thought Marly. He was reliable as mud, predictable as sticky toffee pudding, banoffee pie. He was reliable alright.
The man paused for effect and looked around at the audience as if he could tell they were ready for the next one. âDoes he satisfy you sexually?'
Er... yes, after a fashion, in a manner of speaking, more or less she supposed that he did though she wasn't much bothered about that sort of thing; it was more important to her that he treated her right and she could tell him pretty much almost anything.
âDo you feel that you fit together?' the man went on quite solemnly as if he were singing his way through a psalm.
What d'you mean âfit' Marly shouted at the television and Oprah smiled back at her, cool as a cucumber in her long white flowing gown. For heaven's sake, man, what on earth do you mean by âfit'? Fit together like a jigsaw puzzle? My arm here, his leg there, the wart on the end of my nose in the middle... Golden Couple on Sunset Boulevard? Domestic Harmony at 120A East Hill? She reached the crease at the bottom of his chin and could rest her head in the crook of his neck if that was any good, in that sense she fitted him, strangely fitted him.
âHas he stuck by you through thick and thin, through the valleys and the shadows, the bad times and the testing times?'
She sighed and supposed that she had to admit he'd stuck to her like superglue â though sometimes she'd wanted to prise him off and now he was starting to use his fists....
âWould you be unable to cope if he wasn't around?'
Of course she wouldn't be unable to cope. Who on earth did they think she was? She could cope on her own easy peasy lemon squeezy â and she would have to soon enough when she went away to live by the sea with or without him. (But you have no financial capability, he had said when she'd raised the question of leaving.) AnyÂone could cope on their own if they had to, it was simply a mindset, a hardening of attitude. Of course she wouldn't be unable to cope....
âHallelujah, count your scores!' the man suddenly cried in apparent jubilation. One or two people tittered, others cheered (they were always cheering on the Oprah Winfrey show) and Oprah's teeth gleamed in delight. âIf all your answers were NO then I have to tell you you're with the wrong person.' The relationship expert shook his head, suddenly sorrowful. âWhat are you doing with this guy? You're on crazy street with Mr Crazy and you gotta get outa there.'
There were several groans from the audience and Oprah smiled sympathetically. âWe've all been on crazy street,' she said gently. âWe've all been there.'
âSure have,' the expert agreed.
âYou just gotta get the crazy bus outa there!' she quipped.
âYou betcha!'
They smiled at each other under the lights then turned to the audience. The expert was about to continue when the camera shifted to a middle-aged woman in the audience who was standing up to ask a question. She was shaking nervously under the spotlight and seemed particularly excitable. âWhat if you got the bus outa there and ended up back on crazy street with another Mr Crazy? For twenty year I beenâ¦'
âJust keep riding those buses ma'am,' the expert said quickly, smiling broadly. âRide 'em all the way along to Kansas if you have to. There's some real nice folks live up there.'
The audience erupted into spontaneous applause and the woman sat back down looking dazed.
âWell now,' the man continued, stroking his moustache, âif you got a coupla NOs then it may well be you're with the one before the one, if you see what I mean.'
âNo I do not,' Marly shouted again at the TV. You could go on forever and a day like that: the one before the one before the one before the one.
âAnd if you got one NO or less...' he paused again for effect.
That's me, thought Marly in suspense.
âThen I suggest...'
âWhat, what?' she cried, leaning forward and almost knocking over the empty cup on the cardboard box. There were one or two stifled whoops and hollers from the audience.
âI suggest that youâ¦'
Oh for goodness sake, man, get on with it.
âBook the church!' he cried at last, punching the air with his fist. âBook the church!' The audience went wild â throwing slips of paper about the place, cheering, hugging each other, stamping their feet.... The expert kept punching the air with his fist, egging them on. It was obvious the whole thing had gone to his head. âJust take that crazy bus round to the minister's house,' he shouted, âand book that goddamned crazy church!'
It looked like Oprah Winfrey was trying to calm him down when they cut to the commercial break.
Book the church, Marly wrote on the little scrap of paper, giggling to herself at the expert's antics. She doodled a heart and a childish D 4 M then scribbled them out again in embarrassment, her nose almost touching the page it was getting so dark in the flat. She wouldn't go up to Bluewater, she decided, after all, what with the Christmas rush and everything it would be too packed. She would stay right here, quite quiet in the flat, listening to the rain drumming on to the roof and waiting for David, perhaps a snooze in the red sleeping bag, another cup of tea, an afternoon film. She spun herself round until she lay lengthways along the settee, propping her head up on a cushion, turning off the television and closing her eyes. It was a relief to know that she didn't live on crazy street and David wasn't a Mr Crazy (though he used hisâ¦). He might not be a Mr Right but he was at the very least a Mr Reasonably Okay. (Was that what Terry meant by accepting?) How could she ever have doubted it? Had she been blind? It wasn't too late to turn it all around. It wasn't impossible that she could be well. If they went away to live by the sea who knows what could happen. They might even get married in a crazy church â she could see it now: Michael effing Angelo ridiculous in a top hat, Anne with her painted toenails and her father... well, her father wouldn't come but they would be married nonetheless in a church full of flowers and prayer books in Ariel boxes (at Ivy's funeral the prayer books had all sat in Ariel boxes) and crazy Roman candles that lit up the stained-glass windows â what a lot of scrubbing the choir boys must do. They would go this very weekend and pick out a gown at the bridal shop in Bluewater, with the other young couples that sauntered by, the girl always dragging the boy by the arm and saying âIsn't that dress beautiful?' and the boy saying âNo, I think it's horrible', not having a clue what she meant, not having a clue what lay in store. Amazing how you got swept away by the dream â you'd practically take a gnome up the aisle for the most beautiful dress in the world; and yet you'd give it all up for the greatest man on earth. David wasn't the greatest man and nor was she the greatest girl but they might do very well far away from the little grey wounded street. If they lived in a cottage on top of a cliff with roses round the door and honeysuckle creepers; a cottage with a washing machine and cookery books, wooden floors and patchwork quilts and a gate that led to the path to the beach.... Ah yes, there she was, racing down the cliff-top path, picking flowers as she went with no Hades in sight, just acres and acres of clean white beach where David sat building sandcastles with a sturdy robust little boy with roses in his cheeks. The sky so blue as if it had just been washed by an enterprising set of little angels â what a lot of Ariel they must use... her hair, her skin, her eyes so clear and bright, her legs so tanned as if she'd just stepped out of a TV advert, the three of them strolling hand in hand, catching the rays and counting the seahorses on the waves. How they plunge and dance â she points them out to her son â graceful as the Ballet Rambert. How their manes glitter up in the sun, like lots and lots of granulated sugar... she is mixing them bran mashes in the kitchen full of cookery books! She is teaching the boy to play Bach and he plays â how strange â with purple fingers. She is sleeping safe and warm and tight underneath the patchwork quilts for there are no sad ghosts here. Only happy ghosts haunt the cottage with the roses and the honeysuckle creepers.
She woke up with an hour or so to go before David came home. It was almost completely dark in the flat and she groped for the lights, feeling her way into her slippers as she went. There were sounds of thumping from down below and she figured Jason was back already though normally he was quiet as a mouse, peering through his optical lenses no doubt or stroking his golden fleece. She turned the radio on to drown him out and set to work about the flat. She would have it spick and span for when David came home... he would be so pleased. Her mind was quite clear after her short nap and a vague sense of contentment still clung to her. They would soon be away from this little grey street! She polished and dusted, hoovered and hummed, occasionally breaking into song along with the radio when she knew the words. She just did things that needed to be done, without thinking or feeling and it was good to act without thinking or feeling: she repositioned the rat trap, dusted a small ornament, rinsed out a peanut butter jar. She prepared a little pasta sauce (Ã la David) with lots of mushrooms and onions, courgettes and tomatoes â just the way he liked it. She dug out the Limes application form from her bag, settled herself at the table and meticulously read through it. The anglepoise lamp got quite hot against her cheek as she strained her way through the questions, putting down answers she thought they wanted to hear and struggling to fit her large unwieldy writing into the small spaces; though at the end there was a great big space to fill and she didn't have a clue what to say.