Read The Desperate Wife’s Survival Plan Online
Authors: Alison Sherlock
Being paid in cash did make it easier to keep to a budget, she had learned. Whatever amount of money she had in her purse was final.
There were no hidden accounts, no cash stashed away. Once it had gone, there was nothing else.
Charley was still using up the drawerfuls of shower gels, lotions and potions that she had purchased months or even years ago. They were all expensive, in total contradiction to her current circumstances. But at least her skin felt and smelt nice.
It was a different story with the food she ate. All
the store-cupboard basics such as pasta, rice and anything tinned were fine. She had lots of those, but it was all easy, bland fare. Her beloved special ingredients, the magic touches she had once used to make her ice-cream and other favourite recipes, were still boxed up untouched in the hall cupboard. She hadn’t yet been able to face unpacking them.
The phone rang at eight o’clock on Saturday
morning. There was only one person who would call her at that time of the weekend.
‘Charlotte? It’s Mum. What are you doing today?’
Charley stifled a yawn. ‘Not much.’
‘It’s the second day of the May Day Fête and I’m manning the cake stall. Why don’t you come down later and sample my rock cakes?’
Charley grimaced at the thought. ‘I’m a bit tired, actually. Thought I’d rest today.’
‘Well,
come over for lunch tomorrow. I know! You can make some ice-cream for pudding.’
‘I haven’t got the ice-cream maker any more,’ said Charley, feeling herself sink into melancholy.
Her mother tutted. ‘Then make it the way you used to, lazybones. You don’t need those fancy gadgets . . . What’s that? . . . Your grandmother says a bit of your ice-cream will go down a treat before she heads home next
week.’
Charley thought Granny would probably be grateful for the opportunity of some edible food.
‘I haven’t got any ingredients in the house,’ she whined.
Didn’t her mother realise how painful this was for her? How painful everything was these days?
‘Get yourself down the market then. You’ll get some cheap fruit there.’
‘I don’t know if I can, Mum.’
‘You’ve promised your grandmother now,
you can’t let her down, and I forgot to pick up a dessert for tomorrow. Come round at twelve. It’ll be fun.’
She hid under the duvet for a while, desperate to go back to sleep but the conversation with her mother had woken up the dormant chef inside. With a sigh, Charley threw off the duvet and stumbled out of the bedroom and into the hallway.
She flung open the door to the tall cupboard and
stared down at the pile of boxes. ‘Sugar and Syrups’, she had written on one. The word ‘Spices’ was written on another.
Charley recalled the day when all her precious cooking ingredients had been packed away. Bottle by bottle, packet by packet, she had picked them out of her enormous built-in larder and put them into the appropriate cardboard box. Some of the ingredients had barely been touched;
some were old favourites that she’d used time and time again. Her precious collection of cooking ingredients had been tucked out of sight if not quite out of mind. Charley had often found herself thinking about her cardamom pods or kirsch liqueur. She had even found herself standing outside Gino’s delicatessen and inhaling the fragrant aroma in deep breaths. But she no longer went inside. Couldn’t
bear to.
Now her precious ingredients were in front of her again, just waiting to be touched, tasted. She reached up to the box on top of the stack and brought it down. On the side she had written ‘Recipe Books’. She ripped off the packing tape, opened up the box and stared inside. There they were, her books, all with well-thumbed pages and creased spines. She had given away the ones she never
used to the charity shop. But these were her favourites, her old friends that she could never give away.
She knew which particular book she was searching for and dug deep until she found it. It was a book on desserts, in which she had found a basic ice-cream recipe many years previously. To that classic base, any number of flavourings could be added.
Charley knew she had the sugar but she was
going to require cream and fruit. She found herself pouting like a sulky teenager. She didn’t want to make ice-cream. It was too painful a reminder of how far she had fallen, of how happy she had been with Steve and how lonely and miserable she was now.
Ultimately, though, she knew that the pain of making ice-cream would be nothing compared to the pain she’d endure if she turned up at her mother’s
house the following day without it. Besides, she still owed them £40,000. A bit of ice-cream was nothing compared to that debt.
She ate her breakfast in front of the television and remained there until she knew she could put it off no longer. After getting dressed, she walked out of Lower Grove towards the end of the high street where the market was held every Friday and Saturday.
In the heady
days when she’d had money to spend, Charley had bought all her fruit and vegetables in the farmers’ market which was held in Little Grove on a Tuesday morning. There she had bought produce which was fresh, local and organic. A little bit pricy but it was top-quality food.
By comparison, the main Grove market was less organic fair, more flea market. In a small car park at the back of the cinema
about fifty stalls jostled for space. Amongst the fruit and vegetable stalls were imitation handbags, knock-off DVDs and dodgy mobile phones.
Charley strolled around, enjoying the calls of the market traders and the smell of fresh produce. There were lots of imported bananas and melons, but in the end she chose a large punnet of early strawberries. She also picked up some new potatoes and a cabbage.
The whole purchase came to £2. In the good old days, the only thing that had cost her less than a fiver on her supermarket bill was
Vogue
magazine.
She wandered away from the stalls, swinging her carrier bag and feeling a rare glimmer of something approaching contentment. On the way back she popped into the corner shop and picked up a large pot of whipping cream, which was about to go out of
date. It was going to be frozen that afternoon so it didn’t matter.
Her silent flat was in stark contrast to the noise and bustle of the market. Anticipating the loneliness about to engulf her once more, Charley brought out the small radio that her father had lent her. Her iPod and CDs had all been sold by Julie on eBay the previous week, which had brought in a few more precious pounds.
She
placed the radio on the kitchen counter and switched it on. Every pop song was either about being happy or unhappy in love. She didn’t need reminding of either, so fiddled with the dial until she came across some classical music. No words meant no reminders and the tunes were quite jolly, so she was able to start making her ice-cream.
She washed and hulled about half of the strawberries, before
cutting them up into tiny pieces. Normally she would have puréed them in a blender, but the bailiffs had taken both the blender and food processor. Instead she mashed up the strawberries with the end of a rolling pin. There were a few small lumps remaining, but Charley figured that they would add a bit of texture.
She whipped the sugar into the cream until it was just thickened, another task
that took a lot longer without her precious food processor. Her arms were aching by the end.
Then she folded in the strawberry mush, giving it a ripple effect, and poured the whole mixture into an old Tupperware box, ready to freeze. Without her ice-cream maker, she had to remove the box from the freezer every half-hour to give the mixture a stir and ensure it remained smooth.
At least it kept
her busy. By the time the ice-cream was frozen, Charley had managed to lose a couple of hours and it was the middle of the afternoon. She looked down at the mixture and felt impressed with herself. Without any kitchen gadgets, she had made this.
Still, she felt she should have made a bit more of an effort. Perhaps a touch of strawberry jam to bring out more of the fruit taste. Or making a chocolate
base would have been a nice twist. But she was exhausted by the cleaning and by the mental strain of the week, so she put the ice-cream back into the freezer and went into the bedroom for a nap.
She tossed and turned before curling up on the bed in a tight ball. Without anything to distract her, her imagination ran wild. She daydreamed of Steve arriving unexpectedly at her door, apologising,
sobbing that he’d make a terrible mistake and that they should be together, for ever.
Unable to sleep, Charley groaned in despair. She was tired but knew that keeping busy was going to be the key to survival. So she dragged herself off the bed and went back into the kitchen to begin making another batch of ice-cream.
ON SUNDAY AFTERNOON,
Charley found herself sitting at her parents’ dining table, looking at their new double-glazed patio door.
‘It’s lovely,’ she said to her mother, hoping her tone was enthusiastic enough. It was hard to become animated about a sheet of glass at any time of the day.
‘They’ve made a right mess on your father’s decking, which we’ll have to fix somehow.’
‘But how can you afford it?’ said Charley.
‘They couldn’t cancel the order, could they?’ said Granny, who was sitting at the head of the table. ‘The fools paid in advance.’
‘All those dodgy cancellation policies these companies have,’ added Aunty Peggy, who had also joined them for lunch. ‘Disgusting it is, how they can rip off good people.’
Charley hung her head, once more feeling the burden
of guilt for her parents’ current financial status.
‘Wasting the last of their money, when the roof’s got a leak and the washing machine’s up the creek,’ carried on Granny.
Charley looked across the table at her parents. ‘Is that true?’
‘It doesn’t matter,’ said her mother quickly. ‘It’s been a nice change going up the launderette.’
She didn’t look her daughter in the eye and Charley knew
she was lying. For a start, the launderette was in Lower Grove.
‘Anyway, Peggy’s giving us her old one when her new machine comes at the end of the month.’
They were both being so cheerful, so plucky, despite the fact that they had nothing much to live on. Charley looked down at her plate, which looked worse than normal. Her mother appeared to have bought the smallest chicken in the world for
the roast dinner. Plus they had been given only two small roast potatoes each. The meal was inedible as usual, but there would never have been as little of it on offer as this in the old days. Charley felt wretched.
‘Lovely chicken, Maureen.’ Aunty Peggy’s faulty tastebuds were legendary. ‘Charlotte? You not eating any?’
Charley glanced down at her plate of burnt offerings and undercooked poultry.
‘I’ve got a bit of a headache.’
‘That’ll be all those chemicals you’re using in that new job of yours. Your lungs are probably hardening up. Plus all those filthy houses . . . Goodness only knows what kind of skin complaints you’ll pick up! Those dust mites can be nasty little buggers. It wouldn’t surprise me if you ended up covered in eczema . . .’
Charley suppressed a wave of nausea and hoped
it was only the chicken.
‘And as for other people’s beds,’ carried on Aunty Peggy, ‘I shudder to think about them. Don’t you, Maureen? Once you’ve got bed bugs, you’re stuck with them. They’re dirty little devils too. Luckily, my mother swore by her home-made potions. I can always knock up something for you, if you end up with a tapeworm.’
‘Shut up, Peggy,’ said Granny, with a fierce glare.
‘The girl’s gotta work, hasn’t she? And she’s working a damn sight harder than you ever did, in that cushy office job of yours.’
Aunty Peggy stuffed a potato in her mouth. She would never have dared contradict Granny. Charley also received a hard stare from her grandmother.
‘Eat up your food, Charlotte,’ she snapped. ‘None of us can afford to let good food go to waste.’
The trouble was, the
food here was never good, which was probably why the strawberry ice-cream went down so well.
‘Give us a second helping,’ said Granny, holding out her empty bowl. ‘You were a bit stingy with the first serving, Maureen.’
‘Very tasty,’ said Aunty Peggy, also on her second helping. ‘Did you hear about Grove Castle?’
‘I know!’ replied Maureen, turning to tell the rest of the family. ‘He’s only gone
and married her!’
Grove Castle had been yet another English stately home struggling for survival before the last Lord Beckenham had passed away. His fifty-year-old son, who was rumoured to be a playboy, had just caused a scandal by installing his glamorous and very young new girlfriend as Lady of the Manor.
‘I heard she wants to reinstate the Valentine’s Ball,’ said Aunty Peggy.
‘She never
does!’ replied Maureen.
‘I met your grandfather at the Valentine’s Ball at the Castle,’ Granny told Charley. ‘He looked so handsome in his demob suit.’
‘What were you wearing?’ asked Charley.
‘A pair of curtains.’ Granny smiled.
Charley was shocked.
‘It was just after the war. There wasn’t a decent dress to be found anywhere. Plus we had no money, did we? So your great-grandmother got down
the rose-printed curtains from the front room, cut out a pattern on them, and I wore that once she’d stitched it together. It had tiny little red rosebuds on it. Ever so pretty.’
‘I didn’t know that.’
Charley suddenly realised her family had been through a whole host of bad times before the present crisis. Post-war rationing, three-day weeks, recession after recession. If they could survive
all that, why couldn’t she do the same? If her grandmother could wear a pair of curtains to a fancy ball, why couldn’t Charley clean other people’s houses to keep a roof over her head? It wasn’t her dream job but she was still surviving, wasn’t she?
She reached across the table to give her grandmother a kiss on the cheek.
‘What’s that for?’ asked Granny, with a smile.
‘Kisses are free, aren’t
they?’ replied Charley.
A few good things were. She just had to find them.