Authors: Judy Astley
Mo, he thought, was looking tired and dejected. She didn't say much these days, not to him anyway, and when she did speak she was snappy. She seemed caught up in faraway thoughts of her own and he hadn't been invited to share them. He didn't know what to say to her that would please her. When she'd complained about the care of Penmorrow being too much for them he'd done his best, getting Alice down from London. In fact, now he took a deep toke on the spliff and recalled in a heady blur of smoke, that had been Mo's idea. âAlice should do her bit' â those had been her very words. The mood she was in these days, she'd deny it for sure. She seemed to resent Alice's presence even more than she'd resented her absence. Who could know with anyone, even the person who was supposed to be closest to you, how to get it right?
Mo was looking glassy-eyed now. Harry glanced at her wiry, prematurely greying hair and wondered why, when she was a couple of years younger than Alice,
she looked as if she was almost as old as Joss. That was what happened, he thought â considering this, by way of the dope's effects, to be a deep piece of philosophical insight â when you modelled yourself on someone from the wrong generation. Mo had arrived at Penmorrow so full of admiration for Jocelyn, eager to be a free spirit like her, and to please her. She'd made a lifetime habit of emulating her with even the smallest things, like all that rustly velvet clothing and the heavy amber beads and crystals and keeping her hair long. She should get it properly cut and coloured and conditioned back to youthful smoothness, Harry thought, surprising himself. She should decide that she was herself, not some second-hand faded old hippy. And she should do it fast, before she too became debilitated and started thinking about the approach of the end of her life, rather than the good-time middle bits that they were surely allowed to have sometime soon.
Alice turned the car out of the winding Tremorwell lane and joined the main road west, pulling into a long slow line of traffic heading for Penzance. It wasn't even ten yet but the Sunday motorists were out in force, and they all seemed to be making for the far tip of the county. At the side of the road, just past the garage, was a hitch-hiker. Alice, her car slowed to a crawl by the sheer traffic volume, thought of how she used to hitch everywhere when she was a young teenager. A night out in Truro would involve herself and Sally taking turns to hide in a ditch so that motorists would think the hitcher was all alone and either feel worried for their safety or hopeful that they were wanting more than a car ride.
âIt's Aidan!' Grace interrupted Alice's thoughts.
âWe'll have to stop, he'll see us.' Alice pulled over, reluctantly, sure that Grace would resent this unexpected companion on their trip.
âCourse we will. Anyway, Aidan's cool.' Grace already had the window down, waving to him. Alice pulled into the layby where Aidan waited, and stopped the car.
âWhat happened to your own car?' she asked as he climbed in.
âBit of starter-motor trouble,' he said, settling himself into the back of the Galaxy behind Grace. âI don't think it likes the sea air. It's happier with pure North London fug.'
Alice looked back at him by way of her mirror.
âSo where are you heading? Where do you want us to drop you?' She'd sounded abrupt without meaning to. It wasn't very fair of her but she'd prefer to spend the morning with just Grace. Or with just Aidan. She could see him smiling at her. He looked very boyish with his chic glasses and hair tweaked up in that slightly Tintin way that all youngish men seemed to like. Theo spent ages tweaking his into shape in front of anything with a slightly mirrored surface. In her opinion it made them all resemble birds with titchy crests, like soft little finches caught in a breeze.
âI've got a day off from Jocelyn's magnum opus,' he told her, âso I'm going to see a film. They're showing
Blue Juice
as a one-off down in Penzance so I thought I'd see it, check out the surf scene. Or at least as it used to be.'
âYeah right, and Catherine Zeta Jones,' Grace teased him.
âYeah, well, OK, she's a babe. Back then anyway. She's looking too Hollywood for me these days.'
Alice wondered if that was polite-speak for âolder'
but decided against commenting. She'd only be inviting a flurry of embarrassing cover-ups, verbally.
The car slowed again as traffic joined the road from a junction, a steady crawl of a long line of cars.
âWhy are there so many people on the road? Are they all going to Land's End?' Grace asked.
âWho knows? Perhaps they're all going to their various churches,' Alice said.
âDo you think so?' Aidan looked surprised. âI had this down as pagan country.'
âThat's spending too much time with Jocelyn,' Alice laughed. âShe's convinced you the whole county is a hotbed of spells and heathen festivals. You're forgetting all the Cornish Methodists.'
âShe does that, your mother,' Aidan told her. âShe winds you in like a spider with silk so that you end up thinking her world is the only one that exists. It's good for the book but a bit much when you're back on planet Reality.'
âI like that,' Grace commented. âI like her world.'
âOh don't get me wrong.' Aidan leaned forward to reassure Grace. âIt's just that it's so far removed from my personal reality.'
âWhich is?' Alice asked, signalling to a carful of holiday family to join the traffic queue in front of her.
âOh you know, the usual.' He was smiling â looking as if he missed his home. âManky flat in Kentish Town, beer cans everywhere, pizza boxes under the bed, you know, usual sad-bloke-on-his-own stuff.'
âSounds like Theo.' Grace was laughing at him. Alice thought so too â it sounded laddish, juvenile, non-responsible. All the things that she and Noel simply weren't. She pictured vividly the things Aidan left out: a zebra-print thong scrunched up at the far end of the duvet, cast off in sexual abandon by a lithe,
taut-skinned girlfriend; an unsavoury heap of boy-smelling clothing desperate for someone to launder it; photos Blu-Tacked to the wall of drink-sodden party debris and girls in strappy little dresses, with sleek long hair, clutching each other lovingly and pulling daft expressions, cigarette in one hand, a sickly drink concoction in the other. Aidan's world, a pre-settled, youthful world.
âSo you weren't a church-goer then?' Aidan asked Alice.
âWhat's this? More research?'
âI suppose so. Joss is very vague sometimes. I'm having to pull this book together from all sources. You don't get that with a footballer's memoirs.'
âSuppose not,' Alice conceded. Her mother was a woman much given to reinterpreting events of the past. Or, at least, to leaving out the bits that were more or less humdrum. If Alice had been a devout Christian and had insisted on being baptized and confirmed, Joss would probably have skipped over that and mentioned some Beltane extravaganza she'd hosted instead.
âActually, when I was Grace's age I sometimes used to go to the Sunday morning service at the Tremorwell village church with my friend Sally.' Aidan had his electronic recorder out again and was pecking at its works, reminding her of Theo and his phone. Aidan even had the tip of his tongue out between his teeth as Theo did when he concentrated. What was I thinking of? Alice asked herself, feeling mildly mortified that she still found this young man so attractive. One day, she thought, not too far on from now, she'd turn into a caricature: she'd be accosting strangers like the two âOooh! Young man!' harridans on the Harry Enfield show.
âWhat did Jocelyn think of you taking up conventional religion?' Aidan asked. It was a professional question, she recognized. She could sense the deep lack of real interest.
âI didn't tell her,' Alice replied truthfully. âShe disapproved of all organized religions. She believed, still does, that they're systems by which the poor â and especially the female poor â were kept in guilt-ridden terror of eternal damnation.'
Behind her she heard the recorder being switched off. He simply didn't want to know any more and was now, she could see, staring out of the window, his knee jigging up and down impatiently, waiting like a child for the next thing. The film he wanted to see.
Alice remembered the church outings. She'd enjoyed having this secret from Jocelyn. She had loved the hymn-singing and had been enormously envious of Sally, who told her that they sang a hymn every morning at her school assembly. Alice had added this to her grievance list of things she minded missing out on from not going to school. She sang well â Sally said she'd have been a dead cert for the school choir. Sometimes, to annoy Jocelyn, she would belt out her favourites while she was doing jobs around Penmorrow, shelling peas in the kitchen or sweeping leaves from the verandah. âFight the Good Fight' went down particularly badly: Joss couldn't resist clucking over what she called the âoffensive paternalism' of the words, though contrarily even she was quite fond of âEternal Father Strong to Save' and in a good mood might be tempted to join in.
At the beginning of the summer season, Alice remembered, the vicar would greet unfamiliar faces in his holiday-swollen flock and would welcome this year's âswallows', smiling graciously round at them
and expressing the unctuous hope that they wouldn't fly away too soon. Everyone would laugh politely, the locals pretending they hadn't heard this annual analogy before. On the Sunday after the August bank holiday he would return to his metaphor, usually in his sermon, trusting the summer swallows would find spiritual sustenance in their winter quarters till their safe return the next year.
It was in the church when she was fifteen, Alice remembered, that she'd first thought about leaving Penmorrow. It had occurred to her that she too could be a swallow. At the end of the summer with Marcel, he'd asked her to go to France with him. She'd told him she couldn't and he'd simply shrugged and said, âBut you could,' setting free the whole of the rest of the world for her. She hadn't wanted to go then, because she hadn't wanted to stay with him, but from then onwards she had it in mind that one day she could leave the village and return in a new guise as a visitor, a whole-summer one or just for occasional weekends. It was a few years more before she actually left â but it was enough at the time to have absorbed the exhilarating notion that flight was possible.
Grace was now being silent â Alice assumed the burst of early-morning energy had been sapped away and that she was about to lay her head against the car window and doze off again. She turned off the main road and drove along by the sea through Marazion and past St Michael's Mount, purely for the pleasure of being so close to the water and seeing clutches of family visitors setting up their windbreaks and toddler tents, pitching in for a long, leisurely day in the sun. Aidan got out here, happy to walk along the seafront, as the tide was out, into Penzance.
âWe missed out on all that, really, didn't we?' she
commented to Grace as they slowed to let a heavily equipped family haul their coolboxes and beach toys across the road.
âWhat? Missed out where?' Grace snapped back to life.
âOrdinary English seaside holidays, like all these people. Staying in rented cottages and hanging out on the beach all day. Sandwiches and flasks of tea.'
âGod Mum, you sound like those people who go on about the good old days. Anyway, we always came to Penmorrow. Why would we need to rent somewhere?'
âYes but . . . well to me it was a sort of home visit, not a holiday. We didn't often spend whole days going to the beach, because it was always just
there
, down the path. And then we've always gone to Greece or Florida or . . .'
âItaly like later. Mum?'
âHmm?' Alice was negotiating the roundabout now and watching the Isles of Scilly helicopter taking off from the Penzance heliport.
âDo we
have
to go to Italy? Can't we just stay here?'
âWell it's all booked. And what about Theo and Noel?'
âWhat about them? They can still go if they want to.'
Alice gave her a sharp look. Grace had rover done this before â split herself and her mother away from the other two. That hadn't been the idea when she and Noel married: living separately, each was a lone and lonely parent bringing up a solitary child. Together they formed a family â something so very much cosier. Or so she'd always thought.
âWhy don't you want to go?'
Grace shrugged. âDunno. I'm just OK here. Actually, I don't even much want to go back to London.' She shuddered. âTraffic, everyone going on about what
they're wearing all the time and all that homework just so the school can creep up the league table. Netball, ugh.'
âIt probably isn't that different down here,' Alice said, smiling at her.
âBut it might be. We should try it.' Grace was quiet for a moment, then she said, âI read Jocelyn's book.'
âI know. I saw you with it at St Ives. What did you think of it?'
âNot sure. Brilliant I suppose but . . . was Angel actually Joss? Did all that stuff happen to her?'
âThat's what everyone's been asking ever since she wrote it, especially as she never wrote another. No-one got any sense out of her about it. Sometimes she'd say it was someone she knew but mostly she said she'd just made it up. I never met any of her family so who knows? If it
was
her it would come out in Aidan's book, I'd expect.'
âBut didn't
you
want to know? Didn't you ask her yourself years ago? And why didn't you see any grandparents or aunts and uncles?' Grace sounded quite fierce, frustrated by Alice's apparent indifference.
âOf course I asked! But what can you do if she keeps changing her mind? One thing she did say, though, was that it was almost worse in her family to have made it all up. Her family were devout Christians and thought she was an irredeemable sinner for having so much as imagined it all. She did say she'd have got less grief if it had all been true, which is pretty damning, wouldn't you say? And she was an only child of quite old parents. I might have met them when I was tiny, but I think they're long dead.'