Authors: Wendy Perriam
âFine, fine. How was Brighton?
And what in God's name were you doing strolling arm-in-arm with an out-of-work lunatic in
shorts?'
The shorts had certainly been a stumbling block. They were cut-down jeans, sawn off so close to the crotch that his bare brown legs seemed to go on and on for ever. It was difficult to concentrate on Magda, with all that tangled golden hair creeping over the train seat and trying to involve itself with her severe brown dress. She brought out Magda almost immediately, as a shield and a defence. This was a problem-solving day, not a spree. Strangely, the lipsticked letters seemed almost to have shrunk. Ned had a way of rubbing things off with a little optimism and a lot of common sense. He turned rebellious teenagers into a temporary affliction, like a head cold, rather than a terminal illness. A wrecked bedroom, in his eyes, was a sneeze, not a death throe.
âKids from the cosiest families do worse than that, Franny.'
âYes, I know.' She didn't know. Teenager had just been a word until she'd met Magda â something she'd read about in the Sunday supplements, a species which roared around on motor bikes and stuck safety-pins up its nose, but always at a safe distance from her and Charles.
âBut Magda's had a double shock. First no father, and then her mother running off â¦'
âOne-parent families are here to stay, my love. Brent Edge was swarming with 'em. It's us who've got to change our attitudes. Lots of kids seem to thrive on Dad in jug, or Mum in Blackpool. We're just bloody hypocrites. If you're a famous film star, it's positively fashionable to have a baby without a father â the Vanessa Redgrave syndrome. I bet
she
even denies any bloke conceived hers in the first place! But try and get away with it when you're a humble office cleaner or a shop assistant, and all hell's let loose.'
âLook, Ned, that's not the point.' He was being far too pat. Perhaps he just wanted to dispose of Magda, so that he could get down to the Mars bars, or worse. People's motives were always so suspect. Hadn't she herself sandwiched Magda between her scruples and his shorts? But she must be fair to Ned. He was still up to his neck in Magda, only five miles out of Brighton. They hadn't even had a coffee in the buffet car.
âHer mother's not dead, Franny, only absent for a while. And meantime, you'll cope. You will, you know. Kids are tough. They adapt, and if they kick a bit in the process, just kick 'em back â gently. You're tough, too, Fran. My little blue steel whiplash.'
She was amazed that he could take it all so lightly, shrug off rebellion, joke about hate. She stared out of the window. Patchwork cows chewing contentedly while Concorde screeched over them, curdling their milk; stolid sheep munching all the way to the abattoir. Nature seemed as unconcerned as Ned. It was an ordinary sort of morning, half-awake, and drizzling with a lazy rain.
âNed â¦'
âYup?'
âI thought you promised sun.'
âGive it time, love. Have a while-u-wait Mars bar.'
She shook her head, closed her eyes. The black darkness behind them suddenly capsized into crimson, as if someone had unrolled a red carpet across her eyelids. The sun had come out, blazing with repentance, galloping after the rain. It jumped in at the window and sliced Ned in half, turning his hair from straw to champagne. The dust in the air between them exploded in a thousand colours. She felt his body leap in sympathy.
âFantastic timing! I bet they pay the sun to do that on purpose â part of Brighton's tourist drive. You've gone all golden, Franny. Cheer up! Let's leave Magda in Richmond for a while. I refuse to let her spoil our day. It's just you and me and the sea.'
And half a million other bods, she thought, as they fought for a patch on the beach. Charles hated crowds, especially ones with transistor radios and progeny. But Ned knew everyone.
âSee that lady there,' he whispered, âthe one with the double boobs.' Her purple-padded bikini top had shifted down, so that two purple cupolas abutted against her breasts, and all four mounds rose and fell in sleep. âShe's madly in love with her driving instructor â the one snoring beside her with the zebra-crossing on his swim trunks. They're staying in sin at the Metropole, but her husband thinks she's gone to a London clinic to get her boobs fixed. He's a conventional sort of chap who likes his ladies with the usual two. There he is now!'
He pointed to a small, swarthy man, waddling towards them with his trousers rolled up, and brandishing an ice cream cornet.
âThere's going to be violence, I know it! Don't look, Fran. He's armed with a double-scoop strawberry.'
She didn't look. She was staring at Ned. He had just removed his blue cotton sweater and underneath was a dazzling white T-shirt printed with the words âIâD SELL MY SOUL FOR FRANNYâ in screaming scarlet capitals.
âNed!'
âDo you like it? I got it done just before I met you. There's a place outside the station which prints them while you wait. I was going to put ââFranny for Pope'', but something told me you're an Anglican.'
âOh, Ned.'
âWell, I suppose you must like it, if it's just earned me two Neds in a row. Give me a kiss, then.'
His face was moving towards hers. She dodged it and bestowed a safe peck on his shoulder. He deserved it. No one had ever plastered her name all over them before. He was like a walking advertisement for Franny. She had stopped being Franny fifteen years ago. Charles didn't approve of nicknames. But Ned had resurrected her. Sometimes she hardly knew who she was. Franny was almost dead, and Charles' Frances was too precious to be taken out of its case, and there didn't seem to be a central, essential Frances in between. She was one person with Charles and a different one with Ned, and another one still with Viv, and Laura and ⦠And yet none of them was authentic or spontaneous. But just looking at her name written on Ned's crazy chest made her feel better. Ned was like a rope trick. One flick of his wrist and the knotted, tangled piece of string she'd been all day pulled out into a simple scarlet ribbon. All right, she would be Franny â just for a day â one magic day, when the sun was shining and half of London had parked itself on Brighton beach and a marvellous mixed-up man thought fit to write her name all over his chest.
âNed,' she said.
âYup?'
âIt's super.'
âSo are you. Now close your eyes. It's sandwich time and I'm about to say grace in Latin.'
The peanut butter had melted into the bread and turned the sandwiches into soggy cowpats. He'd sat on the swiss roll and flattened it. The Acton market pears were long past their first, firm youth. On Charles' rare trips to Brighton, he always ate at Wheeler's, or ordered lunch in his suite at the Grand. He avoided picnics unless they were socially unavoidable, as at Glyndebourne or Lord's. They had a picnic set, with proper china plates and small silver forks for the salmon and the strawberries. Ned was drinking out of the bottle and his table was two bare legs spread with a Mother's Pride wrapper.
Frances bit into a squelchy pear. The juice trickled down her wrist. Ned licked it off obligingly and kept his face, upside-down, below her chin. âThat's how you'd look to an Australian, I suppose. Smashing! Shall we swim after lunch?'
âI haven't brought my costume.'
âI have! I bought you a bikini for your birthday. It must be your birthday soon, if you're a Virgo. Christ, you really are a Virgo, aren't you? â so tidy and efficient. I've never seen a girl give hospital corners to dirty sandwich papers before. I bet your dustbins look like ornamental swans.'
Frances stared at the wrappers. She'd been giving them the Charles treatment quite unconsciously, smoothing them out and folding them into squares. She dropped them almost guiltily.
âHappy birthday!' said Ned, and passed her a package the size of a pocket hankie.
âBut it's not my â¦'
âIt's gotta be. Otherwise we can't swim. Try it on.'
It was nothing more than three Union Jacks â one to cover each of her vital territories, held together dangerously by skimpy scarlet ties.
âNed, I couldn't possibly wear it! It's outrageous. Everyone will stare.'
âAnd so they should. You're a Michelin entry, ââworth a detour''. Come on, get undressed. I want to see the only walking flag in Brighton. I bought it at the same place as the T-shirt. It could have been worse. I almost got it printed with a message in morse code. Do you know, they tattoo people there. While you wait. I heard them â screaming! Shall we be done on the way back? ââWhy did the swiss roll?'' plastered all over my belly!'
There wasn't much room on his belly. It was already thickly tangled with honey-coloured hair, creeping down below his navel and disappearing into the top of his trunks. He had stripped off his shorts and his T-shirt and was standing naked except for six inches of striped poplin. Everyone else around them was more or less undressed, but somehow Ned looked nude. She couldn't understand it. The whole beach was jostling with bare bodies, but Ned's towered above them all like a naked bronze on a high pedestal. And yet he was small, made on a completely different scale from Charles, with narrower shoulders, tauter hips, a neat, tight bottom. Charles' swim trunks didn't cling like that, or plunge so disturbingly far below his stomach. Charles was a he-man, a bigger and better specimen than Ned, but Charles preferred to camouflage his form, hide it in a stern and unobtrusive uniform. Ned wore his body like an exhibit, even with his clothes on. âLook at me!' it shouted, as he undid the bottom button on his shirt, or belted his trousers another inch tighter.
He was displaying it now, leaping around her, throwing up the sand. âHurry up, my love. We'll have the sea to ourselves if we get a move on. Half these bods will be tramping back to ââSea View'' and ââMon Repos'' for their braised-landladies-with-custard, any minute. The one o'clock curfew. Stewed prunes, pass the ketchup. Aren't you glad we've eaten?'
Frances nodded, felt ridiculously glad about everything â the sea pouncing on the pebbles; the sun squeezing between brown bellies and trying to find room for itself on the beach; even the gimcrack little plastic windmill, which Ned had bought her and stuck in the sand, where it shouted to the wind. A simple, stupid word, âglad', not big enough for the clean, salty feeling that tugged at her hair and had washed all the lipstick from the walls. All right, he shouldn't be buying her bikinis and she shouldn't be profaning the national flag by wearing them, but she was Franny today and the rules were different if you changed your name.
He held a huge striped beach towel for her, and she tried to squirm out of her clothes.
âOops! Dropped it. We should have gone to Cannes â they're topless there. Mind you, you look pretty stunning not topless. I've always yearned for a girl with red-white-and-blue breasts.'
She could feel him looking at her and the glance was like a red-hot finger, outlining her curves.
âRace you to the sea!' she said, to escape his scrutiny. They skimmed across the beach, stumbling over sandcastles and stubbing their toes on spoil-sport stones. She was a barefoot Contessa again, with a red rosette crowing on her chest. And this time no Magda to come between her and her crazy, barefoot Count. He collapsed into the sea on top of her.
âI won! Ouch, it's freezing. I've changed my mind â race you back again.'
She grabbed his hand and pushed him to his knees. âRotter!' he yelled. âNow I've swallowed a starfish and I'll have a five-pointed stomach.'
They were sitting in the shallows like toddlers, with waves thumping over their knees and seaweed tangling between their toes.
âShall I tell you something terrible?' Ned felt for her hand under the water and buried it in the sand. âPromise me you won't rush back to Richmond, in sheer disgust.'
âWhat is it?' She felt a sudden twinge of fear, didn't want to rush back anywhere.
âI can't swim. It's shameful, isn't it?' He yelped with laughter. âI've tried. Oh my God, I've tried. I got my best friend to push me in, once, and they scraped me off the bottom three weeks later. I even took fancy swimming lessons at the Municipal Baths in Penge with an All-England wrestler called Gladys. I sank her, all fourteen stone of her, and Penge Borough Council demanded compensation. The English don't like non-swimmers. I suppose they think it's unpatriotic, with all that water around us. They refused to serve me, once, when I tried to buy a pair of water wings â¦'
She was shocked, despite his banter. Charles could swim five thousand metres without stopping. He did it every summer, as his annual endurance test. Plunged straight in â no messing â and slogged backwards and forwards in straight lines, until the distance was up. On each occasion he tried to cut his time down. He didn't really like swimming, but it was a challenge and a discipline, a way of measuring his prowess and fitness, making sure he hadn't softened up.
Ned was walking on his knees and had reached neck-level, his head a smooth brown cup sticking up on a saucer of sea.
âYou swim, love, don't let me stop you. You can pop across to Brittany and back, while I sit here and knit.'
She didn't want to swim. It was much more fun paddling and splashing and playing childish games. They jumped waves and collected treasures â half a crab, a cuttlefish, a barnacled beach shoe, even a message in a bottle. (Well, Ned swore it was a message.)
They returned to their six-inch square of beach and Ned wrapped the treasures in the dirty sandwich papers and spread the towel for Frances. She shut her eyes against the sun and the space between her eyelids filled with gold and scarlet sequins. The sun was like a velvet towel, mopping all the water from her body, and acting like an anaesthetic to dull the darts of guilt and doubt which still kept pricking.