Authors: Freya North
And then he would be afforded only glimpses of memory. And what use would those be?
A glance of her porcelain neck.
Her incomparably soft twirls and curls, so rich and red that they radiate light. Oh, the feel of them!
Eyes mahogany, sometimes conker, lately a rich chocolate too.
The sight of her, yes, but the sound of her more so; the sound of her. She makes funny noises while she reads. She sings under her breath as she walks. And she hums with his pottery, caressing his senses
and
affirming his merits as a ceramicist too. But he hasn't heard her for a while.
âOh God, Barbara, isn't to actually
hear
, more preferable than merely to
recall
, to remember?'
Barbara regards him as if he is a fool.
âOf course it is, damn it.'
Ridiculously early one morning, after mulling over more possible uses for Number Three Penbeagle Street, Chloë sits cross-legged on the bed, swaddled in William's jumper which she has consistently neglected to return. The postcard reproduction of
Mr and Mrs Andrews
by Thomas Gainsborough (1727â1788) lies, a little dog-eared, in her lap. Sixty-one years old when he died â what an injustice! She decides swiftly not to let the Andrews know, let alone the artist himself. She comes across Mr Andrews on his customary early morning âblow through'.
âWhere's your wife?' she asks.
âCharming!' he exclaims. âWill I not do?'
âI don't know,' Chloë says honestly. âI think it's Women's Things.'
âHmm,' he contemplates, âbiological er, disturbances?'
âNo!' Chloë cries. âWell, I suppose it could be â all because of a man I've met.'
âNow that's not like you, Chloë dear,' says Mr Andrews, very interested, ânot like you at all. Sit down on the bench and we'll have a chin-wag. Rex! Heel! Good dog.'
âI've met a chap.'
âYou've met a chap.'
âYes.'
âAnd his name, girl?'
âWilliam Coombes.'
âAnd has he a respectable trade?'
âHe's a potter.'
Mr Andrews considers this, and then considers it good.
âRemember the urns at Ballygorm?' Chloë continues. âThey're his. Not only that â the ceramics I so loved at the South Bank last year too; which I remembered even when I was in Antrim. Isn't that weird?'
âActually,' Mr Andrews counters, âI'd think it rather comforting in some small way myself. This huge world full of people revolving around their own minor worlds and yet you two, it seems, destined to meet.'
âYes,' Chloë agrees, âbecause if it hadn't been in London, or even in Ireland, it would still have been here.'
âSo why is it my wife whom you seek?'
âOh,' mumbles Chloë, âI don't know. You know? Just a chat, some advice. I think.'
âAdvice, hey?'
âA cure for a stomach full of butterflies?' Chloë suggests meekly.
âGone off your food?' Mr Andrews asks, and it sounds like âorf'. Chloë nods. âCan't sleep a peep?' he furthers. She nods vigorously. âMind wanders and dances around in circles?' Chloë agrees. âNot altogether unpleasant a sensation, is it!' he declares.
âNo,' Chloë concedes, âbut strange.'
âAnd would you be happier if it were to subside, disappear even?'
âNo,' declares Chloë, suddenly alarmed, âabsolutely not.'
âWell then,' Mr Andrews declares.
âBut,' falters Chloë, âis it
safe
?'
âIt's safe,' he winks, âdear, dear girl.'
She feels slightly easier, though she's not sure why, and thanks Mr Andrews accordingly. She takes off William's jumper, folds it and places it on the chest of drawers. She would, of course, be forgetting it accidentally on purpose when she next saw him.
Mr Andrews woke his wife rudely.
âMr A!' she declared. âGracious me! Put that thing away. And put me down at once.'
âCadwallader,' he declared, wrestling with his garters, âis in love.'
The last Tuesday in November was when, finally, William, watching Chloë climb and wriggle her way through the ancient holed stone of Men-an-Tol, realized he was running up the one-way street of being in love with her. He did not tell her so just then, as the emotion itself was too raw and unexplored; the notion simultaneously baffling and intoxicating, uninvited and yet not unwelcome.
Chloë had, in fact, found herself in much the same place the day before. Two pages from the end of
Rebecca
, she suddenly stopped reading. Reaching for the closest thing to hand that would serve as a bookmark, she slipped a National Gallery postcard of a Gainsborough double portrait between the pages and put the book down. She walked over to the window, juddered the sash up and thrust her face full on against the spiky chill of November.
âHeavens,' she said, smiling and frowning, âI wonder if I'm falling in, you know, love?'
She knew her feelings to be as strong as the wind and as fresh as the air, and if that was how being in love felt, then it was a condition to be welcomed.
C
hloë could not sleep. She rose soundlessly at two in the morning, dressed without a fuss and stepped out into the cold. The familiar cycle route soon warmed her and the sound of the sea made her feel safe.
Number Three Penbeagle Street was no more gloomy at night than it was during the day, the other buildings, however, now seemed lonely and forsaken without their daytime activity. The key turned easily as she knew it would and Chloë pushed her bicycle through first and followed it, closing the door behind her with an unobtrusive click. The lamp on her bicycle spun a soft light on the interior but cast no shadows for there was nothing in the room to produce them. Just the walls. The windows. The two doors. The original coving. The fine skirting. And the unused polystyrene cup it had seemed rash to throw away.
âAre you there?'
âYes, I am here.'
â
Is
it you?'
âYes, it is me.'
âJocelyn?'
âSweet Chloë.'
Chloë did not need to see her to know she was there. She felt her; a warmth enveloping, comfort seeping. Jocelyn was very near. As close as ever she had been. Mitsuko. For a while, Chloë stood very still and said nothing. She feared the lump in her throat might make her voice falter; break, even. And that would upset Jocelyn who had decreed no tears. Now that she was here at last, finally with her once again, Chloë could not spoil her visit. So she just stood, resting her back lightly against the wall, the backs of her knees nudging the back wheel of her bicycle, one hand on a warmed tyre, the other in her pocket. She gazed over to the arch window and caught a glint of ruby, a glance of emerald picked out from the fanlight by her cycle lamp. Beyond, the neglected garden emerged as two sombre humps, like an old hippo, patient and camouflaged in a drying water-hole. She closed her eyes and prophesied a flourish of small flowers instead, whites and mauves and perhaps forget-me-not blue. No pink, that was for sure. She envisaged variegated ivy, perhaps Virginia creeper clambering up the wall, and she went over to the window and peered through. She saw clematis stampeding. A small table or two. Perhaps the sound of a trickle of water. Endless. So possible. How exciting.
âIsn't it!' Jocelyn declared. âI
knew
you'd find it so!'
âCan't wait,' said Chloë gratefully, turning back into the room and leaning against the window-sill. âThe key unlocks more than Number Three Penbeagle Street, doesn't it?' she mused.
âFlinging open the doorway to the rest of your life, my duck!' declared Jocelyn.
âA great, big open space,' exclaimed Chloë. âA little frightening,' she added quietly.
âChallenging!' corrected Jocelyn kindly. âDo you think I'd send you anywhere where you would not be safe?'
âNo, Jo,' said Chloë, âyou never would.'
They shared an audible smile and sighed each other's name.
âCornwall,' started Chloë cautiously.
âCornwall!' agreed Jocelyn.
âWhy no introduction? Like you gave for the other places? Jocelyn?'
âBecause, my dear, it needs no explanation. I did not need to expound its beauty for I knew you could find it by yourself. I know you very well. I knew it would suit you. I believed it might provide the solace for you which Scotland gave to me. After all, is it not here that you found me?'
âHeavens, yes it is,' marvelled Chloë.
âAnd so,' said Jocelyn, âit is here that I can now leave you, for you can let me go.'
âI can't!'
âYou
can
, darling.'
âI don't want to.'
âBut I'd like you to.'
Chloë bit back tears.
âI need you to,' said Jocelyn.
âAnd I â Need â You,' whispered Chloë.
âI think you'll find you just
think
you do, my darling.'
Chloë considered this. âI
want
to keep needing you.'
âWhy is that?'
âI suppose it makes me feel safe.'
âSafety,' said Jocelyn, âis ultimately of one's own making. And I rather think you now have an inkling of that fact.'
âI do?' said Chloë somewhat incredulously. âI suppose I do,' she said forlornly.
âBuilt up and developed over your year away?'
â
Your
year away!' countered Chloë.
âNo,' said Jocelyn firmly, âyour own.'
âYes,' said Chloë quietly after a moment's reflection, âmine.'
âDoesn't it feel good to say so?'
âNot sure,' Chloë wavered, âit feels strange, new.'
âI think,' Jocelyn declared, âthat you'll develop a taste for it.'
â
Do
you?' whispered her god-daughter, who held implicit trust in Jocelyn and believed everything she said.
âOh yes,' said Chloë's godmother, âI do.'
Chloë said âHeavens' to herself and then sighed contentedly out loud.
âDo you think you might be happy here, Chloë? In Cornwall? Because you could always sell Number Three if you like; take the proceeds to wherever you decide to settle.'
âNo!' Chloë exclaimed, surprised at the brevity of her reaction. âIt's mine! And yes,' she said, chewing the notion and finding it appetizing, âI think I could be happy here. Funnily enough.'
â
Bliss
fully happy?' goaded Jocelyn gently. Chloë turned and faced the garden again. âWhy don't you answer?' asked Jocelyn, âChlo?'
âPossibly,' was all she muttered after a while.
âNow girl!' laughed Jocelyn, who could always tell when Chloë was blushing, even if her back was towards her, even over the telephone, even between the lines of a letter. âWhat have I told you about ambiguity? Is it not an affectation that is neither witty nor necessary?'
âI don't mean to be ambiguous,' hurried Chloë, missing the warmth in Jocelyn's voice. âI was just wondering.'
“Bout what?'
âAbout the acceptable speed for love to appear and root itself.'
â'Bout time!'
âBut
is
it?' whispered Chloë, incredulous, as if, without Jocelyn's go-ahead, the whole concept could so easily have remained untenable, implausible. âReally?'
âIsn't it!' Jocelyn declared. âOh Chloë! If you detect even an inkling of happiness, a tiny glimpse of love, a mere hint of contentment, for heaven's sake grab it and don't let go. Don't, ever, think twice.'
Her words hung in the velvet brown of the room and when she spoke again, her voice was low and shot through with wisdom, with experience, tinged with sadness: âDon't lose it, my duck. It comes but once. Do not question it. Do not forsake it. It cannot be retrieved.'
Chloë cycled back; slow, sad but somehow exhilarated too. Jocelyn's voice filled her head and images of William solicited her mind's eye. The knowledge of both was immensely soothing. Later, as she pushed her face into the pillow to stifle her sobbing, she laughed as she cried.
Oh Jocelyn Jo, don't go.
Oh William!
Stay!
A
nd so to the kiss that seals their fate and our story.
William's intention was that Chloë should see Carn Galver. He offered the Good Life his voluntary services as a washer-upper if only they would excuse Chloë her shift.
âFine by me,' said Jane, eyeing November's dwindling clients dawdling over herbal tea refills. The proprietor released Chloë but demanded that William honour his debt the next Saturday night. Chloë whispered to Jane that she would gladly do her shift on that night.
It was a piercingly clear day and William knew that a walk to the summit of Carn Galver would afford them priceless views over both coasts and justify a hearty tea too. They did not make it. In fact, they would not make it to the top until late January, though they went there often. The pull of the ancient landscape was too strong in other directions, and it seemed to lure them invariably to places not on their itinerary. But always for a reason: a particularly beautiful sky, a peregrine falcon just yards away, sunlight turning the standing stones to gold. They were quite happy for chance to lead the way and were rewarded with the secrets and gifts such detours provided.
When William told Chloë that a journey through the pierced stone of Men-an-Tol would bring her luck and health, she bundled her jacket into his arms and wished her way through the rock. As he helped her through, a shot of sunlight, pink and warm, alighted on her face and kissed it before William could. It spun the stone soft, it pulled flame from her hair, it sank deep into her eyes and turned her skin truly into porcelain. She could have been the mermaid of Zennor and, just at that moment, William thought she very probably was.