The Last Pier Part 13

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Then he went to the back of the shop where he could get a better view. Word spread fast he knew and he had been the pharmacist in this town more or less forever. If anyone could spot a familiar face a mile away, it would be him.

'Yes,' he said. 'It's her.'

He sounded like a gamekeeper on safari who, having spotted the prey, was prepared to predict its movements to the crowd.

'Turned out pretty. But for the hair, she could be Rose herself!'

'They were a good-looking family,' said the tampon-seller, remembering.



'Hated her, the aunt did. G.o.d knows why. It weren't her fault.'

'Well I heard a different story...'

'Oh look, she's coming in here!'

Cecily entered the shop like a corps de ballet dancer coming on stage, wanting to stay in line and blend in with the others. Without expecting any applause, knowing she's just part of the whole. No one could see the elegant structure of her ribcage under her coat containing a heart fluttering like a bird. She skimmed around the edges of the shop floor now, thankfully, almost empty of noise. She picked up two bottles, shampoo and bubble bath, both green. And she walked over to the counter. It was then that all speech stopped and the pharmacist (grim-faced with the concentration of not being grim-faced) served her. Cecily's hair was damp from the spitting rain. Her small, lovely mouth was stretched shut in a slender line. But it was her eyes that astonished them. No one had remembered how vividly violet her eyes were.

'Well!' said the pharmacist after the door had clanged shut and Cecily's retreating figure hurried past. 'Whatever next!'

And he went back to his dispensing.

'I knew the father,' he added.

And he shook his head. That sort of memory doesn't go away in a hurry.

The high street was quiet. Changed but vaguely familiar in ways that could only disturb. Cecily felt it holding on to its secrets, refusing to give her the clue she needed most. An answer to the question, Why?

'It's still early days,' the voices told her, kindly. 'Wait a little.'

But the thick, sluggish weight in her head, the slate-grey pain had become terrible.

It mingled with the sound of the sea, coming in from behind the houses.

Day-old flags dragged their pointed ends to the ground. A small pearl b.u.t.ton rolled into a drain with a death rattle. The woman who had dressed up as Bly's answer to a Pearly Queen walked past.

'My G.o.d! Cecily,' she said.

Cecily did not reply. The silence in her head was blistering and she hurried past the woman. The woman looked as though she'd seen a ghost. The war had been dead for twenty-three years. Why was Rose still alive, then?

'Don't you remember me?' asked yesterday's pearly queen.

Cecily shook her head. Everything, she wanted to say, was distorted. But her mouth would not open. Time had closed it up like a damp pocket book.

'You were such a little girl,' the woman persisted. 'I went with your mother to get your train ticket. Remember?'

Cecily's memory refused to be kick-started into action.

'Ah well! You're back, that's the main thing. Staying up at the house, are you?'

In the absence of anyone coming to her rescue, Cecily nodded. Where were the twins when she needed them?

'If you need anyone to clean for you...?'

Concentrating hard, Cecily was forced to stare at the woman's face. Something moved in the locked room in her head.

'Are you Cook?' she asked.

Her voice, unused for so long, appeared reluctant to be squeezed out. There wasn't much of it in the tube.

'Oh no love. I worked at the pub. The one that was over there. It's gone now. We've only got the White Hart left but,' she hesitated.

Cecily had a blank look that frightened the woman. Perhaps she had gone too far but she'd started so she'd finish, she told her husband later.

'It used to be called The Golden Eagle. Remember it? I used to work there. I was quite young. Your sister's age.'

She stopped. Surely she had gone too far?

Cecily shook her head and moved on with a small, barely-heard murmur and a pair of delicate shoulders bent helplessly against the wind. The coat she was wearing was marsh-green, foreign-looking and fitted her like an old glove. Someone long ago had worn it once before.

She had wanted to ask the woman where the ice-cream parlour was but she couldn't remember its name. (In Italy she had stayed for a while in a village called Molinello simply because she had liked its name.) Perhaps her memory was finally going.

Nonsense, said her voices.

Glancing at a shop window, she caught sight of herself and jumped. What was her mother doing following her around? The thought of her mother living secretly inside her skin was scary. Cecily walked over to the window for a closer look. There were the high cheekbones, the dimple when she tightened her face. Only her eyes remained her own. Incontestably beautiful. Huge. l.u.s.trous. A different colour from her mother's or her aunt's. Irish eyes, Geoff had said, in the heat of his pa.s.sion. Smiling even when they weren't meant to. Seasick-making eyes, he had shouted at her, after the fires in him had been put out.

'Can I help you?' asked a youngish man, coming out of the shop.

It wasn't the shop it had once been, but an estate agent's now and the man hoped Cecily wanted to buy a house. Something about the man's face seemed familiar. She searched it for clues. In his hair, which was black and sprung straight up, perhaps? In the shape of his teeth? The man wore flared trousers and a thin s.h.i.+rt. When he smiled there was a puzzle in his smile that matched hers. Both of them shook their head.

'No, thank you,' Cecily said hurriedly and moved on.

Having come outside to sell a property, the youngish man felt thwarted. Disappointed, too. Who was this beautiful woman?

Cecily walked on. She was nearing the end of the high street before she remembered the name of the ice-cream parlour. There had been a chestnut village in Italy where she had lingered for a moment. Carlo's teasing voice had chased her through the dappled sunlit trees. Her bones had felt like small twigs snapping underfoot for Carlo too had deserted her.

'Molinello,' she murmured, now.

And she walked back up the High Street and turned left into s.h.i.+ngle Street.

BY AUGUST 1968 there had been so many changes in s.h.i.+ngle Street that it had unravelled like a woollen mitten. It had been rea.s.sembled after the war by a madman with little respect for history. The Molinellos' ice creams no longer existed of course and the house where the Italian family had lived was gone, replaced by lock-up garages and a warehouse. An old people's home with benches facing a melancholy sea occupied the s.p.a.ce where Bunter's sweet shop once was.

Small traces of an elusive past confused Cecily, who pulled her coat closer. A beam of sealight dazzled her eyes and because of this she failed to see the silent figure on the street corner. Eyes hidden behind dark gla.s.ses, features shadowed by unknowable thoughts, sadness too ingrained to be discounted, statue-still the figure stood. Watching her.

Memories fell like rain on Cecily's thin frame. A billboard, advertising the ballet Le Spectre de la Rose, was one. A voice, so clearly heard, another.

'How on earth did you get tickets Papi?' Franca had asked.

'Your father,' Anna said, 'could get hold of Hitler's wallet, if he wanted to! Take Rose and Cecci with you. And give the other one to Agnes.'

'Or the aunt,' Mario added but Anna had shaken her head.

'No, Agnes.'

Even they had felt Agnes' aloneness.

'I'll take them over,' Lucio, off to pick up the morning's delivery, offered.

But his voice wasn't quite right.

'And what about your fidanzato?' Mario teased his daughter, his voice a happy echo on the now-deserted street.

'He's not my fiance!' Franca replied crossly, eyes s.h.i.+ning her denial. 'And anyway he doesn't like ballet.'

What was the past but a sc.r.a.p of music, played on a piano? Cecily paused in mid-flight across the road and listened.

It was the very same tune that had long ago bothered Lucio, when, driving up to the back of Palmyra House, delivering ice cream to the Maudsleys, he had heard it for the first time.

Sat.u.r.day August the 19th. Ah yes!

A waltz, floating effortlessly through the drawing-room window, as though it were a woman on a man's arm, was difficult to resist.

How many times had Agnes played that piece of music?

When the waltz came to an end on that day, he climbed down from the truck. His legs felt heavy.

Cecily watched with interest. Sometimes she thought her mother the most beautiful woman she had ever seen. This was one of those times.

The ballet tickets were in Lucio's pocket and Agnes, her face a flushed vibrato, shy as a nightingale caught singing, came to the door. She had no idea why it should be so, but the sight of Lucio always made her tongue-tied.

When she smiled the summer light shone straight into the green of her eyes and Lucio, staring at the dimple that came and went in her cheek, forgot what he was about to say.

'Won't you come in?' Agnes asked.

'What were you playing just then?' he asked, bending low under the beam of the door.

'The waltz from Le Spectre,' she told him, her slender hands making a gesture so lovely that he wanted to take them in his own large ones and hold them tightly and dance across the room into eternity. Wanted to hold her face close to his so that her dimple appeared once more.

'Will you play it at the dance?' he said instead with a smile not seen for many years.

Who was this man, Agnes wondered? The ache in her throat was choking her. Her face stung as if it had been slapped. She felt bewitched but where had the charm been hidden? Had the gipsy who had tried to sell her the bunch of rosemary done this?

'Not unless,' she said breathlessly, 'someone can find a piano.'

Lucio smiled. It shall be done, his smile promised. Why had he seldom heard her play, his eyes asked, again.

Because, well... because, you've never been here when I have, hers answered him.

But, oh dear, they were already saying far too much and hastily she retreated behind the ice cream and the ballet tickets.

'I'll pick the girls up afterwards,' he said while his eyes told her something altogether less mundane.

His voice cradled the day. It was warm and slow and full of promise. What could she do but nod?

Afterwards she stood in the cool, dark hall listening to the sound of his truck driving off, the tickets crushed in her hands; listening to the wild beating of her own heart.

Kitty coming in from the field, flushed from some private exertion of her own, heard the sound of the old out-of-tune piano, and frowned.

Cecily, letting out a breath in a mighty whoosh from behind the pantry door, listened, too. Lucio, she thought, looked so like Carlo.

Time stood still. So that now, when it was picked up again, here in desolate s.h.i.+ngle Street, with the seagulls' cries piercing her heart, Cecily remembered, they had been waiting for the evacuee that day. I hope he never comes, she had thought.

Her father had gone off to an ARP meeting. Again.

'But I'll be home in time for supper, to welcome the little chap,' he had said.

And the rest of them had gone, Cecily remembered, on that Sat.u.r.day night, to the ballet. Agnes, wearing the emerald dress that had once, for a brief moment in the past, excited Selwyn, but later would barely raise an absent-minded smile from him.

'Go to the lavatory before it starts,' Agnes said.

Rose, with the cross look back on her face, was keeping an eye open for Franca.

'Go with her please, Rose,' Agnes said.

'I can go by myself,' Cecily muttered.

And she had made a dash for it down the stairs, an escapee from Home Rule, treading carefully on the red, plush carpet. In the ladies' powder room her face looked pretty after all, she thought, startled.

The lights in the auditorium were rose-coloured. So perhaps she had simply made a mistake and the mirror had lied. But her hair did s.h.i.+ne and she appeared to have cheekbones rather like Rose's.

'Cecci,' Franca hissed, behind her in the queue. 'Can you give this letter to Joe, tonight?'

And then she vanished.

'h.e.l.lo Cecily,' Robert Wilson had said as she went back to her seat. 'What's that you've got? A letter? From an admirer!'

Ah yes! Robert Wilson.

That name.

Again.

The Last Pier Part 13

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The Last Pier Part 13 summary

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