Bad Girls Good Women (82 page)

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Authors: Rosie Thomas

Tags: #Chick-Lit, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Modern, #Romance, #Women's Fiction

BOOK: Bad Girls Good Women
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It was only then that Mitch let himself respond. Mattie held on to him, rocking him in her arms and rejoicing in his pleasure, because it was part of her triumph in her own. To be absolved from the necessity to pretend, or to joke, or to cajole, was a revelation of lightness.

They lay still, half enclosed by the red curtain, holding on to each other. Mattie felt so happy that tears swam into her eyes and she let them roll down her cheeks. ‘I hardly ever come,’ she whispered. ‘And never like that.’

Lazily, watching her with satisfaction, Mitch propped himself on one elbow. He rubbed the tears away with his thumb and then tasted the salt of them.

‘Why not?’ he asked softly.

Mattie sighed and settled her head against his shoulder. The hair on his chest tickled her cheek. The rest of the world seemed comfortably remote, suitably irrelevant to their curtained enclave. She felt blissfully safe, and secure, and pleased with the two of them. ‘I’d better tell you,’ she said reluctantly, ‘in case you don’t want to go any further.

‘Don’t be ridiculous. But you’d better tell me, anyway.’

She began at the beginning. She told him what she had never told anyone else, except for Julia, about Ted Banner and his sad, shameful advances, and her own guilt, and the way she had locked all that away.

Mitch’s face went dark. ‘Jesus Christ. My poor love.’

‘It’s all right,’ she told him. ‘I was a tough kid.’ It was easy to see it like that, with the luxury of Mitch’s sympathy on her side. More confidently, she told him about John Douglas, and Jimmy Proffitt, and the men who had come after that. Mitch listened, without interrupting her.

‘I never liked it,’ Mattie whispered. ‘Perhaps I didn’t want to let myself like it.’

‘I’m no psychologist,’ Mitch answered, ‘but it’s possible.’ Mattie told him about her long affair with Chris Fredericks. He nodded patiently. Last of all, she came to Alexander. It was only then, when she talked about Alexander, and Ladyhill and Lily and Julia, that Mitch showed any flicker of jealousy.

‘Where is Alexander now?’

‘At Ladyhill, I think.’

‘Will you see him again?’

Mattie studied his face, then she shook her head. ‘No. Not like that. How could I? Alexander is a friend. I should have had the sense, for both of us, to keep it that way.’

Mitch nodded, satisfied. Then he put his arms around her, holding her against him. ‘Is that all?’

Suddenly Mattie laughed. ‘Yes. Not very much, is it?’ The sense of lightness came back to her. She could have floated off the big bed, except for Mitch’s arms holding her down. She felt his mouth against her ear. ‘Enough to be going on with.’ He was laughing too, she heard it in his voice.

Mitch reached out and turned off the lights. He folded himself against her back, tucking his knees into the crook of hers. ‘It’s all right,’ he told her. ‘Everything’s going to be all right. You’re safe now. Go to sleep, my love.’

For so long, Mattie thought, she had been waiting for someone to say that to her. It seemed so simple, and so obvious, now that Mitch Howorth had finally done it. Obediently, Mattie closed her eyes and went to sleep.

In the morning, with thin autumn sunlight flooding the room, she turned to him again. She had woken up with the old, disbelieving cynicism dulling her happiness, but she reached out to Mitch with it. She touched him, smoothing her hands over his belly and the rounded muscles of his chest and arms, with the beginnings of familiarity. He blinked at her sleepily, and then lifted her on top of him. Mattie crouched over him, like a frog, and her hair fell around them, a more intimate curtain.

He made her come again. The easiness of it, and the reverberating depths of the pleasure it gave her, startled Mattie into silence. Afterwards she lay curled up in the warmth under the covers, incubating her happiness.

Mitch touched her cheek, then climbed out of bed and put on his dressing gown. He walked over to the window and stood with his back to her, his hands in his pockets, looking down into the garden. He stood without moving for such a long time that Mattie began to be afraid. She imagined that he was going to turn round and tell her something terrible, that he had to go away, and that after all it wasn’t any good, that she wasn’t safe after all. She scrambled out of bed and went to him, greedily putting her arms around him, knowing that if he said it she wouldn’t be able to bear it.

In the garden beneath she saw yellow leaves, and russet ones, shining with the night’s rain and bare branches poking up between them.

Mitch said, ‘Mattie, will you marry me?’

She listened to the words, inside her head, before she understood them. And then she felt a shock of relief and joy and certainty that was far stronger even than the physical pleasure that he had given her.

‘Yes,’ Mattie answered.

Mitch lifted her up and carried her back to the shelter of the absurd four-poster bed.

Mattie and Mitch were married at the beginning of December, a little over a month after they had first met. They were married at St Pancras register office, just round the corner from Mattie’s Bloomsbury flat, on a Monday, the only day on which Mattie didn’t have to be back at the theatre the same evening.

‘We want to do it very quietly,’ Mattie said firmly. But she relented in the face of Lily’s disappointment and made her the bridesmaid. Lily wore an ankle-length pink empire-line dress with puffed sleeves, and sheltered under a white fur shoulder cape, which she was delighted with. The bride wore a black maxi-coat with puffs of black fur at the collar and cuffs. It was not unlike the one that John Douglas had paid for to keep her warm through her first winter on tour. Mattie’s amazing hair rippled out from under a gold crochet pudding-basin hat. She looked like Ophelia, but she carried no flowers. Only Lily had a posy, of daisies and carnations in a pink frill to match her dress.

Mitch Howorth, blinking with pride behind his glasses, wore a double-breasted dark blue suit with a rose in the buttonhole. Julia had had to work hard to contain her astonishment when Mattie introduced him. He seemed so unremarkable, a small balding man with a slight paunch and an amiable smile. But there was no question that Mattie was in love with him, and he with her. On their wedding day they seemed to see no one else. Their eyes were fixed on each other, greedily, as if they couldn’t wait to be alone again. To Julia the obvious intensity of their passion seemed too naked, almost indecent. She shivered a little, beyond the impervious circle of their intimacy.

There was only a handful of other guests at the brief ceremony. Mattie’s brothers and sisters came, and Felix, looking very dark and spare in morning dress. Mitch’s only supporter was his younger brother, a fisherman from Whitby, who was his best man. But afterwards, when they all shuffled outside again led by Mattie and Mitch with their hands glued together, they were confronted by a knot of press photographers waiting on the pavement. The news had leaked out, despite Mattie’s insistence on secrecy. Flash bulbs went off, their incandescence making the December light seem even greyer when it descended again.

Mattie half hid behind Mitch. She was thoroughly relieved to discover that the photographers were there as much for Ricky as for herself. In the last years, Ricky had achieved some fame as the lead guitarist of The Dandelions. He had appeared at Mattie’s wedding in trumpet-legged white trousers and a ruffle-fronted overshirt, his forehead and cheekbones painted with flowers. He waved the photographers away and cheerfully fended off the reporters’ questions.

‘Nah, I’m just giving my sister away, aren’t I? It’s her day. You’ve got your pics, haven’t you? Now off you go.’

Mitch and a giggling Mattie were bundled into Mitch’s surprisingly elegant car, and the rest of the wedding party into the line-up behind it. They drove away to lunch in a nearby Italian restaurant, a favourite of Mattie’s.

Julia had wanted to give the party at her house.

The two of them had come together again, almost as friends. Neither of them had spoken of Ladyhill, or of Alexander. With an effort, Julia had made herself happy for Mattie’s happiness, and put the memories behind her.

‘Please let me,’ she begged Mattie. ‘I’d love to do it.’

‘It’ll be too much work for you,’ Mattie said.

Julia stared at her. ‘How could it be too much trouble? It’s your wedding.’

Gently, but allowing no possibility of contradiction, Mattie said, ‘I’d rather just go to the restaurant, without any fuss. You see, it’s being married to Mitch that’s important, not all the ballyhoo of a wedding.’

Julia was hurt, and her sense of exclusion deepened, but she knew there was no point in renewing her offer.

A few more people had been invited to the lunch party. They were mostly theatrical friends of Mattie’s, but Julia was relieved to see one or two familiar faces from the world that she and Mattie had once inhabited together.

Alexander had been asked, but he had telephoned to say that he was sorry, he had to be in New York. Julia thought that it was cowardly of him, but she could hardly talk to Mattie about his failure to appear. Neither of them mentioned Alexander, or Ladyhill, in the brief conversations that Mattie had time for before her wedding.

The wedding lunch, in the restaurant’s upstairs room, was satisfactorily convivial. Julia sat near the end of the long table, with Felix, and Rozzie, and the familiar faces. There was plenty of gossip and champagne. Lily drank two glasses, becoming endearingly giggly, and then sleepy. Mitch’s brother made an excellent droll speech, and presented a yawning Lily with a gold locket on a chain, on behalf of the bridegroom. Mitch’s response to the toast was brief.

‘I never expected to find happiness like this. I know I haven’t deserved it. I want to thank Mattie for giving it to me, and all of you for coming to celebrate it with us.’

Julia gulped her champagne, blinking back her tears and smiling through them at Mattie, who saw no one but Mitch.

The party ended, amidst laughing and clapping. Julia went down the stairs with everyone else, following the bride and groom. The newlyweds looked dazed, and relieved to be escaping back into their own company.

Mitch’s car was waiting at the kerb. Ricky had tied white ribbons and tin cans to the bumper. Mattie and Mitch were going to spend one night at the Savoy, and the next day they were returning to Chichester.

‘We’ll go abroad for Christmas, when the show comes off for the panto,’ Mattie explained. On the pavement, in the little crowd, Mattie and Julia kissed each other, brushing cheeks. Julia was sure that Mattie didn’t distinguish her from any of the other guests. ‘Good luck,’ she whispered. ‘Be very happy, both of you.’

Mattie’s face was radiant with it. ‘I’ll be happy as long as I’ve got Mitch.’

Julia hugged her. Mattie smelt just the same. Although her scent was more expensive than the old Coty it was still emphatic, a little too sweet, faintly overlaid with cigarette smoke. Julia felt bereft at the prospect of losing her.

‘Goodbye.’ They held each other at arm’s length, for a last look. Mattie winked, and for an instant she was her old self. Then she was inside the car, beside Mitch, waving at all of them left behind outside the restaurant. Julia waved back until the car was out of sight, trailing the ribbons and cans behind it.

‘I’ve had enough,’ Marilyn murmured beside her. ‘I’ll take Lily back, if you want to go somewhere with all these.’

‘Thank you,’ Julia said, not wanting in the least to go back to the quiet house. Felix went home to George. Julia fell in with Ricky and the actors and the familiar faces.

She didn’t remember much about the rest of the day. It ended in a club, somewhere, where she danced with an actor and took his hands out of the front of her dress. On her own in a taxi, going home at last, she sobbed stupidly, her sadness unblunted by all the drinking she had done to celebrate Mattie’s wedding.

Christmas came, after the annual tornado had tom through Garlic & Sapphires. The shops took a record amount of money and were almost cleared of stock.

‘Thank God that’s over for another year,’ Julia exulted on Christmas Eve, as she always did. But in her heart she didn’t care much about the takings, or the stock.

Julia and Lily spent Christmas in the house by the canal. In the morning they opened their presents together in Lily’s bed, and at ten o’clock Alexander rang to wish them a Merry Christmas. Julia knew that at ten thirty, following the stately parish rituals, he would go down to Ladyhill church to read one of the lessons at morning service. She could see the little stone church, packed with people and scented with pine branches and mothballs, and hear the choruses of ‘Hark the Herald Angels’.

Ten years ago
, she thought.

Lily grabbed the receiver almost before Julia had returned Alexander’s brief good wishes, and bombarded her father with talk. After she had finished she hung up, without asking Julia if she wanted to say any more.

Later, Julia cooked a traditional dinner and friends came to eat and drink with them, Felix and George amongst them. George sat by the log fire with a blanket over his knees, the folds of it draped so that they partly hid the wheelchair. He sipped at a glass of Vouvray and ate a small piece of turkey breast. His present to Julia was an exquisite marquetry box. She had admired it many times, on his desk in the inner sanctum of Tressider Designs.

‘George, you can’t mean to give me this,’ Julia protested, but he put his hand over hers.

‘It’s to keep your precious things in.’

They were sitting a little apart from the others, where it was quieter for George. Julia looked sideways at him. ‘The trouble is that you can’t put the really precious things in boxes.’

George’s gaze moved to settle on Felix. ‘That’s true. Luckily we both recognise that, don’t we? And we can also innocently enjoy the
bibelots
that do fit in boxes. Aren’t we fortunate?’

Yes, Julia thought, looking at her pretty room warmed by the company of friends and the spirit of Christmas. Fortunate, after all. She squeezed George’s hand, wondering that she had ever dismissed him as a waspish old queen, wondering at all her other mistakes. After dinner, they played charades. After everything, Julia still clung to her notions of what a proper Christmas should be. Felix and Lily were demons at the game. It was after midnight when the last guests left. Julia went upstairs to see Lily into bed. She lay under the covers and held up her arms.

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