Caught in the last autumnal sunlight, another pomaded girl,
her veil now hanging at her nape, larked with her family and newly forged
relations on the seaside bound platform. Her stout husband, so broad his
sailor’s uniform could barely contain his shovel-built frame, gulped beer from
a bottle. Around them swirled the laughter and chatter of the wedding party in
vignette. Though Celia could not hear the conversation, sat as she was in the
train on the opposite platform, she could guess the smutty quips that set the
ample breasts a-rolling beneath the dresses of mauve and yellow and ochre. A
boy of perhaps ten, his hair greased down and parted sharply, gnawed at a hunk
of pork pie. Another child of maybe seven squirmed beneath the peppermint
spittle of an aunt lick fingered wiping coal smut from her cheek. Those of
rectitude mixed with the reckless, and the feckless, to wish the happy couple
well and each other ill when later gossiping at the poor behaviour of this person
or that.
At first Ceclia hadn’t noticed such wedding scenes, but as she
journeyed inland and northward, she became increasingly aware of them; and
increasingly fascinated to see, and note, the similarities and the differences.
Some, like the present scene, were open demonstrations for all the world to
see, whilst others were more sedate affairs: the families waiting like Russian
dolls in neat line with the father beside the bridle couple, and the mother’s
clutching, twisted, handkerchiefs. And, yet others were entirely furtive, the
couple waiting patiently on a bench with a bottle of tea and packet of
sandwiches, to slip way to the consummation of a boarding house, with a sea
view. And then there were still others, that fitted somewhere into this broad device
though all shared a common thread, for the groom was uniformed and the bridal
dress was at most her hurriedly altered Sunday best.
The oily scent of steam which signalled imminent departure
was rising when the compartment door flung open and in rushed a Jack. Celia
turned from her musing on the wedding scene instinctively to see the nature of
the new arrival: perhaps she would be required to move the hat box from the
seat beside her, or perhaps the new passenger might be pleasant or
objectionable, but principally because it is natural for a human being to see
and assess their circumstance. Having dashed for the train Jack was breathless.
He dropped into the seat by the door, dropping his suitcase between his feet
and puffing out his cheeks before releasing a overly dramatic sigh.
Before Celia could react with anything other than alarm, the
stationmaster’s moustachioed face appeared at the window as he secured the
door, then he raised a red flag, and let out a shrill blast on his whistle.
She looked back to the opposite platform as an arriving
train broke wedding scene into a Zoetrope of goodbyes. Celia glanced back at
Jack, adjusting the brim of her hat. The flash of panic within her had subsided
though thoughts still raced through her mind of how she might escape the
situation. However the taut lurch of the train taking traction dispelled these
hopes. The feeling of being trapped was compounded by a child on the other
train racing to the window directly oppose her and rudely staring at her.
The train slid past the grime blackened stone cottages, past
a flash of hawthorn, before breaking once more into the sheep stripped
moorland. Everything, as far as the eye could see, was devoted to farming of
wool. The treeless landscape was as industrial as any mill or factory. The
chequered fields marked out by the grey stone walls had a monotonous regularity
that matched the beating of the wheels of the rail. And, always there was the
backdrop of the higher moorland, rusting against the skittering clouds.
“Do you mind if I smoke?” asked Jack. And receiving no response, he asked again, “madam, do you
mind if I smoke.” Celia shook he head, and found herself grasping at the brooch
at her neck like a spinster, all the while trying not to show her face fully.
Jack reached into his jacket pocket to retrieve his cigarette case but as he
retrieved it he caught his rank insignia on the on the inside button stud,
tearing it from his cuff and leaving it hanging by a weft of thread. “Blast!”
he exclaimed, before quickly saying in an apologetic tone, “Oh, please excuse
my language.” He held his cuff towards Celia as if in some form of explanation,
though she was still turned away from him, the brim of her hat shading her
face, and he hand still clutching at the brooch at her throat. He thought the
lady’s behaviour odd in the extreme. Whilst it were true they were
unchaperoned, her reaction to his presence was more of the type one expected in
second rate novels. That is until he noticed the monogram on her travelling
bag, which caused him to look at the woman more closely. “Celia, is that you?”
he asked, guessing full well that it was from what little he could see of her
profile.
Knowing she could not hide any longer, Celia turned to face
him, “hello John,” she said.
At this Jack almost laughed. “Good Lord, this is a surprise.”
“Don’t mock me John,” chided Celia.
“I wasn’t mocking you. I am genuinely surprised to see you.
I was under the impression that you were a fixture on the London social circuit.
It is rather a surprise to see you here, in Yorkshire.”
“I might very well say the same for you Mr Jackson,” replied
Celia, somewhat climbing from her high horse, though only somewhat, “aren’t you
supposed to be teaching at a minor public school in Sussex, or Surrey, or some
such place?”
Jack held up the ragged cuff, from with daggled his mark of
rank, “I’m second lieutenant Jackson these days. Or I will be if I can ever
find the company I am supposed to be commanding. I was supposed to meet them in
Leeds, but when I got there I was informed they had gone to Bradford, and when
I got there I was told to find them at a place called Wenn Ghyl.” He tapped a
cigarette on the silver case and was about to light it when he suddenly
remembered “doesn’t your cousin Bunny live at a place called Wenn Ghyl?” Celia
nodded. “I shouldn’t worry Celia, if things carry on how they have been going I
shall get to Wenn Ghyl, only to find that I will have to go to Manchester, or
Plymouth or Glasgow: and you shall never see me again. Not that I mind really.
So how are you? You’re certainly looking well. You got married didn’t you?”
“Yes.”
“Yes, of course, I saw it in Tatler, or some such scandal
mag. One of the maids at the school was most keen and keeping up with the
affairs of the rich and famous, I can’t say
it much interests me but she happens to leave old copies lying around
and I happened to take a peak and there you were. Oh wait,” said Jack, suddenly
realising the situation, “I see. You married a German chap didn’t you.”
“Not that it is any concern of yours.”
“No, no, of course not, you’re free to marry who you like, as
and when you like.”
Celia turned her gaze again to the barren landscape flashing
past the window. This chance meeting with Jack was yet another confirmation to
her that fate’s fickle finger had picked her out for torment. A point
emphasised by his apparent good humoured callousness at seeing her again. For
he looked no different from the man she had known two years before, the man
whose heart she imagined she had broken, and yet there he sat calmly puffing at
a cigarette with seeming disregard: a point proven by his grin when he caught
her slyly looking at him, which immediately forced her to turn back to the
passed landscape and the fleeting sky.
“I didn’t suspect you would enlist,” said Celia, cautiously,
afraid that conversation might inflame Jack to lead it in directions she did
not wish. “Of all the people I know, you were the least likely to run to the
colours.”
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