Mary and me
We found each other in the cloakroom on the first day at high school, like water finding its level. The cloakroom was full of too-long fresh gabardines mixed with the smells of new leather emanating from briefcases carried by the posh girls. When the deafening bell rang for break, Mary and me wordlessly attached ourselves to each other, walking round arm in arm as if we’d invented a new glue. People called us bosom buddies. You never hear that these days. These days, it’s all BFF, except the last F is often a lie, to be changed with your underwear. On weekends, we scraped our hands and knees on the tall oak trees in the park. And in the autumn, we collected conkers, hardening them with vinegar so they would win. We didn’t think, then, there could only be one winner.
Our mums knew each other. Like us, they were born a few days apart and went to the same school. I liked Mary’s mum. She always smelled nice. Not tarty. Nice. Like a summer’s day. I would look at them, sucking my thumb and wondering what Mary did right to get all those cuddles. She didn’t get told she was a bad girl. Ever.
I called for Mary on my way to school. She lived one street away, so it was on my route. She was always making us late, finding something else to do when it was time to leave the house, like ‘Hang on, Jeannie! I’ve just got to back-comb me hair,’ even though she’d already done it twice. Or, she’d be there pulling her socks up, making sure they were level on her calves, then pulling her skirt down from the waistband so she didn’t get into trouble because it was too short and she knew it. I would hop foot to foot, envisioning an earful for being late, then pull her out the door. Part of me wanted to leave her to it. But you don’t abandon your best friend, no matter how much your tummy tightens. There’s many a time I’ve done detention for that girl.
Later, the back-combing paid off. All the youth club boys were after her. I bought the Rolling Stones’ ‘Get offa my cloud,’ even though I had nothing to play it on at home. It cost me two weeks’ pocket money, but it was worth it to play it at the club and dance like we were on Top of the Pops. Me and Mary always danced together, unless some boy got between us.
There was a lad called Terry, like in the song. We used to sing it about him, us girls, but never to his face. He had beautiful Irish looks: pale skin, dark hair, bright blue eyes the colour I imagined a sapphire might be, not that I’d seen one. He used to loiter outside the club, smoking, waiting for Mary to come out so he could murmur something as she walked past. She always kept on walking, but she let him see her smile as she did. We were twelve; he was fourteen. I half hoped he’d notice me, but I could enjoy the attention he paid her; I didn’t have to face not knowing how to behave around him, even though in my dreams he and I were married and he loved me and cuddled and kissed me, showering me with affection.
We started dating boys at thirteen. We’d go as a crowd to the bowling alley, or maybe the cinema. I never liked going to the pictures, though. I wanted to see the film, whereas the boys always made for the back row. They’d lean over and make you close your eyes so they could kiss you, slobbering so much it made the skin around your mouth sore. You missed most of the film, but if the boy had paid, it seemed only fair. One day, a boy called Derek grabbed my hand while he was kissing me and placed it on his thing, pressing down hard. I felt it go hot and wet. I froze, willing it to be over, his long tongue still poking where it had no business to, making me gag. When I looked at Mary, she wasn’t batting an eyelid as her boy’s hand groped her thigh, creeping under the hem of her miniskirt. She had her hand round his neck, kissing him back. I wondered what she was doing right, and I was doing wrong. I’ve never liked the name Derek to this day.
After that, I didn’t keep a boyfriend more than two weeks. If they did what that boy did in the cinema, they got the boot straight after walking me back to mine. If they were nice, I allowed things to go on a bit longer. My dad must have sensed something. He had a habit of calling each boy by the name of the last one, meaning they were on the back foot from the off. But Mary, she stuck with them at least three months. I got through six boys to her one.
‘Shall we go to the flicks Saturday, Mary?’ I asked one day on our way to school. We were nearly fifteen. ‘It’s that new James Bond film.’ I knew she loved James Bond, though she usually went with her mum. Still, I was hopeful.
‘Oh, no, sorry,’ she said in a sing-song voice, her ear pointing towards her shoulder as she inspected her nails, her lips forming a tight smile. ‘Me and Roland are meant to be staying in. We’re saving up, see.’
I could tell she wanted me to ask what she was saving up for, and to be fair, I was burning to know, but I wasn’t giving her the satisfaction.
‘Suit yourself,’ I said, shoving my hands in my blazer pockets. ‘I’ll ask Wendy.’
We both knew Wendy wouldn’t come, but at least Mary had the grace not to say.
Roland stuck. He used to buy her flowers and chocolates every Saturday from the market on his way to her. Her mum liked him because he was polite and called her Mrs Fletcher. As he became more familiar, his broad smile would come with an ‘Alright, Mrs Fletch?’ She would touch her lacquered hair with her fingertips and smile back at him, laughing and throwing her head back.
Shortly after our sixteenth birthdays, I saw Mary at school. We’d given up walking to school together, and she spent her birthdays with Roland. I asked her what she’d got for hers. She didn’t answer. Just took her left hand out from underneath the desk and laid it on top. Mrs Stewart glared in my direction. I squared my eyes on her so’s not to get into trouble. I looked down as soon as her back turned to write on the blackboard. There, on Mary’s ring finger, was a silver band with a colourless stone.
‘It’s only cubic zirconia. We couldn’t afford a real diamond yet, but once Roland’s flush, he’ll get me the real thing.’
Mary placed her hand back under the desk and began writing in her exercise book, looking up at the teacher now and then. I followed suit, my face and neck burning.
After we’d done our exams, Mary left school and got a job at the Co-op. It was only a stop-gap, she said, until she could get a filing job. I got a holiday job in the local library. I saw Mary once or twice, but words got stuck in our heads, never making it to our mouths. Then one day, we went for a walk in the park, just like old times. It was late summer, and the horse chestnut leaves were turning archangel-gold.
‘Oooh, can’t wait for the conkers!’ I said. But she kept looking at her sandals.
‘I know I’m a big kid,’ I said, trying to get her to agree so she’d come out of her shell.
‘I’ve got something to tell you, Jean,’ she said.
My heart started beating fast. I wondered if she was breaking up with me. Funny expression, I know, but we used to say that about friendships, not just boyfriends. I still saw her as my best friend, even if she seemed to have forgotten me since Roland came on the scene.
‘You know me and Roland are engaged,’ she began. My throat went tight, so I couldn’t get any sound out. ‘Well, we’re getting married next week.’
‘Next WEEK?’ My voice was like screeching tyres.
‘Yes. I’m afraid it’s when you’re back in school,’ she said.
‘Why? Why would you choose a day when I’m in school? Aren’t we best friends?’ I said, sounding pathetic. I could tell the tears weren’t far away and I willed them to stay put.
‘It’s cheaper. We need to save our money, with—’
‘With?’
‘Withababyontheway,’ she blurted.
When the penny dropped, I wanted to give her a hug, tell her it would be alright, but what did I know? What would be alright? Never again being the girl for whom the biggest decision was whether to have ice cream or chocolate for your birthday meal? Who went out dancing, or giggled at nonsense? Being married to Roland? Having a baby? A life of scrubbing floors and making dinners? I felt like I was on a fast fairground ride, and I wanted to get off.
We kept walking, looking straight ahead until I stopped near the big oak tree we climbed when we were kids.
‘When’s it due?’ I said.
‘I dunno. Probably around March.’
‘Near our birthdays, then.’
‘Yeah.’
‘Right.’
‘I can’t afford to have you as a bridesmaid, Jean, but I’d like you to come if you can bunk off school.’
‘Try stopping me,’ I said, tears stinging my eyes, relieved we’d found each other again. ‘I’ll always be your friend, you silly cow,’ I said, kicking the earth.
‘Ditto,’ she said.
We walked back arm in arm.
I went to the wedding, took a good luck horseshoe, and gave her a big hug afterwards. I even managed to hug Roland. He turned out to be a good bloke. He qualified as a car mechanic and then did his Knowledge as a London cabbie. Worked two jobs so they could pay a mortgage. And he got her that diamond. He was playing with his three kids in the park one day when he dropped dead. He was thirty-eight. The same park where Mary had told me her life was changing. The insurance paid off the mortgage, but Mary and the kids had a Roland-sized hole in their life that never quite healed.
And me? I got my A levels and ended up in a good job where I met Keith. He wasn’t like the boys I’d dated when I was young. He gave me time and attention. And he understood me almost as much as Mary. Keith didn’t seem to mind when I started going round to Mary’s more often after Roland died. I took to dusting Roland’s photograph for her and bringing flowers to cheer the place up.
Keith and me never had kids. I suppose it wasn’t meant to be. But I’ve never missed one of Mary’s kids’ birthdays. They call me Auntie Jean and kiss me on the cheek to this day.
Mary lives round the corner. We suffer with our joints, but we always get together on Wednesdays for a cuppa. It breaks up the week, especially since Keith died. Sometimes, we walk arm in arm to a café, but mostly we sit in her house by the park, listening to kids having the time of their lives.
Lately, Mary’s been getting things wrong. Yesterday she thought Roland was due back for his tea.
So I’ve discussed it with her three. I’m moving in on Monday. Then she won’t leave the gas on, forget to bring her purse back from the post office, swear at the milkman, or go for a walk in the park in her nightie at half past ten like she did last week.
I mean, you don’t abandon your best friend, do you?
On Tuesday, we’ll visit the park. We will walk arm in arm, chuckling about the tall trees we used to climb. Now the leaves are falling, maybe we’ll find some shiny brown conkers. When we get back, we’ll take off our muddy shoes, put on our slippers, and she can make us a nice cuppa. Then she can put her feet up while I make fish and chips.
Between us, we’ll be alright.
about the author
onnie’s words appear in MsLexia, Tiny Molecules, Briefly Zine, and elsewhere. She shares a home with a rotating cast of family members, including little people who think they’re in charge. To relax, she walks, reads, and dances, occasionally travelling alarming distances to visit loved ones in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Website: https://bonniemeekums.weebly.com/
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