by Roger Noons
a mug of hot chocolate
I had to go back. Sixteen
minutes thirty two seconds before my mother drew her last breath, I made a
promise.
It was six weeks after her
funeral, before I was able to board a train to Truro and then catch a bus to
Falmouth. It had always been my mother’s favourite holiday destination. Many
years we visited twice, staying in a boarding house, ten minutes walk from the
sea. On this occasion I’d booked into an hotel overlooking Swanpool
Beach.
She’d asked for her remains
to be scattered on Gyllyngvase Beach. I rose early on the Sunday morning and
launched Maisie Cox into the water. With no wind, the ebb tide took her away,
forty two years after she’d borne me.
I was sitting in the garden
reading when the owner of the hotel passed by. ‘Good book?’ He asked. I nodded.
‘There’s an excellent second hand book shop in town,’ he told
me.
I found Quay Books on the
Tuesday morning, when I was seeking shelter from an unexpected shower. It proved
to be my kind of place. Lots of volumes, a coffee machine and armchairs. I’d
just opened a book of Ted Hughes poems when the proprietor wished me good
morning.
‘Not many people come in
here for poetry,’ he added.
The usual conversation
followed, from where and how long are you staying. When I said ‘the Black
Country,’ he asked where, which told me he knew the area. As I looked at him, he
flicked his head back to remove the greying flop from over his left eye. He then
scratched his eyebrow and I had a suspicion he would remember Cradley Heath and
a girl called Maisie.
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