An
Imperfect Life
Chapter
20.
William
By the end of the evening we both knew quite a bit more about each other.
William was twenty five – my senior
by five years. As Mum said when she
first met him,
‘He’s a man Pat, isn’t he?’
He had been in the navy and was
indignant at the amount of space allotted to a
Rating compared with that of an
officer. His brother was a serving
officer in the
Royal Navy – and was married with
two children. William had just left Leeds
University (First Class Hons) and
started an apprenticeship with Metro Vickers.
I
found him perfectly natural and
easy to talk to and it didn’t occur to either of us to leave each other after
that first dance. We arranged to meet in
ten days time.
William said he had to go back to Leeds to pick up a book-case and’ clear things up’.
I got the impression that he was
ending something. When we met again I
was
surprised how easily we slipped into a natural
relationship with none of the awkwardness one sometimes experiences with a new
acquaintance. This felt more like a
comfortable old glove.
“By the way Pat there’s something I must tell you. I’ve got a stammer.” Considering we had been talking pretty non-stop
since we met – this came as a surprise.
His beautiful speaking voice had been the first thing that attracted me
to him. However, when he bought some
chocolates for the cinema, I saw how bad it could be. It seemed to vary according to whom he was
speaking. It never embarrassed him or
stopped him speaking whenever he felt like it.
One of his friends later told me
William had been a member of the Debating Society
and when his allotted speaking time
was up he said he should have longer because of his stammer. This friend also said he had never seen such
a change come over someone, since we had met.
His parents- both teachers who had met whilst teaching
at a school named Sexey’s - had sent him to be treated by Lionel Logue – the
man who famously treated King George VI.
However William decided that no ‘trick cyclist’ was going to teach him
how to speak, so it was a total waste of money.
On our first date, ten days after we met, William asked me to marry him
which rather took my breath away. I told him about Jamie and said I didn’t
think I could ever love anyone else. This Probably was not a sensible thing to
do but it didn’t seem to daunt him. He said I probably needed time and he could
wait, so we agreed to wait six months when I would be twenty- one in March.
Meanwhile we would continue getting to know each other.
Vanessa had started going out with Abe who was atManchester
University and at
Christmas the four of us were going to a Fancy Dress Ball. The men made the
minimum of effort – Abe in a Noel Coward dressing gown with a long cigarette
holder and William, for no particular reason, in dungarees. Fancy Dress was
right up Vanessa’s street and she took charge. I was to be Nell Gwyn, complete
with oranges, and a purple satin dress trimmed with white muslin. Vanessa
thought it was too prudish and attacked the neckline with a pair of scissors,
which left little to the imagination and forced me to stay upright all evening. Vanessa was magnificent as Cleopatra – draped
in a white sheet on which she had painted hieroglyphics with gold paint. Her
sandals got the gold paint treatment along with a rubber catheter which she wound
round her brow and which looked exactly like a golden asp.
We had a great time and I felt – amongst all those rowdy students - completely safe with William. At one stage he had gone to get us all a drink and a student grabbed me, lifted me high into the air, spinning me round whilst I desperately tried to keep in my dress. William appeared, gave an almighty roar and the student dropped me and fled. We were very late back at the hospital and for the first time took advantage of our fire-escape. Abe and William came up too and we gave them a snifter of the peach brandy Vanessa had bought for a Christmas treat.
Vanessa had started going out with Abe who was at
We had a great time and I felt – amongst all those rowdy students - completely safe with William. At one stage he had gone to get us all a drink and a student grabbed me, lifted me high into the air, spinning me round whilst I desperately tried to keep in my dress. William appeared, gave an almighty roar and the student dropped me and fled. We were very late back at the hospital and for the first time took advantage of our fire-escape. Abe and William came up too and we gave them a snifter of the peach brandy Vanessa had bought for a Christmas treat.
As we said a lingering good night
William shocked me by saying:
“You know Pat I think you should
have made up your mind. If you haven’t by
now that is an answer in itself.”
In spite of the night cap I didn’t
sleep much that night. I was feeling pressured. It
was just January – my birthday wasn’t till March. As a Pisces I find decisions
difficult except on the rare occasions that I’m swept along by a tide of
conviction. The last year had dented my self confidence and I was no
longer sure I wanted to do further training – assuming I got my
RSCN. I had been honest with William and told him I could never love
anyone as I loved Jamie and he accepted that. Or so I thought. Of one thing I was certain – I wanted
children of my own and instinct told me that William would be a great
father. I would probably never meet anyone like him
again. He was kind, he had the common touch; equally at home
talking to the lord of the manor or a dustman and people took to
him. He had a first class brain, was honest, trustworthy and
honourable. He appeared to be deeply in love and I knew he would
take care of me – like that lovely song ‘Someone to watch over me.’ Would it be
enough for both of us? Could I trust his judgement?
I first met Jamie when I was fifteen,
but I was nineteen before I realised I loved him. Might not the same
thing happen with William?
On the other hand he had very strong
convictions and didn’t hesitate to air them, regardless of other people, which
sometimes caused upset. I suspected he was stubborn. In
the first flush of love I could usually sweet-talk him round but what about
after we were married? How I wished Maddie were
around. In the past I had resented her interference but now I really
needed her ‘take’ on the situation.
Then there was his stammer; I
was proud that he hardly stammered at all with me. He was full of ideas and with his mind racing
ahead, I found it very moving when he struggled to get the words
out. But I didn’t want to marry him out of compassion. I
prayed for guidance and the next time we met I took one look at his face and
said ‘Yes.’ and was swept along by his joy and enthusiasm.
William said we should phone his mother and he wanted me to speak to her. I
William said we should phone his mother and he wanted me to speak to her. I
think the whole idea took her by
surprise. She had had William late in life and in those days a late
child was often looked on as companion for old age. William had been
educated at home until he was eleven and his mother adored him.
‘I hope you know what you are
taking on.’ she said but I took this to be her sense of
humour. Conversation was difficult as she was very deaf and usually
kept her hearing aid switched off. Sadly
William’s father who had been an officer in WW1 was now virtually bed-ridden
with heart problems so would be unable to attend the wedding. We planned to
have it in late July – it was now January.
“William I think you should come home with me on my next day off – then you can ask Dad for my hand.” William agreed it would be a good idea.
“William I think you should come home with me on my next day off – then you can ask Dad for my hand.” William agreed it would be a good idea.
One night William came to
meet me on his motor bike and he was wearing an old rubber
mackintosh. He had lost the belt and tied some rope around the
waist. I determined no way was he going to show up at home looking
like that, so we had a serious talk about his sartorial appearance. I was going
to take as much trouble with his appearance on the big day as with my own. On my day off we met in Manchester and instead of going to the bus
station went to a stop on the edge of town. It was not a very
salubrious part of Manchester
and my heart sank when the bus came and the conductor said it was full.
“‘Oh please let us
on. I’m a nurse – it’s my day off and I’m going home.” His
face softened and he extended his arm to help me up.
“And I hope your rabbits die!” came William’s
voice from behind.
“Right! Off!’ The conductor’s face hardened and he almost shoved me off the platform. I turned to look at William – totally unaware of what he had done.
“‘OH WILLIAM!”
During our enforced wait in the sleazy area, I explained to William that if he had resisted the urge to condemn the bus conductor’s rabbits to an early death, we would now be on the bus and halfway home. William, in his wrath had not noticed the conductor’s face soften, nor yet his proffered arm to help me up. He listened, a little abashed and apologised. I thought it ironic that his stammer didn’t prevent the snappy crack that would be better left unsaid.
There was a warm welcome and one of Mum’s special high teas waiting for us and William relished both. After tea I went into the kitchen with Mum to wash up and let the men get on with the business of ‘permission to marry.’ Before we’d even started the cutlery, Dad appeared with a big grin on his face.
“What happened Dad?”
“Well t’lad couldn’t get it out an’ I knew what he wanted to say so I said it were alright and you could get wed!”
“Right! Off!’ The conductor’s face hardened and he almost shoved me off the platform. I turned to look at William – totally unaware of what he had done.
“‘OH WILLIAM!”
During our enforced wait in the sleazy area, I explained to William that if he had resisted the urge to condemn the bus conductor’s rabbits to an early death, we would now be on the bus and halfway home. William, in his wrath had not noticed the conductor’s face soften, nor yet his proffered arm to help me up. He listened, a little abashed and apologised. I thought it ironic that his stammer didn’t prevent the snappy crack that would be better left unsaid.
There was a warm welcome and one of Mum’s special high teas waiting for us and William relished both. After tea I went into the kitchen with Mum to wash up and let the men get on with the business of ‘permission to marry.’ Before we’d even started the cutlery, Dad appeared with a big grin on his face.
“What happened Dad?”
“Well t’lad couldn’t get it out an’ I knew what he wanted to say so I said it were alright and you could get wed!”
“Thanks Dad.” You’d think they were glad to get rid of me,
“When were you thinking of?”
“July – as soon as I have finished my Finals.”
“July – as soon as I have finished my Finals.”
“Eeh Pat- couldn’t ye wait a
year? We’ve just bought t’three-piece suite”’
Mum caught sight of my face and said.
Mum caught sight of my face and said.
“Never mind we can manage it” Good
old Mum! Well, she held the purse strings so she should know.
Over the week-end we discussed
the arrangements and William suggested we got married at sea where, as long as
you were three miles out, the captain could marry you. I said I wanted to be married by our
minister. He and his wife had been kind, helpful and supportive
during my teen-age years and when William saw the simple church (alas no more)
he agreed.
It was a shame that Gran
would be in the States, Maddie and family in Africa and William’s brother a
serving officer and his family in Malta .
William sent off for an engagement ring that he had seen in a catalogue.
William sent off for an engagement ring that he had seen in a catalogue.
“Goodness," said Vanessa when
she saw it, “I’ve never seen such a tiny diamond. You can get really good sized zircons for the
same money.”
I forgave her and asked her to be bridesmaid. I
also asked Annie, my old friend from the Convalescent Home. We all
met in Manchester
and as often happens when you introduce your special friends to each other it
didn’t go well. Vanessa had a vision of them wearing striped
creations in yellow and black.
‘We’ll look like bloody big wasps!’ moaned
Annie.
There
was so much to think about and Finals were looming which was giving me
nightmares. William’s poor father had a heart attack and when he was
convalescing his mother wrote how she was pushing his bed out onto the veranda
every day so he could enjoy the spring sunshine. This worried
William and his brother as she was no spring chicken and had
angina. And then a bombshell!
William met me one evening looking desperately worried. He had been called up.
‘Not another bloody war!’ I screeched. Apparently when he left the Navy he was given the option of signing on as a Reservist. This meant he would get an income of 1s 1d a day (about 14p but it went much further then) and as he was going to University he jumped at the chance. Now however the Korean War had broken out; conflict between the Communist North and the American occupiedRepublic
of South Korea . I
couldn’t understand why the British Navy had to be involved. Maybe now history is repeating itself. I wondered if someone was trying to tell me
something. William was insistent that we
should bring the wedding forward – even if it meant we had to get married in a
registry office, he just wanted to be married. He was going off to
war - anything could happen - I had to agree. I went to see Matron
and explained what had happened. She was very sympathetic and said I
could have leave to get married and would then return to take my Finals and
make up the time after the exams. There were a few tears
shed. Most of my close friends had left so the people who didn’t
know me very well, assumed I was pregnant and had to get married. I was so sick of wars.
William met me one evening looking desperately worried. He had been called up.
‘Not another bloody war!’ I screeched. Apparently when he left the Navy he was given the option of signing on as a Reservist. This meant he would get an income of 1s 1d a day (about 14p but it went much further then) and as he was going to University he jumped at the chance. Now however the Korean War had broken out; conflict between the Communist North and the American occupied
I was on the brink of a nervous break-down,
what with last minute swotting and trying to arrange a ‘shot gun wedding’.
16 comments:
Another action packed chapter with so many evocative moments. I like that ir moves with a cracking space but still includes little details like the Nell Gwyn spin, the bus conductor's rabbits, the wasp outfits and the and the three piece suite!
Rashbre: well done! I see you are paying attention.
Any photos kicking about of you as Nell Gwyn, or will we have to recreate it when I next visit? :)
It seems William's stubbornness often served him well, giving him the determination to battle with his stammer and to pursue you!
I know what you mean about Piscean decision making!
Looking forward to the next chapter, Pat.
Sx
Asking someone to marry them after just 10 days is WAY less sensible than admitting you love someone else. What was he thinking? What was his hurry? Or is that how it was played back then?
Unlike rashbre, I have no idea what the rabbit remark means.
I'm eagerly awaiting the next chapter. :)
Today, if someone tried to pressure you into marriage after only a few days, it would be a case of run, don't walk, to the nearest exit. We have a little more insight into the kind of personality that would rush things like that. And when someone lists reasons for marrying instead of a resounding, joyful 'yes!', that in itself is pretty telling. You certainly didn't lack pursuers :o)
During WWII there was food rationing which continued into the 50's. To ensure that a certain level of protein could be enjoyed, many people kept rabbits. Rabbits are prone to disease and could often be wiped out relatively quickly. This was a minor disaster and intensely frustrating. Hence "I hope you rabbits die" was a particularly personal and nasty thing to say to someone (totally justified in this instance of course).
Kim: sadly no photos exist and as Nell may well have said "Them days is over boyo!" Don't let it stop a trip south though.
Scarlet: the indecision is a blight and causes unnecessary stress I find. I keep hoping I'll grow out of it. When I grow up p'raps.
Exile: In spite of the stress of the recent war and the trouble world wide - Korea etc - it was still unusual to propose after ten days. I was a bit emotionally battered and at 21 there was - incredibly in this day and age - always the fear of being an old maid.
Read below AndrewM's excellent explanation of the 'rabbit' remark.
Mage:Im so glad you seem to be enjoying it and will try to be mote prompt but the high seas are calling again.
SDC: on the plus side I had two wonderful sons - a highly interesting life and I'm still standing. I wouldn't have missed it. Life was never dull.
Andrew M: do you know I never realised that but of course it is true. I never heard anyone but William actually say it. Looking back it was really quite hilarious - especially the volte face of the conductor.
Oh Pat.
Your Life is a roller coaster without a stop !
Can not wait for the next chapter.
Thank You for posting this.
cheers, parsnip
Parsnip. My pleasure
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