The
Birthmark
Jane Scoggins
A
hot July day in Southend On Sea and Jackie and Julie linked arms and strolled
along the seafront towards the ice-cream kiosk.
‘Not
a cloud in the sky’ said Jackie as she raised her face to the sun. ‘What a
perfect day’
Julie
squeezed her mum’s arm and felt a bit sad as she felt the thinness of her arm. And
put to the back of her mind her Mum’s sadness. How unfair she thought to
herself before turning and beaming at her mum.
‘I
told you it would be a beautiful day today and Southend has come up trumps.’
Southend
had been a last minute decision for a day out.
‘There
are a couple of deckchairs free over there, you go and sit on one and I will
get us ice-creams.’
Julie
came back laughing with two ice creams melting down the sides of the cones and
dropped down into the second deckchair beside Jackie. They sat silently for a
few minutes eating their ice creams conscious of the hot sun in a race to melt
them before they were reduced to a completely sticky mess.
They
sat watching the world go by; secretly storing up their observations to share
and talk about later when they were out of earshot of the subjects of their
observations.
They
had always loved people watching and it was something that bound them together
as mother and daughter. They had the same sense of amusement. Julies Dad hadn’t
quite got it but he was always tolerant and indulgent and accepted that he was
not on their wavelength as far as humour was concerned. Today was the second anniversary of his
death, and wife and daughter had visited his grave first thing that morning and
laid down two red roses beside his headstone. Dad had been so proud of his ‘two
beauties’ as he had called them, with their thick auburn hair and brown eyes. A
thorn between two roses he had called himself as he put his arm around the pair
of them. He had always wondered how a
geek like himself had managed to capture the heart of such a beautiful
vivacious girl as Jackie. But capture her heart he had, and many happy years
together had followed.
A
simple tale of love and loss. A group of teenagers laughing and jostling,
chatting and happy went past. The girls in cut off denim shorts with wide
leather belts on their hips, skimpy striped bikini tops with shoestring
ties. Growing up Julie had always been
conscious of an operation scar on her chest and shoulder and had always been
reluctant to show much upper body bare skin in public.
Mother
and daughter sat for a while longer enjoying the day and observing the passers
by. A middle-aged couple strolled past holding hands and Julie thought ‘That
should be my mum and dad’. When the man turned around to look at her Julie
thought she must have spoken out loud without realising, felt a bit embarrassed
and automatically put her hand to her mouth as if to stop any further
inappropriate thoughts escaping.
The
man paused and the woman looked on expectantly as he looked again at Julie and
then to her mother. His hand also went
to his mouth as if wanting to delay his speech before he committed himself to
speaking... He directed his words carefully and hesitatingly to Jackie.
’You aren’t by any chance Jackie Mills are you?’ Julie looked at her mum and
Jackie looked at the man and for a couple of seconds, there was silence as she
looked searchingly at his face.
‘Yes
I am’ she said hesitatingly, clearly not as yet making any connection with
whoever the man was...
And
then the penny dropped and with caution, she said ‘And are you Dave Fox by any
chance?’
Simultaneously
they both beamed at one another in complete recognition.
Jackie
rose as quickly and as elegantly as was possible from the awkward position of
sitting in a low slung deckchair, clutching her handbag and cardigan.
Dave Fox stepped forward and took her hand.
‘Jackie Mills I cant believe it, after all these years. You have hardly changed
at all.’
Jackie’s hand self consciously went to smooth
her once abundant burnished chestnut hair that had been her crowning glory, and
for which she was known and recognised through her teens. She had turned the
heads of many a young man with her pretty face and gorgeous hair. Dave had been
one of those young men. To look at him now, a man that had not reached middle
age unscathed in terms of hair thinning and lines on his face he was not
readily identifiable to the untrained eye as the cool handsome slinky hipped youth who sang with a band and had a
following of girls as long as your arm.
‘Well, I never. can it really be you?’ Jackie looked into his face and then turned to
her daughter. ‘Dave this is my daughter Julie’.
‘I
can see that, she is the living spit of you. And this is my wife Mandy.’
By
way of explanation, Jackie explained to Julie that they had hung out together
when they were young and that she used to travel about with him in a crowd when
the band went to play at clubs and festivals.
After
Dave and Mandy had said their goodbyes and gone on their way Julie and Jackie sat down again whilst Jackie gathered together her
memories and shared them with Julie explaining that Dave was known as ‘The Fox
that rocks’ Julie began to get a new view of her mother, as a rock chick, a
groupie even. Julies mind is suddenly opened up to another world, one that she
had not imagined her mother inhabiting. Her father had been a much more
serious sort of man than Dave. She considered the contrast.
When
they got up to walk along the seafront looking for somewhere to eat Jackie
continued to chat about the past. Meeting with Dave had prompted those dormant
memories.
Julie
also found herself thinking about Dave and her observations of him. True his
face was no longer that of a handsome young rock singer, but he certainly had a
twinkle in his eye. The most impressive part of him was his well-honed tanned
upper body above his jeans. The day was hot and he had his T-shirt thrown across
his shoulder.
It
was not until he pulled his T-shirt from his shoulder as he said goodbye and
turned to go that Julie could see the full extent of a rather beautiful and
intricate tattoo that swept across his right shoulder and down onto his chest. Beneath
the tattoo she was sure she could see an irregular patch of pink skin that was
not tanned, and as if by coincidence almost matched the same scarred area on
her own shoulder and chest where she had had a large birthmark removed as a child.
Copyright Jane Scoggins