Extract
Been etching at the novel today.
Protagonist Anya, throughout the book, tells her story mostly in retrospect but also in the present tense, because of how the past clings. She takes us to relive directly, using italics to denote her own direct thoughts, and indirectly by allowing a third party narrator. Today's big scene happens around 1973, although the events could have happened any other year. The next novel I might have a go at has more period detail. (I love how this makes it seem; that I just slap and dash my keyboard, throw a couple of hundred pages together.) This is what I edited and wrote and edited today, with the odd pause to discuss sheds and eat.
Anya
stares harder at the horizon. In her chest, a cold heaviness presses, as though
she is turning to stone, like one of the granite maidens in the old stories,
cursed for dancing on the Sabbath, and the little flecks of silver mica will be
her frozen tears. Frank drives on.
The road shrinks, twists, the sky darkens. They turn off the road and onto the lane that leads to the
cottage, the cottage with its curtains pulled firmly shut, lights shining
within. As though it was still the night that she had run away from it, escaped
out of the door with a cover story and a uselessly thin coat.
'I'm
staying at Mary's house tonight.’
‘Have
you done the coal?’
‘Yes,
I’m all done.’
Well,
I'm not sixteen anymore, she reminds herself, I’m Mrs Frank Bench; as the
handbrake grates and the engine shudders to a halt. Frank leaves her in the van while he knocks on the door. The
door opens, light spills out; she can see the back of him, shaking hands,
raising his hand in greeting. He turns and waves her in. She picks Michael up from his carrycot,
which is wedged in front of her seat, clutches his blanketed bundle in front of
her, aware of trying to draw strength from the warmth of him.
'Well,'
her mother says. ‘Here you are.’
‘Hello.’
Anya is shivering.
‘Come
on in, all of you,’ Dad puts his hands on Mum’s shoulders, moves her gently
aside. ‘Come on in and let’s get the kettle on, and have a look at this
grandson, shall we?’
‘Thanks
mate,’ Frank says, ‘I could murder a cuppa.’ He puts a foot over the threshold.
‘Boots!’
Mother points.
Anya
gets a glimpse of Peter, leaning in from the living room. He catches her eye
and disappears. Frank leans down to unlace his workboots.
‘Wasn’t
thinking,’ he says, ‘Sorry about that.’
‘In
you come love,’ Dad waves Anya in. Her shoes slip off. Dad squeezes Mum’s
shoulders, then steps forward to fold Anya and her baby son in his arms. He’s
so warm. Anya leans into him. He smells of coal smoke and sawdust. She doesn’t
want to move.
'You
can stay for two weeks,’ Mum blurts, ‘we have a lodger booked in, in a
fortnight, and we just can’t cancel. It’s our living, you understand.'
‘It’s
good of you to help out,’ Frank pats her on the arm; pulls his hand away and
stands awkwardly in his socks.
‘Well.’
Anya
can’t see her mother’s face. She doesn’t need to.
‘At
least you’re married now.’
‘Come
on through.’ Dad draws them to the living room, where a fire is chugging in a
wood burner. ‘Like it? Cuts down on the soot dust. Burns just about anything,
as long as you keep the flue in check.’
‘It’s
good,’ Anya chews her lip, smiles at the boys who have grown taller and who are
staring at her as though she's been resurrected.
‘More
of an electric man myself,’ Frank admits. He sits on the sofa, holds his feet
up to the heat of the flames.
Dad
plucks Michael from her. 'Come and meet your nephew, then, uncles! He won't bite!'
Michael
blinks at the new voices. Peter
and William edge closer. Peter has shadows on his chin, like he has started
shaving. William’s hair has that darker line he always gets in winter, when the
sun can’t lift hazel strands from the deep brown.
Peter
looks at his nephew, looks at his sister. ‘Got your eyes,’ he says. He sounds
like a man.
‘Can
I hold him?’ William reaches out.
‘Yes,’
Anya nods.
‘You
can sit down too, love,’ Dad says; ‘right, Will, that’s it, keep the little
chap’s head up.’
William
grins. Behind him, on the wall, Anya sees that her school photographs have been
taken down.
I'm
not going to cry, she promises herself.
Mum
brings in a tray of tea, sends Peter for the biscuit tin.
William
has seen her looking at the wall: with his back to Mum, he rolls his eyes at
the pictures. Anya's smile flourishes.
Comments
Tiny, presumptuous suggestion:
when the sun can’t lift hazel strands from the deep brown.
when the sun can't lift hazel out of brown.
Less, more, here? Just a thought. I like the rhythm of the second.
Picking nits. Thanks for letting me ...
Jacqueline, it is quite the process isn't it? I love writing the blog posts because they are short, because they feel like playing. They pop out like kittens to a practised cat. The novel is such a different beast! I wrote a poem about birthing a stone, might stick that on a post one day, if I can find it.