The Dreams of Bethany Mellmoth
She had come home, heavy-hearted, to prepare for her mother’s hen party. Why would a woman of fifty-three want to have a hen party, given that her first marriage had turned out to be a grievous and miserable train wreck? She rang the doorbell and Demerson answered. ‘Hey, Bethany,’ he said. ‘You mama she out.’
On the train Bethany pays for her single to Hastings, end of the line. £32 – fuck. She has £4 and some change left. And no mobile phone. How could she have run out without her phone? How was she going to function – to live? Never mind, she says to herself, you’re safe, that’s the main thing. Demerson can’t follow you. He could never know you caught a train to Hastings.
Bethany went to her room and looked at her dresses hanging in the cupboard. She picked out the red one – the Coco Fennell – and laid it on her bed. Now she had her own flat she really should clear her stuff out – especially given that Demerson would be living here in future, in the ‘family home’. She quite liked Demerson – he was friendly, jolly – but she wished her mother wasn’t marrying him. However, she told herself firmly, it wasn’t her life – it was her mother’s. She had her own road to travel and the nest had to be left once and for all – she was twenty-four years old, for God’s sake. She had to stop coming back home. Maybe this marriage was a blessing of sorts – it would drive her away – make her truly independent, finally. She took her clothes off and tried on the red dress. Looked good. Bloody zip. How were you meant to – . Demerson came into the room without knocking. ‘No worry, Bethany, I zip you. Very beautiful dress. Sexy.’
After Hayward’s Heath, heading south-east, the names become strange, as if she’s entering a foreign country. This train seems to stop at every station, she thinks. Plumpton, Lewes, Polegate, Pevensey and Westham, Cooden Beach, Collington. It’s as if I’ve fallen down a rabbit hole and entered this bizarre toytown England, she says to herself. Diddley-dum, diddley-dum. She rests her forehead on the cold window and looks out at the late afternoon landscape. Trying not to cry.
Demerson zipped her up and before she could say ‘thank you’ he was feeling her breasts, reaching round from behind, pulling her against him. ‘I real like you, Bethany,’ he mumbled in her ear, and kissed her neck. Bethany thought: this is my soon-to-be stepfather. ‘You beautiful, ver’ hot, Bethany,’ he said, nuzzling into her hair as she struggled, shouting his name, saying, ‘Fuck off, Demerson!’
The train stops again, seemingly having gone only another 200 yards since the last station. She sees the sign, mistily, through her tears: BEXHILL-ON-SEA. She thinks at once – I’m getting off here. This is the place for me. She feels safe, all of a sudden.
In her struggling, Bethany managed to free her right arm and, reflexively, swung her elbow round and thwacked Demerson on the side of his face. He went down in a sudden slump, as if he’d been felled by a gunshot, shouting, cursing loudly in his Brazilian Portuguese. She stepped back. He was on his hands and knees, shaking his head. Her elbow was aching – she must have connected with his temple, she thought, in a momentary flash of rationality. Knockout blow. She watched him keel over, then right himself. He tried to stand but she was out of the room, slamming the door behind her. At the bottom of the stairs she realized she had left her handbag, her mobile and her wallet in her room. She flung open the drawer in the hall table where her mother left money for the cleaning lady. She grabbed some notes, some coins. Hauled her coat on, hearing her door open and Demerson emerge. He was shouting down the stairs, ‘I get you, Bethany! I find you!’ Then she was gone. Out of the door, down Hollywood Road, running for the Tube station at Fulham Broadway. Not looking back.
Bethany leaves the station at Bexhill-on-Sea and walks down Eversley Road, instinctively heading for the coast, the sea. She passes a phone box and remembers what has happened. Her mother and her friends are meeting in a karaoke bar in Putney. Drinks, nibbles, songs. She steps into the phone box, dials her mother’s mobile and shells in a precious pound coin.
‘This is Alannah Mellmoth. Please leave a message after the tone.’
She thinks fast. ‘Really, really, sorry Mum, I can’t make it tonight …’ She improvises. ‘Sholto’s ill. I have to take him to hospital. I’ll call later. Love you.’
Beep-beep-beep. Sholto will do whatever she tells him, back her to the hilt.
She hangs up. Now’s not the time to tell her mother about her future husband.
As she raced to Fulham Broadway she kept thinking she could hear running steps behind her. Could Demerson have followed her so quickly? Surely not. She paused and looked back – and thought she saw him! She ran into the station and went to the very end of the platform. No sign. A train came and she waited until the very last moment, ducking in between the sliding doors as they closed. No – he must have missed her.
Bethany stands at the end of Albany Road and looks at the De La Warr Pavilion in some amazement. What is this extraordinary building doing on this modest seafront? Like an art-deco spaceship that has landed – like that film, what’s it called? Alien? No. Yes, Alien, the first one. She goes inside and finds the ladies’ lavatory off the lobby. In a stall she sits down on the toilet and allows tears to flow, silently, her shoulders shaking. She calms herself. She’s safe – she doesn’t need to do anything. Don’t think, girl, don’t think, she says to herself. Just let life flow by you for an hour or so.
She checks her money. £3.77. She’s hungry. She mooches around the lobby for a while and goes into the shop, pretending to look at the postcards and the merchandise. She picks up a free brochure: The Official Guide to Bexhill-on-Sea. The Birthplace of British Motor Racing. She slips it in her pocket and wanders out on to the promenade.
Bethany walks up the West Parade, the shingle beach and calm grey sea on her left, the light in the sky beginning to fade as evening comes on. She imagines her mother in the karaoke bar – she’ll be first up, singing ‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’. Bethany smiles, despite herself: her mother thinks she’s got a great voice – which she hasn’t – and she always claims that Bethany has inherited her talent as a singer. When Bethany once told her she was going to join a band as its singer she saw the clear green jealousy shine in her mother’s eyes. She tries to stop thinking about her mother. How is she going to tell her about Demerson? What’s the best strategy in this situation? ‘Mum, by the way, your future husband tried to fuck me.’ Bethany feels her anger mount. She rubs her bruised elbow. She hopes Demerson’s head is very sore, throbbing, bruised – maybe she’s blackened his eye. Good.
She reaches into her pocket, unthinkingly looking for her pack of cigarettes. Not there. In her handbag in her room. She needs a cigarette – very badly.
The Sovereign Light Café, it says. A small wooden boxy caff on the Parade with a few aluminium chairs and tables outside. Bethany wanders around and peers inside. Wainscotted wooden walls painted a creamy primrose yellow with purple blinds, two or three customers hunched over their cuppas. She shivers – it’s getting dark and the windows of the Sovereign Light Café glow with unearthly warm light in the advancing gloom.
Demerson never looked at her in that sidelong way – that way men look at you when they think you don’t know what they’re thinking but you do. There was nothing in his manner towards her that would have made her suspicious or uneasy in his company. A stocky, quite good-looking Brazilian man who had a window-cleaning business – which was how her mother had met him. He and his team cleaned the windows of the office block where her office was. Bethany had thought it was just another fling – her mother was attracted to foreign men – but she was wrong, it was more serious this time. Any nationality would do for her mother – she wasn’t fussy – as long as the man wasn’t English. She’d had a Greek boyfriend, a Ghanaian boyfriend, a Croatian boyfriend, two Spanish boyfriends. Bethany imagined it was her subconscious way of getting back at Zane – or of eroding her memories of him with all these foreign men, so different.
Bethany does another turn around the Sovereign Light Café, thinki
ng. Maybe that’s the answer – she should call her father, see what he suggests. But her father is in Los Angeles and she has no mobile phone and £3.77 in her pocket. She stops by a blackboard and looks at the list of sandwiches on offer. Ham Mustard Tom. Egg Mayo. Brie Cranberry. Cheese. Crab Sticks Mayo. White or Wholemeal Bread. She feels the saliva squirt in her mouth and goes inside.
There’s a young guy wiping down the serving area.
‘We’re closing,’ he says, without looking at her.
Rude, Bethany thinks. ‘Cup of tea to go and a Kit-Kat,’ she says.
Now he looks at her and she can see his interest suddenly quickens. She realizes she must appear somewhat exotic in her black coat and her red dress here on the West Parade at Bexhill-on-Sea. He’s dark, this guy – lean, almost gaunt – and he looks very tired, his eyes shadowed. He hasn’t shaved for a few days. He serves her the tea and hands her the Kit-Kat with a new friendly smile. She pays him. Now she has less than £2.
‘Closing time, gents,’ he says to the locals. He has a slight burr to his voice. Toime. He’s wearing chef’s checked trousers and clogs with his sweatshirt.
That’s the look, she analyses, that exhausted chef’s look. Too many drugs, she thinks, as she walks past him, saying, ‘Night. Bye.’
Bethany sips her hot tea from its Styrofoam cup and walks round the Sovereign Light Café. The young guy pulls down the blinds and the lights go off. At the back there’s a busted aluminium chair by a wheelie bin. Bethany sits on the chair – rocky, but it holds. She folds the collar of her coat up and eats her Kit-Kat. She almost feels normal – out of the sea breeze the late spring air is mild. She takes a big gulp of hot tea, wanting the throat-burn, the chest-glow. She would kill for a smoke, she thinks. She looks out to sea and, at the dark line where the water meets the sky at the horizon, she sees a powerful light flash – miles away.
The back door opens and the chef comes out. He looks at her.
‘What’re you doing there?’ he says, locking the door behind him. He’s wearing a parka with a fur hood, jeans and trainers, changed out of his chef gear, carrying a plastic bag that no doubt contains his clogs and checked trousers.
‘No law against sitting in a chair, is there?’ Bethany says, with some aggression.
He shrugs and rummages in his pocket, taking out a pack of ten cigarettes.
‘Can I have one?’ Bethany asks. ‘Please. I’d be really grateful.’
He lights her cigarette and then his own.
‘Where you from?’ he says.
Bethany decides to tell him. ‘I’ve run away from London,’ she says. ‘A man attacked me – and I’m sort of hiding out.’
The chef looks at her closely. ‘I hate London,’ he says, simply, as if that covers every possible eventuality, as if that explains everything. He leans against the café wall. ‘Yeah. Worked there for a while,’ he smiles at her. ‘Not my cup of tea, darling. I do like to be beside the seaside, I do.’ The smile makes him look different for a moment, all the weariness gone. He has white, even teeth – Bethany notes: she likes that in a man.
‘This your café?’ Bethany asks.
‘Nah – just on for the day,’ he says. ‘Someone called in sick. I’m with an agency. Job here – job there. Suits me.’ He frowns as if he’s thinking of something. ‘Wouldn’t mind owning one of these caffs, though,’ he says. ‘Make a fortune in the summer. Laze around all winter. Good life.’
Bethany thinks: he’s right – your life would be very simple. Here on the front at Bexhill-on-Sea, working hard half the year, travelling the other, doing the things you wanted to do knowing you would be coming back, money to be earned, security …
‘What’s your name?’ she asks.
‘Carl,’ he says.
‘Carl what?’
He looks at her, suspiciously.
‘Why do you want to know?’
Bethany stubs out her cigarette under her shoe.
‘I like to know people’s full names,’ she says. ‘It differentiates them.’
‘Carl Trueman,’ he says, with a little cough.
Bethany Trueman, Bethany thinks and is immediately angry with herself – she has to stop doing this, it’s ridiculous.
‘Bethany Mellmoth,’ she says.
Carl Trueman holds his hand out and they shake hands – she finds this formal gesture oddly reassuring.
‘Well, I got to be going,’ he says. ‘Got an early shift. Cheers.’ He walks two steps then spins round. ‘You going to stay here all night?’
‘Maybe,’ Bethany says.
He shrugs off his parka and hands it to her. ‘You’ll need this, then.’
Bethany stands there surprised.
‘Two fags left in the pack. Bring the parka to me in the morning. Seafront Brasserie on the De La Warr Parade.’ He points. ‘About a mile down there. I’ll make you some breakfast.’
Bethany doesn’t know what to say as she takes his parka.
‘Have you got a phone?’ she asks. ‘I just need to send one text.’
He hands her his phone and she texts her mother: DONT MARRY DEMERSON. DANGEROUS. I WILL EXPLAIN. BETHANY XXX. She hands Carl his phone back.
‘See you tomorrow,’ she says. ‘Thanks.’
He walks away. ‘Keep warm, Bethany,’ he says, over his shoulder. As he walks away Bethany sees the light flash out at sea.
‘What’s that flash out on the horizon?’ she calls after him.
‘That’s the Sovereign Light,’ he says. ‘Massive lighthouse platform. That’s how the café got its name.’
Bethany is surprisingly warm in Carl Trueman’s parka with the hood up. She wedges the chair against the wheelie bin so she can rest her head against it and hugs her knees to her body. The fur fringe of the hood frames the dark patch of sea and sky that contains the Sovereign Light and she counts its steady flashes, stopping after a hundred, trying to remember the name of that book where there was a light – a green light, she recalls – that has some heavy symbolism attached to it. Hope – symbol of hope. Perhaps the Sovereign Light could be her symbol of hope, she thinks idly, deciding to stay awake until dawn, reaching into the pocket to fish out one of Carl’s remaining two cigarettes. Then she might look as tired as he does.
Bethany wakes at dawn to the sound of a dog yapping. She stirs, stiff, and realizes one hand has gone to sleep. She massages the blood back into it, stands and runs on the spot for a while. She needs a pee very badly.
There’s a man on the beach with a small dog and a metal detector, waving it slowly over the pebbles, to and fro.
‘Morning!’ he shouts at her.
‘Morning,’ she calls back, unreflectingly, as if it’s the most natural thing in the world to spend the night sleeping on an aluminium chair in a borrowed parka outside a café on the West Parade in Bexhill-on-Sea.
Yes, she thinks, and heads off east, down the promenade, in the direction of the Seafront Brasserie where Carl will be serving up the first of the day’s breakfasts. She would kill for some bacon and eggs. Carl Trueman. Well named, she thinks – like the Sovereign Light Café.
She walks on, more briskly now, the silver sea on her right, the first rays of the morning sun striking the perfect hemispherical curves of the De La Warr Pavilion’s glassed-in staircase, setting star-spangles and flare-dazzles dancing in her eyes, and for some reason she feels oddly sure that all will be fine now – now that she’s here in Bexhill-on-Sea, Birthplace of British Motor Racing, heading for a breakfast to be served by her new friend Carl Trueman – and that all her problems will be solved, one way or another, eventually.
Ten …
Bethany Mellmoth sits behind the reception desk in the No Parking Gallery in Dalston, East London, on 20 December, feeling a little sorry for herself. It wasn’t her fault that her drama school had gone suddenly bankrupt, but to have had to become a gallerina once more was a major disappointment – it was never in her plans and, moreover, the current show is both depressing her and driving her quietly insa
ne, she thinks. The show is called The Times of Sand. Throughout the capacious gallery space are various sizes of neat sand cones – one must be half a tonne, another could be held in two cupped hands – and embedded in each cone of sand is a timepiece of some kind. An hourglass, a kitchen-wall clock, a metronome, a carriage clock, a ladies’ watch in the smallest cone, a grandfather clock, a sundial, a winking green LED timer … Moreover, an amplified tick-tock, tick-tock is being played through the gallery’s PA system. It’s not so much the irritant of the noise that bothers her, as the reminder that – also – her life is slipping away in those audible seconds. That’s what depresses her, she realizes. Two years ago she was working in No Parking. And here she is, back behind the desk as if nothing had happened, as if no life had intervened in the meantime.
Bethany picks up her laptop and goes downstairs to the storeroom where there’s a small desk. There’s a buzzer on the front door that will alert her if anyone wants to come in. The Times of Sand with its remorseless ticking reminds her that she’s only written three pages of her novel, 2084. It’s an overt homage to George Orwell but not even the month she spent on the Isle of Jura seeking inspiration made her write any faster.
She opens her laptop and changes the name of the central character from Churchill to Jones. This seems like progress and she begins to feel better. Her phone gives a little shrill ping. It’s a text from her father in Los Angeles, she sees, entitled SPOOKY. Oh God, she thinks, what now? No, it’s not SPOOKY, it’s SP100KY. It’s a reservation number. He’s booked her on a flight to Los Angeles. He wants her to come and stay with him for Christmas.
Bethany’s mother looks at her in a strange way, her face mildly contorted. A kind of baffled hostility, Bethany thinks, or bitter incredulity. Then Alannah turns abruptly and pours herself three fingers of vodka and squeezes the juice from a wedge of lime into it.
‘I won’t go if you don’t want me to,’ Bethany says. ‘I just wanted to let you know that he’d asked me.’