Another outing for a favourite short story.
Outside
Little Amanda, in special white stockings, lived lightly with her grandmother, an old curmudgeon, overbearing and humourless.
Grandma had her own daughter once, a beauty with bright green eyes and hazel, switchback hair running in careless shiny ropes down her back. Beauty went off with a beast, who took her downhill into the town, underground into the dungeon city at the base of the hill, the hideout of the poor, desperate and cold citizens with nothing to do, except gaze with gauzy eyes into the middle distance, the dark walls enclosing them, the weight of a whole city above.
From there, a baby was pleadingly brought to the old woman, wrapped in newspaper to keep it warm. Baby child Amanda was quiet. Occasionally she would sing, self-consciously curling her lips, as if to mute the sound. She wasn’t supposed to be happy. Grandma, with her bent back and stern gaze, was unhappy.
But the sun shone, so Amanda found escape from their flat into the back green, below the gaunt height of the tenement. Lying on the grass at the base of the hill, she would gaze dreamily up at the trees, admire their swishing branches and hope flowers would sail down, land on her face and arms. Fragrances blew around her. Beneath the branches, she breathed deeply and her heart lifted.
Not so far away, Simon held a yellow duster. Motes swam in the air, then settled again a little way off: on the mantelpiece, on the round-headed clock, the dust and grime kept the corners of his living-room warm. It annoyed him, a little, when the sun shone. Then he could see specs and marks in the light.
Habit tugged him over to the window. The sash and case rattled faintly. Without really seeing, since he looked so often at the same shorn hills, he watched…adjusted and looked again.
Her dark brown eyes, almost black, found the flicker. She looked too, smiling easily. No-one else noticed that light brown face, saw those window eyes catch the sun. No-one else was there to watch the shape of her cheeks, the way her hair swept back. That blue dress, hidden under the bright, waxy green of trees fully awake.
Amanda grinned. Simon smiled.
The old man turned away, shaking with regret. Where was Ellen, to share this? He had long ago looked at beauty like that, in that way. In the business of passing his days, he had lost the urge to look outside. Outside!
The duster lay on the floorboards where it was dropped.
He saw her again when he left, the front door slamming shut behind him. Deeply busy, dreaming. Such a beautiful child. Such wondrous sunlight. See those flowers…red flowers.
Please share:
Diane Dickson
May 17, 2019 @ 12:36 pm
What a lovely treat. Thank you.
Fran Macilvey
May 17, 2019 @ 12:47 pm
Hi Diane,
I thought about you as I was posting this again. You so kindly commented last time that you liked this story, and I’m glad you still do; bless you.
John Corden
May 19, 2019 @ 8:49 am
Dear Fran,
This comes under the heading of ‘Stories I wish I could write’.
And so I have stolen it and posted it on my blog.
Fran Macilvey
May 19, 2019 @ 12:36 pm
Hello dear John,
Thank you so much. I am honoured that you have posted my story on your blog. 🙂 It fell into two parts which came together, though how, I can hardly guess. I shall visit your blog. xxx
Gwen Wilson
May 23, 2019 @ 12:17 pm
Fran, John Corden asked me ages ago to reach out to you. I got side-tracked, and then it slipped my mind. Many apologies! His re-blog has now brought me to yours. What a lovely evocative, entrancing story.
Fran Macilvey
May 23, 2019 @ 2:29 pm
Hi Gwen!! Thank you so much for visiting – I’m delighted whenever you can pop by and say hello. I’m very glad you like this story, which has been in my vaults for a while… It’s really two stories, brought together by a belief that children and older people have a lot in common and are natural allies.(Grandma in this story is only unhappy because she insists on being so.) Bless you!