Clacton Beach Memoir: 1975

By ralph
- 317 reads
Clacton Beach Memoir: 1975
Was she red with anger? It was difficult to tell.
What with the sunburn, heat haze and lipstick.
From the water’s edge, where I was balanced,
tiptoed on sharp shingle, she was a windmill.
Such were her roundhouses.
It was an odd view. Like a circus on the telly.
The recipient. A geezer in green corduroy,
had knacks of sliding himself out of reach.
He was a master.
A ducker, diver, dancer!
As I stepped closer under the fib
of buying a cornet with a flake,
she screamed and hissed at him.
Come on you bastard!
Come and cut me if you can.
And he smirked a response.
I’ll slice your face, sweetheart.
So they can play noughts and crosses.
Then she whispered this.
Just loud enough for us all to finish him.
You couldn’t slice a loaf of bread, darlin’.
Now. It might have been prudent
to intervene. To shout for the police.
Make an embarrassed protest at least.
But. I brought that ice cream, with a flake.
And walked back up the beach to them.
My Mum and Dad. My Terry and Julie.
As they kissed deeply in the sand.
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Comments
Interrsting, and how to read
Interrsting, and how to read it? I thought maybe it was his mum and dad having a moment?
Dougie Moody
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Good one Ralph
Quite vivid and intriguing. And I hope not too many people saw your mum and dad.
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Wonderful vignette. And
Wonderful vignette. And lovely to see a return to Terry and Julie. I feel quite invested in their lives.
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