This story was written in 1995 and was originally to be included in my short story collection, Nine Lives, but I rejected it. It would've need a complete rewrite to bring it up to date and sharpen it up, but I thought it was worthy of a blog appearance!
Nine Lives is free from Sunday 16~Wednesday 19 August 2015 ~ click here
Nine Lives is free from Sunday 16~Wednesday 19 August 2015 ~ click here
MOVING OUT -
a story about leaving home and growing up....
Time
to go.
She
zips up her suitcase and takes a last look around the bedroom, a pretty, frilly
room, decorated in a style she has long outgrown. Then, turning to gaze out of the window, she
pictures the flat she hopes to buy once she has found her feet. A flat furnished to her own taste, with
dramatic splashes of colour. In this
flat she will laugh and cry and live, she
will find a social life and entertain her friends, all by herself. In this flat she will grow up. For nineteen years she has lived according to
someone else’s rules, but now it is time to break free.
She
lights a cigarette and watches the stream of grey smoke drift across the
room. He doesn’t like her to smoke.
Well, that’s too bad. He seems
almost pleased when he catches her, so that he can tell her off, as if she is
still a child.
He. Him. Victorian Father. That’s what he is. The restrictive, demanding, nagging presence
who wants to stunt her development.
Enough is enough. She feels
guilty about planning her departure with such secrecy, but there is no other
way.
When
did the rot begin to set in? Two years
ago, she thinks, when she wanted to enrol on a college course - and he used
every one of his persuasive powers to prevent her from doing so.
“Why
on earth do you want to mix with a crowd of silly students?” he’d demanded,
rustling his newspaper and lighting his pipe (that pipe! How she hates it!). “Think of all that studying!” he said. “You’ll never cope with it!”
She
has read articles in women’s magazines like Cosmo
and Company, and is beginning to
understand the male ego. She hides these
magazines in the same way as men hide porn, reading only her innocent romance
novels with alpha male heroes and ditzy heroines when he is around, but her
secret stash has taught her a lot. She
knows about men, now, all men. He likes
her to feel helpless so that she can see him as the Great Provider. Big Daddy.
He is scared of losing her, so he wants her to believe she cannot cope
on her own.
She
has had enough of their quiet, closed, stifling existence. Just
the two of them. It used to be
enough, but now it isn’t. He discourages
her from making friends. Doesn’t he
provide her with all she needs? If she
wants something she only has to ask!
Yes, she can have anything she wants – apart from the freedom to express
her own personality. Maybe she should
blame the generation gap, she thinks, and laughs to herself. Men of his
generation don’t acknowledge such a thing exists. They think it’s just an excuse for younger
people’s lack of respect, but it’s not.
She
opens a cupboard and looks, without regret, at the few possessions she is
leaving behind. She doesn’t feel they
are truly hers, because she chose so few of them herself, not even the
clothes. He likes her to dress like her
mother did. She wants to wear jeans and
funky tops, not pretty frocks. His
little girl.
“But
I’m not a girl, I’m a woman!” she says, out loud, to the reflection in the
wardrobe mirror. A girl would stay put,
safe, unchallenged, cared for, but the emerging woman in her head dares to
break free. She feels sad because she
loves him, of course she does, but she is more frightened of the consequences
of staying than of the big, bad world outside.
She
lifts the handle on her case and, on impulse, leaves her cigarettes and lighter
on the dressing table. She will give up
smoking, because she won’t need it anymore.
She won’t feel frustrated and hemmed in, in her new life. She walks out onto the landing. Before closing the bedroom door behind her
she glances in one last time. She is
shutting the door on her childhood. This
makes her smile, and she hopes many more things will make her smile when she
steps out into her brave new world.
Down
the stairs, out onto the street. She
breathes in the air and feels spring-like, despite the cold November
drizzle. Now she must walk; wisely, she
has decided not to splash out on a taxi to take her to the station. Managing her own finances will be another
thing she will have to learn, but learn it she must. Better to be poor but independent than
shielded from the world by those overpowering arms.
She
walks down to the bus stop, her hand closed tightly around the train ticket in
her pocket. Her ticket to freedom, and
life as a fully-fledged adult. She is
scared but happy, and proud of herself.
She
should have listened to her mother after all.
Marrying
a man twenty-five years older than herself was never going to work, long-term;
finally, at the age of thirty-seven, she has found the courage to grow up.
~~~~~
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I've never read any of your stuff before....my fault,,, and I really enjoyed this. I liked the spare style, and the personal perspective. You don't waste words...and descriptions are just enough to set the scene and help the reader to picture it. Nice.
ReplyDeleteThanks, pet! I actually wrote this about 16 years ago though edited it lately; I'm usually a bit more lively than this, but I do write in a rather 'spare' style, I have to say. If you look in July, there is 'a short story about schadendfreude' which is one I wrote this year. Moving Out is more of a sketch than a story, almost, I think; but thanks for reading and glad you liked! xx
DeleteI meant schadenfreude; that was a typo, not a SPELLING ERROR!!
DeleteOoh! Nice twist, I didn't see that coming! Lovely story. Thanks for posting, Terry :)
ReplyDeleteThank YOU for reading, Maria - I'm pleased you liked it xxx
DeleteLove this and I didn't see the twist at the end either!
ReplyDeleteMany thankules!!! xx
DeleteI really enjoyed this, thanks. Loved the twist too! x www.lilacpaperdoll.com
ReplyDeleteThanks, Christine - really appreciate you reading!
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ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteHello, Katherine
DeleteYou have my full permission to use this story; I feel most honoured, thank you!
Would you be so kind as to give me a credit, so that students know whose story they're reading? Spreading the word about one's work is so hard, and it all helps.
Again, thank you; I hope it makes for an interesting exam ~ perhaps you might let me know?
Best Regards
Terry
PS. I'm removing the original comment because of confidentiality regarding the exam.
DeleteDear Terry!
DeleteAbsolutely, you will be credited!
Thank You so much!
Best Wishes
Katherine
PS I'm removing the inquiry above for exam confidentiality
Thanks, Katherine :) I look forward to hearing how it's received.
Delete