Read The Girls from See Saw Lane Online
Authors: Sandy Taylor
âYou have a point,' I conceded. âBut I don't really see what you can do about it, except maybe to play hard to get.'
âI think
he
has to be chasing
me
to play hard to get.'
âYou'll just have to get him to chase you then, won't you?'
âHow do I do that?'
âI dunno, play hard to get, I guess.'
At which point we both fell back onto the bed giggling.
Dear Diary,
I've been going out with Elton for three whole weeks. Three whole weeks. That's twenty one wonderful, amazing, mind blowing days!!! He came into Woolworths and asked me out. Dottie said I should try playing hard to get. She should try her hand at stand-up comedy. Why would I want to play hard to get? I want him to get me don't I? Dottie has a lot to learn about love.
Tonight me and Dottie, Elton and Ralph are going to the Miss Brighton contest at the end of the west pier.
Did I mention that Elton had asked me out? Well, he did.
Tatty bye diary
Mary Pickles (girlfriend of Elton Briggs. Rock star)
Aged 17 years.
I
t was
the night of the Miss Brighton beauty contest and Mary and I were going to watch it with Elton and Ralph. It was a lovely evening and I was feeling happy. There were butterflies of anticipation inside me. It seemed to me as if I was standing on top of a diving board, about to jump off into the deep waters of the next stage of my life. I couldn't wait.
We were meeting the boys at the bus stop. Mary was almost beside herself with excitement because she was finally going out with Elton. He'd come into Woolworths late one Wednesday afternoon and was hanging around by the pick 'n' mix counter. I saw him before Mary did because the local school had just turned out and she was surrounded by a bunch of kids who were pushing and shoving each other out of the way trying to choose their sweets and get Mary's attention. Elton was wearing blue jeans and a black shirt with a black leather waistcoat over the top, it was easy to see why Mary was so attracted to him, it wasn't just the way he looked, there was something about him, something kind of cool and mysterious; definitely not my type, but I could see the attraction. I wasn't going to be busy for at least another hour, when the factory turned out, so I went across to Mary's counter. âI think you've got a visitor,' I whispered. Mary was busy shovelling fruit salad chews into a paper bag.
âI haven't got time to see anyone now,' she said.
âI think you'll have time for this one,' I said, grinning.
Mary turned round and saw Elton. She went visibly pale and the fruit salad chews shot all over the counter.
âDon't worry,' I said. âI'll take over here, tell Mr Rankworthy you've come over funny and you need some air.'
âThanks, Dottie,' she said.
âTry playing hard to get,' I whispered.
Mary gave me one of her looks.
I watched her go over to Mr Rankworthy to plead her case, she looked up at him like a little puppy dog and you could see him melting like a slab of Neapolitan on a hot day. He put his arm around her shoulder and led her outside. I thought for one awful moment that he was going to stay with her, but after what seemed like an eternity he came back into the shop. I gave Elton the nod and he went outside to join Mary.
For the next ten minutes I was busy serving the kids, and as the last one went off clutching a bag of rainbow drops, Mary came back into the shop. She certainly wasn't pale now, in fact her face looked like the rising sun and she was grinning from ear to ear as she skipped over to me.
âWell?' I said, smiling at her.
âHe asked me out, he actually asked me out.'
âWhat did he say?'
âHe just asked me if I'd like to go out with him.'
âNothing else?'
âElton doesn't say a lot, does he?'
âWhen are you going to see him then?'
âTomorrow, he's taking me to the Istanbul. That really cool club over the top of Dorothy Perkins.'
I gave her a hug, âI'm really happy for you,' I said.
Mary was on cloud nine for the next few weeks. Her excitement was beginning to rub off on me and I hoped that maybe it would be my turn next.
We had arranged to meet the boys after work. It was one of those balmy summer evenings when you feel like anything is possible. It was lovely to see Mary looking so happy. I was feeling excited and happy about the evening ahead. I can't remember exactly what we talked about, Elton probably, and then he and Ralph walked round the corner. Well, Ralph walked but Elton sort of swaggered, he had slicked back his hair and he had that cocky, smiley way about him, and Ralph was sort of in his shadow. I quite liked that. I'd spent almost ten years of my life walking behind Mary. It was something Ralph and I had in common.
âHello, gorgeous!' Elton said to Mary, taking the cigarette out of his mouth just long enough to kiss her. Ralph and I smiled at one another awkwardly while the two of them messed around. Mary was flirting like a professional. I didn't know where she'd learned to do that.Â
When the bus came, we went upstairs and Elton sat with his back to the window and his legs spread out on the seat in front of him. He pulled Mary down onto his lap and they snogged for a moment or two, then she climbed off him and came to sit next to me, in the seat behind. Ralph sat on his own. Smoke from Elton's cigarette was wafting over the back of the seat and into my lungs. It was making them feel a bit uncomfortable and tight.
I pushed open the window to let some air in and looked down on the families coming back from the beach; fathers in shorts, mothers in summer dresses and little kids in sandals with cardigans over their swimming costumes. The children were carrying buckets and spades and the mothers were carrying picnic bags and the fathers had newspapers tucked under their arms and were smoking cigarettes. Everyone looked tired and a bit sunburned but they were smiling.
Mary's elbows were resting on the back of Elton's seat and they were giggling and larking about. I sighed and leaned my forehead against the window and, in the glass, I caught Ralph's eye in his reflection. He smiled at me, and I smiled back, and then he came to sit in the seat behind so we could talk.
âElton says you know someone in the contest,' he said.Â
I nodded. âSally from work.'
âIs she looking forward to it?'
I laughed. âShe said she needs as much moral support as she can get. She was so nervous yesterday she came over all unnecessary and had to sit down in the staff room while Mrs Burgess from Hosiery rubbed her shoulders and made her drink sherry!'
Ralph grinned and rubbed his nose. âWhy's she so nervous?'
I shrugged. âShe's worried she won't get any votes. But she doesn't need to because she's the prettiest-looking girl I've ever known, and one of the nicest.'
Ralph smiled at me. âShe sounds like you,' he said.
I could feel myself going red. âAnyway we promised we'd turn up and cheer her on,' I said. âSo here we are.' Right at that moment Mary gave a delighted shriek and burst out laughing. I didn't know what to say after that so I looked out of the window again. The bus was making its way along Brighton seafront now. I watched the boys stacking the deckchairs and the ice-cream and hot-dog vendors packing up.
Actually, I'd been looking forward to the Miss Brighton contest for ages â it was one of the biggest things that ever happened down our way and people always talked about it for weeks afterwards. I'd been before with my family and it had been brilliant. It was a real show, with music and microphones and lights. The girls always looked so beautiful in their swimsuits and sandals with their hair all lovely, like princesses, and I'd wished, when I was a little girl, that I would grow up to be pretty enough to be in a beauty contest. When I'd told Dad my ambition, he'd said I was too good to be parading up and down in front of every Tom, Dick and Harry in my smalls. I think it was a nice way of telling me I was too fat.
âOi, you, take your feet off the seat or I'll chuck you off the bus!'Â
It was the conductor, all red in the face and sweaty, and he was jabbing his finger towards Elton's chest.
âWhat, these feet?' said Elton.
âThose feet,' said the conductor.
Very slowly Elton took his feet off the seat, one leg after the other, all the time smirking at the conductor and blowing out smoke through his lips.
âAnd less of the bloody cheek, sonny,' said the conductor. âOr else.'
As soon as he'd gone downstairs, Elton dropped the fag end on the floor and put his feet back on the seat. I looked at Mary. She looked a bit embarrassed.
Eventually we got off the bus and joined a stream of people going towards the West Pier. There was a real buzz of excitement in the air, everyone was talking and laughing. The air smelled of fried onions and candyfloss and cigarette smoke and the Pier was all lit up and the lights were making reflections in the black water below. You could see the lights of the Palace Pier further along the coast. I suppose we were lucky to have two piers, I shouldn't think many places did. And the big, fancy buildings that faced the seafront were lit up too, and their windows were open and you could hear the sea tumbling over the pebbles on the beach. I almost felt like skipping, it was so lovely, and then I felt something warm touch my hand and I glanced down; it was Ralph's hand. I smiled up at him and curled my fingers round his.
âOh
come on,
you two!' Mary called impatiently.
Elton was carrying a black bag on his back.
âWhat's the bag for?' I asked.
âElton's brought some drink,' said Mary.
âJust something to get us in the mood,' said Elton.
âIn the mood for what?' Mary asked and then she went all giggly again.
âYou don't have to have any,' said Ralph.
âI won't,' I said. âMy mum would kill me.'Â
âOh Dottie, you're nearly eighteen! Who cares what your mum would say? Maybe it's time you let your hair down a bit,' said Mary.
âNo thanks,' I said. âMy hair's perfectly fine as it is.'
The contest was being held in the concert hall at the end of the pier, so it was a bit of a walk to get to it, especially as so many people were all heading in the same direction. Everyone seemed to be in high spirits. There were lots of couples holding hands or leaning over the railings looking down into the water, and lots of separate groups of boys and girls eyeing each other up. The pier was made up of planks of wood with spaces between the planks so you could see the black water lapping away against the posts beneath. It made me feel a bit dizzy. Mary's stiletto heels kept getting stuck between the gaps and every time that happened we had to stop and wait for her to take off her shoe and free it, so it was taking us ages to get to the end. At one point both her heels got stuck at the same time and she was left rocking backwards and forwards like some demented children's toy. Mary and I both burst out laughing, but Elton wasn't amused.
âBloody hell,' he said. âI wanted a seat at the front but we'll never see anything at this rate.'
âShe can't help it,' I said. âGet on my back, Mary, I'll give you a piggy back.'
âOh would you?'
Ralph stepped forward. âDon't worry,' he said. âI'll carry her.' Mary climbed onto Ralph's back.
 When we reached the end of the pier there were loads of people milling around waiting to go into the theatre, or playing on the games machines. It was very noisy and very exciting. Ralph put Mary down and we headed for the ladies toilets as we always did whenever we went anywhere. We stood in front of the mirror to touch up our make-up.
âWere you and Ralph holding hands earlier?' Mary asked, her reflection glaring up at me.
âYes,' I said.
âOh, Dottie!' She shook her head at me in the mirror.
âWhy does it bother you so much?' I said.
âBecause you can do better than him.'
âI like him,' I said quietly.
âWell, it's your life,' she said. âJust don't say I didn't warn you, when you end up married to a plumber with a load of ginger kids running round your ankles.'
âI like ginger kids,' I said.
Mary looked in the mirror and pouted. âDo I look okay?'
âYou look fab,' I said.
We came out of the toilets and found the boys, who were standing round the corner. Elton was smoking and drinking from the bottle. He was even more animated than usual and his eyes were very sparkly, so I guessed he'd had quite a lot already. Mary held out her hand for a drink and took the bottle and swallowed several mouthfuls. I didn't know what to do. She wasn't used to drink, but I couldn't really see how I could stop her. Elton grinned at her wolfishly and said: âWow! That's my kind of girl!' and he threw his arm around her shoulder. Mary almost fainted with joy. She immediately picked up the bottle and drank some more.Â
âRight,' she said, wiping her lips with the back of her hand and smearing her lippy. âLet's go!'
She started squeezing herself through the crowd. The rest of us followed in her wake, apologising as we went, until we got into the theatre. We were lucky to find four seats together quite near to the front.
Almost at once the lights were dimmed and there was some music and then the curtains swished back and on the stage was a bloke who looked a bit like Cliff Richard. He had on a blue shiny suit with silver sparkly lapels.
âHe looks a right idiot,' said Elton.
âI think he looks nice,' I said. I couldn't bear to agree with anything Elton said. He had the same effect on me as my sister.
The bloke told some jokes and sang
It's Now or Never
in a very melodramatic way which made Mary and me giggle. Then at last it was time for the beauty contest. One by one the girls came onto the stage and they walked up and down and did a twirl and then stood in a line in the light with one foot in front of the other and one hand on their hips. I thought they all looked lovely in their swimsuits. Elton started wolf-whistling and some people told him to shush. Sally's bathing suit was white and she had on these really high heels and her hair had been set. She didn't look a bit like the same girl who worked on the haberdashery counter in Woollies.
âSally looks nice, doesn't she?' I whispered to Mary.
âWhich one's Sally?' she said.
âThe third one on the left, in the white swimsuit.'Â
âGosh,' said Mary. âI didn't even recognise her.'
Out of the corner of my eye, I could see Elton taking swigs out of the bottle in his bag, then he passed it to Mary. I was feeling really uncomfortable about the way things were going. I tried to concentrate on the beauty contest.
When it came to the âpersonality' section, all the girls smiled a lot while they were answering their questions, and almost all of them said they wanted to get married and have children. One of them said she was going to university and wanted to work for the space programme in America and the presenter chuckled away and rolled his eyes at the audience and said: âOh my! Have you been reading about women's liberation, my darling?' and everyone laughed. Well most people laughed. I didn't and Ralph and Mary didn't either but Elton certainly did.