Copyright oggbashan July 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
-
It was the mid-1960s. I had just moved into a flat a year after being at university for three years.
I was almost asleep, worn out by my girlfriend's passionate lovemaking. We had been together for the last year at university and a year since then, but this was the first time we had been able to be in a bed together since I had moved out of my parents' house into this basic flat above a shop in Orpington High Street. Before tonight unsatisfactory lovemaking had been in the cramped back seat of my car.
The flat needed work to make it from just a weatherproof abode into a home but I could afford the work and time over the next year or two once my finances had recovered from the setting up of the mortgage and the legal costs. But the location was ideal. It was only one hundred yards from the office where Monica and I work. Although I have an older car, I would only need it for leisure at weekends -- when I could afford the petrol, unlike the twenty miles of commuting I had been doing every day. The flat might be large enough but wouldn't be great for a family. The access was up an external staircase from the back yard where I could park my car. But it was a first step on the housing ladder.
Today, Sunday, Marion and I had been moving my things into the flat. Those stairs seemed to get longer and steeper with each item. She had bought us a Chinese takeaway and insisted that we had to try the new double bed which was the only item I had specifically purchased for the flat. Everything else was either from my bedroom at my parents, or hand-me-downs from the wider family. I was better set up than many of my friends were who were moving, or had, moved. I even had Marion-made curtains on every window.
I had been doing most of the carrying, while Marion sorted and put things away. After the meal I was shattered but Marion wanted to try the possibilities of the double bed. I showered and crawled into bed beside a naked Marion who rolled me on top of her.
Whether she stopped whenever I was at the point of no return or whether it was just that I was so tired, I don't know. An hour later I still hadn't come and couldn't resist as Marion rolled me over and started bouncing on me. I think I came before I went to sleep. I might have done; I don't remember anything until Marion brought me breakfast in bed on Monday morning.
"I'm pleased we have today and tomorrow off work," Marion said. "You still look shattered."
"Do you wonder?" I asked, "Apart from the humping and heaving there was a lot of humping last night as well."
"And you didn't perform at your best. You went to sleep. I think today should be a break. How about a trip to the seaside?"
"OK. Where?"
"You've mentioned Camber Sands before. I've never been there. How about Camber?"
"Depends on the weather. Can you get a paper from the newsagents? They're two doors away."
"Weather?"
"Camber Sands can be a literal pain if here is too much wind."
Monica took far longer than I expected. When she returned, I had a pile of items in the hall.
"So much?" she asked. "We're not going to the Sahara, are we?"
"No, but Camber has few facilities. The toilets are in one place, usually overused and messy. I'm taking a tent because we would need somewhere to change and to shelter from the sun and sand."
"Shelter from the sand? Why?"
"What's the weather forecast?"
Marion opened the newspaper.
"Bright sunshine all day. Temperature about 25 maybe 28, medium to strong South Westerly wind."
"We'll need the tent, and you have better cover your legs. I'll load everything and we'll go via your parents' house to collect your swimming things. And -- have you still got those old stockings you were going to stuff a cushion with?"
"Yes, why? I was going to throw them out because I found a bought stuffing material was better."
"If there is a strong wind, tent pegs on their own might not be enough."
Half an hour later we were on the A21. It took half an hour to get through Sevenoaks and another forty-five minutes for Tonbridge, but once beyond Tonbridge the roads were fairly clear. We arrived at Camber Sands main car park at about eleven o'clock. Even then on a weekday the car park was two-thirds full. I unloaded everything I had packed into the car on to a wheelbarrow and we set off to go about two hundred yards from the car park.
We had to carry the wheelbarrow across the soft sand to the wet sand exposed by the retreating tide. Only then could we wheel it. The dry sand was like a mist about a foot high. Marion was wearing sandals and complaining that the sand was hurting her ankles. When we had unloaded, she sheltered behind the heap of items as I erected the tent. I filled some of her old stockings with sand and used then around the tent pegs. Inside the tent I had a larger than necessary groundsheet. I attached the edge on the windward side about a foot up from the tent's lower edge and used more filled stockings to hold it in place. Marion was grateful to get out of the wind and blowing sand.
After coffee from a Thermos, we changed into our swimming things. We ran across the windblown sand to the wet area, but some dry sand was still hurting our bare legs. We were pleased to get into the sea as the tide was returning. We swam for about half an hour and was just returning to the beach across one of the sand bars when a small boy stopped us.