Chapter 8
June came to an end and July arrived. The festival would take place on the Saturday, the Fifth.
Marianne said, "Plan on having the whole of the following week off, Simon. I expect we'll be partying all over the weekend, and you'll definitely want Monday off β and I'd like to be able to spend time with you all that week. Besides, you
deserve
some time off after what you've been through, you hero you!"
Simon had waved off the last part, but had put in for the leave anyway. To his relief his request had been granted without a murmur β he really didn't want to face Marianne if her wishes had been thwarted. That he might have been given the leave because he'd saved the life of a fellow fireman didn't enter his head.
All was set for Simon, Marianne and Caroline to go to Knebworth β except transport. Simon hadn't thought of it at all, and when Caroline asked, "How are we getting there?" Marianne and Simon looked at each other in horror.
"I could ask John if we could borrow his car," Simon suggested after a moment. "He's not supposed to drive it at the moment anyway after that concussion."
So Simon hared off to see John. "Sure, no problem," he said, and readily handed over his keys. "Just, please, be careful with her?"
"Of course I will, John!" Simon assured him. "I know how much you dote on that car!"
That settled, with more assurances from Simon that he'd look after John's car, he
carefully
drove home.
- - - - - - - - - -
"Mum says we ought to go and stay overnight at Aunt Jennifer's, she lives really close to Knebworth, within walking distance of the site, actually," Marianne told Simon the next morning. "It'll mean we can drop the car off there and not worry about parking it."
Simon immediately agreed. "Good. That way it won't be in a car park full of drunken drivers bashing into everything and not even leaving a note! I must admit I was worried about that. How close is your Aunt's place?"
"It's just a couple of miles β a small village called Rabley Heath. Aunt Jennifer bought a little cottage there after she and Uncle Pat got divorced."
"Yeah! Uncle Pat was a no-good so-and-so, he
hit
Aunt Jenny!" Caroline piped up.
"Then he went and took almost all the money, too. I never liked him either, Cari. But Jenny's cool." She turned to Simon and added, "You'll like her, I know. She looks like an older version of me and Cari."
Not knowing quite how to react to that, Simon chose humour. "I'm not sure that's such a good idea. I might get into the wrong bed."
Marianne grinned at him. "She'd like that. Aunt Jenny's got similar needs to mine, and no husband to help her out."
Caroline looked a little shocked at Marianne's words, and told her, "She wouldn't try to steal your boyfriend, Marianne!"
"No, but she might ask me if I'd care to share. What would you say to that, Simon?"
"I'd say I was your boyfriend, Marianne."
"Corrrrect answer!" she told him β and gave him a wonderful kiss!
- - - - - - - - - -
Simon, Marianne and Caroline arrived at Rabley Heath at tea-time on Friday. The festival was the next day.
The cottage was a small, white painted house, with an equally small, well-tended garden to the front. There was room to park the car on the driveway, so Simon parked John's mini in front of the garage door and cut the engine.
Marianne grinned widely at him, opened her door, got out and held the seat up so that Caroline could emerge from behind her. Simon locked the doors behind them and walked after the twins as they
skipped
along the path to their Aunt's back door.
"Hi Mari! Hi Cari!" he heard as he rounded the corner.
Jennifer was, as Marianne had said, an older version of the twins. She looked to be in her mid-forties and had rounded out a little, but the resemblance was striking. The same curly dark hair, the same heart-shaped face, and those same wonderfully sparkling grey eyes. She smiled and held her hand out to greet Simon.
"You'll be Marianne's boyfriend, I take it?" she asked him, drawing him in and giving him a peck on the cheek.
"Yes ma'am, that's me. Simon Cook."
"Well it's wonderful to meet you, Simon. Come in, everybody, I'll make some tea."
So a while later the three women and Simon were sitting in Jennifer's small but cosy front room. It was tastefully cluttered in shades of cream and brown, with photographs of horses and family, mementos of places visited, and commemorative plates from various events.
After bringing in the tray with the delicate china cups and Rich Tea biscuits, the twins' Aunt said, "The whole village is abuzz with rumours about the concert this year. There were all sorts of things supposed to be going on last time, and they say it'll be worse this year."
"Oh, what sort of things?" Marianne asked with a smirk.
"Drink, drugs⦠and inappropriate behaviour," Jennifer told her with a straight face, before dissolving into laughter. "You should hear some of the old maids. 'Nothing like it in
my
day!' they say. What they're forgetting is that, really, all the same things were going on β just hidden under the carpet, and often the poor girls concerned got in the family way and were sent away, poor things."
"Barbarians," Caroline said.
"Yes, but people of their time. Things happened, they just weren't spoken of," Jennifer said.
The conversation continued around him, and Simon sat there, unable to say a word. Jennifer broke open a bottle of wine, pouring for all four of them. He took it all in, disbelieving. Just how open
were
these people? He couldn't
imagine
a conversation like this with
his
relatives! Though he noticed a difference; while Marianne and her Aunt were quite comfortable talking about
that
('Sex!' his inner editor insisted. 'It's Sex β why don't you relax a bit?'), Caroline was quiet.
Talk eventually turned to other subjects, and Simon joined in rather more. Another bottle was produced, opened, and consumed. He wondered if it was just the alcohol that was making everyone so free and open, allowing the two girls and the older lady to talk about sex, politics, sex, religion, sex and just about any other subject seemingly without inhibition. He remembered earlier in the evening, and concluded that it wasn't β they really were this open. It wasn't what he was used to in his own home β his father was very much of the older mould, while his mother seemingly went along with him.
It was to his surprise when Jennifer announced that it was already after half-past ten, and she was going to bed.
"Girls, you have the spare room, of course. Simon, I'll fetch you a couple of blankets and a pillow,β you get the couch, I'm afraid."