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Cornish Short Stories
Cornish Short Stories Read online
Cover design © Vita Sleigh, www.vitasleighillustration.com
Vita Sleigh has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, to be identified as illustrator of this book cover design.
Woodcut illustrations © Angela Annesley, www.ravenstongue.co.uk
Angela Annesley has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, to be identified as illustrator of these woodcut illustrations.
First published 2018
The History Press
The Mill, Brimscombe Port
Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2QG
www.thehistorypress.co.uk
Selection and Introduction © Emma Timpany & Felicity Notley, 2018
The right of Emma Timpany and Felicity Notley to be identified as editors of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
All content is copyright of the respective authors, 2018
The moral rights of the authors are hereby asserted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
The content of the stories are entirely fictional and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without the permission in writing from the Publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN 978 0 7509 8822 3
Typesetting and origination by The History Press
Printed in Turkey
eBook converted by Geethik Technologies
CONTENTS
Introduction
Talk of Her KATHERINE STANSFIELD
Roaring Girl ALAN ROBINSON
An Arrangement TOM VOWLER
Beginning Again CANDY NEUBERT
Sonny ROB MAGNUSON SMITH
The Superpower SARAH PERRY
The Haunting of Bodmin Jail ANASTASIA GAMMON
The Siren of Treen EMMA STAUGHTON
Ballast SARAH THOMAS
I Run in Graveyards CLARE HOWDLE
The Maple is in Blossom CATHY GALVIN
That Same Sea ADRIAN MARKLE
Home Between Sea and Stone TIM MARTINDALE
The Hope of Recovery ELAINE RUTH WHITE
I Turn on My Own Axis FELICITY NOTLEY
The Kiss PHILIPA ALDOUS
A Bird So Rare EMMA TIMPANY
Too Hot, Too Bright S. REID
On the Border TIM HANNIGAN
Notes
Acknowledgements
The Contributors
INTRODUCTION
AS WE put together this collection, we were determined that the stories we chose would not simply reach for familiar tropes – rugged cliffs, romantic beach scenes and pasties – but would have sprung from felt experience. They needed to be true both to their writers and to Cornwall. When a seagull does fly in from the wide blue yonder, as in Rob Magnuson Smith’s masterful story ‘Sonny’, it instantly becomes both more than itself and exactly what it is, inscrutable behind its yellow eyes.
Writers are often solitary but can flourish when brought together. We both feel fortunate to have discovered Telltales, a live literature event based in Falmouth, where writers share their work and socialise over a drink or two. It was through Telltales that Nicola Guy from The History Press – herself from Cornwall – found us and invited us to edit this new anthology. Nicola had some rules for us to follow: the writers included must be Cornish by birth or upbringing or must live in Cornwall. Cornwall also had to feature as a setting in the stories themselves.
The work of this current generation of Cornish writers is hard to classify; nothing is clear-cut in this far-flung place. The many legacies of Cornwall’s industrial and maritime past still visible in the region have informed a number of the stories. Elaine Ruth White’s ‘The Hope of Recovery’ takes us diving deep to a wreck beneath the waves of our dangerous coastline. Sarah Thomas’s ‘Ballast’ pays tribute to Cornwall’s presence on the world map in the great age of sail, a time when explorers and naturalists, including Charles Darwin, passed through Falmouth’s natural deep water harbour. The stories create their own map of Cornwall: from the Tamar to the Helford, from Bodmin to Penzance, from Launceston to Zennor.
During the submission process, many retellings of traditional Cornish tales surfaced. Emma Staughton’s ‘The Siren of Treen’ – a melodic reworking of ‘The Mermaid of Zennor’ told in three voices – stood out, as did emerging writer Anastasia Gammon’s ‘The Haunting of Bodmin Jail’, an original and witty take on the classic ghost story.
Given Cornwall’s long history as a source of inspiration for artists, we felt the visual design of the book should reflect this. Elemental forces in the cover design by Vita Sleigh and in the woodcut illustrations by Angela Annesley resonate between the contemporary and the traditional, rather as modern life and a rich literary heritage feed into the writers’ words. Vita described the inspiration behind her design as follows:
My approach was to use colours which I felt expressed the essence of Cornwall: wild, often grey (the sea in winter, stark cliffs, the turbulent skies), earthy with splashes of colour (the bright green that mosses can be, the yellow of gorse flowers, the deep almost tropical blues of the ocean on those rare but gorgeous Cornish days).
The image of the wind-blown tree was something I came back to again and again in drawings. It is what I thought of first when I saw the brief. I liked the idea that the tree has been shaped by the Cornish landscape and weather, in very much the same way that the writers will also have been heavily shaped by living in this sometimes harsh but beautiful area of the world.
Whilst Cornwall’s past never feels far away, Candy Neubert’s ‘Beginning Again’ is set very much in the present, detailing the intricacies of a father–son relationship on an idyllic Cornish beach. The liminal space between land and sea is also the setting for ‘The Kiss’ by Philipa Aldous, where a girl and boy walk together, full of anticipation for the moment that will surely come. More complex relationships are the focus of Tom Vowler’s exquisite and moving short story, ‘An Arrangement’, and S. Reid’s beautifully wrought tale, ‘Too Hot, Too Bright’. The shifting boundaries between fiction and poetry are explored in Cathy Galvin’s richly layered prose poem, ‘The Maple is in Blossom’.
One of the defining characteristics of Cornwall is its separateness: there is joy to be had in crossing the Tamar from east to west. We are delighted that Tim Hannigan has allowed us to include in the collection his inspired, numinal piece, ‘On the Border’ – a deeply-felt exploration of place and time.
We’ve chosen to open this book with Katherine Stansfield’s poem ‘Talk of Her’. The ‘her’ in question is Dolly Pentreath, the last native speaker of the Cornish language.
Emma Timpany and Felicity Notley
Cornwall, 2018
TALK OF HER
KATHERINE STANSFIELD
They say she spoke no English as a maid
hawking fish in Mousehole. They say
she was found by the language man
as if she was lost, that the day he came
she was raging. He thought her curses Welsh
at first, then caught something else.
A witch, they say, and Cornish
her tongue for witching. They say
she was wed and unwed. They say
there was a child, a girl, though some
say a boy, say he died. By the end
she’d prattle anyt
hing for pence. They say
she was the last to speak it, but listen –
there’s others here still talking, and when
I dug her up last week, forty-seven feet
south-east from the spot they had marked, her
with three teeth in that cracked and famous
jaw, I tell you, she spoke just earth and water.
ROARING GIRL
ALAN ROBINSON
SHE WAS the first person I saw at the festival as I entered the tea room, flooded with light from the domed glass ceiling, which showed fluff on her black velvet jacket and britches. She looked up as I approached.
‘Is it Eileen?’ I asked.
She smiled. ‘Aileen.’ Emphasising the A.
‘I’m Jack.’
‘Sit down.’
‘Can I get you a tea or something?’ I asked. She was sitting at the table like a sprung coil, looking as if she wanted to get away quickly.
‘I’d rather have ale,’ she said. ‘Or better still, mead. There must be loads of mead around these parts.’
I couldn’t place her accent, which sounded like Suffolk mixed with cockney and even some Irish. Nor could I tell her age. She looked girlish yet old, prematurely grey hair bobbed like a boy’s. She was both dandyish and slovenly: her ruffled lace shirt matched the velvet suit perfectly, but was a bit torn.
‘I’m sure we can get mead. Follow me.’
Her eyes lit up, a burnished blue, and tiny dimples appeared in her cheeks.
‘Now you’re talking.’
‘Have you been here long?’ I asked as we walked down the hill from the tea room to the meadows, passing the main house where early festival machinations were taking place on the green outside, lots of women in wellies with Cornish accents bossing men about. It was understatedly alternative.
‘An age,’ she said.
‘I’m sorry. My train was a bit late. Then I walked straight past the entrance to Port Eliot. It’s more or less a hole in the long garden wall.’
‘Which one of these tents has the mead?’ she asked.
‘The big one,’ I gambled. I knew it was the beer tent, but not if it had mead. It did.
‘You’re a star,’ she said, when I handed her the glass.
‘Cheers.’
‘This is a big show,’ Aileen said. ‘I’ve never seen so many people in a tent except at Royal Regattas.’
‘Have you been to many?’ I asked.
‘A few,’ she said. ‘You have to. I get on quite well with some of the courtiers. They say the Queen likes me.’
‘Thanks for meeting me,’ I said. ‘I’ve brought a CD which explains a bit about myself and the story. I thought it might help to listen to it when you’ve got a moment. I know you’ll be busy here.’
She took the disc, turned it over with a blank look and put it on the bar. She then put her mead glass on it.
I didn’t know what to say. I sipped my beer, spluttered into it, then said, ‘I also have the story in print,’ and took a copy of my book’s introduction from my bag.
‘Manuscript: that’s what I’m used to. It’s a bit thin though,’ she said. ‘Did you write it yourself? Maybe you should get help.’
I welcomed these put-downs as par for the course with star-rated literary consultants, as well as, if I’m honest, the dominatrix-ish frisson I sensed between us.
‘Anyway, I’ll have a look at it later. Tell me a bit about yourself,’ she said.
I summarised my patchy writing career, titivating the most promising bits, and hoping to sound edgier than my subject matter.
‘You didn’t say anything about money, like what you were paid last, or what you wanted for this, but if you’re a new boy I guess you just have to take the crumbs, am I right?’
By this time I’d truly lost my voice. I nodded.
‘Thanks for showing me the mead house. I’ll have a look at this tonight.’
‘Thank you. I hope you enjoy it. Where shall we meet?’ I called, as she moved off.
‘Here, same time tomorrow.’
That night I tried to find and bump into her. Port Eliot’s not so big that it couldn’t quite easily happen. I looked for her velvet suit, but as it grew dark that was difficult even in the beer tents, and I hoped I would just run into her on a path through the trees, or on the moonlit walk along the riverbank. I came across only lovers and midnight swimmers, unaware of my presence, so that by the end of the night I began to feel like a ghost.
I wondered if she’d read my manuscript by now, and if it was a hit, or if she’d binned it and wouldn’t turn up on Saturday to give me feedback.
After midnight passed, I gave up hope and followed the raised voices and slews of people heading for the Walled Garden. Under a marquee at the far end an Irish band was mixing every kind of world music to an Irish backbeat, the yells and whoops of performers and crowd growing more insistent as I came near. It was cold on the edge of the crowd, and to get warmer I pushed through until I was a couple of rows from the front. There she was, tambourine in one hand, a drink in the other, still in her black velvet suit, shirt collar undone, a determined look in her eye as she kept time. It was a family affair, and she seemed to be part of it, or a close friend, winking at a young girl guitarist in the band who was a little hesitant, urging her on. The song finished unexpectedly on an upbeat, the discipline of the finish taking the audience, including me, by total surprise. I blinked twice, and when I focused again, after my eyes had swum from woodsmoke and beaconing stage lights, Aileen had gone. There was a gap next to where the young girl musician stood with her guitar, looking lost. A lostness I shared.
It was pitch black away from the lighted tents. I walked along pathways beneath trees, numb and still exhilarated from the music. As the sounds everywhere damped down, there was nothing to do but find my tent and sleep.
Before I was due to meet Aileen the next day, I went to a writers’ open mic, a semi-serious affair in a small tent in a grove of trees. I thought it would help me loosen up before my meeting. She was there, in an identical velvet jacket and britches, this time bottle-green, reciting a pub-song-cum-verse-drama, which reminded me of women blues singers whose records I’d heard from the 1920s, a riot of double meanings and sexual innuendo. It was a Rabelaisian hoot. She went down well, sandwiched between a couple of gawky lads whose stories were of self-loathing and self-love.
I followed her down the slope away from the trees, glad to see she was heading for the mead tent where we’d agreed to meet.
After getting drinks, I was about to ask if she’d been able to read my piece, when she said, ‘The first thing is that you should stop writing about yourself, for Christ’s sake. Choose someone famous or mythical, and forget prose. Why isn’t it in at least iambic pentameter? And it has to be a play; at the moment it’s like a long letter to no one. What do you say to that?’ She took a sip of mead.
Dry-throated, I spluttered back that I respected her opinion but was trying to do something experimental with the prose.
‘We all resort to a bit of loose prose every now and again, even Will Shakespeare,’ she said. ‘But plays are what entertain people. Think about what I’ve said. We’ll talk some more, but now,’ she drained the mead, ‘I have to go and see the Queen.’
I followed her at a distance after she left the tent, out of sheer curiosity. I knew the Queen couldn’t actually be there, even though she looks as good in wellies as the next person.
When I caught up with Aileen she was bowing to the Queen of Hearts in a children’s pageant in the woods. She said, ‘Majesty, may I have your ear?’ and whispered something, after which the Queen pronounced: ‘Clear the court, we must see a play!’
Aileen performed a one-woman play within a play about two star-crossed lovers and their goblin aides, both funny and moving, enthralling the kids and their mums and dads and me.
Afterwards I caught her eye, as she watched the end of the pageant from the far side of the audience. I smiled. She saw me, but turned a
way and walked towards the river.
That night I blotted her out, and her critiques. I told myself they were the rattling of an East End trendy who never set much of a foot outside London. Why come to these things and agree to see budding writers if you had no intention of nurturing them? For the free invite, no doubt, and the expenses. I got into Guinness, which simultaneously helped with the blotting out and made me feel more substantial.
I ended up at a gig in the music tent, which I came to halfway through. I could have sworn it was Bob Dylan in his Nashville Skyline period but on the way out heard someone say, ‘He was just like his dad,’ so surmised that it had been Dylan’s son. I headed for the riverside walk, entranced by the fairy lights and thinking – still gobsmacked by the Dylan Junior gig – of reincarnation.
I got lost and stumbled on an open-air cocktail bar in a glade that played soul to die for. I sensed Aileen had been there – or maybe I just sensed her everywhere that weekend – and got to dancing and drinking with two women of Aileen’s generation. They knew the moves. We had a good laugh, took selfies. I found for some reason I’d drunk myself sober and went back to my tent to re-read my manuscript. At that hour, approaching early dawn, it alternated between being genius and dross, often on the same page.
Wide awake and restless, I headed for the river across the meadows. The estuary birds would reassure me with the inhuman prescience of their calls; it had worked before.
The open-air cinema screen was still up, though now it was a blank white sheet, and a few all-night stragglers were still winding one another up with tall stories and meanderings among the wisps of mist suspended above the waterside.
Along the estuary there was a boathouse towards which I was walking. As I got near, I saw a boat swinging fast, driven by oars, headed for the boathouse. It glided in, and Aileen stepped forward to the end of the jetty. I hadn’t seen her until the last minute, recognising first her bottle-green velvet of the day before, and then her boy’s hair, as she stepped gingerly into the boat. I wanted to hurry and say goodbye, or please ring, both of which would have been equally inappropriate. She was going to wherever she’d come from, in the Hollywood manner in which she seemed to do everything, and she hadn’t given me her card.