Jenny sat at the table in the bay-window on the ground floor of the guest house.
From her seat she could see part of the road, the pavement beyond, the railings and then the sea.
The road was grey, the pavement was grey and the sea was little better.
The railings though were bright yellow.
A little rusty in places, but aren’t we all?
She was thinking about the pain in her left hand. Was it inflammation of the joint or was it arthritis? And what’s the difference anyway?
She was also thinking about standing up from the table and returning to her room but the yellow railings called to her.
Come!
She wanted to. She would like to go swimming, but not in that puddle of murk.
“How can you be so gay?” she asked the railings.
“The Mediterranean – now that is a sea worthy of its colour.”
A week before she had been on the south coast of France, the sun had been shining and the verdant green of the pine trees had framed a blue that had made her sigh.
She sighed now.
Perhaps a walk along the sea front?
She looked at the window and saw the first dusting of rain.
She sighed again.
“It don’t never rain but it pours,” she said choosing to ignore the double negative.
Instead she decided to go back to her room, at the back of the hotel where neither the railings nor the sea could speak to her – the only window looked onto a heating vent.
Grey.
She closed the curtains and stood silently as the gloom settled around her. She tried to remember what she had read earlier that morning, her book was still open on the bed where she had been reading.
Something about the past.
A quote from someone.
It might have been Shakespeare.
If she couldn’t remember, then she would have to open the curtains again and flick through the pages of the book until she found it.
And if she opened the curtains, she would have to look at the grey central heating unit. And if she did that, the gloom - lifted by the opening of the curtains - would descend upon her like a shroud.
She hated grey.
It would have been better to have remained by the bay-window – at least the railings offered something bright.
And with that thought, she remembered the quote.
What’s past is prologue.
It was Bill.
Her day felt better already.
Despite the tempest the rain had now become.
