A Perfectly Appropriate Dress

Thank goodness the Turners had the good sense to book a proper holiday, if for no other reason than that dress.

2016-02-23

 

“The weather forecast is for bright skies all weekend,” Patrick announced at the breakfast table. “It looks like we’ll have that sunny day at the seaside you wanted on Sunday, Shelagh.”

Still wrapped in her dressing gown, Shelagh put the finishing touches on a picnic basket. “That’s lovely, dear. I haven’t walked along the seaside in years.”

“You went to Brighton for your honeymoon, Mum. That’s not so very long ago. You must have had plenty of walks along the shore then,” Timothy reminded her. Distracted by his sister, he didn’t see the look exchanged between his parents, nor the blush that flooded his mother’s cheeks.

Patrick cleared his throat. “Yes, well, it’ll be nice to get in a few of those hikes in the forest we’d planned, Tim. Maybe this time, we can protect Angela from the S-Q-U-I-R-R-E-L-S this time.” He stood up and carried his dishes to the sink. “Everyone should put a move on it if we’re to leave on time.”

Shelagh glanced up. “Patrick, I’ve put the suitcases in the hallway, and the basket of food is all set. Please load the car, I need to go get dressed.”

“I still don’t see why we need to bring food along,” he muttered. “The hotel will feed us, Shelagh. This holiday is supposed to be a relaxing one for you, too.”

Shelagh thought of the three days of washing, ironing, packing and organizing, and smiled to herself. He did try, she knew. “Well, it won’t be very relaxing for anyone if the children get hungry along the way. It’s not enough to ruin our lunch in Southampton, but enough to keep us happy. And be careful, Patrick, don’t get your suit all dusty. You look very handsome, and I want to show you off. Timothy, could you please wash up the breakfast dishes? I’ll put Angela in her playpen.”

“At least I won’t have to do any washing up at the hotel.” grumbled the teenager.

Shelagh lifted her daughter from her chair. “If you like, we can find a nice cafe in town that could put your skills to work, dear.” She grinned and squeezed his elbow as she passed by.

A quarter of an hour later, Patrick entered their room. “Bags are packed, and the children are set to go, Shelagh. Almost ready?”

She stood up from her dressing table, her hair smooth in its twist, light make-up carefully applied, and her earrings adding an elegant glow to her face. “Almost, Patrick.” She turned her back to him. “If you could zip me up, please?’

For a long moment, there was no sound or movement from her husband, and Shelagh’s eyes danced. “Patrick?” she asked innocently. “My zip, please?”

She felt his fingers fumble, then tug the pull up the length of her back. Turning into his arms, she whispered, “Do you like it?”

Patrick swallowed thickly, and Shelagh pressed a kiss to his mouth. “It’s new,” she told him. “I thought I’d try a new look this week.” She pulled away, suddenly nervous. “It’s not too much?”

Patrick lifted her arm and twirled her slowly to fully appreciate the new look. The dress wasn’t so much a departure in style, but the cut emphasized his wife’s lovely form in ways that made his imagination spark.  “It’s perfect, Shelagh. You’re perfect.” He pulled her close against his body. “I’m so glad I booked two rooms.”

“Dad!” Timothy’s voice called from the doorway. “Could you two hurry? At this rate, we’ll be late for everything!”

Laughing, Patrick kissed his wife quickly. “That boy is going to get rich babysitting his sister this week.”

Shelagh smiled knowingly. “I’m sure I don’t know what you’re talking about, Patrick.”

Patrick watched as she walked down the hallway. The way she moved in that dress, he was completely certain she knew exactly what he was talking about.

 

Of Greengrocers and Costumes

Sometimes, a little fact will stick in our heads and take us to odd places. This fic is inspired by some bits of character background provided by Doctor Turner’s Casebook.  If I’ve gotten any details about British grammar school years, or fruits available to greengrocers in Northern Scotland in the 1930’s, or Victorian theater, it isn’t for lack of trying.


 

Chaos reigned supreme that afternoon. Timothy , gearing up for exams, needed quiet to study, whilst Angela was busy in the discovery of music, and determined to make as much noise as possible. Between preparing dinner, cleaning a lunchtime spill on Patrick’s new jacket, and preventing Angela from both banging the piano keys and crushing her wee fingers under the keyboard cover, Shelagh was exhausted. It was a weary woman that crawled into bed that night.

“Tomorrow will be easier,” Patrick promised, looking up from his book. “I’m off, and I’ll take Angela to the park. She needs a good long run-around to work off all that steam.”

Shelagh rolled over to face him and burrowed her face into his side. “Mmmph,” she breathed. “You’ll need to run her for another four months if we’re to head off the terrible two’s.”

Patrick stretched, then placed his book on his nightstand. “I’m afraid the two’s are nothing on the three’s, my love. We’re in this for the long haul.”

Shelagh’s eyes blinked wide as she watched her husband thump his pillow into shape. “Patrick, please humour me tonight. I only managed today by telling myself she’s getting it out of her system.”

“Alright, then. We’ll run her like a puppy every day and she’ll be through this in no time. I’m sure we won’t even have a single issue during her entire adolescence.”

Patrick chuckled, but when he glanced down at her he saw a gleam of tears in her eye. He switched off the lamp and pulled her back into his arms. “Here, now. A good night’s sleep and you’ll feel better, and that’s my official medical diagnosis.”

“I hope so,” Shelagh answered. They lay in the quiet dark together, and Patrick could feel the trials of the day slip from his own shoulders. “What can I do to help?”

“You do so much, already, Patrick, and I don’t know what I’d do without Mrs. Penney. I should be able to manage.”

“You do manage, my love. You manage beautifully. You’re tired, that’s all.” His hands slid up to knead her shoulder. “Roll over and let me rub your back.”

She shook her head and burrowed her face against his chest. “Tell me a story,” she whispered.

That surprised him. In the early days of their engagement, when there were still so many details to learn, they would take turns sharing stories from their pasts. The business of juggling family and work didn’t leave much time for it anymore. He missed it, now he thought of it, and so, it seemed, did Shelagh. “It’s your turn, I told the last one. Back at Christmas?”

Shelagh lifted herself up to look into his face. “You did not. It was my turn last, remember? The night it snowed, I told you about the Apple Brownie.”

Patrick’s shoulders shook. The “Apple Brownie.” He recalled how each morning of her childhood, a young Shelagh would wake to find a an apple, or an orange, or even once a mango (but almost always an apple) perched upon her chest of drawers. When Shelagh had first mentioned this, he hadn’t been surprised. Her father was a greengrocer, after all. If any house would have an abundance of produce, it would be the Mannion’s, and Patrick called shenanigans.

“Don’t be so sure you know me, Patrick Turner,” Shelagh scolded that night. “There’s much more to me than what’s on the surface.”

“Thank goodness for that,” he murmured in her ear. Years in a habit had effectively hidden many of his wife’s secrets from the world. One of the great joys of this marriage was the discovery of those secrets.

“Patrick, if you’re not going to listen, you shouldn’t be quite so hopeful.”

Schooling his features to an attentive expression, Patrick begged her to continue.

“It was always the loveliest piece of fruit, much nicer than the fruit left after the shop finally closed for the day. Sometimes the stuff Dad would bring up was so bruised it was only fit for stewing,” she shuddered. “I hate stewed fruit.

“When I was old enough to ask, my mother simply said that it must’ve been left by the Apple Brownie, and went about her day. I didn’t question her, and I don’t think I ever asked again.” A shadow passed over her face. “As I got a bit older, I started to suspect that perhaps my mother knew more about it than she let on. I thought I was very clever, and would set my alarm earlier and earlier to try to catch my mother out, but I never could. No matter what time I woke, the fruit was always there, waiting for me. It wasn’t until she became ill and then. . . later . . . that I realized it must have been my father all the while.

“Up until the day I left for school, never a day went by that I didn’t wake to a piece of fruit.” Shelagh’s voice drifted into quiet. “He never told me he loved me, my father. It wasn’t his way. But now I think perhaps he had his own way.”  

Patrick pressed a kiss to the top of her head. He knew better than most, better than Shelagh even, the struggles her father would have faced as a widowed father alone with a child. Hadn’t he himself hidden behind his practice during those first terrible months after Marianne’s death? But some force pulled him back to life; back to his son and opened his heart to Shelagh. Shelagh’s father never knew that redemption.

Angus Mannion was a man who knew love, but was afraid of it. A polished apple was the most he could give his daughter, and when his pain became too much for him, he found a new place for Shelagh at a convent school.

Lying next to her now, Patrick caught her hand and brought it to his lips. As long as it was up to him, Shelagh would never doubt she was loved. He searched his mind for a new story to share, but could think of none. She knew of the days spent running about the parks near Alder Hey Hospital, and how he would watch the wounded soldiers in their “hospital blues.” She knew of his determined studies, how he pushed himself to the top of his class in order to prove to his father that he was better suited to a medical career than the accountant’s life. As Shelagh’s confidence in their relationship grew, she had begun to ask questions of her own, and by now Patrick felt he had shared it all.

“Cranes,” Shelagh murmured. “Timothy made one for Angela this morning before school. He told me you taught him how. Where did you learn to make cranes?”

A laugh rumbled deep in his chest. “The musicals!” he exclaimed. “I haven’t thought about those for years!”

“What musicals?” Shelagh was alert again.

“At school. Liverpool Collegiate.” He chuckled again. “It was always Gilbert and Sullivan, every year.” His mind flooded with memories long forgotten.

“Patrick, you can’t stop there! Tell me more,” Shelagh begged.

“Every year the school would do a production of a Gilbert and Sullivan musical. When I was–oh, sixteen, maybe?” He nodded. “Yes. My fifth form year I was cast as Yum-Yum in The Mikado, and we were required to make cranes by the dozen for the prop department.”

“You most certainly were not! You’re making this up.” Shelagh pressed her lips together in disbelief.

“No, no, I’m not! My voice hadn’t changed yet, and there were no other older boys who could sing the soprano part. Even so, I could barely hit the notes they wanted me to sing, and then my voice broke right in the middle of dress rehearsals. Headmaster Brown was convinced I’d done it on purpose.”

Shelagh sat upright. “Patrick Turner, you’re teasing me.”

He looked up at her outraged face. “Honest, Shelagh, it’s true! Headmaster Brown started those productions before the Great War. By the time I was there, it was a tradition. I’m not sure why, it was always so hard to cast the soprano parts. But if you were tapped, you did your service to the school.

“Anyway, I was fitted for the costume and learned the part, and then my voice broke. I could only manage if I did a falsetto, and it sounded so ridiculous, the director gave the part to a second year. They never let me try out again, even though I have a perfectly reasonable tenor.”

Shelagh leant back against the headboard. “Well, I never expected that. A thwarted acting career. Patrick, imagine if you’d gone on to play the part? Everything would have turned out differently. How could we ever have met? You’ve shaken my belief in fate.” Her eyes danced with humour.

He tugged her back into his arms. “Oh, we would have found each other, my love. You would have seen me in some West End production and fallen in love with me from the mezzanine.”

“You’re ridiculous. I think you’ve made up this whole preposterous tale just to shake me from my mood.” She snuggled in closer.

“Man cannot live by hope alone, my love.”

 

The next morning, the mood in the house was brighter. Angela’s ambitions shifted from music to drawing, and she quickly added many crayon masterpieces to her portfolio. Timothy was less tense with a weekend to master Geometry proofs, and both Shelagh and Patrick hummed as they set out the morning meal.

Patrick pulled a face as he reached for the cereal box. “Cheerios? On a Saturday?”

“Angela prefers them to eggs, dear. Could you please set her up?” Patrick did not notice the mischievous glance exchanged between his wife and son.

Angela’s squeal of delight drew his attention to the bowl. There, wading amongst the Cheerios, were a pair of origami cranes.

“Ha, ha, very funny, Shelagh.” He rolled his eyes in faux annoyance.

“You never were in The Mikado, Dad! You would have said,” Timothy teased.

“I’ll have you know there are many mysteries in your old dad’s past, young man.” He placed a crane into Angela’s outstretched hand. His head came up with a jerk. “Hang on,” he muttered.

Sounds of boxes being moved travelled down the hall from the storage closet.

“Patrick, what on earth?” Shelagh called.

He popped his head out the doorway. “Don’t come in. I’ve just remembered something.”

Shelagh muttered under her breath. “I’ve finally gotten that room organized and you’ll make a mess in the work of a moment.” She sighed, her annoyance not entirely pretend, and returned to the kitchen.

Several minutes later she called down the hall, “Patrick, come and sit down. Your eggs will get cold.”

Patrick shuffled back and stood in the doorway for several moments before his family looked up. Collectively, they gasped.

Before them stood the family patriarch, stalwart and steady pillar of the community, trusted friend and confidante, bewigged and wrapped in a satiny yellow and blue kimono.

“They never collected the costume after they sacked me. I’d forgotten all about this old thing, it was with the boxes from my parents’ house. . .” Patrick’s voice trailed off as he looked up at the faces of his family.

Timothy paled. “Dad,” he whispered in the horrified voice only an adolescent can muster, “Take. Off. The. Wig.”

Patrick grinned wickedly. “I can sing “Three Little Maids from School Are We,” if you like.”

“No!” came the family chorus.

Pulling the wig off, Patrick continued, “Well, the wig is a bit scratchy, certainly,  but this might do very well for a dressing gown.” He stroked his thumbs across the hem of the wide sleeve.

At the sound of the postman, Timothy jumped up. “I’ll get that,” he announced.

“No, Tim, you finish your breakfast. I’ll get the post,” his father replied.

“Dad, no!” Timothy was aghast. “You can’t go to the door like that! You look . . .”

Patrick schooled his features into an expression of pained shock, an effort made more difficult by Timothy’s efforts to protect his father’s dignity.

“Dad, it’s fine, having a keepsake and all, but if you . . .if you went to the door in that people would not smile at you–or–or want to associate with you. Put it back in the box, Dad.” Worn from his efforts at parent-managing, Timothy went for the post.

The wicked grin returned as Patrick turned back to his wife. “He makes it so easy sometimes.”

Rolling her eyes, Shelagh buttered another piece of toast for Angela. “Yes, you’re very funny, dearest. Now go put that back in its box and eat your breakfast. Angela’s looking forward to her day in the park with you.”

“Oh, it’s not going back in the box, my love.” Patrick shrugged the robe off his shoulders and folded it over the back of his chair. As he took his seat, his eyes caught hers, their expression bring the color to her cheeks. “I’m quite. . . hopeful you’ll like to wear it yourself.”

 

Easing Fears

“I never know when I love you the most. But I sometimes think that these are the times that I love you best.”

This little scene from 5.4 has captured our fangirl hearts. I think we’ll be hearing about it and reading inspired fics for a long time.


 

“Come on, then.” Shelagh stepped back from her husband. “Bed, and no arguments.”

With a slow exhale, Patrick rose to follow her down the hallway to their room. He lingered as she stepped into the nursery to adjust the covers on their daughter, watching as her light hand felt for the rise and fall of Angela’s breathing. The toddler sensed her mother edging away from the cot and stirred. Shelagh tucked the well-loved bear in the crook of Angela’s elbow and immediately the child settled. After a moment, Shelagh kissed the tip of her finger and pressed it to Angela’s forehead, then moved quietly to the door.

He loved how Shelagh knew instinctively how to soothe their worries. Her touch, her voice, brought a sense of serenity to their home that made the hardest of times bearable. Without her, he knew his current conundrum would consume him. His fears for those poor babies and their families could quite easily take over all of his time as he searched for answers. Shelagh understood, but knew how to keep him centered.

He was surprised when rather than going on to their room, she stopped at Timothy’s door. A light tap, and she slipped into the room. The boy slept at an odd angle, his long thin feet hanging over the edge. Shelagh’s hand twitched, and Patrick knew she held herself back from fussing with the boy’s blanket. A moment spent shifting his books on his desk, and she left, closing the door behind her.

Patrick stepped close, a wry smile on his face. “He’s nearly a young man, Shelagh. I think he’s gotten beyond tucking in,” he teased.

Shelagh blushed, glancing at the floor. “I know. But when he sleeps, he looks so like the little boy who stole my heart, I can’t help myself.”

He squeezed her shoulder lightly, then slid his hand along her arm.  Reaching for her hand he brought it to his lips. “It’s a good thing he did. I’m not completely certain I would have won you if not for him.”

Her blushed deepened at his quick wink. “Patrick–” she chided half-heartedly.

He laughed, and led her by the hand to their room. Shelagh stepped over to her small vanity table and began to pull out the precise pins holding her hair. She ran her fingers through it, and reached for her hairbrush.

“No, let me,” Patrick asked. Their eyes met in the mirror, and he stroked the brush through her hair, smoothing it about her shoulders in the quiet of their room. Shelagh sighed and stood, wearing her “nurse face.”

“You’re exhausted, Patrick. There’s no reason for you to look at me so…hopefully. You need your rest.”

“I’m always ‘hopeful,’ my love.” He pulled her close to him and buried his face in her soft hair. He could feel Shelagh’s body start to relax into his, and pressed a kiss to her throat.

“Patrick,” she demurred. “It’s late.”

He grazed along her throat and whispered in her ear. “Do you think about how you love me often, my love?” His voice was husky. “When? Tell me. Do you think about how you love me when we’re apart, when I’m away?”

He pressed a soft kiss to her lips and felt the soft sigh escape her lungs. The strain of the evening’s work faded, his fears eased as their own private world surrounded them. In the quiet of their room, they found comfort in one another that night, and in the morning, would face those fears stronger together.