| MOTHER
KELLY'S DOORSTEP
So there I was sitting in a Japanese restaurant with Mary
who was spiking
lumps of green tea ice cream with her chopsticks. I was quietly
crooning
Mother Kelly’s Doorstep for her because she had asked
me to provide the dinner
jazz. It was 11.55 on a Wednesday morning. Life doesn't get
much better than
this, I thought. ‘Do the bit about when the girl had
a hole in her sock, a hole
in her shoe, Mum, ’ Mary ordered. As I sung about the
stocking where the
hole peeped through I thought,as I often do, that just as I
have finally
reached the correct level of organisation and sanity required
to look fairly neat
whenever I want, neatness itself no longer garners any respect.
Do people
gush, ‘Oh, but don't you look wonderfully neat!” when
a really tidy person
enters the room? No, in the main, they do not.
Only the other day I heard of a billionairess American philanthropist
who
decided that her immaculate Oscar de la Renta couture ball
skirt was shown off
best by a little cashmere sweater in which there was a small
moth hole. Her
admiring friends nearly dropped dead at how chic that hole
looked. Knowing the
fastidiousness of its bearer they could see straight away It
was no oversight.
Indeed it was as desired and deliberate as if the garment itself had been
dispatched to a moth farm in the Hamptons for a late summer spree. Oh the
elegance! Oh the daring! Perfection in clothes, as in people just isn't
necessarily that attractive any more. A wonky mouth, a suggestion of an unravelling
hem, a little flab, a strawberry birthmark, a sight stutter, say, these, I
resolved, are what we should all be wearing to parties in the Spring. (Perhaps
not
all at once, though.)
As I dressed myself for New Year’s Eve in Luisa Beccaria
amethyst panne
velvet, my hair having been coaxed into the kind of curls that
would not have
disgraced a Charlie’s Angel, my toe nails gleaming through
my seven denier tights
in Dior rouge de fete and my features hidden by about half
a ton of makeup, I
suddenly realised that I looked a bit stupid. Not stupid exactly,
more as
though I didn't quite have any thoughts or feelings or personality
to call my
own. This is an effect I have long strived for- a clear, smooth
and
irreproachable demeanour, a reaction , I presume, to a lifetime
of having been thought a
little too intense. But it wouldn't quite do. if the truth
be known, being
this well turned out actually made me look a little OLD. I
took off all my
eye makeup straight away and scraped my hair into a ponytail
that was less
Farah Fawcett and more Grange Hill. But that was no good either,
I just looked
like someone in a bad mood who didn't quite want to go to the
party, a person
with a tummy ache or maybe someone who slightly disapproved
of her hosts or was
worried, even, that attending the party somehow implied that
she fully
condoned her hosts’ flamboyant lifestyle, when in fact
she did not. I redid my eyes
and fluffed my hair again. Perhaps what this outfit really
needed was a
smile. But I did not feel like smiling. I tried different shoes,
some crazy
bracelets, four different dresses, scent, a hat, but every
time i looked at the
mirror one awful phrase kept popping back into my head, “Hello
Aunty.”
We don't have to go to the party, I thought. But the amount
of planning that
had gone into the complicated baby sitting arrangements was
easily enough to
have launched a new product worldwide, including the Scandinavian
countries,
and I just didnt have the heart to change things at this the
eleventh hour.
Then I noticed a disposable propelling pencil on the mantel
piece. I picked
it up and thinking of the American heiress and her rather incredible
attempt at
dressing down, I made a small pin prick in my tights to the
side of my left
knee and traced the ladder down into the strap of my patent
sandal. It
wasn't bad. In fact the delicate vertical stripe was really
rather flattering.
It looked sweet, the whole effect suggesting that I was coping
with my life,
but only just. (True. True.) Then I downed a scant inch of
whisky, reached for
my handbag and my husband and slightly emboldened I began to
hope for the
best.
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