3
Eco Chic
‘May I see?’ asks Jude, leaning forwards from her position on the sofa. She’s dressed in wide-legged trousers teamed with a polka-dot blouse, and everything she says has a dramatic edge, as if a camera were permanently trained on her. ‘Hell’s teeth darling, where in the world did you get that stuff?’ She holds the blockade photo nearer. ‘Did you knit that? The poncho thingy?’ I have decided to take this whole experience with a big bucket of salt. Thankfully the filming at Heston Fields is already in the can.
‘No, but someone probably did. People used to drop off donated clothes.’
‘Lulu! Come and see this.’ Jude beckons a girl from the crew. ‘The other side of the eighties,’ she explains, ‘but you won’t be seeing any of that in Hoxton Square. Those dungarees! Shades of Dexy’s Midnight Runners, I fear.’
Lulu doesn’t look old enough to know who Dexy’s Midnight Runners are but she nods in appreciation and says Cool. With her long chestnut hair she reminds me of Pippa.
‘What was it like there?’ she asks.
Jude raises an eyebrow, also curious, but I can only muster a cliché.
‘It changed my life.’
She places a slim hand on my knee, ‘And now it’s being changed all over again, darling.’ I laugh, then realise she isn’t joking.
The conversation which follows is orchestrated to seem informal. Jude tells me to relax, pretend it’s only the two of us. She asks me to tell her about my lifestyle, so I talk about Easy Green and explain our ethos, how we advise people on low incomes about sustainable living – heat insulation, mostly – which helps reduce their utility bills. Just when I’m working towards another mention of the Heston Fields campaign, she cuts in, ‘Fabulous. Now, this is the key question. Ready?’ She allows a pause before it comes. ‘What do you want from your wardrobe?’
‘Oh, um, right…’ This is not a question I’ve considered much, but something is called for. ‘Well the main thing is probably comfort.’
She re-crosses her legs and the gesture is like a sigh. ‘Ah yes, our old friend comfort,’ she says using the kind of intonation that might be reserved for the word enema. ‘And where do you buy your clothes?’
‘Umm,’ I’m sorting through to remember my last purchase, a striped top from the new high-end charity shop in town. ‘I get a lot of things second-hand.’
She nods as if some puzzle is becoming clear. I mention a few things about landfill and sweatshops, before Zeb the director steps in, ‘We’ll have to stay off this Tessa, if you don’t mind. Don’t want a political broadcast.’
‘But I thought…’ I thought this was part of the package, the eco-chic theme.
He shoots Jude a meaningful look and scratches the soft wires of his beard. ‘Go again.’
‘Right, shopping as protest,’ says Jude seriously, pushing a chunky bracelet further up her arm and nodding towards my shirt. ‘So you could say that particular pea-green garment is a sort of protest. Or is that just what people do when you put it on?’
Someone in the crew hoots. A board clacks, ‘That’s it!’
Jude pats my knee. ‘It’s for the camera, darling,’ she says. ‘Strictly tongue-in-cheek.’
I remind myself about the bucket of salt.
Lulu is sent to organise coffee, and since I’m not needed for the moment I escape with her to the kitchen for ten minutes of normality. While we gather mugs, my phone bleeps.
Lulu stirs the mugs and frowns. ‘I can’t remember if I put sugar in Zeb’s.’
‘Zeb. That’s an interesting name, what’s it short for?’
‘Simon,’ she says, lifting the tray and making for the living room.
‘Hideous for the skin,’ she says. I tell her I smoked roll-ups back in the day and she says it’s impossible to make a woodbine look stylish unless you’re eighteen and working the retro-grunge look.
‘You came around to the idea then?’ she says. ‘Zeb feared you were going to bolt. We had a Hare Krishna once and she refused outright.’
I shrug, reminding myself to play along. ‘It’s an experience.’
‘Exactly,’ she says. ‘One you won’t regret. And it’s for your daughter too.’
‘Is it?’ I conjure Pippa with sudden alarm. ‘Did she sign the letter?’
‘No no,’ Jude waves her cigarette hand. ‘What I mean is, we learn what’s acceptable from our mothers, don’t we? What you’re telling her is that this,’ she takes me in with another sweep of her cigarette, ‘is okay.’
I have a flash of Pippa in one of her outfits, mobile in hand, jumbo handbag on shoulder.
‘Believe me, I have no influence whatsoever on my daughter. Sometimes I wish I did.’
Me and Dom get along fine, apart from the usual tussles over wet towels on floors and homework, but with Pip it’s more complicated. I can’t dispel the idea I’m not the mother she wants.
Jude regards me with interest. ‘Even so, darling. It’s going to make you feel like a new woman when we sort you out.’
Bobby sifts his fingers through my hair and says hmm a lot. He produces a booklet of nylon hair swatches, each tinted a different shade, and tests them against my face before settling on Firecracker. I struggle to imagine a whole head of Firecracker, but when I ask questions he becomes mysterious and says Trust me, so I sit back and let the mixing, separating and painting begin.
‘All these products are organic so they’re super gentle,’ he assures me, and I remember 1982, the one and only time I tried to colour my hair – in the wintry outdoors with a bottle of bleach.
The hair takes ages. When it’s done Bobby moves on to make-up. He tells me what good skin I have. He says he often finds this with curvaceous ladies; maybe it’s all that blood pumping around their bodies giving them a healthy flush. What do I think? He says he once worked with Meryl Streep and she had the most beautiful skin of any actress he ever came across who didn’t have an actual weight problem. Like porcelain.
When I’ve been dressed they stand around and examine me approvingly. I’m wearing a long green skirt made from crepey material – part of a fair trade couture range – which sways in fronds when I move. The rest is questionable. Particularly the pink bodice. I glance down and there are my breasts, lifted from the darkness and displayed like shy newborns quivering before an audience. I insisted to Jude that I’d never wear something like this, but she’s of the flat-chested model physique and kept saying, ‘You’ve got a lovely pair, Tessa, show them off.’ After negotiations she eventually fetched a cream jacket with seed pearls and feathers stitched around the collar. I’ve been instructed not to button it.
My feet are shod in a pair of stiletto heels – nude because this will apparently lengthen my legs – and Jude has made me get into something called Miracle Tights, which are supposed to give an instant streamlining effect. The operation of putting them on was like struggling into a pair of washing-up gloves three sizes too small.
‘Are you sure it all goes?’ I ask, assessing what I can see of the ensemble.
‘Goes,’ Jude laughs. ‘Co-ordinating handbags are for the MIFs darling.’
‘The what?’
‘The Milk In Firsts. Trust me, you look gorgeous.’ Bobby agrees and says he should probably leave the room before he starts having heterosexual thoughts.
It is time for the unveiling. There’s a hush. Jude steers me like the mother ship towards the mirror, gold-frilled, like the ones in picture books about Snow White. I’m half-suspecting someone will swing a bottle of champagne against me. The blindfold is supposed to heighten tension. Jude counts to three before untying it with a flourish.
And there is a woman I only partially recognise. I stare back at her, the woman with the cleavage, the woman with the bright orangey-red hair cut in slices around her face. She has swallowed me whole. I am blinking out of her generously mascara-ed eyelashes.
‘Oh!’ The woman wobbles back on her dagger heels. ‘This is strange.’
‘Strange?’ Repeats Jude from off camera.
Zeb yells cut and asks if I want to take a minute. Jude strides over, ‘What’s wrong, darling?’
I look down at myself, put a hand to my hair. ‘I don’t feel like me.’
She throws her head back, ‘That’s the whole point! You’re not supposed to feel like you. You aren’t you.’
‘Who am I then?’
At that moment Bobby arrives like a coach to a boxing ring. He sweeps a powder brush over my nose while Jude talks.
‘Come on darling, we need to wrap this up. I don’t think I can bear another night in a Travel Lodge.’ She looks to Bobby, ‘Jesus, remember when we used to have an actual budget for this show.’
We go through the scene again and this time I give them what they want, which is a gasp of pleasure followed by a twirl. Afterwards, Pete and Dom are ushered in. Dom is wearing his biggest, blackest Goth boots and an expression of bemusement. I hope he didn’t tell his teachers why he’s got the afternoon off. Pete is clasping a bunch of roses which have obviously been supplied.
‘What d’you think of Mum’s new look?’ comes Jude’s voice. Dom doesn’t answer. Zeb checks his watch. ‘It’s all in the edit,’ he says. Jude asks Pete what he thinks of me. There are two high spots of colour on his cheeks as if he’s been drinking.
‘She looks amazing,’ he says. ‘I can’t believe she’s my wife.’ His eyes have gone like half-set jelly.
At last it’s over. The crew reel up cables and pack them into boxes. Jude gives me a final hug, ‘Remember you’re a beautiful woman,’ she says firmly. I thank her. I don’t know why I’m thanking her, but she seems so sincere and I want her to leave so badly. And then she does.
Dom flops on the sofa. When I ask what he thought of it all he shrugs, says why did I let them make me a ginge, and asks what’s for tea.
‘You’ll have to see to yourself tonight,’ says Pete. ‘I’m taking your mum out.’
He is looking at me as if we’ve just met.
‘Great,’ I say, ‘I could do with a nice meal after that.’
He tells me I look a million dollars again and then, still with the slightly unhinged half-set jelly expression, he suddenly whoops me around in a circle like a cowboy with a cowgirl. We are laughing and I’m engulfed by a surge of sheer relief.
‘Right, give me ten minutes, I’ll just get changed.’ My face feels cakey and the shoes are pinching.
‘Changed?’ He’s stopped laughing. ‘You are changed.’
‘I can’t go out like this.’
‘They’ve spent all day dolling you up.’
I explain about the shoes. He says he wants to show me off. I tell him this isn’t Crufts and then Dom chips in from where he’s sprawled, ‘You’d look a lot less freaky without all that stuff on your face.’ Pete shouts at him. I pull Pete into the kitchen.
‘Are you ashamed of me?’ I ask in a low voice so Dom can’t hear. I’m leaning on the counter for support, but benefitting from the extra height of the heels.
Pete shakes his head. ‘No, no, I’m proud of you, that’s the point.’
‘Let me wash my face then.’
He wraps a hand around the back of his neck, as if I’m one of his more challenging Year Elevens. ‘You are so bloody stubborn. Why can’t you go out like you are, just for one night?’ The jacket is scratchy and I drape it on the kitchen chair. ‘Most women would love all that pampering.’
‘Pampering? I’ve been pummelled about like a side of beef. Look, I’ll be ten minutes, I can hardly walk in these shoes.’
He shakes his head.
‘What?’
‘You,’ he says. ‘Why can’t I take you out when you’re dressed up like a woman for once?’
I rock very slightly on the heels. He bangs the kitchen door shut.