Chapter Fourteen

Wedding Day

Groom nervous in Clapham. Bride not there to comfort him. Bride nervous in East Molesey. Bride’s mother in tears. Bride’s father remonstrating with Molesey boatclub chief barman. Bride’s sister in tears (again). Groom’s mother fussing trying to ensure the groom is well-groomed. Groom’s father wondering why there are so few horses in London; was it a lack of grooms?

In Weybridge at the register office there would soon be the footfall of the fifty guests the office would hold. There was to be no comfort spared. It must be true, the brochure said so. Rylston was a splendid manor-house[27] and for the marriages that took place within its walls the county council had thoughtfully provided the imaginatively named Rylston suite, offering impressive flower arrangements, period leather and mahogany furniture and appropriate framed pictures. It also boasted stunning chandelier lighting. If that were not enough, the waiting area also boasted original oak panelling, stained glass windows and an impressive oak staircase. Shortly it would boast the Kennedy and Hamilton wedding party.

The spring weather was on its best behaviour. The sunshine may have been weak, but it was there in fits and starts competing manfully with the stunning chandelier. Cars were sweeping into the not so stunning car park A Mercedes here, a battered Land-Rover Defender there. One smelling of opulence, one smelling of horses. Uncles and Aunties appeared, re-acquainting themselves with relatives they had not seen since the last wedding. Oh yes, cousin Rachel’s, wasn’t that a hoot?

The two families took up their stances, standing twelve feet away from each other as if contamination would result from any closer proximity. The alcohol later would actively encourage inter-family mingling, much like it did (between the Kennedys and the Fortescues) at cousin Rachel’s wedding when the mingling was carried just a tad too far. The resulting divorces, children and law suits did nothing to further relations between the Kennedys and the aforementioned Fortescues.

Just around the corner in The Slug and Pellet, Michael and Fay his best man/woman were indulging in a swift drink (or two) to steady the nerves.

“Are you ok, Mike?”

“Yes, Fay. Are you ok?”

“Yes, Mike.”

“Nervous, Fay?”

“Yes, Mike.”

Occasions such as weddings tend to bring out the sparkling conversationalists in all of us.

“Shall we go? Is it time?”

“I think we should.”

“How do I look?”

“Like your mother dressed you.”

“How do I look?”

“You look beautiful, Fay. We are both just so happy that you agreed to be our best man/woman.”

“Yeah, well someone has to do it, might as well be me,” Fay replied as she turned away hurriedly.

“Why,” Michael said, “I do believe you are crying.”

“Oh, shut up.”

Michael ran the gauntlet of back-slapping family members as he entered the Rylston suite. His mother greeted him warmly and straightened his tie for him and glanced surreptitiously at his shoe-laces. His father greeted him warmly, slapped his back and glanced not so surreptitiously at his shoe-laces.

The murmur of voices went on unabated for some time, extolling the virtues of the flower arrangements and the period leather and mahogany furniture, when suddenly a hush descended upon the Rylston suite. A special kind of hush which is only noticeable when a bride to be is about to put in an appearance. Which Judy did. She was good like that.

If it’s an immutable law that all brides have to look radiant than Judy obeyed that edict perfectly. Her radiance radiated the length and breadth of the Rylston suite. Her father who was something big in the city seemed now to have shrunken to something small in Weybridge. Fay may have been the golden girl, the girl who ticked all the boxes, but Tom Kennedy was as proud of Judy as he had ever been or perhaps ever would be. Their slow, measured steps reflected their shared joy and their mutual if unspoken acknowledgment that this moment was to be savoured in its entirety. Their stately progress towards the front of the room where the groom, best man/woman, sister and daughter awaited them was punctuated by oooohs and aaaahs by those who recognised radiance when they saw it.

Michael gripped the back of his chair for support in an effort to disguise his shaking. This was not wholly successful for the three empty chairs next to him on the front row began a mad dance across the superior carpet. His next move was to hold on to Fay for support, but this just looked odd and entirely inappropriate. Come on, Michael. Would Johnny Norfolk be a quivering mess if taking a penalty before a hushed crowd at Wembley Stadium? Would Johnny Stevens lose his cool when plotting his escape from a Russian firing squad? Well, quite possibly, but he was marrying the beautiful Miss Judith Kennedy, an altogether different prospect.

Half the attentive audience had their eyes on Judy and half on Michael. To him it seemed like hours before Judy arrived by his side. But arrive she did with a smile that both instantly calmed and bewitched him.

A few minutes later, a delighted and delightful Mr and Mrs Hamilton were standing in front of the fifty guests that the Rylston Suite could accommodate comfortably. He with a smile as wide as the M25, she out-radiating the stunning chandeliers. They were oblivious to the comments and asides that were passing back and forth between several of those fifty guests.

“It’s only been a few months you know.”

“You’re right, they can’t really know each other.”

“Perhaps they had to get married.”

“Oh come on, no-one has to get married these days”

“It’s about time, our Liz.”

“What do you mean, Jack?”

“Well, she is twenty-nine.”

“Do you think it will last?”

“I’ll give it a few months.”

“Do you think there will be any cheese sandwiches?”

Oh, assorted guests of little faith, let them enjoy their moment before spreading doom and gloom like confetti (frowned on in the Rylston Suite and Rylston grounds).

The official photographer was Dave Wickham who was also the official photographer for ‘The Big Brash Guide To London’. His forte was photographing cuisine. He was a marvel with Lebanese breakfasts, Moroccan street food and Albanian pike balls. Everyone said so. No one was quite sure of his skills with wedding parties although they were tolerably confident that the cake and buffet would look sumptuous. Dave rose to the occasion superbly. Everyone said so. After shooting eighty-seven photographs, none of which included food there was a mass exodus towards Molesey boat club and the awaiting buffet supplied by the finest caterers this side of Chessington. The procession was led by a resplendent Mercedes bedecked with ribbons, followed by a battered Land-Rover Defender which not to be outdone, trailed straw from under its tailgate in a celebratory although entirely accidental manner.

The band had been hired by Tom Kennedy on the strength of testimonials from Elspeth’s fellow members of the Molesey WI who had bopped the night away to the Surrey Seven on the occasion of Miss Sprigg’s eightieth birthday bash. Although Tom had difficulties imagining any of Elspeth’s (Elspeth herself was not present on that evening due to a prior engagement which consisted solely of washing her hair) friends bopping or indeed having a bash of any kind, he acted on their recommendation and duly booked the Surrey Seven. The band were already, if not in full swing, then a passable imitation of swing as the guests arrived, their numbers bolstered by those who had lost out on attendance at the ceremony itself.

Their first number, in an outbreak of gross insensitivity or a perverse sense of humour (a humour they had singularly failed to display at any time since 1965 when they were formed in a coffee bar in Hook) was a cover of Tammy Wynette’s D.I.V.O.R.C.E. No one present took it as an omen, not even those doubters who were purveyors of doom and gloom in the register office.

Dave Wickham was busy snapping happily away, catching guests both on and off-guard. Every few seconds a section of the hall was illuminated by flashes from his camera. The final count was; two hundred and sixty five photographs of bride, groom, family members and guests and three hundred and twenty-one pictures of the buffet and cake. All were superb; it was felt he had captured the very essence of the occasion. Everyone said so.

Fortunately for all concerned the food provided was delicious as well as photogenic. The vol-au-vents were generally agreed to be the tastiest this side of Esher and the sandwiches of a standard never before seen at the Molesey boat club. The Surrey Seven continued to plough their own inimitable musical furrow with Hook’s finest vocalist (as voted for by the Hook Gazette in their 1967 poll) Eddie Fox exhorting all and sundry to take to the dance floor, an offer which no one seemed enthusiastic about taking Hook’s finest up on. The repertoire was as old hat as the old hat the drummer wore and the patter (step forward Hook’s finest once more) as dated as the rhythm guitarist’s brylcreemed hair which evoked memories of Denis Compton among the older guests.[28]

Michael was no great shakes as a dancer, not with his dodgy knees, but when invited by Eddie Fox to take to the floor with his bride he felt unable to refuse. Michael and Judy were out of step with the band, but then, the band were out of step with themselves as they gamely re-worked ‘When I Fall In Love’ to a point where even Nat King Cole would be hard pushed to recognise it. Tom Kennedy who had never been something big on the dance floor took over from a relieved Michael and the Surrey Seven in a burst of improvisation launched into a less than spirited rendition of ‘Isn’t She Lovely’, the harmonica of Stevie Wonder’s original being replaced by erstwhile saxophonist, Richard ‘Dicky’ Ruskin on his kazoo. It didn’t quite come off. Everyone said so.

For three people, the afternoon/evening held out a terror of its own, notwithstanding the Surrey Seven’s ‘Pop goes the Sixties’ medley. The speeches. The bride’s father, the best man/woman and the groom; all of whom were unaccustomed to public speaking and would have much preferred to have remained in that particular state. The tradition of joke-telling and anecdotal episodes from the happy couple’s lives was proving to be beyond the collective imagination of our intrepid trio. Would Johnny Norfolk have been struck with fear at the thought of giving his acceptance speech at the Footballer of the Year award ceremony? Would Johnny Stevens have been tongue-tied at the Spy of the Year award ceremony? But the two normally reliable Johnnies could do nothing to help Michael on this occasion.

Tom Kennedy (who had not even one Johnny to help him) knew the gist of what he wanted to say, but what was worrying him was how to go about translating that into words. Being something big in the city has never been (and never would be) a guarantee of skills in oration. Fay Kennedy had written down in the smallest detail what she intended to say, but her problem was the simple fact that she had lost her notes; she knew not where. For all three of them time was running out.

But now that time had arrived. Tom Kennedy got to his feet and surveyed the room. He re-arranged his face to display confidence although the consensus amongst those present was that it displayed the countenance of one who has just spotted the firing-squad (Johnny Stevens would know) lined up against him. His nervousness meant people were generally kind to him when his ordeal was over. After all, it was fairly easy and therefore understandable that he should confuse his daughters, one with the other. Tom’s detractors on the other hand could quite reasonably point out that only one of these daughters was enjoying her wedding day. He knew no jokes so told none; everyone agreed that this was a relief indeed. He praised Judy’s passionate nature as evidenced by her boy-band stage, her geeks stage, and her teachers stage. He evinced the hope that Michael could cope with her passion and duly received Michael’s perhaps over-vigorous nodding in confirmation that he could and indeed had. After remembering to thank everybody he concluded by saying that Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg address was only ten sentences long and suggested that if anyone present wanted to know about Judy’s pea stuck in a nose incident then they should see him later. He sat down with the conflicting thoughts that he had both said too much and too little.

Fay gave away nothing of the sibling rivalry that had existed for so long between herself and Judy, wisely choosing to concentrate on happier times. The endless times when her little sister had bombarded her with songs from whichever boy-bands were currently the top of her charts, graded not by the quality of the songs, but rather the sex-appeal of the band members were unaccountably some of those happier times.

“Judy, place your right hand on the table please.”

“Now, Michael, put your right hand on Judy’s. You are all witness to this; Michael, this will be the last time you will ever have the upper hand!”

Cue laughs and applause.

“Judy, you look stunning...and Michael...you look stunned as well you should be. And for the record, I am not the best woman, you are, Judy and why it has taken me so long to realise it I have no idea. Join with me in toasting the happy couple. To Judy and Michael.”

Judy, with tears in her eyes, nudged Michael who suddenly found that standing up was one of the most difficult actions that he ever had to perform in his life.

“Er...thank you, Fay. Are you sure you haven’t done this before? My speech today will be like a mini-skirt; long enough to cover the essentials, but short enough to hold your attention. Er...if you are a man I mean although if...well...moving on. I’m sure you will agree with me that Judy looks absolutely beautiful today. It’s conceivable that some of you may be surprised, but I am not, she is beautiful every day. I’ll never forget the evening I proposed to Judy, that coffee table had cost me £45.”

He was met with a sea of blank faces.

“Ah, you don’t know that story of course. Er...anyway. Neither of us will forget it, will we Jude?”

“Forget what, Mike,” Judy said, in a stage whisper.

He kissed her. It seemed like the appropriate response. Cue oooohs and aaaahs from the assembled throng and a cheeky drum roll from Derek ‘Buddy’ Valentine (real name Brown).

“Thank you for the generous gifts that you have all contributed, I can’t tell you how much they mean to us. Of course, after I’ve been to the car boot sale tomorrow morning I’ll have a considerably better idea. Anyway, I trust that you all feel suitably fed and watered and are looking forward to a night of gay frivolity, embarrassing photos, step forward Dave, and bad dancing. I know I am.”

More toasts followed. Gifts and platitudes were handed out like frowned upon confetti.

“Tradition dictates that I tell an amusing story or two about Judy. Unfortunately, Judy has dictated I do no such thing. You will have to do without the story of how she got her bottom stuck in the floor well of my father’s battered Land-Rover Defender or how she mistook my shaving gel for shampoo during a weekend in Framlingham, the shampoo sales in that fair town rocketed that particular weekend. There was the time...but, no a promise is a promise. Raise your glasses please and drink a toast to my world and my wife for they are one and the same thing......to Judy.”

“Tradition dictates,” announced Judy, “that brides do not make speeches, but bugger tradition! Anyway, it’s not a speech, but a big thank you to the practice of drinking three coffees in the morning, the railway network for the marvel that is Clapham Junction station, to dodgy shoulder straps, to Styrofoam mugs, to man-bags and to the Bread and Roses. And yes, I know many of you haven’t a clue what I am talking about. No comments please, Mike. Thank you to mum and dad, to big sister Fay who has grown into being my second-best friend after Mike who is as special as it gets. Thank you, one and all.”

Michael mouthed a silent thank you through his tears.

Michael was encouraged and cajoled in equal measure by friends and family to grace the dance floor once again, it was acknowledged by one and all that his rhythmic displays were one of the highlights of the night. It was unfortunate that as he reluctantly entered the fray once more that the Surrey Seven chose that moment to enter the realms of glam-rock with a manful, if not strictly accurate rendition of The Sweet’s ‘Little Willy’. Michael flashed a smile to all and sundry that he hoped would be taken as ironic. It didn’t work. Everyone said so.

The rest of the evening was a resounding success. There was much laughter, much mingling, some of it not strictly appropriate. More photographs. More dancing, although not by Michael whose dodgy knees had resolutely refused to take any further part in the dance floor proceedings. The music ranged from the thirties to more contemporary fare. The band even received the odd smattering of applause when some of the guests actually recognised the songs they were performing.

But all in all, the Surrey Seven performed far beyond their expectations as indeed did Michael and Judy later.

27 Built in 1906.

28 A cricketer who scored mountains of runs for Middlesex and England. Known as the ‘Brylcreem Boy’.