Q.1. You find a photograph which reminds you of someone or somewhere you used to know. Describe what you see, feel and remember as you look at the image.
Who is this Dad?’
I look up from my book and take the photograph. ‘Where did you find this?’ I frown.
‘In the box Grandad gave me.’ she states proudly. Then, with a giggle she scampers off again, her interest in the grainy image already lost.I examine the picture more closely. A woman stands near a doorway in a room full of people. Her gaze is stern, her lips are pursed. Her dark hair is scraped back unfashionably into a tight bun, which does little to soften her harsh features. My heart catches in my throat. I know her of course. My mother’s face is not easily forgotten.
She’s wearing a striped skirt and matching jacket, and is clearly uncomfortable with the jolly scene behind her. As if cut and paste into the picture by someone with a wicked sense of humour, she looks out of place. The other wedding guests, are caught in action chatting and smiling in the background. She is still, posed and already grey.
I do not remember if I was there that day. I remember that suit though and how it smelled strongly of the cloves my mother used to keep the moths out of the wardrobe. I remember folding the suit into an old suitcase years later. I remember the cold smoothness of the material. My mother rarely cuddled or hugged me.
When I look again at the photograph, I recognise the place, remembering other such occasions when my cousins and I enjoyed skating round wildly in our socks on that same wooden floor. Their parents, my aunts and uncles, would dance in circles or sometimes in pairs. We would sometimes be encouraged to join in but preferred to make dens under the tables and sneak back to the buffet to raid what was left of the yellow marzipan off the cake. My mother did not dance unless my father insisted.
I try to make out my mother’s eyes. Brown I remember, the same colour as my daughter’s, but the camera has turned them a bright and angry red. I shudder and turn over the picture, pushing it into the back pages of my book.
The photograph is still hidden there later when my daughter asks for it back. I hug her and say not to worry, it will turn up somewhere and there are other better ones I can find for her.
Q.2. Write a description using the title, ‘The view from the top’
The relief at reaching the top was immense. I’d stopped feeling angry about half way up and now was just relieved to have made it. As I pulled myself up to the top of the rock, the sheer effort meant I could see, hear or feel nothing for what seemed like several minutes afterwards. I lay exhausted on my back on the sandy platform.
Directly above me the gulls were too high to make out though their shrill cries seemed to mock me and my puny efforts in swimming out here and climbing the rock. As my eyes tried to focus, the sky seemed unreal, too blue to be true. Only smudges of clouds still hung on to this perfect canvas of summer, the sun behind my head burned, too intense to look at.
Turning my head to the right I could see swimmers still in the water. Some lazily floated on their backs, faces upwards, enjoying the gentle rocking movement of the waves out past the beach. Further back, nearer the shore, surf boards bobbed and toppled, and groups of boisterous teenagers ducked and dived in the waves as they crashed in towards the sand. On the shoreline, smaller children in brightly coloured costumes shrieked and ran back to parents as waves, tiny now, trickled between their toes.
I sat up and looked left, across the bay towards the busy docks and city with its shops, schools and offices. From the beach it had been screened by the curve of the rocks. From out here high up on Long Rock the ugly cranes and buildings spoilt the view. The dirty reds and blacks of shipping containers clashed with the impossibly blue green sea and the hazy fog of pollution hung between the land and the impossibly blue sky. I didn’t want to go back, ever.
I looked straight out to sea and studied the tiny yellow white sails of yachts or brave windsurfers – so far out from here I couldn’t tell. At the furthest edge of the horizon a larger ship, perhaps a ferry or tanker, hardly seemed to move as it crept towards the port.
I shifted a little towards the edge of the smooth rock platform, and looked directly downwards to the water below. Jumping off didn’t seem like such a good idea now. The sea moved around the rock in swirls, and shadows beneath might have been rocks or worse. I was going to have to climb down back the way I had come.
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