Wednesday 5 November 2014

Tatoos

Hello everyone and welcome to Real Womans Words on this cold clear November day.  We are super lucky to have the words of budding author Sophie Jonas-Hill, who is imparting her wisdom by a somewhat autobiographical gem regarding her tatoos. Lovely.
I hope that wherever you are and whatever you are up to the world is being kind to you and you to it, and in your busy schedules if you have 500 or so words to share then let me know. You are also invited to share the blog through twitter, the more women who share wisdom the better.

with grateful thanks
Dee





 Tatoos by Sophie Jonas-Hill   



            You all know each other, dont you?Im in Chelsea Town Hall at an antique fair, being sold a deep blue evening dress. The woman selling it had been looking at my tattoos as if shed just lifted up her watering can and seen an unexpected toad. Now shes seen someone else, a hipster looking at vintage items on the next stall, one arm tattooed shoulder to wrist.
            Who knows each other?I ask.
            You people with tattoos,she says.
            Im looking at myself in her mirror, zipped into the dress with its billowing skirts. I catch her eye in the looking glass.
            Oh yes,I say. We all know each other.
            Oh,she says, do you?as if shes a little alarmed to have her assertions confirmed.
            Yes,I say, its because of the meetings, you see.
            Shes been trying to convince me the dress once belonged to Wallace Simpson. It didnt, otherwise I wouldnt have been able to zip it up. Its not even Wallace blue.
            What meetings?she asks, tweaking at the back of the gown.
            When you get tattooed, you get onto the list,I tell her. Once a year, you get the invite. You dont have to go, but well, its a night out, you know?
            I don't know why I want the dress, other than I do. It has huge skirts and smells of damp and old perfume. Ive no where to wear it to, other than dancing round my bedroom, but then lets not discount that as a reason. The woman looks at the hipster as he picks up a vintage telescope.
            Where are the meetings held?she asks, leaning closer to me.
            The New forest,I tell her. At midnight.
            Midnight?She glances at the hipster. Perhaps thats why he wants the telescope,she hisses. Star gazing.
            I expect so,I say. What were you saying about the dress?
            She tells me that the story is, that Wallace Simpson came to stay at a house party at her great Aunts.
            She brought five cases, five, each full to the brim. At dinner she was being bright and charming, when suddenly the butler came and whispered that there was a telephone call for her. She got up and went into the hall, and everyone tried not to listen, then she simply never came back.
            Never came back?
            It was him, you know.The woman winks at me. He called and she answered, just ran upstairs to change and pack and was gone. But she left the dress behind, and never sent for it.
            I imagine the dress hanging in a closet, waiting and waiting for Wallace Simpson to no avail, jus as the woman is imagining all us tattooed people, dancing in the New forest.
            Is there really a secret meeting?she asks.
            Is this Wallace Simpsons dress?We smile at each other.
            No, I didnt buy it, but I like to think she took the plunge. Ill look out for her at the next meeting.