Pale grey looks good with most colours, and is particularly striking with black or white.
“Think of stretch marks as pregnancy service stripes” – Joyce Armor
After her husband’s betrayal, Frances Macaulay Forde swore off love and romance for good, until a long-lost stranger unexpectedly reappeared in her life. By Laura Venuto.
When Frances Macaulay Forde watched her boyfriend Paudie Coughlan perform on stage with his band, thinking, ‘God,
he’s gorgeous,’ she never expected their relationship would end. She also never expected that 30 years later she would be standing in the same position, saying the exact same thing, but with an altogether different ending.
It was December 1973 and Frances was a feisty, fiercely
independent 23-year-old living and working in a small city in
Zambia, Africa, and managing a local pop band in her spare time. A few weeks earlier she had been living in England, but decided to return home upon her brother’s advice. “Dennis visited me on his way back from a holiday in Perth and said to me: ‘Go home to Zambia, save some money and then go to Australia – and go straight to Perth. It’s the most amazing place.’”
Looking for a new adventure, Frances did just as her brother
suggested, and a few months later she was well on her way to
buying that plane ticket… right up until Paudie walked through the door of a band practice to audition for the role of keyboard and rhythm guitar player. His soulful, shy eyes and deep, sexy voice had Frances transfixed. “I watched him play and that was it,” she says. “When you’re 23 you just fall madly in love, don’t you?” Before long, Paudie and Frances were going out and Frances’ plans for Australia went out the window. “Suddenly, I wasn’t thinking about going anywhere,” she says. Needless to say, their ensuing relationship was of the passionate intensity that comes
with youth. “I used to worship him,” says Frances with facetious exaggeration. “I’d stand there and watch him play guitar and just think: ‘You’re gorgeous!’. I wasn’t thinking marriage, but I’m an all or nothing person, and I knew I wanted Paudie forever.”
But unfortunately, as with many intense, young relationships,
it was also short-lived. About five months later, Paudie, who was just 21 at the time, confessed to Frances that things were moving too fast and he just wanted to be friends. “I was very young and I really didn’t want to get serious,” says Paudie. “And I knew it could get serious if I let it, but I thought that would be unfair.”
Nursing a broken heart in a very small community wasn’t easy
for Frances, and suddenly Perth looked like a fantastic option once again – the perfect place for a fresh start. Within a matter of weeks she had booked herself a flight to the other side of the world, trying to get as far away as possible from Paudie.
From the moment Frances set foot in Perth, she loved it and
felt a sense of renewal wash over her. However, she continued
to think of Paudie. “I would look up at the Southern Cross
wondering if he was looking up at it too, and I would sit and write the most awful poetry,” she says with a big laugh at the youthful melodrama of it all. “But I had really fallen hard and it took me a while to get over it.” Frances and Paudie didn’t keep in contact though, and gradually, Frances felt herself moving on.
Over the coming months, Frances’ new life started to take
shape; she found herself a job, a nice apartment and had made a great group of friends. The plan was to spend a year working and exploring. She wasn’t looking for love, but being the “hopeless romantic” she was, within six months she had been swept off her feet by a “bronzed Aussie hunk”. He must have done something very right as they wed three weeks later, on Valentine’s Day, 1975. Paudie sent a message through a mutual friend to say he was happy for her and wished her the best; Frances simply ignored it.
Besides the initial impulsiveness, the rest of her marriage
went by the book according to Frances. “We were a statistic.
We waited two years before we had our first baby; we had two
beautiful children – a boy and a girl – we did everything as the book says. And we had 10 wonderful years together.”
Life was rolling along nicely. The young family had built a
new house, and Frances had just started to pursue her greatest dream – to become a screenwriter. After completing film and TV courses, she started a small film production company and was on the verge of being recognised for her screenwriting. But just when she thought things couldn’t be more perfect, Frances came faceto-face with a most unexpected nightmare – finding her husband with another woman. “It devastated me; because suddenly those 10 years were a complete lie. And I didn’t see it. I absolutely trusted every word that came out of his mouth. I believed he loved me because he said so, and I believed and trusted him because he said so. I think it was because I was so trusting and
gullible that it devastated me even more. It was just horrendous.”
Frances didn’t hesitate in making a decision; she packed her
bags, put her children in the car and quit her job (as she worked with her husband and all the staff knew about the affair). And with just 30 cents in her pocket, she faced the prospect that at 34, she would have to rebuild her life. But the most difficult part of the journey for Frances was rebuilding herself. “It took me three years to like myself again, because my thoughts of myself were: ‘You’re a failure. You’re to blame. You didn’t love him enough.’”
Over the coming years Frances had her fair share of admirers,
but romance couldn’t have been further from her mind. “I became adept at fending off any whiff of a romantic advance. There was no way I was ever going near anyone again,” she says. So much so that she actively side-stepped any reference to, or chance to work with, the whole notion. Frances even left a romance writers’ group because she just couldn’t imagine a romantic man. “I was still a romantic at heart, but I didn’t believe in romance for me. I didn’t trust my own emotions. And I certainly didn’t think for one moment it would come into my life again. I’d blown my chance.”
For many years, Frances deliberately remained celibate, as
it was the only way she could be sure of protecting her heart. Instead, she focused her energies entirely on herself and her children. One of her biggest personal coups came in 2001 when she graduated with a degree in creative writing. “My confidence was building,” she says. “I was finally paying off a small house; my children were grown and happy, living in their own places and I had just earned my degree.” It was during her final year of study that Frances discovered an internet bulletin board which reconnects people who have lived in Zambia. “I wasn’t looking for anyone in particular and had forgotten all about Paudie, so what happened next took me completely by surprise,” she says.
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