Authors: John Clanchy
âHome now,' Grandma Vera says.
âAnd behaviourally?' Gerontics says. âHave you noticed much difference since the fall â when was it, last Friday? I can see she's a lot stiffer physically, but that goes with the overall loss of tone. But behaviourally?'
âShe lives more and more in the past,' Mum says. âLike this singing thing. Which comes from my childhood. It's like one door's popped open since the fall, and more and more of the ones in the present are being shut. And not only my childhood, but hers as well. The other day â'
âIs that a bad thing â for her?' Gerontics says. âLiving in the past?'
And that's the first sympathetic or smart thing I've heard Gerontics say, and I look at him with his frameless glasses, like he's trying to be modern or something, and I think â well, he's still smarmy and that â but if you look behind his glasses at his eyes, which are blue and actually quite friendly without being beautiful at all like Philip's, that's my Philip's, and you see he's listening to Mum like he really wants to know what she thinks, maybe he's not so bad after all, maybe he's even normal with kids and things of his own, but he just gets smarmy and can't help it when he puts his doctor's jacket on and remembers how big a room he's got and everybody goes
Yes, Doctor, No, Doctor
all the time, and he believes it. Maybe it's not even his fault, I think while he and Mum are talking. And, as we're getting our things, there's something
I
want to know this time, and I ask him. Mum looks a bit annoyed when she hears it, but he answers me quite seriously, like it was a really interesting question. Which it is, to me.
âOne grandparent, female line,' he says to himself, looking at the ceiling and working it out, like he was giving a quote for a new drain. âOne in twelve,' he says to me. âYes, about one in twelve.'
âOr better,' Mum says and smiles at him with a tight mouth.
â
Goodnight sweetheart,
Grandma Vera sings to him, while he's still working out what Mum's on about.
âSleep will banish sorrow
â¦'
Grandma Vera
We used to play school. She was clever, cunning. She watches all the time. It's the rule, she'd say. She knew all the rules. Cats aren't, cats aren't â Not in here. It's the rule. Emily! Stay, please stay. Don't run, Emily! Don't leave me! Please?
âMother?'
Emilyy â!
âWhat are you looking for, Mother?'
That hurts, that hurts, you're breaking my arm. No, I don't want to, I don't want to. Let me go, let me go â Please? Can I go now? I won't say anything. I promise. Cross my heart, I promise.
âIs there something in there you want, Mother? Something in the cupboards? Mother â?'
That's Miriam, now. Miriam. She's clever, Miriam. Cunning. She watches all the time.
âMother?' she says again. âWere you looking for something? Something from the cupboards?'
âBloodbath,' I say. You have to be cunning back with Miriam.
âJesus,' she says quietly, so I won't hear it. But I hear it.
âShe's the only real friend I've got now,' I say.
âNow that's simply not true, Mother. When she was here, you never liked her. In fact you drove her away. And anyway, you have a whole new set of friends now. You got along well with Hafize, didn't you?'
âHalf these â?'
âHafize. The Turkish woman. With the head scarf, you remember?'
âShe was here before. I saw her.'
âYes, on Wednesday. She came to sit with you last Wednesday.'
âShe was in here. I saw her.'
âIn the cupboard? She was getting something from the cupboard?'
âAnd Ruth Daley, with the ankles. She was a friend. You remember Ruth Daley?'
âI'm not sure that I do, Mother â¦' Miriam says. She's pretending not to remember now.
âWith the ankles,' I say.
âYou don't mean old Mrs Daley? The woman who used to live next to us in Ryde? Is that the one? I don't remember there was anything wrong with her ankles, though. I suppose I was too young to notice.'
Always thinking, Miriam. Always. Always had the answers.
âAll I remember,' Miriam says, âis that when we lived there, you would never have anything to do with her. You always said her home was dirty, and Mrs Daley herself was a slattern â¦' Miriam's talking to herself again. When she says it's what
I
do. âI used to think,' she says, âthat meant she was ethnic, a Russian or something. I could never work out why she was called
Mrs Daley.
Then one day I realized that, since she was married, it must have been
Mr
Daley who was a Slattern, and she became one when she married him. Like promising to bring your children up Catholic. Mrs Daley
was
a Catholic, wasn't she? Mother â?'
âI always had friends.'
âOf course you did. You still do.'
âThere was a pagoda on the house, do you remember? Right across the front.'
âA pergola, Mother. Yes, there was. But not on the old house, not at Ryde. It was on the new house at St Leonards, remember? With the jasmine climbing over it at one end, and the wisteria at the other? Dad planted it just after we went there.'
âNo â'
âAll right, all right, Mother. Maybe it wasn't Dad at all. Maybe it was some other man. A gardener, or someone.'
âEmily was my best friend.'
âI don't think I ever knew any Emily.'
âShe stole the doll, I'm sure. She hid it.'
âOh, now I see what you're getting at. She hid the doll. Like in a cupboard?'
âI never got it back. She came to play one afternoon, and after she went, the doll was missing.'
âWhat was it like?'
âIt had one arm that was broken at the arm â it had been twisted till it broke â and I always had to dress it in long gloves or sleeves to the end thing â what's the end thing?' I ask Miriam.
âFingers?'
âNo, no â'
âHand? Wrist?'
âTo the wrist, wrist. What is to the wrist?'
âThe sleeve, Mother.'
âSleeve?'
âOn the doll.'
âWhere's the doll?'
âIs that what you've been looking for, Mother? In the cupboard? An old doll?'
She's cunning, Miriam is. She watches, listens.
âOne of your old dolls?' Miriam says.
âEmily took it when she ran. She ran away from the man. I couldn't.'
âWell, whosever it was,' Miriam says, âit's not in these cupboards now, Mother.' She says this, but she goes on pretending to look anyway.
âHe broke her arm, he tried to anyway, the man who was building the pagoda. He twisted it. Twisted. That hurts, that hurts, she cried, but he wouldn't let her go. Emily got away. She ran. The man twisted the girl's arm more, she had to swallow his pipe thing. Please? she said. Can I go now? I won't say anything. I promise. Cross my heart, I promise. She always wore gloves after that, sleeves to the â What's the end thing?'
âWrist, Mother.'
âIt's broken.'
âBroken or not, it's simply not in here. I'm sure I'd know if it was. We didn't bring any dolls when we moved you here.'
âBloodstock â'
âPlease don't start this again, Mother. Mrs Johnson was just trying to help you. She wouldn't have taken anything away from you.'
âI sucked his pipe. He made me. Emily wouldn't. She ran away.'
âWhose pipe, Mother? Dad never smoked a pipe.'
âSucked it. It tasted â'
âIt couldn't have been Dad's. You're thinking of someone else.'
âDo I have any friends left at all?'
âOh, Mother, of course you do. There's me for a start, and there's Philip, and Laura and Katie â¦'
âNone?'
âAnd now there's all my students as well. They want to become your friends.'
âNone at all?'
âYou know what it's like when people get old, Mother. Some of their friends get sick, some die, some move away with their families â like you've done. Some just get frightened and turn in on themselves.'
âEmily got frightened. She ran away.'
âDid she? I never knew her.'
âEm's my special friend. I love her. Love Em.'
âDo you? Who knows, perhaps she's even still here. In Sydney, I mean. Would you like me to try and find her for you, track her down?'
âOh, no, you mustn't do that. It's not allowed.'
âWhatever you like.'
âIt's against the rules.'
âThere are no rules against it, Mother. You've only got to say, and I'll try.'
âYou mustn't.'
âWho is this Em, Mother?'
âEm?' I say. âI never said Em.'
âWell, I think you did, Mother, but it doesn't matter. Not if you don't want me to try and find her.'
You see how careful you have to be with Miriam, how clever she is. Miriam always broke the rules. That was her trouble.
âNo,' I tell her. âThank you anyway. It's too long ago now,' I say. I can be cunning too. I'll just wait till she's gone, and then I'll look again.
Miriam
âI'm glad you've come back,' Jane says.
This is only my second visit, but already I've come to love this room, its subdued colours, its greys and muted blues, its flashes of yellow, its stillness in a still house. I guess it's that, its stillness â isn't that what Eleni said she desired most of all, Stillness â
esychia
â even above Love?
âWhy?' I say. âDid you think I wouldn't come back?'
âIt's always hard to tell, after a first visit,' she says. âCounsellors get anxious too, you know. Like anyone else.'
âYou anxious? I don't believe it.'
âYou don't believe I'm anxious, or you don't believe I'm human like everyone else?'
âI just can't imagine you as being anxious. What would someone like you ever get anxious about?'
âWhether I've understood for a start. About what a client's come for, I mean â let alone whether I've supplied it. The first session's always a bit ⦠You're always feeling one another out, searching for a focus. You'd be amazed at the number of people who come for one session, and then never reappear.'
âReally?' I say. âI thought that was only in language teaching. People appear with us too, then disappear. You wonder whether it was you, or the course, or something else â and you're nearly always wrong. You assume it's you and then â if you do ever find out â it usually turns out to be something much simpler, something neither you nor they have any control over. Like the husband's been shifted in his work, the family's had to move interstate, or a child falls ill, or something ⦠totally normal.'
âThat's true,' Jane says. âBut unless you actually know, there's always this tiny, nagging feeling of rejection.'
âYes,' I say, with surprise. âBut I still find it difficult to see you as anxious.'
âI'll take that as a compliment,' she says. âBut you haven't come here to listen to my anxieties.'
âNo,' I say.
âSo?' she says.
âYou asked me last time to think about some things â about what I'd want to say to Mother if I could.'
âAnd have you â thought about it, I mean?'
âYes.'
âAnd have you reached any conclusions?'
âNo.'
âGood,' she laughs. âI always suspect quick resolutions. Would you like some tea?'
We make it together. In one corner of her room by her morning window, there's an electric kettle, a tea-pot, cups. In her colours. We stand side by side in the soft filtered light while she boils the jug, prepares the cups. I watch her hands as she does this. Her hands are heavy, square-ish, her fingers thick, but they are also precise and capable. Unhurried. She turns her head and smiles at me, without speaking, just looks at me as though she's wondering what I'm thinking.
âYou look different somehow,' she says, though this time without looking. As she pours.
âDo I?'
âMore ⦠I don't know,' she says. âSelf-possessed maybe. Less edgy?'
âPerhaps it's just that I'm not wearing any make-up.'
âAh,' she says. âIs that it? It suits you.'
I blush when she says this, suddenly a child again beside this confident, mature woman. Whom I want so much to like me, to approve of me. âShall we take our tea back to our chairs?' she says, and lets me go in front of her. Which is wise. It allows me the space to recover, and the face I present to her as we sit is composed once again, our relationship more equal. Perhaps, I think, she knows all this, and I'm just relaxing into this thought when she says:
âSo. Tell me about your crises of the moment.'
As I speak, I focus on Mother. I tell her about the students offering to sit and maybe, in the telling, I give myself more credit for this than I deserve.
âThat's wonderful,' she says, âthat's brilliant, Miriam,' and I find myself not blushing this time but glowing, with simple pleasure. âYou could create a whole new paradigm of geriatric care,' she says, smiling. âThink of your mother, with all those bright, alive women. The stimulation for her.'
âPhilip says she thinks they're all the same person.'
âNo comment,' Jane says.
âHe
was
joking.'
âBut it must take some pressure off you.'
âIt does â for the moment anyway. But I've actually been thinking â¦'
âYou have time for that as well?'
We smile.
âYes. For a few minutes anyway,' I say, âjust before I pass out each night. I've been thinking I might stop teaching for a while. Or formal teaching at least. I feel so ⦠I don't know, hamstrung by things, I suppose. The courses, the restrictions on teaching, the whole atmosphere of the college is pretty sour at the moment.'
âBut you do mean to
do
something else, don't you? Professionally?'
âOh God, yes,' I say. âFull-time care of Mother would be death for me, and torture for her. She
thinks
that that's what she wants. That's why Bloodbath had to go â'
âBloodbath?'
âMother's name for Mrs Johnson, the previous sitter. Alongside Bloodstock and Bloodgum.'
âWhy so much Blood?'
âI have no idea. She gets stuck on certain words, but what the original association is, is usually beyond me. Katie can often work them out. She says Grandma Vera's thoughts are like fish in the river.'
âFish?'
âThere's a river at the back of our house â across a park actually. And a little lake. If I get a chance, I walk with Mother there. Katie comes along too. Mother's thoughts are like the fish below the surface, Katie says. They flash about all over the place â it looks random â but all the time there's a pattern, the way they move, the way they communicate, you just have to be able to see it. It's all still there, I think Katie's saying, it's just a different way of thinking from us.'
âLike a child's in some ways?'
âYes, I suppose. Anyway, the two of them seem to be able to communicate in ways that are beyond me.'
âInteresting, isn't it,' Jane says, and reflects for a moment. Then brings me back to where we were. With Bloodbath, Bloodstock,
et al.
âThough Mother,' I tell her, âalso throws in the odd
Fatso
from time to time.'
âThat must be a relief for both of them,' Jane says. And how about you?'
âMe?'
âNames for your mother. Apart from
Mother.
Tender names â do you have some?
Mum
even?'
âNever. I could never bring myself to say that. I couldn't get it out. I've even tried once or twice in the past months, but I'd go to say it and catch myself with this absurd, immovable stone on my tongue. I could never spit it out, get it out past my teeth. It made me feel so â'
âSo what?'
âSo fake, Laura would call it. So much in bad faith. If I were to turn around now and suddenly start calling her M â See? Even now the word won't come out.'
âIf you were to turn round now and suddenly start calling her
Mum
â what then, Miriam? What would happen?'
âI ⦠I don't know. I only know it'd be wrong.'
âFake?'
âYes.
Fake â
I say. âGod, what an undiscriminating word. I sound like a typical teenager, don't I?'
âFake
will do for the moment,' Jane says. âBut fake to what? The life you've already lived with her?'
âYes.'
âWould it be different perhaps if you'd been able to express the anger you feel towards her in a way she could understand?'
âIt might, I suppose. But it's too late now.'
âOh?'
âI couldn't do it now. I couldn't say to her now,
I hated you
.'
âThe real enemy's escaped? Slipped away into the forest?'
âYes.'
Jane's house itself is like a forest, I think. Its silence is so deep. You could lose yourself, just sitting and listening, in it. If you were allowed.
âYou hated your mother at times?' Jane says. âHated her for what? Think of something specific.'
âI can't. I've put all that away now. I've locked it away.'
âSo it's secure, it'll stay there forever? Even after she's gone.'
âI suppose.'
âWhat will you do with it then?'
âHow do you mean?'
âMiriam, you have an attic, a lumber room of anger, just sitting there. Anger's energy, isn't it? It's hard to contain for very long. Where's your anger going to go, Miriam?'
âThat's what Philip's afraid of.'
âIs he?'
âThat's why he won't enter into any decisions about Mother. He leaves it all to me. I know what he thinks â at least I'm guessing I do because he'll never come out and tell me â but he's afraid, if we discuss it, we'll have almighty rows, tear ourselves apart over it.'
âBecause he thinks your position is fixed? Non-negotiable?'
âI suppose.'
âSo he supports you, he says he'll support anything you do, any decision you make?'
âYes.'
âDoes it feel like support?'
âSometimes it makes me so angry.'
âYou must be like a tinderbox some days.'
âI try not to show it.'
âThis lumber room of yours must be getting pretty crowded, mustn't it? Boxes of gelignite and semtex all over the floor â¦' We take a moment and laugh. Drink tea. âBrian,' she says then, apropos of nothing. âYour brother. You felt he was always favoured â'
âI was never good enough,' I hear myself suddenly blurting over the top of her. âWhatever I did, it was never enough. It never satisfied, it just set up more tasks, more hurdles.'
âGive me an example.'
âAn example?'
âA voice, then. What would she say?'
âWell, I was really good at sport. I was strong, I loved to run â is that surprising?'
âNo. Not with a figure like yours.'
âWe had the school sports, and I trained with a friend, a boy, secretly, on an oval halfway between school and home, often missing music and other things, and on the day of the sports â this was in the senior grade of primary â I won nearly everything, sprints, jumps, the lot. I had cups and medals and ribbons, and I knew this was the way I wanted to live â in my body as much as my mind. I loved it, the exertion, the struggle, the exhaustion â the pleasure of it all.'
âPleasure?'
âExcitement. Pleasure.'
âAnd when you got home and told your mother, and showed her the ribbons, the cups â?'
âShe said, ââThat's nice, Miriam.'' She barely glanced at any of the prizes. ââYou mustn't neglect your piano, you know.'' '
âOkay, that's disappointing, but it's not â¦'
âSavagery? Child abuse? No, but day after day, in everything she wanted me to do, I knew I'd never be good enough. I'd never meet whatever it was she had in mind for me, some vision she had â'
âWhich you would always fail? In her eyes, and therefore in yours?'
âYes.'
âAnd that meant ⦠?'
âI could never â¦'
âNever what?'
âNever â¦'
âOkay, take a moment. We can come back to it.'
âTo what?'
âTo what you can't say. The hard word. There's a box of Kleenex on the shelf just beside you.'
I snatch at a tissue. Use it. Them. The minutes pass. Humidly. With sniffling, ashamed glances, tea. Jane sits, offering nothing. But her hands are open, I notice, in her lap.
âYou okay?' she says finally.
âYes, I'm â' I say. And am about to say
sorry
, but choke it off. She smiles.
âYou can be abstract now,' she says. âIt's a lot safer.'
âIt's just that everything I do,' I say, âis reactive to her. Still. Isn't that crazy?'
âNo. Not crazy.'
âEven now. I'm thirty-nine, I've got two girls of my own to bring up, and when I do something, especially if I think it's good, something for them perhaps, or even for myself â a new marriage for Christ's sake, after a disastrous first attempt â or something at work, something simple like a successful class or a new program, the first thing I think of is not them, or my students, or Philip, it's running off to her with it, showing her, saying, Look there, isn't that good, isn't that enough â
Being something, Making something of myself
for you? Isn't that
enough
?'
âEnough for what?'
âFor â¦'
âEnough for what, Miriam?'
âEnough to make you â¦'
âSay it.'
âLove me. Oh, fuck â'
âCan I ask you a question, Miriam?'
âYou must be joking,' I say.
âCan I put a proposition to you, then? It's all right, it's abstract â something to think about.'
âI'll try.'
âAnger. Do you think it's ever possible to give anger away?' âThat sounds like a question to me.'
âThere's a proposition behind it.'
âYou mean, give it away like a present? Here's some anger. I know how much you like it, so when I realized your birthday was coming up, I â'
âUnlocked the lumber room.'
âI don't think so,' I say. âIt sounds impossible to me. Just to give it away like that.'
âOh, it may take some effort.'
âWrapping it up, you mean? The paper, the ribbon, the bow. Writing the card?'
âWriting's possible. Some people give away their anger that way.'
âYou mean stories, poetry, journals, that sort of thing?'
âFor some it works.'
âJane, I simply don't have the time or energy for that. Coming here is about the only thing I do for myself now. I don't even swim any more. If I were to sit down and write, something else would have to go. The family, Mother, Philip â'