Read Painted Love Letters Online
Authors: Catherine Bateson
Badger came round after that, for dinner. Nan fussed in the kitchen with all Mum's cook books spread across the table. She wasn't used to it, she said. In the old days she would have just cooked a good plain roast but now we were all vegetarians, it was difficult. Mum got home and instead of heading straight for the shower and spending hours in there, washing the grease out of her hair, she put on her apron and made soothing noises at Nan as they both mixed and stirred. They made ravioli, just like they did in Italy, Nan said, and the kitchen smelled peaceful and warm. It reminded me of Nurralloo, when Mum would let me help her cook, but I didn't really want to help this time. I just wanted to sit watching Mum and Nan.
Badger arrived with bottles of wine, flowers for Nan and Mum and some tiny, brightly coloured fruit, nestled like little ornaments in a box like a chocolate box.
âWhat is it?' I asked.
âMarzipan fruit,' he said.
âIt looks so real,' I said sticking out my finger and delicately nudging a miniature apple, âwhat's marzipan?'
âAlmonds,' Nan replied, âand sugar. What a treat, Badger.'
Badger looked pleased. He was a tall old man, older even than Nan. His hair was dark grey and stood up like a brush all over the top of his head. On either side of his mouth were deep lines that looked as though they'd swallow his smile, but when he did smile, they just vanished into the other, smaller creases on his face and his pale grey eyes seemed to darken all of sudden and I felt I had to smile back, quickly in case he turned away from me before he could see that I was glad he was there.
âWhy is he called Badger,' I asked Nan later, âit's weird.'
âHe's a bit like a badger, I suppose,' Nan said. She was doing her yoga in the lounge room. âLook at this, Chrissie, remember how stiff I was when I first started?'
âWhat do you mean, like a badger?'
âYou've read
The Wind in the Willows?'
âWhen I was little,' I said, âand anyway, that's just a story.'
âWell, badgers are private, shy creatures. They're interesting, intriguing and very attractively striped.'
âBadger hasn't got stripes.'
âNo,' Nan said, and smiled, âbut he is very attractive.'
âNan's in love,' I told my mother when she came home from the afternoon shift, âshe's in love with Badger.'
âDon't be ridiculous,' Mum said, âthey're friends, that's all.'
âShe said he was very attractive and she smiled in that way.'
âWhat way?'
âThe way people smile when they're thinking about kissing.'
âOh, Chrissie, you do make things up, you silly girl.'
âIt's true,' Dad said, coming up behind her and kissing her neck. âThey're in love, isn't that great? Fancy walking into a senior's yoga class and meeting someone who makes you smile because you can't help thinking about kissing them. It's a beautiful thing, Rhetta.'
âIt's disgusting,' Mum said, and she spent a long time in the shower and when she came out she was all shiny, as though she had been polished.
âWhy is it disgusting?' I asked Dad, âWhy does Mum think its disgusting, Nan and Badger?'
âYour mother's sad,' Dad said, âand when you're sad, everything's hard, even kissing.'
âAre you sad?' As soon as I said it I could have bitten off my own tongue, but the words were out, hanging still in the air, like a sky message.
âOf course I am,' Dad said, stroking my hair, âI'm sad about leaving you all behind. Some days I feel so sad I can't bear it. But it's easier for me because I'm the one going on. Each day my body gives up a little more, so it becomes a little closer and I can feel another little piece of this life slipping off me, slipping away. My body is teaching me how to leave. You don't have to understand that, Chrissie, but remember it, remember that while my heart is sad, it's also being slowly taught to say goodbye. And I'm very pleased Nan's here, too, you did the right thing. You're a brave girl and that makes me feel good, knowing how brave you are. You really are your mother's daughter.'
âI don't want to hear any more,' I said.
We had conversations like that, my father and I, and Nan and I. We had an agreement that when I wanted to, I could stop them talking. When it got too much I could go to my room. Or I could walk right out of the house, with Bongo and we'd go down to the river and muck about until we both smelled of river mud and were so dirty we'd have to hose off out the back before we were allowed in the house.
âYou would never have let me get that dirty,' Mum said when she came home to find Nan hosing me.
âNo,' Nan agreed, âhow stupid of me, Rhetta. I wanted you to be perfect, to show the world what a good mother I was. I am sorry. I felt if I could keep you clean and neat, you'd be safe. I didn't know what else to do, how else to protect you.'
âAnd you would never have hosed me down outside. You'd have smacked me hard, then you would have dragged me into the laundry and you'd have scrubbed until every inch of me was rubbed red. You were a terrible, terrible mother. You hated small children. You hated the mess I made. Why are you so goddamn wonderful now? Why do you have to be such a perfect mother to her, when you were never, never good to me?'
The hose dropped and Nan went over to my mother and held her. I stood there dripping but they didn't care. Mum was still shouting but the words were all muffled because she was shouting into Nan's shoulder, and I couldn't hear and I didn't want to hear.
âWere you a terrible mother?' I asked Nan that night, âDid you really hate small children?'
âI loved my house,' Nan said, âIt didn't matter that it wasn't the one we were going to build, Keith and I. I loved it because it was ours and it was perfect. And that's how people judged you then â you were a good wife and mother if your children were clean and neat and your house was pretty and spotless. And you had to be able to make a good sponge.'
âI wasn't a natural housekeeper,' Nan said, leaning back into her pillows. âI didn't like having to do the same thing over and over and have nothing to show for it but an absence; an absence of dirt, an absence of mess. I had to force myself to do the floors every day and to dust every day and to tidy every day, and so, yes, I don't think I was any fun as a mother.'
âMum was fun,' I said, âin Nurralloo. We used to cook together, you know? She didn't seem to mind how much flour went on the floor. Dad sketched us at the table.'
âI'm sure Rhetta is a much, much, better mother than I was,'
âShe's changed, and you've changed, and its gone topsy-turvy,' I said, squirming round to look at Nan, âMum's gone so hard, she snaps like a really fresh gingernut biscuit and you've gone soft.'
âApart from my thigh and calf muscles,' Nan said laughing. âDon't worry, Chrissie, your mother will stop snapping. She's got a lot on her plate, more than anyone should have.'
âShe needn't,' I said, âDad said she doesn't have to work that hard.'
âMaybe she does have to, just for a while, for herself. You don't always work for the money. I wish I'd been able to work after Keith died. You know, when your mother went to school, I used to just go back to bed. I used to go back to bed and try to sleep for as long as I could, just so I wouldn't have to feel so alone.'
âWhy didn't you get a job?'
Nan shrugged, âI didn't know what to do.'
âSo did you sleep all the time?'
âThat's what it felt like. A whole year, maybe two, of sleep. Like Snow White.'
âAnd Badger's woken you up?' I snorted, thinking of Badger leaning over Nan, kissing her awake.
âI think I've been slowly waking up, inch by inch, over the years. And this, not just Badger, but this whole thing â Dave, yoga, your mother and you, Chrissie, have been the final wake-up nudges.'
âWill Mum sleep when, I mean if â¦'
âNo, she won't sleep. She has to stay awake for you, Chrissie, and that's why she's working so hard now.'
I didn't understand everything. It didn't seem likely that Nan really slept for that long but I also knew just how tired you could get being sad. Sadness rested over our house the way I had seen clouds sit on top of mountains, and some days we seemed to move slowly through it, as though the cloud had turned into leaden fog and each movement we made required just a little more effort than we could bear to make. Only Nan seemed to step through these times lightly. Maybe it was the yoga, I thought, strengthening her legs or maybe it was because she had done all that sleeping those years ago when Mum was a shouting teenager.
One night Nan came home with Badger and they both looked smiley and secret. He whispered to her, in the hallway outside our room, âDo you want me to stick around?'
âNo, better not,' she said, âit wouldn't be right, you getting caught up in any flak.'
When he'd gone. Nan announced that she was moving out of our house and into Badger's.
âI don't believe you're doing this,' Mum said, âI don't believe a woman of your age would do such a stupid thing.'
âYou can't move,' I said, âNan, you can't move.'
âI hate going, Dave,' she said to my father, âI know it just seems like the wrong time but I don't think it is. I think you and Rhetta need to be together and I know Badger and I do. I won't be far away. It's just that I won't be living here full-time.'
âWhy do you have to go?' Mum demanded. âJust why? Tell me one good reason, and I don't mean that nonsense about Dave and me needing time. We need you. Chrissie needs you. We need you here.'
Mum slammed into her bedroom. We could hear her banging things on her dressing table. Then she came out waving her hairbrush around.
âWhat right have you got to be happy,' she shouted. âWhat right have you got to be making plans!'
And she threw her hairbrush down. It bounced and landed at Nan's feet.
âYou know I would give you anything,' Nan said, âanything at all. If I could I'd take my own lungs out, but I can't, I can't.' She walked up to my mother and then she took off the long string of amber she always wore and put it around my mother's neck. I don't think Mum even noticed because she was crying too hard and her hands were over her eyes.
We did see Nan all the time. She dropped in nearly every day and we went over to her place too, and it was almost as if she hadn't left except Mum wore the amber necklace all the time and seemed to soften a little as though it wasn't only the hairbrush that had cracked that afternoon but also a casing she'd made around herself. Although she still worked at the bistro, because she said it kept her sane, she stopped working back-to-back shifts and weekends and was at home more often. Sometimes when I got home from school she'd be lying with Dad on the couch, not talking or watching television, just lying close and for a minute or two I'd forget everything and just be happy to see them like that.
Nan bought Mum a new hairbrush, made of boar's bristle with a wooden handle. It was the kind of hairbrush, Nan said, that would last you a lifetime, if you didn't lose it somewhere. They were made in England and you could only buy them at David Jones. Mum had her hair cut because of the grease smell and the washing but she used Nan's brush every night, first on me counting one hundred strokes and then on herself, when she'd take the amber necklace off and hang it around my neck so the brush wouldn't get caught in it and pull it and maybe break it. I'd stand there counting the honey-coloured beads as my mother counted brushstrokes. I knew the amber was special because my grandfather, not Badger, had given Nan the necklace when they got engaged. He'd brought it back from the War. Amber was for eternity, Nan said, but she also pointed out the little lives that had been trapped in it, insect parts and fly wings, so I was never sure whether eternity was a good thing or not.
Leprosy, Leonardo and Father Damien
I knew these facts off by heart: Father Damien arrived in the leper's colony of Kalaupapa in 1873, later he himself contracted leprosy and he died in 1889. I knew that leprosy often begins as a small dot in the palm of one's hand. You shouldn't call it leprosy, Mr Chapman said, it was really Hansen's Disease and the fact that it was still called leprosy in our textbooks went to show you how behind Queensland was in the education system.
I had a small red dot on my palm. I couldn't remember it being there when we lived in Nurralloo. It wasn't a freckle or a mole, it was a definite dot. It looked a little as though someone had jabbed with a red ballpoint pen or the sharp end of a compass, not hard enough for blood to bead on the surface, just hard enough for it to leak under my skin and form a pin prick red dot.
At night I would wake screaming from dreams in which my fingers or my nose slowly crumbled. I wouldn't even know it was happening and then in the dream I'd look down, casually, see myself in a mirror, and I'd realise in horror why the people in the street or the supermarket had backed away from me. Dad would come in when I screamed and hold me and rock me. He always asked what I had dreamt about but I never told him. It wasn't fair to tell him about the leprosy dreams when his lungs were covered with real hot spots, cancerous cells that might be still multiplying themselves.
I hated the chapter on Father Damien but I couldn't stop reading it, over and over again. Leprosy starts with a tingling and then a numbness in the extremities, often the digits. Your fingers begin to rot. The book said that when Father Damien took confession, sometimes he had to hold his nose for the stench of rotting flesh. At first he slept out in the open, rather than share a hut with a leper, and he ate his food from a flat rock. I couldn't understand how he could bear to eat. Fingers and toes fall off, noses crumble back into the face of the victim, and eventually, before you die, your whole body becomes numb to pain.
There had been cases of leprosy in Australia, up north. There had been a leper's colony in Queensland. There were still leper colonies in India. One of the problems with leprosy is that you feel no pain in your hardened skin, so you can burn yourself hideously and not know. I stuck pins in the thickened skin around my red dot, stuck them in harder and harder until I bled, just to make sure I could feel the sharp point going in. Some days I seemed to have to jab harder than other days. Some days I could hardly feel a thing.
My mother's hands were rough from washing the glasses at the bistro. You washed them with a little methylated spirits in the water so the glasses shone. She seemed to often burn herself, pulling things out from our oven. I asked her if a particularly ugly burn hurt and she said, âNo, I hardly felt it when it happened and it still doesn't hurt. Looks horrible though,' and we both stared at the welt near her thumb.
It was hard to tell if my original spot had grown larger, or whether the pin pricks made it seem larger. Sometimes I got a tingly feeling in my fingers, a little like pins and needles. It happened most often in the morning, when I woke up and it was usually in the left hand, the hand I tucked under my head when I went to sleep. I wondered if I should write my symptoms down, the way Dad was keeping a pain journal.
I was really scared when my left hand ring finger went numb after the Friday sports afternoon. I went home and peered at my palm through the old magnifying glass I used to start small fires sometimes. The whirly lines on my skin looked huge and the dot was definitely not a freckle. It was not a little pimple, like the kind my mother called sweat pimples. It was not a mole. It wasn't a scar. I could think of only one thing it could be â¦
It takes ages to die of leprosy. That is one of the horrible things about it, gradually all of you thickens, and goes numb, the way my finger was. I was sad about that finger.
Mum sometimes wore turquoise and lapis lazuli rings from India and I had tried one on and worn it for a whole weekend.
It wasn't possible that the rings, even though they came from India, could carry leprosy germs. And I hadn't worn it on my ring finger anyway, but on my thumb.
I found one of my mother's old cotton gloves that she'd worn back when she'd tried to look after her hands. The idea was that you smeared moisturiser over your hands and then slept with the gloves on and when you woke up your hands were softer than a baby's bottom. It was too hot, though to sleep with your hands in gloves, Mum said and anyway, what with the washing up at the bistro, hardly worth it.
I didn't think it was too hot. I put the left hand glove on and then I couldn't see the hardening skin and the give-away red dot and no one else could, either.
âAllergies,' I told Mr Chapman at school and he didn't question me any further.
âAllergies,' I told everyone in class, âI have this cream, see, and the glove helps it soak in. I have to wear it even in bed.'
âGrowing your fingernails' Dad asked at breakfast, âor is this a new fashion?'
Mum was on morning shift at the bistro. While we were eating our Weet Bix she had been working already for three hours, serving bacon and eggs easy side over to the American business men who tipped so well .
âOh, you know,' I said, tucking my gloved hand under the table, âjust a school thing.'
We had to write an essay called âYour Hero' for Mr Chapman. I chose Father Damien. I said he was my hero because he had worked with the lepers even though he knew he would eventually get leprosy and die. I said he was my hero because he had died young and had kept working right up until his death. I wrote the essay with my gloved hand in my lap. I traced the picture of Father Damien from our history book and put it up in the top left hand corner of the paper. It was a picture from before he had leprosy. He wasn't particularly handsome, his mouth was too big and he wore daggy glasses and clutched a crucifix in his hands.
I wondered if it was really heroic to die when you didn't have to. Was my father not heroic, because he didn't have a choice about dying? Would he be more heroic if, instead of making art, he'd taken us all to live in Africa, where people starved every day? Would I be considered a hero, dying so young and terribly of the leprosy which must be slowly, very slowly, spreading from my left palm to the tips of my fingers?
The more I thought about Father Damien, the more I began to dislike him. What made him think the lepers wanted to hear about God, anyway? If your fingertips had crumbled away and your nose had caved in, would you be that interested in praying? Would Dee still go to church if her father was dying? Why did you have to
want
to die before you were a hero?
I didn't take off my glove at all, even to wash my hand. It didn't get dirty, so what was the point? Anyway, I didn't want water on it, that might speed up the rotting process. I didn't prod it anymore, either. I knew what was going on under the white, ladylike glove and it was terrible.
I handed my essay on Father Damien in to Mr Chapman. I had included detailed descriptions of how at first he had slept in the open air to avoid the smell of decaying flesh but then he'd overcome his revulsion and even eaten with the lepers, eaten out of the same bowl with his bare fingers. And how he had washed the lepers' sores, heedless of his own health.
Most of the other kids did sporting heroes or movie stars. One kid even did their grand-dad, he'd been a soldier. Mr Chapman said my essay showed originality but he hoped next time I would choose a less morbid subject. He said, âAre you sure that's just an allergy you have? You've been wearing that glove for an awfully long time, Chrissie'.
âWashing up liquid,' I said, âand even soap, really.'
When I got home from school, Dad was sitting at the kitchen table.
âPut the kettle on, Chrissie,' he said, âand come and have a biscuit.'
He'd put out some Iced Vo Vo's and I scraped the pink off with my front teeth.
âSo how was school?' Dad asked, sitting down next to me.
âOkay.'
âWhat did you do?'
I couldn't think of anything we'd done that would interest him. âNothing much.'
âYou must have done something,' he said.
âYou know, stuff.' He was sitting on my left hand side and every so often he seemed to look at my gloved hand. I hugged it between my knees and ate another biscuit quickly.
âChrissie,' Dad said, âyou would tell me if there was anything wrong, wouldn't you?'
I stared at him, âWrong? What do you mean?' Hadn't he forgotten something even asking me that?
âI meant at school,' he said. âYou'd tell me if there was something wrong at school.'
âThere's nothing wrong at school,' I said, ânothing at all.'
We sat quietly for a minute. The kitchen door was open and a breeze riffled through. Dad shivered but I turned my hot face towards it with relief.
âI want to see your hand,' Dad said suddenly, âcome on Chrissie, take the glove off.'
âWhat?'
âThe glove, Chrissie, the glove comes off.'
âNo,' I hugged my knees tighter together, âNo, I can't.'
Dad grabbed my wrist and pulled. I grabbed the bottom of the kitchen chair with my hand and clung on but the glove slipped on the metal and vinyl and I could see, from Dad's face, that the effort was hurting him so I let him yank my poor dead hand. He peeled the glove off and we both looked down at my hand as though it was a small, sick animal.
It was just a hand. A pale hand with longer fingernails than its mate but no less perfect. The unblemished skin went right up the fingers and swept down the palm side in the whirls and patterns that made my fingerprints unique in the world. The compass prick marks had gone and so had the little red dot. I pinched the skin where my palm left off and my wrist began.
âOuch,'
âWhat did you do that for,' Dad asked.
âJust checking'
âNice fingernails,' Dad said, taking my hand and examining it, âthey certainly have grown under that glove.'
He turned my hand over, palm side up and before I could stop him, he kissed me right where the spot had been.
âDad!' I said, snatching my hand away.
âWhat?'
âYou might still get it you know,'
âGet what Chrissie? Girl germs?'
âLeprosy,' I said, sitting on both my hands. âLeprosy,' Dad said and then he leant back in his chair and laughed and laughed until he started to cough.
âOh Chrissie,' he said, after I had made him sip a glass of water slowly, âmy darling girl.'
âFather Damien got it and there were cases in Queensland at the turn of the century. They still have it in India. People die of it, I don't think that's funny.'
âI'm sorry,' Dad said, âbut what made you think you had leprosy?'
âThere was this spot,' I said, âhonest, and that's how it starts. And then my fingers went numb. And I had these nightmares that my nose had disappeared. It just made sense, okay?'
Dad picked up the glove and threw it in the bin.
âI don't think we need that anymore,' he said.
I threw out my Father Damien project too, although I didn't bother telling Dad.
âWho is a hero of yours,' I asked him later that evening. He was reading on the couch but he propped the book up on his chest to answer me.
âLet's see â Leonardo da Vinci, I'd say. Yes, Leonardo.'
âWhy?'
âHe was endlessly curious about the world. And not a bad artist either,' Dad said. âHe kept a notebook, a bit like your Nature study book, full of drawings of the way things worked, like the motion of waves, cloud formations, flowers â you name it, he stopped and looked at it, recorded it, wondered about it. He's my hero. There's a book of his drawings on my shelf, if you want to have a look.'
I left a note on Mr Chapman's table the next day. I wanted to clear up any confusion.
Dear Mr Chapman,
I wrote,
I just want you to know that Father Damien is no longer my hero. I think dying on purpose is a waste. If I were a leper, I'd want someone to be finding a cure, like they should find a cure for cancer, not just pray for me. Leonardo da Vinci is really my hero. He would have found a cure, if he'd been born a bit later.
Yours sincerely,
Chrissie Grainger
Mr Chapman passed me a note in return, at Little Lunch.
Dear Chrissie,
I think you have made an intelligent choice with Leonardo. Did you know he nearly invented the aeroplane? If you need to talk to me about anything at all, you know you always can.
Yours sincerely,
William Chapman.
He came up to me in the playground and repeated his offer. I told him, thank you, that things were okay, really. I was swinging from the monkey bars, which I hadn't been able to do because of the slippery glove, and he watched as I swung across to the other side.