‘Arranging your funeral,’ I tell my mother, when she asks what I’ve been
up to. Her eyebrows disappear into her
hair.
‘Even for you, that’s sick,’
she says. But there is laughter in her
voice. She bounces down my garden path to her car, because it is Thursday, and
Thursday is our shopping day. Unable to
think what else to do I follow her, and settle myself into the passenger
seat. She is still smiling to herself
over the joke she thinks we are having.
Two weeks ago I vacuumed up
the biscuit crumbs from this car, filled a plastic bag with used tissues, cried
over the receipt for the last pizza my mother and I ever shared. It is all back now. My foot nudges an empty sandwich carton. I toss it angrily onto the back seat. My mother glances at me, perplexed by my bad
mood.
In the supermarket café we
have our usual pot of tea. Impatient as
ever, my mother lifts the lid of the metal pot and swirls the teabag around. My tongue involuntarily taps the roof of my
mouth in irritation before I remember how much I have missed this. My hand closes over hers. I feel the familiar, hairless texture of her
skin. My fingers stroke the mole on her
wrist that I keep telling her to get checked out, then the rings that I thought
I had removed from her newly dead fingers.
She grins.
‘Was it a good death?’
she asks, determined not to let it go. I
think about the week of refusing to admit anything was wrong, as her feet grew
too big for even her most comfortable sandals and her stomach distended to
pregnancy size under her largest jumpers.
I think about the weeks
that followed, when both of us knew what was wrong, and where it would end, but
neither of us would admit it.
‘I will fight it,’ she
declared, her knowledge of the right thing to say having been acquired from
soap operas and bad novels.
I think about the day I
thought the skin on her legs would burst, so tautly had it become
stretched. She ran out of clichés that
day. I ran out of hope.
I think about how she stopped recognising
me, of how she screamed abuse at nurses who were attempting to relieve her
pain, of how, for three days, she stubbornly refused to let go of even this
intolerable life.
She raises her eyebrows
at me, waiting for some witty response, waiting to show what a great sense of
humour she has.
I don’t answer her
question. Instead, I blink frantically,
then shake my head from side to side, doing my best to wake up.
very moving
ReplyDeleteA lovely evocation of the way grief interferes with normal life and creates a world of old certainties.
ReplyDeleteA very familiar tale for anyone who has had the beloved dead invade their sleep and be infuriatingly cheerful.
ReplyDelete