Authors: Ilsa Evans
Then I close my eyes and take a deep breath in an attempt to clear my body of residual stress. When I open them again I'm in Ferntree Gully Central, so I slow down because the little township is a positive mecca for elderly people, and running over a stray one would
really
not help this day pick up. Within a few minutes I'm turning into my mother's street, and then into her driveway.
I park on the terracotta cobblestones and, leaning back to wait for her, feel myself start to relax as I contemplate the weatherboard house before me. I don't think it matters whether you live across the world or across the street, most people experience a sense of coming home, of revisiting roots, whenever they visit the house they grew up in. I know I do â but I also know that, in my case, the days for this are numbered. The rambling white weatherboard I grew up in is far too big for my mother alone, and the block it squats on is far too big not to attract a wealth of developers as soon as the house hits the market. Which means that, sooner or later, in this spot I'll be staring not at a gracious old weatherboard starting to feel her age, but at a row of pea-in-the-pod brick units.
I press down on the horn impatiently and an elderly gentleman who is planting a series of wilting daisies in his lawn next door looks up and frowns at me with annoyance. The front door of my mother's house opens wide and, a few seconds later, my mother herself comes bustling out and down the brick path to where it intersects with the driveway. She is wearing a loud floral pinafore over a purple skivvy, thongs and a huge smile.
âTeresa, darling! How lovely!'
âSorry I'm late, Mum,' I say as I give her outfit a cursory glance. âYou wouldn't
believe
the day I'm having!'
âOf course I would, honey. You aren't a liar â never have been.'
âOh. Okay. Hey, you're not wearing
that
are you?'
âWhat?'
âThat â' I gesture at the pinafore ensemble ââ to the hospital.'
âBut you said eleven o'clock, Teresa!'
âIt
is
eleven o'clock. Actually, it's a quarter past.'
âAlready?'
âYes. So could you get changed â quickly?'
âEleven o'clock!' Mum shakes her head with amazement and wanders back up the path still repeating the time in a disbelieving voice. She slams the door behind her and I roll my eyes and settle down to wait.
When I was a small girl, I firmly believed height had a direct correlation with intelligence. That is, the taller a person was, the smarter they were. And vice versa. I hadn't just plucked this theory out of the ether either, because in my household there was very good reason for believing it. My father was a six-foot-four criminal lawyer who, when he was home, generally wandered around muttering unintelligible sentences and radiating intelligence. Then there was his assorted family, with not one adult non-tertiary educated or under six foot, and all the children rapidly approaching that mark. My older brother and I were in the same mould â both tall, bright and precocious. And then there was our mother.
She is, to be blunt, an idiot. And a tiny idiot, at that. With heels she might break the five-foot barrier, but they'd have to be pretty decent. I don't want to know what it says about my father that he, in his thirties, married a minute eighteen year old with the IQ of a damaged gnat. Obviously, he was one of
those men who are fatally attracted to dumb blondes â the dumber the better. And with my mother he hit the jackpot.
Age doesn't appear to have made much difference either; nowadays she's so vague that sometimes even entire conversations seem to pass her by. But, total twit or not, her huge, warm personality more than makes up for her lack in other areas. She is one of the most non-judgemental, kind-hearted, truly generous people I've ever met and, as much as she might frustrate the hell out of me at times, I love her dearly. She did a marvellous job of bringing us up and our snug, loving,
secure
childhood home was due in no small part to her warmth and family devotion. Even today, I know she's always there for me whenever I need her.
And she's also still beautiful. Petite, fine-boned, fluffy and blue-eyed â sort of like a pocket Barbie doll â with her hair now an artfully tinted blonde to hide the encroaching grey. Although, personally, I don't know that I'd bother â if she left it alone then at least she'd have
some
grey matter around her cranial region.
Funnily enough, the predilection for clouding the gene pool must pass through the male gene â because my brother certainly did his utmost to better Dad's choice. Needless to say, I don't get on terribly well with my sister-in-law but I've got to admit their marriage seems blissfully content. Just like that of our parents, who worshipped the ground the other walked on until my father died five years ago. Now Mum just worships the ground that covers him.
I run my fingers through my hair and then glance at my watch, deciding it might be prudent to go inside and hurry her along. The odds are she's forgotten I'm even out here and is having an early lunch or something. Just as I get out of the car, the front door opens again and there's my mother, now dressed in a pair of tailored black pants and a lilac cable-knit jumper, and carrying a brightly wrapped gift.
The gentleman planting daisies pauses as she walks past and doffs his hat politely. If I were on the receiving end of such a gesture I'd stop dead in shock, but she is so used to that sort of reaction she just smiles sweetly back and then walks over towards me. She might be a kangaroo short in the top paddock but, even at the age of sixty-four, men seem to fall all over themselves to protect her. I only wish I had half her good looks and the small bones to go with them. Nobody ever gets an urge to defend you when you're built like one of Wagner's Valkyries. And clothes just don't seem to hang the same either.
âShall we, honey?'
âOf course.' I get back into the car and start the engine as she settles herself neatly on the passenger side. I reverse deftly and we head off in the direction of the William Angliss Hospital in Upper Ferntree Gully.
âYou must've moved pretty quickly,' I say, looking at the gift in her lap. âI mean, I only rang you a couple of hours ago.'
âOh, I didn't get it this morning!' says Mum with a laugh. âI bought this gift
months
ago! It's a baby monitor set but I've already told Bronte so she didn't double up. What did you get her?'
âUm. Well, nothing yet. Because I want to wait and see what she
really
needs.'
âVery sensible.'
âYes, I thought so.'
âAnd what chilly weather we're having,' says Mum conversationally as I whip around a string of cars driving very slowly. âWhat a lovely surprise.'
âWell, it
is
winter â so it's sort of expected, I suppose.'
âNot the weather.' Mum smiles jovially at me. âI watched the news last night.'
âThe
news
was a surprise?' I ask as I find myself right behind
a big black hearse and realise that all the slow cars were actually driving that way for a reason. âWhy? What happened?'
âWhen?' Mum looks at me with a frown.
âOn the news. The surprise.'
âOh,
I
don't know. I only watch the weather.' Mum opens her window a fraction and the icy wind whistles straight across and zeroes in on my left ear. âWhy? Did something happen?'
âMum . . .' I take a deep breath and try to focus. âYou just said that it was a lovely surprise.
What
was the lovely surprise?'
âWhy, you, honey.'
â
I
was the lovely surprise?'
âYes, of course â you turning up like that to take me to see the new little baby.'
âBut, Mum, we just arranged it this morning!'
âYes, I know. But the baby was a trifle early, and then â well, so was eleven o'clock. Hadn't you better put your lights on?'
âWhy?'
âWell, it's only polite when you're in a funeral procession.'
âBut I'm not â all right.' I lean over and flick my lights on. âSo how's Tom? Have you heard from him recently?'
âYes, I rang this morning to tell him the news. He was thrilled. And they're all fine.' Mum pauses and a slight frown puckers her porcelain brow. âAlthough I do worry all the time about that Kleenex Clan and what they might do to him. And to little Bonnie.'
âMum. Number one â it's the
Klu Klux
Klan. Number two â last time I saw him, Tom was white, Protestant and heterosexual. The combination of which renders him fairly safe. Number three â the Klu Klux Klan aren't the be all and end all they once were.' I put my blinker on and try to get out from behind the hearse but the semitrailer on my right refuses to let me in. âAnd number four â the only way they'd be a
threat to Bonnie would be if they have a branch that's involved in straightening out spoilt brats.'
âNevertheless, I worry.' Mum folds her arms across her chest and looks at me sagely. âI've heard things, you know.'
I try not to laugh because I don't want to hurt her feelings. My brother, Thomas, who specialises in corporate law, was sent by his firm over to Atlanta, in the US of A, on a two-year contract ten years ago. The chief reason he is still there is Amy, his southern-born wife whom he met and married during the first year of his contract and who steadfastly refuses to live anywhere else. Bonnie is their
very
spoilt five year old daughter.
âAny plans to visit us in the near future?' I decide to change the subject because this isn't the first conversation we've had regarding the Kleenex Klan and the likelihood of them doing something drastic to Tom or Bonnie. Like forcing them to manufacture illicit, substandard toilet tissue in some sweatshop, I suppose. Amy doesn't really enter the equation â after all, if
she
were nabbed by the Klan, Tom would be free to shift back to Australia with his daughter in tow and visit his mother a trifle more frequently.
âActually, he thought he might have a meeting over here in a month or so.' My mother turns and looks at me excitedly. âWouldn't that be lovely?'
âYes, it would,' I reply with pleasure, âbut aren't you due over there this Christmas anyway?'
âAm I? Let me see . . . ' She frowns with concentration. âYes, I
am
! I stayed here last year, so this year it's my turn for America! I'd forgotten â what fun!'
âYes, what fun,' I reply dryly, wondering how it is possible to forget that, for the past ten years, you have spent one Christmas with your daughter and the following with your son. I make another attempt to get out of the funeral
procession but all the cars in the right-hand lane contain extremely selfish drivers and not one will let me in. We lapse into silence but it's not an uncomfortable silence. It never is with my mother because I'll say one thing for her â she's definitely not the type of person who feels they have to fill every conversational gap with inanities. In fact, she's extremely comfortable with long silences and some of my happiest moments with her have been spent without a word being uttered.
I put my blinker on to turn into the road leading to the hospital, and so does the hearse in front of me. Accordingly I resign myself to being lead mourner in the funeral procession all the way through Upper Ferntree Gully, which is indeed what happens. At least it means that, for once, all the other users of the road pay me some respect. And I even have a few elderly gentlemen doff their hats as I drive past. I try to look suitably bereaved but it's difficult with my mother sitting beside me beaming and waving cheerfully at the hat-doffers.
Finally I turn off into the hospital car park and the funeral procession continues on up the hill. Now for the fun part. The William Angliss Hospital is renowned for its lack of parking and is subsequently an extremely rewarding hunting ground for the city's parking inspectors. We drive around and around for half an hour before finding a space which is about four foot shy of being a decent car park. But this is where having a Barina pays off. I let Mum out before manoeuvring the car in with a series of dexterous movements. Then I throw her the keys so she can open the boot and I lock both doors from the inside before clambering over into the back seat, and from there into the boot and out. I dust myself down and lock the hatchback.
âHas Bronte thought of any names?'
âNot that she told me.' I carefully look both ways before ushering Mum over the road and towards the hospital
entrance. âBut then, we didn't get much of a chance to chat this morning.'
âOh, that
is
a shame.' Mum shakes her head ruefully. âYou know, honey, you really should take the time to talk with Bronte more. One of these days you're going to turn around and she'll be all grown-up and gone. And then it'll be too late.'
âGiven the fact she spent the morning giving birth on my lounge-room carpet,' I say as I precede Mum through the automatic doors and into the hospital foyer, âI'd reckon she's pretty grown-up already, wouldn't you?'
âNothing of the sort,' replies Mum blithely, âbecause being grown-up and having babies are not necessarily mutually inclusive, you know.'
I turn and give her an astounded look because, well, sometimes she floors me. Just when I think I've got her pigeonholed, she comes out with something incredibly insightful. We continue in silence to the elevators, where there is a considerable crowd waiting, and I press the âup' button. Glancing around me, I realise there must be a baby boom at the moment. Everybody seems either to be laden with wrapped gifts and stuffed toys or carrying a blue and/or pink balloon announcing the gender of whatever it is they are going to see.
âOh!' Mum is staring raptly at the various balloons. âWe should have gotten Bronte a balloon!'