"Going Home"

Paddy Richardson
Department of Engish
University of Otago
New Zealand

Deep South v.1 n.2 (May, 1995)


Copyright (c) 1995 by Paddy Richardson, all rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the New Zealand Copyright Act 1962. It may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that the journal is notified. This consent does not extend to other kinds of copying, such as copying for general distribution, for advertising or promotional purposes, for creating new collective works, or for resale. For such uses, written permission of the author and the notification of the journal are required. Write to Deep South, Department of English, University of Otago, P. O. Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand.

The leaving was easier than she thought.

All those nights practising it in her head. Just wanted to look at the gardens, so pretty in the spring. Just wanted to see the gardens. Except in the end nobody asked. She simply put on the good blue dress, combed her hair and walked down the corridors, taking care over those polished tiles, and pushed out through the heavy double doors.

Outside. Out through the garden. Trying not to run but wanting to. Outside. Out through the gates and here she is walking along the footpath looking at the daffodils. Just like anybody else.

She breathes in the air. Sniffs it. Sucks it up and rolls it around in her mouth. So different out here. Different even than in the garden. Sitting on those seats. Sometimes she takes off her shoes. Rolls down her rights so that she can feel good rough ground under her feet. She digs her toes in, and rubs her soles into the earth. They say, look at that Jessy getting herself all dirty, Jessy you naughty girl you'll get a chill. Time to go inside, girls.

ÐFunny that. Being called girl. Naughty naughty girls wetting themselves and pinching. Quiet good girls slumped in the seats in the garden with their mouths open. Waiting for it. Drinking in death.

Her voice shakes when she asks for two sections. She wants it far too much. Practised that too in her head over and over in the nights. Listening to them in the corridors. If Mary shits herself again tonight she can sleep in it. Listening to the cries and the calling, I have to get home. I have to, the children want their dinner. She sits in the bus away from the window. Afraid to look out. Cars and people on the footpath. People watching. For her. Tom says it's a nice place, Mum. Warm and clean and friendly and plenty to do. Except that everything to do there ends up with dying and there are better places to do that and better people to do it with.

She grips the sides of the seat with her hands and they are hot and sweating. Jack said I don't want to leave you, Jess. Jess? And she took his head in her hands and cradled him against her body. Rocked and rocked him, tender and gentle for the last time and whispered to him and held him strong and tight while he needed it and then let her tears wash down over her face and down over his. She kissed his mouth and it was still warm and it tasted of salt.

She manages the steps and the post office is there down the road. She has her book ready in her bag but how much?; she has to think, too, about the withdrawal slip. All thats done for her now. Tom said it'd be easier. Tom doesn't know sometimes easier is harder. In the end she stands still and quiet and breathes in deeply. Makes herself think to write the name and the numbers. She has to stop and hold her hand to stop the shaking and rub in some warmth. Her hands are always a surprise. She can never believe they belong to her. Greyish with the brown patches and the thin fragile fingers; skin haphazardly stretched on bone. Jack loved her hands, traced over supple smooth flesh with his fingers. In the end its only bones that are left. In the end your bones get cold and they ache.

The young man behind the counter has Jack's blue eyes that she smiles into and he takes her book and slides it back to her with money. He says have a nice day and she echoes it back at him, a nice day, have a nice day. Her heart is pounding.

Out in the streets she panics a little. All these people and talking and music and the cars slowly nosing. There is a red-capped boy swooping in and out of the crowd on his skate-board. It is how Jean Legget broke her hip and she steps quickly back and a woman drives an elbow into her shoulder. Sorry, sorry, Frightened now. There is a man playing a guitar and singing loudly. She closes her eyes. Back. Still get back for lunch. Not even missed. Tomato soup and scrambled eggs and little triangles of dry toast. Tuesday. Eat up girls. Lovely lunch. Easy to go back, (just in the garden, lovely day). Except she promised.

She opened her eyes. Think. Think hard. stay still and slow and think. She looked every day at the timetables. Tuesday. Eleven-fifteen departure. She folds her arms around her body and squeezes. Stop. Stop the shaking. Jack strokes her arms and her thighs and back and breasts. Breathes into her ear and her mouth. Warm and sweet. So sweet. (I can't do it Jack.)

Walk slowly. Move your body carefully out of the way of the people cars skateboards bikes. Plenty of time. Eleven-fifteen departure. She asks the woman with the red puffed up hair for the ticked. I-am-visiting-my-son. She practised that too and her voice comes out with hardly a quiver and she smiles her triumph over the counter. The woman smiles back. She doesn't understand she is dealing with an escaped convict.

She has the ticket and the change in her hand. Almost there. Almost. The steps are higher and more difficult than she remembers. Hold on tight to the handrail. Push down with your hands and one foot at a time? The driver comes down and he winks at her and takes her arm. Alright love? Yes. Alright. Love.

And suddenly it is the adventure she knew it would be. Sitting high up on the bus beside the window. Nobody will look for me here. I'm doing it. I'm doing it. Going home like she promised. She beams at the bird beside her. Black-black hair and tiny silver rings in her ears and in her nose. I-am-visiting-my-son. The girl squints back at her with remarkably green eyes. Yeah?

It is hot in the bus. Hotter the further they go. Pictures fly past her; houses, motorway, farm houses tucked up away in the trees, cars, hills and trees. She takes her handkerchief from her bag and wipes her face. Missed. Past lunch. Search parties and helicopters and dogs. She dabs at her cheeks with the handkerchief.

The gypsy-girl looks at her. Alright are ya? A big hot? She twiddles with something above their heads. Air conditioning. Better, eh? She smiles. A glorious benevolent smile.

-Michelle. Its me name. Michelle.
-Its a pretty name, Michelle.
-Yeah? She smiles again.
-The girls takes a chocolate bar out of her bag and slowly chews, what does he do then?
-He? Her heart is thumping, (who?, what does he do?)
-Sorry?
-Your son that you're visiting. What does he do?
-Hasn't practise this. Think. Thinks.
-In a bank. He works in a bank.
-Yeah?

Grins. Proud of me Jack. Can still do it. Think on the spot. Forget how to in there. Jenny Oliver with her faded blue doll eyes and pale pouched face. Standing still like she's suddenly remembered something and there is a thin stream of urine slowly slowly running down her legs making a skant dark yellow puddle on the floor. You watch the puddle on the floor and her face crumple and you are almost crying her shame with her. Except there are no tears. When you're old you can't even pee or cry properly. And nobody touches you except to wipe something.

Closes her eyes. Her son in a bank.
Because of the neighbours telling about her.

The burn and then the fall. It could've happened to anybody, leaving the stove on like that. But the pain, the searing ice-cold biting grip of it. Dazed for that week or two after but feeling a bit better and that branch needed taking off. Blocking the kitchen window. She always likes to see out and it was easy hopping up on the step ladder and it wasn't too high except she leaned too far. Falling and the branches clawing savagely against her body. She heard the faint snap that was her arm. Falling in and out of the gold red silver pinpoints of light, I'm dead now, aren't I? One of the kids next door saw her. Lucky, could've been there all night, could've died out there. Marvellous for her age, but.

Lucky? Vomiting; choking on it and sour all over her. Smelling it in the ambulance. Hating it and herself. She'd never hated her body up till then.

She saw how Tom looked at the black eye and the bruises and the red weeping sore on her hand and the plaster. Mum please. Mum please. His eyes are Jack's. She can never say no to them.

I can't keep a proper eye on you now we're in Wellington and with Kate away until next year. Mum please, its best. We only want what's best for you, Mum.

She wants to gather him up into her arms and make it better except now its her who's little and vulnerable and weak. Now she's the child except he's too busy.

What's best for me. What's best for me is dead or back how things were. Me and Jack and Tom and Katy. On the orchard. Up Central. Jack said it, what about an orchard up Central? and the words were a mystery and a magic. Down at the river with the stones hot and the water like green glassy ice. At night. Your hands. Jack, soaping my back in the bath. You hands strong and brown and firm and moving down my young shoulders, my young hips, my young firm belly. Your hands, Jack and your body with mine, spooned against mine late in the hot dark. My hand cupped on your hip and Tom and Katy breathing soft and strong from the next rooms. That. That or dead.

If you think so dear. If you think so.

But they are there and she holds onto Michelle's arm getting down the steps. The heat hits her. Dry and searing. The utterly blue blue sky and that sun of her face. She feels it through her dress in the remembered way and breathes in the heat and catches it in her throat. An orchard up Central.

She is hungry, suddenly, for the first time in months and she buys a pie and a cream bun and takes them to the park. She eats them out of the brown paper bag and the gravy is hot and salty against her lips and runs over her chin. She slowly licks the cream with her tongue. Glorious. Glorious day with the sun on her shoulders and arms and head. She chews slowly and watches the tulips gleaming and silky in the light. Jack'd say it's a scorcher.

She takes a scarf from her bag and wraps it around her head. It is almost finished. Now the last part.

She finds the taxi stand beside the memorial and she directs the driver. She will tell him the house. Visiting-my-son. On the orchard. Lovely day. And soaring over the familiar road. Nearly. Nearly home. Around the curves and past the pines and the school and the store and the pub and here is the last corner. She watches for it and cries out for him to stop. No, not down the drive. She likes to walk. Somebody is expecting me. Somebody is waiting for me.

She waits until the car turns and then she begins to walk down the gravel road. She doesn't look at the house. It is not the same any more and nobody is there.

This is her home, this is the place that she loves. Here, where each season is sharp and so defined it is a drama, a celebrated event. The poplars turning. The napkins frozen stiff and white on the line and the sun frozen way up behind grey glass. The delicacy of cherry blossom then the golden days. The dry searing heat.

She follows the gravel road and then she is down onto the track. She has to push at the lupins and the wild thorny rosehip bushes to get through. She will have to tell him to cut it all back again.

But here now is her river. The dark jade of it. The glistening silver skim of the surface. The soft thick trees edging it. She walks over to it and cups water in her hands and pours it over her face and sits on the stones close to it and watches and listens. She can't hear them yet but they will come. She lies back on the warm hard stones and digs against them with her feet and her hands. The sun is beating, beating and she holds her face up to it.

She closes her eyes for just a moment and rests her cheek against the warm stones and then she hears the voices. It is Katy, Tommy, calling, crying out, laughing and she opens her eyes to watch. Their smooth little brown bodies glisten in the water. Katy throws back her head and her long wet hair streams around her shoulders. They glide along the river on the tyre which is like a black sleek seal. Jack comes then and places he hand on her cheek. He draws her head against him cradling it against his body. He rocks, rocks her; he is so gentle, so so tender but his hands are strong and he holds her tightly while she needs it and he whispers, whispers

                                               against her ear

and his mouth tastes like salt.


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