In the taxi from the
station, Emily hugged her freedom as if it was an expensive handbag. At
twenty-nine, she was returning from her first ever weekend away from home.
London had meant an
orgy of sightseeing that her old friend Hannah was happy to accommodate. Like a
time-poor tourist, Emily had galloped through St Paul's, The Tower of London
and Westminster Abbey until her friend had begged for a sit down and some food.
These buildings have been here hundreds of years she panted, not
understanding that Emilys default setting was playing catch up.
Now Emily trotted up
the bungalows short driveway, a suitcase in one hand and, in the other,
shopping bags ripe with new clothes. No more hand me downs she
thought with a smile.
It was an
exceptionally warm Spring that year, as if the weather, too, was in cahoots
with her. Inserting the key into the front door, Emily knew from experience
that the pokey bungalow trapped extremes of weather. So, with windows and doors
shut up for four days, she knew it would be like entering a forge.
But, stepping into
the hall, she was struck by an uncanny chill, as if an air conditioner had been
switched to its maximum setting and left unchecked for many hours. It did not
provide a welcome contrast to the unseasonable Spring weather outside. Instead,
she began to shiver, the hairs on her arms raised like hackles and a rash of
tiny goose pimples spread across her skin.
Emily instinctively
pulled on a cardigan and wrapped it around her. She waited for the chill to
dial down. It did not. In fact, if anything, it intensified. Her next response
was to move into the small kitchen to see if the freezer door had swung open,
reasoning that in a place little more than a bedsit, the chill from the freezer
might well have filled the place with cold air. But the door was secure. She
then went methodically room by room, trying to find some other source for the
cold. She found no answers, but the bedrooms, bathroom and sitting room, were
all equally as chilled as meat lockers.
This frosty
atmosphere did not frighten her. Emily was accustomed to weird and little
phased her now. Standing with her hands on her hips in the sitting room she
suddenly recognised the atmosphere as the brooding anger that was her late
mothers trademark. Since childhood, she had been familiar with this
withdrawal of affection for some minor misdemeanour, anything from ripping her
jeans in some Tom boy escapade to playing out with friends, ignoring her
parents curfew. At these times, her mothers beautiful features
became an ice queen mask as maternal love was switched off, a punishment that
stung far more than a slap or being confined to her bedroom.
Now the adult Emily,
suspecting that death did not dissolve a persons worst traits, knew that
the house was overwhelmed by her mothers disapproval of her
daughters behaviour in the aftermath of her death. From her mums
perspective, she had betrayed her on many counts. So, this was, Emily
suspected, a sort of supernatural sulk.
Decades before, her
mothers life of delicious domesticity was ruptured by dads sudden
death at 40. Now there were bills to settle, a living to be earned and a
daughter to raise. But mum was unable to face the challenges. She was proactive
only in seeking a replacement for dad, a knight on a charger who would solve
her troubles. However, she soon found that she was considered more mistress
material than wife. Her beauty was too showy for a rural backwater. And
millionaires with money to purchase shiny things were in short supply.
She had begun
drinking just to take the edge off her problems, in the days following her
husbands death. Failure to find a new man sent her mothers moral
compass spinning off its course. Liaisons with a series of rogues paid the
bills. Sex was anaesthetised by copious amounts of booze then. It also helped
to blur the truth of herself in the dressing table mirror.
For Emily, her
dads death was the death of her childhood. As family and friends peeled
off with mothers plunging reputation, at eleven she was promoted to
confidante. By eighteen, when her own life was becoming fecund with
opportunity, her mothers needy You wont leave me too
tethered Emily to her and the bungalow. She procured her wine in the morning
and put her to bed when it finally overwhelmed her.
Emily did this
because she adored her mother. She was absolutely partisan, saw her as a
beautiful victim relentlessly kicked by fate. Decades passed in this dreary
routine. Mother and daughters lives contracting to the parameters of the
tiny bungalow. Even the rogues fell away, except one who visited weekly, left
money discreetly on the sideboard, claiming he expected nothing in return.
However, his eyes constantly alighted on Emily like a fly, suggesting he was,
in fact, watching an investment develop.
Then, in her
mid-fifties, the knight she had always sought rode in to save mother. Sadly, it
was more black than white and arrived in the guise of a tumour. Turning her
back on treatment and determined that cancer would not run riot in her body as
it done with her husband, she decided that suicide would be the cleanest
exit.
The finding of the
lump winded Emily. She crawled like an invalid through those early days of
diagnosis, all the while mother insisted there would be no discussion and life
would default to their version of normal. Emilys shock was compounded
when she understood that her mother expected her to facilitate death. Sick to
her stomach, she nevertheless agreed, thereby giving her mother peace of mind.
But she secretly offered up desperate prayers that it would not come to it.
The origins of the
suicide pact were hazy. Looking back, it was like trying to accurately recall a
nightmare. Had her mum suggested it? Or had Emily been unable to contemplate
life without her? Either way, mothers relief was evident. In her addled
mind it was an elegant solution to an ugly problem.
From her contracted
perspective Emily could not envisage a future for herself. She was isolated as
a heroine in a Victorian novel, having had no contact with her family since she
was eleven. In a sense she had grown up supernumerary to her mother who took
precedence even in something as basic as clothes. Emily had not had her own new
garments since childhood. As she grew into a young woman, mother would rummage
in her own chest of drawers to provide underwear, jeans, and tops. Largely
because all surplus money must go on alcohol.
Mother had also
guessed that the one remaining rogue who kept a seemingly friendly eye on them,
in fact had an agenda. Whilst Emily lacked her mothers beauty she had the
asset of youth. Some residual maternal instinct must have kicked in here. She
knew that her protection was finite now. The rogue was playing a not so long
game for the prize of a vulnerable young woman. In retrospect, Emily thought
mothers advocacy for the suicide pact was a blur of all these factors,
with perhaps a jigger of jealousy as well for her daughters youth and
health.
In the months before
the cancer overwhelmed, Emily basked in her mothers praise You are
so brave. Even at 28, she still craved the approval that was dealt out so
meagrely. Of course, mother had no idea that it was all bravado, but it helped
ameliorate the prospect of the pact and almost made her decision worth it.
But in truth Emily
was horrified. It was as if the cancer had invaded both their bodies, decided
both their fates. At times she was able to park her terror by bingeing on
classic literature and junk food. Other times, at night, she lay awake,
horrifying images running riot in her mind. Silently screaming I
dont want to. At these times, her love of life fought with love for
her mother.
Mum sensed when the
cancer was making its final move. Laying claim to her brain, it was gradually
stealing her mobility and reducing her voice to a whisper. That day, Emily
downed a bottle of wine herself to take the edge off proceedings. Unaccustomed
to alcohol, she worked in a haze. The afternoon took on a down the rabbit
hole unreality. She talked her way through the preparations. This served
to focus her mind and subdue fear. But there were still moments when she felt
like a prison warder forcing her petrified body towards the noose.
A lack of basic
physics saved her. The flex caused the water in the bath to merely ripple like
a mini tide. There was an element of dark humour about the botched attempt, but
neither laughed. Emily took the failure as an intervention by fate. As she
clambered from the bath the truth tumbled from her mouth. No, I
dont want to.
In contrast, her
mother sobbed at the abortion. Having lost all agency to cancer, she could not
now determine her own death. Her daughter, with strength gained from years of
practice, now supported mum back to bed.
And then her mum
performed the only selfless act of the past twenty years. She instructed Emily
to phone her estranged grandmother. As is often the case, the two hit it off.
Whilst Emily had never resembled her mother, she now saw her genes were gifted
from this woman. They shared the same brown hair and eyes. Their temperament
was similar, too. The granddaughter inheriting her indomitable spirit.
Of course, Emily
knew there would be a reckoning in the future. At some stage she would have to
make peace with the guilt she had stashed away in a corner of her mind. The
broken promise of living on after her mother. The disloyalty of accepting her
grandmothers protection. The process of carving out a future for herself.
But, at the moment, Emily was distracted by the sheer novelty of living.
And now, suddenly,
she began to throw open all the windows and doors. The heat waiting outside
burst into the bungalow, seeing off the cold from every corner, melting the ice
of her mothers anger until, standing bathed in sunlight, Emily smiled,
knowing that, for now, her mum was routed.