i lay quietly
next to her all night, curled up like a baby, as though regressing my life to
that of a child would somehow turn back the clock for her as well. quietly i
lay there all night and listened to her breathe. there was something so very
wrong about that moment... so very, tragically wrong. when i was in about grade
eight or nine my mum and i read peter pan together. i would go into her room
after school and sit in bed with her and she would read out loud to me. i was
too old for stuff like that and we both knew it. it felt wrong to be thirteen
years old and still having my mum read kids books to me, tragic even, but i
don’t remember wanting to be anywhere else. this night felt just the same. it
was wrong – tragic even – but i didn’t want to be anywhere else.
i lay quietly
next to her all night, willing my eyes to stay open so i could remember every
line on her face, every freckle, every wisp of her peach-fuzz hair as it
rebelled against the chemicals that had stolen it so many times. fifty-seven is
too young to die. thirty-one is too young to be without a mum. who will make
the weetbix slice? who will loudly proclaim “darling i just heard your phone
ring. i think you just got an email?” who will sit and smile while we all laugh
at them for still not knowing the difference between an email, a text message,
and a missed call. i lay next to her wishing her skin was transparent so i
could see how her heart got so full of love. occasionally she would moan in
discomfort, my cue to stand up and get another syringe from the dressing table
to ease her pain. dressing tables aren’t for syringes, they are for earrings
and beads and chanel no. 5.
i lay quietly
next to her all night. sometimes my cheeks were wet with tears. i felt like i
should be praying, but i had run out of words for God a long time ago. i had
told God i hated it. i hated the pain i saw and i desperately hated the thought
of not having her. i had told God this more than once, but it didn’t seem to
matter. i think He didn’t like what was happening either though, because tears
were falling from heaven and splashing all over the bedroom window. there were
no more words between me and God, just tears coming from a deep well. not the
same well you get your tears from when you hurt yourself, or when someone is
mean to you. these tears were from a new well. i hadn’t cried tears from this
well before. it was the one specially made for the tears i would cry when i
knew my mum was going to die.
i lay quietly
next to her all night and at some point i heard the sound of her breathing
change. it was the worst sound i have ever heard. her chest sounded empty and
began to rattle with each laboured breath. it was like there was a rattle-snake
trapped inside her. it seemed kind of fitting that death would sound like the
animal i hate and fear the most. the rattling continued, my cue to begin using
a different syringe from the dressing table. dressing tables aren’t for storing
syringes to kill rattle snakes, they are for family photos, bibles, and
drawings from your grandchildren.
i lay quietly
next to her all night desperately trying to remember the last real conversation
we had had together. the last few weeks had been a jumble of showering her,
helping her on the toilet, and talking about food and medication. i couldn’t
remember the last time we had talked about things related to life and not pain
and death. conversations with mums should be about boys and which cake to have
with your coffee. conversations with mums should be about harrison ford movies
and the likelihood of lethal weapon five ever being released. they should be
about flowers and the ocean, or french onion soup disasters. conversations with
mums should not be about crippling pain and which ring you would like when she
is gone.
i lay quietly
next to her all night remembering the fun things we had done together. africa.
london. new york. coffee shops... oh so many coffee shops. singing... in the car,
at the beach, in the living room, at church, in the shower. laughing... in the
car, at the beach, in the living room, at church, in the shower. there will be
too many moments we won’t share now. maybe i’ll get married one day. who will
make my dress? maybe i’ll have a baby. who will make it a dress? maybe someone
will publish my book. who will force me to wear a dress to my book launch? mums
should be there for those things.
i lay quietly
next to her all night knowing that the only thing she wanted was to live. she
didn’t want to live so she could own a bigger house or a new car. she didn’t
want to live so she could become famous and stay skinny. she wanted to live so
she could keep being a mum to me and my sisters... and to thousands of other
daughters and sons all over the world. she did not want to die. mums who want
to love the whole world should get to live.
i lay quietly
next to her all night not knowing that in less than twelve hours she would be
gone forever.