The Tree
Page 9
That left Jack and Mum, and their names were chalked up. Mum was lousy at cards and could never sit still long enough to finish a hand of poker. Jack on the other hand was an artful player. He loved to play and he played to win. He handed the chalk to Gladys.
Gladys claimed her long-term bridge partner, Daisy Sanders. Mrs Drummond, poker-backed and poker-faced, was coupled with the crumpled Mrs Layton, and Mrs Johnson, with her electric-shock hair, twirls of white that stood on end, remained unmatched. They were short a dowager. Who in the neighbourhood could make up the other pair? Vonnie’s clothes trolley thundered down the cement path on its way to the clothes line. All eyes swivelled towards the back fence.
‘Vonnie.’ They all spoke at once.
‘Vonnie.’ A second later they were advancing down the yard in a frightening flank.
‘Vonnie,’ they called over the grey stump that connected the four gardens, the Kings’, the Johnsons’, Vonnie and us.
‘Fancy a game of bridge?’ they said and Vonnie, who was hanging her clothes on the line, had no idea what she was saying yes to.
Her face fell when Gladys informed her of the intention of the game, but it was too late, Vonnie’s name wason the board beside her good neighbour, Mrs Johnson, and Vonnie knew where not to look. My mother’s eyes were pleading with her to find an excuse to back out of the game. There was nothing she could do. Jack named the two teams, Us and Them.
‘The devil himself’d break into a sweat on a day like this,’ he said. ‘We’ll play right here.’ And with a flick of the wrist he popped the four legs of the card table open.
Then there was a thought, I saw it pass between my mother and Vonnie. If Vonnie could sabotage her game . . . And that was that. A different demeanour engulfed my mother and she flew about arranging chairs for the old aunts and finding stools for drinks.
‘What if there is a gust of wind?’ said Gladys, finding her own way of objecting to the location. ‘The cards could blow away. The game will be null and void and we’ll have to start again.’
‘But shouldn’t we play under the trophy, the very thing we’re fighting for.’ Jack’s arm arched up towards the tree dramatically.
‘Yes,’ our family, Us, all said.
If the tree could see our cards, everyone’s cards, we must have thought collectively, surely it could intervene.
‘No,’ said Them.
They were just as superstitious as Us. The tree was alive, it was an entity with a presence, not even a nihilist would contest that. And in their hatred of the tree they had also given it a persona and they felt guilt at the tree having to witness its fate.
‘All right,’ said Jack. ‘As you’re the guests,’ he finally conceded. ‘You choose.’
‘House,’ said Gladys and we began the long slow haul back inside, leading the aunts through the garage and up the drive on their spiky heels.
‘You know they came out on a boat the size of a mattress,’ said Gladys, poking her nose in the direction of the Lus’ back yard. ‘Had to fight off pirates. Missers told me. They had to eat all their jewellery.’
‘Gee, they’ve had a rotten time,’ Mrs Johnson chipped in.
‘Bob had two of his toes off the other day,’ I heard Mrs Drummond confide in Mrs Sanders as I led my charge up the step into the garage.
‘Is that from the diabetes?’ Mrs Sanders replied.
‘No, just fell off. No circulation.’ Mrs Drummond seemed quite pleased.
The neighbourhood women were wary when they came to crossing our threshold, they must have been imagining victory, then the sticky issue of being surrounded by Us. We wouldn’t make their entrance easy, but Jack’s presence must have assured Gladys fair play would prevail, because after her initial hesitation she stepped eagerly into the house. The rest of them were like sheep being herded through a gate, once one of them decided to go the rest of them followed without thinking.
Things got off to a nervy start. Mum was drunk immediately on a lid full of sherry as the tables were being set up. Jack drew up the seating plan on the blackboard and the kettle was on.
The first four sat at the card table under the ceiling fan (turned off at Gladys’s request so as not to upset the cards). Another four sat around one end of the dining-room table, and the last four sat in the kitchen under the harrowed and limp body of Jesus nailed to the cross.
Jack set the alarm of the cooker to ring every seven minutes, that was to be the time limit for each game. It was decided because we were the home team that Us would move in a clockwise direction after each game and Them would stay where they were. Mum protested, our team was older and we were providing the booze and the venue, so we should stay put. A compromise was reached, after half time they would change and Them would move and Us wouldn’t. There would be twenty-four hands. Eighteen before the break, and the remaining six afterwards. All drinks other than water were banned until half time, when they would stop to check the scores and have a toilet break. They were all under strict instructions from Jack to hold their bladders until then. So the drinking eased and the cards took over. No one was going to know until the end which side had won. The points would be counted and that would be that.
We watched sitting on the carpet in the centre of the room, intrigued for a few minutes, then thoroughly bored. We made the mistake of switching on the television and we were yelled at by ten women and two men.
‘Off!’ they yelled in unison.
It wasn’t a great start for Us, the first four, under the fan in the lounge room, were Cath and Flo against Gladys and Daisy. Cath and Flo had barely spoken for thirty years but in a way that you would never know unless you knew. They were at every family do, they were sisters and an outsider would assume they got on, but their relationship had been tarnished by a block of land that had been left to both sisters. Neither would agree to sell to the other or to cut the block in such a way that both had sea frontage. So the land had remained unused for thirty years and their dreams of an island retreat shattered by their own pigheadedness.
After losing the first hand to Gladys and Daisy Sanders, I saw them mumbling to each other. From that moment they were united, their iron jaws jutted from the rings of flesh on their necks. They wouldn’t be beaten again. To see the two of them bonded over a common cause was uplifting.
I watched Vonnie win and win and win. She was desperate I could see. I noticed from where I now sat sulking in the armchair beside her table that she was always dealt the best cards. Unlike the others. I sneaked a look at their hands too, they varied, but Vonnie’s were always superior. There was a streak of concern that divided her face. As good bridge players they all knew who held every card in the deck. So for Vonnie to try to cheat would be impossible.
There was the silence and the shuffling, the cards being fanned and sorted, then the calls, dead pan, three diamonds, four spades, no eye contact, just these flat claims. It was a strange language and it was deciding our future.
Jack rang the bell, we were halfway through.
‘Time ladies and gentlemen,’ he said, and we thrust open the doors and windows and turned the ceiling fan to maximum. The sun was boring on to the front wall of the house and roasting us alive.
‘Not a breath of air,’ said Aunt Cath. ‘We’ve got to get a storm soon.’
‘Not tonight,’ said Aunt Mary, as she pushed her chair out and headed for the loo. ‘Time to say a little prayer for Ireland.’
The queue at the toilet was long and boisterous. The ice had been broken and it didn’t feel like Us and Them, scores and hands were being discussed, tactics and the luck of the cards. It felt like there was deep affection between the teams. Jack was checking everyone was happy and Uncle Val was in his element topping up the brandy glasses for those that were partaking and offering tea to those who weren’t.
Then Uncle Jack turned his attention to the scores. Everything changed on the pronouncement of the totals. Them was winning by a few hundred points. Vonnie had the highest individual score, my mothe
r the lowest, the challenge became real again and they took their seats arms folded, tying in their strength ready for the last half.
Inside the house was an oven. It was agreed the fan could be kept on low as long as it didn’t unsettle the cards. The heat was taking its toll on all of them.
Then something altered in the second half, Vonnie started losing. I noticed she stopped being dealt good cards and the tension rose in the Them team. Us could feel the slip and the gap that opened up. It was like they had stepped outside the game, they were no longer reacting to it, they were dictating it.
They could see the finish line and they wanted to decide how they were going to cross it. They didn’t need much, in fact it might as well be close, I could see them thinking. If they only won by a point they would still win. And in some ways the closer the finish the more irritating that would be for Gladys and her team.
It was some time during the last game that we realized Gerard was missing. No one saw him drift off. The drama before us was suddenly riveting as the result became more imminent.
The heat in the room was easing as the last hand was dealt. The sun was dropping and the sky behind Gladys’s soulless green hedge was a variegated cocktail of orange and red.
The last cards were on the table and the timer on the oven rang for the final time.
‘Time,’ said Jack, and he set about tallying the scores.
The room went quiet as my mother sighed and looked about her, something was wrong. And it was just as Uncle Jack announced that Us had won, that my mother said, ‘Where’s Gerard?’
‘Best of three,’ said Gladys immediately.
‘You agreed the rules,’ said Jack. ‘And you agreed to abide by them.’
‘I think we should play on,’ said Gladys, trying to muster support from her team-mates.
They shook their heads. ‘I’m happy with the result,’ said Mrs Drummond. ‘We all played our best.’
‘Not everyone,’ said Gladys, turning to Vonnie. ‘You were in the wrong team,’ she accused Vonnie with her tarnished eyes.
‘Where’s Gerard?’ said my mother again, ignoring Gladys.
No one knew.
‘It’s not a fair result.’ Gladys wasn’t going to let it lie.
‘Would you shut up,’ said Mum. ‘Where is Gerard?’
We found the back door open and didn’t think anything of it. Gerard would be downstairs playing on his scooter or up in the dirt under the house or in the yard rolling over in the grass. Or maybe he’d snuck through the Johnsons’ fence to watch Mr Lu digging his garden. No one expected to find anything else.
24
When we saw him lying at the bottom of the tree in a heap, little Gerard, I was surprised how sick I felt. My mother screamed and ran to him and Uncle Jack grabbed the phone.
Seeing her child twisted in a damaged ball was the last straw for my mother. She wailed and howled even after she’d discovered that he was alive. He would mend but not my mother. Whatever had snapped inside her when she saw his body heaped at the bottom of the tree could never be fixed. And she was furious that she had been forced to witness that moment. Those slimmest seconds when she had believed him dead and the acid of that image had already burnt her guts and by later that afternoon her clothes were hanging from her body, the weight seemed to have dropped off her in a few hours.
She bellowed at the Neighbourhood Watch women to leave. She cursed them for not wanting to play under the tree. She blamed them for his fall, for losing the game, for allowing her to win the tree she didn’t want.
Her prize was above us, all around us, and she shouted at it like a mad woman until the ambulance arrived for Gerard and Jack took her under the house to calm her down. She yelled at everyone randomly, but mostly the tree because she believed it had called to Gerard, beckoning him into its arms. His youngest, the delectable innocence, who could blame Dad for calling to Gerard and who could blame Gerard for seeking out his father.
I felt my stomach fizz when I saw his arm twisted back, bare white bone exposed, shattered and sharp like a broken teacup. I thought, who would I fight with? Who will I poke when I’m feeling angry? I feared I would never do battle with Gerard again.
The Neighbourhood Watch women moved up the drive in a wavering line that lapped towards the front gate as the ambulance arrived. I’d heard the siren coming, as I had months before when the fire engine came for me stuck in the tree, scooting down the main road, parting the traffic at the lights at the bottom of our hill. Then I saw the drain man’s van flash by behind it. My mother saw it too. The longing and bewilderment came into her eyes and the old aunts posted themselves at intervals around her, like a force field that was meant to keep her in and him out. All of them chattering and asking questions like a line of sparrows on the telephone wire. Twittering on about fractures and breaks, arthritis in later life. I wished someone would take an air rifle to them. Then suddenly they went quiet, their prattling hushed. They were monitoring her mood, she had gone into shock, and they tightened in around her.
The drain man was still waiting for her to signal him, to give him permission to open the door of his van and step down the drive, but she didn’t. He must have seen the helix of old women around her and assumed it was one of them that was injured. The gravel crunched under the tyres of his van and he drove off as the ambulance men trotted down the drive carrying the stretcher.
The coil of relatives wrapped around my mother was an unwieldy mass. It moved with her wherever she went. It hung with her over Gerard as the ambulance men placed him on a stretcher. It hobbled up the hill with her to the back of the ambulance which is where attempts were made to remove it, but there was no arguing with them, they were as one and they climbed in beside my mother and Gerard to protests from the ambulance men saying it was against the law, there was no room, they just couldn’t do it. All cautions were ignored and the posse was locked in the back of the ambulance. It took hours at the other end to move that many old ladies in high heels up and down hospital corridors.
What happened to Gerard is that he broke his arm and his collarbone and he was unconscious, but he would be fine, he would mend, but not my mother, she was broken and possessed.
She came back from the hospital to find the drain man at the house. Jack had stayed with Aunt Cath in Casualty. Cath had fallen off her heels hobbling down a ramp and had been admitted for observation. With Jack absent the drain man must have sensed an opening, but his timing, which had been so sensitive and impeccable to date, was way off the mark. My mother took one look at him and bawled she never wanted to see him again. That was just her opener.
‘Or any man as long as I live,’ she followed with.
He tried to defend himself. He’d seen the ambulance, he said, and he needed to know what was going on. It had worried him for the rest of the day not knowing.
I could see how difficult it was for her, she was touched by his concern, but she didn’t want to allow herself to be.
‘Go,’ she said. ‘And never come back. Ever! You make everything worse,’ she said, though her eyes said something different. Her eyes said confusion.
He left, the drain man, looking so defeated. For the first time I could remember, I felt sorry for him.
Her real anger though she held back for the tree. It was the sight of Gerard with his arm in a sling, his collarbone and ribs strapped, her perfect child damaged that sent her back into a temper.
She watched him playing on the floor with a pile of toys and that triggered something.
There was a distant trembling of thunder and the clouds were gathering in the west. My mother’s mood matched the brewing storm. The stirring, the rumbling. She had been holding something in that was near eruption. It was oozing around the corners of her sanity.
I heard her then in the kitchen, in the cupboard under the sink, then in her bedroom, flinging open the cupboard doors and tearing garbage bags from a roll. She began to throw all his belongings into them. Last time they had been packed away wit
h tenderness. Now there was no order to the way she was doing it. Clothes, papers, books were all mixed together, nothing was going to be recycled or handed on, it was being treated as trash. She thumped around her bedroom and slammed the doors and drawers making no secret of the fact that everything was going.
When she had finished and the garbage bags were brimming, two deep along her bedroom wall, the wind began to pick up bringing with it the first sprays of rain. She moved through the house then, on the prowl, and glided down the back stairs. The weight in her movements increasing as she flung open the lid of Dad’s tool box. I heard the scraping of metal on cement. She was dragging the heavy head of the axe across the cracked cement floor and out into the garden. Then she picked it up and swung it at the trunk of the tree.
Inside we put our pillows over our heads and tried not to listen to her while she bellowed at him at the top of her voice. She blamed him for what had happened to Gerard. The neighbours, everyone in the suburb, heard.
The drought broke that night and between the cracks of thunder and the plops of rain we could hear her screaming at him. She accused him of taking her child, or trying to, of calling to him and forcing him to climb the tree. Then the neighbourhood knew what the tree was about, if they hadn’t before, they did now.
I couldn’t bear it any longer. From my window I could see her taking wild swings at the tree with the axe. I was terrified of going near her in case she didn’t know what she was doing. I started to shake. I was afraid she would kill me if I went too close.
I found Edward on the top step watching. We knew we had to get her inside. We called out to her.
‘Mum . . .’ I tried first.
‘Go away!’ She punched at my plea with an angry grunt.
We took a step back.
‘Come on in, Mum . . .’ Edward tried next, sounding as normal as he could.