The telephone call came not long after midnight. It was the hospital. It was time. So, I was woken and bundled out of my warm, cosy bed to be taken to my father’s brother’s home.
I clearly remember saying ‘I don’t want to go there. I hate them.’ but to no avail. Instead I was driven in the family Valiant through the chilly night and placed in the scrunchy, uncomfortable bed of my relatives and returned to sleep. Sometime before dawn the single globe in the bedroom was flicked on. Too soon my hazy, sleep muddled head was filled with the words ‘Your mother’s gone’. And that was it. Words which echo like yesterday.
It was Easter Sunday 1977.
Later that morning, as homemade chocolate Easter eggs were handed around the morose household, I wanted the keys to the family car. If my mother was dead I wanted to see if she was in the boot. I was seven years old. I hadn’t been allowed to go to my beloved grandmother’s funeral two years earlier. So, I had no idea what happened to recently deceased people. Why couldn’t they be brought home by the family? Why wouldn’t my mother be in the Valiant’s boot? Eventually, after I stacked on a turn, I was taken outside into the wet morning to the car. Of course she wasn’t in there. Days had passed since I’d seen her in the hospital. Now she was gone, forever. Never to be seen again.
It’s now 40 years since my 30-year-old mother lost her short yet brave battle with cancer. Acute Myeloid Leukaemia, or AML. She had finally been diagnosed in December 1976 yet by April 1977 she was dead. Four months, if that.
When you’re seven years old you miss your Mummy. The happy face in the tuck shop with a sausage roll and a chocolate milk. Or surprising you with a special homemade lunch at the class room door. Adventures to the Art Gallery of South Australia or to the Children’s Library on Kintore Avenue or to the South Australian Museum or trips in the clunky gated lifts at the John Martin’s department store. Or endless rides on the whiny Red Hen railcars which made up Adelaide’s train system.