I stood outside the gates and waited while the old people eased their ways slowly off the bus. She middled among them, a bird of paradise next to their drab pidgeon colours; grey, brown, faded. Sunspots and cardigans. She had her pink hat cocked a jaunty angle and wore flowers, patterns, everything bright, sunshiney and vibrant. She glanced at me, and her eyes moved over me, not seeing. Not yet seeing. But something tugged at her memory. Something pulled her gaze back from chatting to one of the nurses who milled around the flock of old, stooped, slow; shepherding them inside the aged care home that was as drab as their worn skin. Her eyes landed on me, quizzical. Her brain flipping a back catalogue of faces until she found me. I cried then.
I didn’t know I was crying really, except for a surprising warm trickle down my cheek. And I didn’t really know why. She just seemed in the wrong place. I stood and I clutched a plastic container of fresh biscuits baked for her by my one of my dearest friends, and I cried. She made her surprised noise, her chirrup of recognition and stepped carefully toward me. Maybe it was the unsteady tred of her feet, in place of her signature stride that undid me. She always strode, Norma. Proudly, head held high, chest back, with purpose. And now she minces, careful not to fall.
She hugged me, exclaiming at not recognizing me. I wrapped my arms around her bony back and held, too long. Not long enough. She was smiling, happy to see me. Even then I had to put my name in her mouth as she introduced me to the nurse, to every nurse that we passed. My Granddaughter, she said again and again. Still proud, though my name was lost in her retreating brain. Tears kept rolling out of my eyes. I knew, in that shitty, ugly corridor, that even though we had just said hello, that with every minute we were already saying goodbye. That I was disappearing from her in small increments, and her from me.
We inched through the lino covered corridors, past the drooling and demented. I already hated that she was here before I’d even gone five paces into the gloom and quiet of the place. We snuck away from the overwhelming old age to retreat to her room and took our customary positions, the ones we’ve had forever. Me on the bed, and her in her chair, the same spots we have occupied ever since I can remember. And we talked. We always, always talked. About everything, anything. That day though, used to talking to a four-year-old I slipped easily into answering her questions about her life. About how many children she had, and when she had married. I felt like I was recounting the memories she had given to me, back to her. And all the while I was watching her face, thinking how she looked like Melody. How she looked like Mum.