Dig
down through the soil in any part of my garden and you’ll hit a solid
pan of pebbles and boulders. It comes as a surprise after two feet of
soft, rich soil. A hard, jolting surprise. The tines of your fork bend
as you try to find a way through, to ease the foreign matter loose. Your
neat hole dug for the fence, trellis or gazebo post becomes enlarged
and distorted in the search for the margins of a large boulder. When the
obstruction is revealed in all its terrible glory, the shaft of the
spade snaps in an attempt to lever the monster free from the earth.
This
isn’t a natural feature of my back garden. There’s no glacial or
ancient river-bed explanation, it was caused by huge earth-shifting
lorries that used my back yard as a throughway during the construction
of the housing estate seven years ago. There’s no such easy explanation
for the obstruction under my own soft surface. It was found beneath my
ribs, after I broke them in a karate sparring session. The boulders can
be dug out of the garden with the right tools. My cancer couldn’t be
removed. It was part of me.
James
loves the garden. He’s not a typical boy. The flowers and vegetables
are safe from harm when he’s around, unless he has other, more
boisterous, playmates to visit. We have the accoutrements of childhood -
footballs, sliotars, a rugby ball, the usual sport playthings, but
James doesn’t kick the heads off the roses or bash the broccoli. He
inhales the scents, wonders at the earth’s creative abundance and
carries ladybirds from tree to tree. My special son with unique focal
powers. He dwells within a spectrum of disorders, a fitting word for the
range of colours and lights that brighten his world.
From
the front of the house I call to my family, each of them busy,
indulging in their own favourite pastime. They don’t hear me or, if they
do, there’s no response.
My
wife, Leah, reads a novel. When she doesn’t read, she sleeps on the
white stitched, dark brown leather of the Italian sofa in the playroom.
We chose that sofa together, just before the recession took hold. There
was a bitter fight with the bankrupt furniture company to get it
delivered.
Sarah
plays her silver-plated flute, bought with her own money saved from
birthday, Christmas and Holy Communion gifts. At age six she drew her
first note from a flute at the music school open day and took a firm vow
to one day buy her own. Now ten, she picks up any new classical piece
from sheet music within minutes. It’s too early to say she’s a prodigy
but the sound is heavenly.
I
walk through to the back of the house, calling for them again. James
hears me first, his ear ever tuned for my voice. He looks up from his
Lego and I stoop down to ruffle his hair. When he’s not playing Lego or
exploring the garden, James likes to watch recorded TV programmes that
include quizzes, facts and figures. He’ll stand in front of the screen
and speak the answers in time with the contestants, every high and low
score of the series stored in a memory that can’t remember where he left
his shoes.
I
became needy. The family understood that. I didn’t show pain and they
didn’t smother me with sympathy. They showed that they cared by
respecting my needs when I had to have one or another to keep me
company.
‘Let’s take a turn around the grounds,’ I say.
Leah lets her glasses slip down her nose, gives a tight smile and returns to her book. Not her.
Through the archway, in the dining room, Sarah runs through a minuet and hits a wrong note.
‘That should be a sharp,’ I call to her.
‘I’ll play that again,’ she says and runs through the tune, an emphasis placed on the corrected tone.
‘I don’t know how your father could tell the difference,’ Leah mutters from behind her book.
James stands and I put my hand down to his.
‘We’re going outside, Mum. We’re going outside.’
‘Yes, dear. Come in if it rains.’
He unlocks the door and hooks it open.
‘Down here, Dad. Down to the orchard, where it’s squelchy.’
It’s just a dwarf Granny Smith’s apple and a Victoria
plum tree. I built the trellis across the garden to give an illusion of
a secret garden. This is where I did battle with buried boulders. This
is where I sit on my bench, listening to the birds and watching James
gather the autumn leaves.
‘Look, Dad. These aren’t from our tree.’ He holds up a fistful of oak leaves that have blown in from the neighbour’s garden.
Sarah’s
flute strikes up a new tune, a march. The notes stride down from the
house, and James stomps around the base of the apple tree, his shoes
hitting the waterlogged ground with the sound of troops crossing the
marshes.
‘Let’s
dance,’ he says and takes my hand, swinging his arm to the military
step. He will never be too self-conscious, too embarrassed to hold his
father’s hand. James doesn’t see, hear or feel other people’s opinions.
But he sees me, feels the strong, assuring grip of my hand on his.
My feet make no splash next to his. The rain begins to fall, pattering the leaves. The tears of an absent father.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Very moving.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I felt moved too when I posted.
DeleteI like your style. It's balanced and intelligent and the story was capactivating.
ReplyDeleteThanks Lorraine. See you around for lunch ;-)
Delete