by David Deanshaw
sweet yellow wine
A tear was trickling
down his cheek. He had clasped his hands and then wound then together tightly.
I didn’t really want to disturb him, but I needed to rest my weary arthritic
knees. I looked over towards him seeking to share his bench. He looked over to
me reading my thoughts and he nodded, but did not move. He had been listening to
a gentle chorus of birds hidden with the trees.
‘Peaceful,’ I
said.
‘Yes she loved it
here.’
I hesitated realising
I had interrupted a tender moment.
‘How long ago? I
asked.
‘Today, last year,’
he croaked.
‘I don’t want to
disturb you.’
‘Not a problem,
perhaps you’d stay and listen for a while?’
‘Tell me about
her.’
‘She was the kindest,
gentlest woman you could ever wish to meet. She organised me from the day we got
engaged. She kept house, did the budgets and the cooking.’
‘But you helped? By
providing the funds?’
‘Yes that’s what we
men were for in those days. Then she bore the children.’
‘How
many?’
'Just two, one of
each.’
‘But you
helped?’
‘Yes of course. But
whenever they fell or got bruised or scratched it was her warmth that mended
them. She used to say, “There you are, mummy mended it.” They’d recover as if
by magic. I taught them to read then listened as they read to me. I did sums
with them – fractions they always found difficult, but not decimals later.’ He
raised his head and looked into the distance. ‘Now they’ve both gone
away.’
‘Far?’
‘Australia and New
Zealand.’
‘Do they come back to
visit?
‘Only for the
funeral,’ his voice croaked again, ‘they stayed for three weeks to help me sort
things out, then left’
‘Do you want to be
with them?
‘Difficult, I’d have
to be sponsored at my age. Besides, she’s still here with me, not out
there.’
Trying to hide a
frown of not quite understanding, I asked, ‘but do they want you to
go?’
‘No I don’t think so.
They only think of the future, not the past.’
At that moment, he
leaned forward with his elbows on his knees. There engraved on the bench were
the words, ’in loving memory of Amy.’ She had been sitting on his shoulder the
whole time,
‘What else do you do
with your time?’
‘Not much I don’t
know what to do without her.’
‘You were obviously
very much in love.’
‘I loved her more
every day.’
‘Can I make a
suggestion?’
‘Please
do,’
‘A friend of mine
decided some years ago that he knew nothing of his parent’s family or any of his
antecedents, so he decided to write a book about himself for his children and
their children. He did it all the way from junior school to
retirement.’
‘Oh I couldn’t do
that.’
‘If I said that the
most touching part of the book for me, when I read it, was the story of how he
met the woman he would spend the rest of his life with. Right from first
meeting, to falling in love and realising that they were soul mates. It was a
love story that brought a tear to my eyes. What would you say to
that?
‘It sounds a nice
story.’
‘All your readers
will learn just how much he loved her. He tells me it was a joy to write. Did
your grandchildren ever meet Amy?’
‘No they stayed with
the other grandparents for the funeral.’
‘Then why not write
something for their sake. I am sure you have pictures too? He
nodded.
‘Do you know I think
that I quite like that idea? We got a computer some years ago to stay in touch
by email. My son recently introduced me to Skype. He calls me every Saturday
morning at ten in the morning, so it must be the same out there only at night.
Thank you for talking to me. Shall we stay in touch?
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