by Sarah Bilaney
vegetable smoothie
Mary walked into the kitchen; shoulders squared
as if she was about to confront someone rather than cook an evening meal. She
slammed the door, demonstratively.
How dare they! They should have told her first.
After all, she was Lilly’s Mother. She was the future grandmother. Lilly should
have told her first. It was cruel that Lilly firstly confided in Mary’s mother.
Mary remembered knowing look that had passed between her own mother and her own
child. Why did Lilly seem to prefer her grandmother to mother? Lilly had even
told her father before telling Mary.
Yes, after she heard she had responded with an
acerbic observation, something that she knew would make her shudder with shame
later.
Lilly had arrived in the afternoon looking
radiant.
‘Mum, I’m pregnant at last. I’ve been longing
for a child and Michael’s as happy as me. Please be pleased for
me.’
Mary responded quickly.
‘Oh Lilly, just after your career’s beginning
to take off. To think of the sacrifices I, or rather we’ve made to pay for your
university. And now, well! Are you sure you want the bother of a child? you
don’t know how much work they are! Sleepless nights, and the loss of all
independence. Look at me, I didn’t go as far in my profession as my childless
colleagues.’
When she saw how her daughter’s face crumpled
in response, Mary had muttered something about needing to cook, and left
abruptly.
Now she was in the kitchen, her
kingdom. Before her lay gleaming marble surfaces, black and shiny, the sink, the
refrigerator and the dishwasher all made of stainless steel, all set between
cupboards of a pale shimmering wood. A variety of kitchen appliances were
scattered on top of the work surface. Her kitchen had been built up over years.
Every birthday, every Christmas her husband had added to it, new pots, new
appliances and even, one year a completely new kitchen. Perfect gifts for a
dedicated hobby cook, though recently she had begun to wish that he would give
her something frivolous like a scarf or jewellery or a bottle of perfume. In her
present mood her kitchen felt like a place of
servitude.
She felt angry and her anger spilled over into
resentment. They, her family, were outside enjoying themselves, relaxing on this
delightful September evening, while she was entombed in the kitchen cooking. She
started to chop onions, their sickle shaped slitters glancing off a sharp blade
and giving off a sweaty odour. The smell elicited the unpleasant memory of her
son returning from school terrified and smelling of fear. She heated oil and
added mustard seeds that started to explode; their popping sound matched her
bursting, raging heart. She poured herself a glass of wine, a very dry red wine,
its dryness made the inside of her mouth feel fuzzy, its tart taste fitted her
tart mood. After finishing the glass quickly, and she poured herself another
drink. She added the onions to the pan; they sizzled and hissed in response to
the hot oil, the sound mirrored blistering anger.
Her daughter was pregnant and Mary was to
become a grandmother. The very thought made her feel old, made her feel that she
was being relegated to the camp of the ancient, the timeworn, and that her life
was speeding away. She remembered the words of an old pop song, “I hope I die
before I get old”. Mary did not want to die; she just did not want to get old.
Mary’s thoughts drifted to reminiscences of being a petted and spoilt daughter
to a revered wife and mother. She was unsure as to her role as a grandmother,
though she felt it would marginalize her. Mary remembered her own grandmother, a
stern lady whose iron-grey hair matched her iron-grey persona. When Mary was
young, her family visited to this ogre with trepidation, the whole family seemed
afraid of her grandma. With time, Mary’s grandmother lost her role as family
matriarch, grandma became a sad confused old lady, a nuisance. Now, with
impending grand-motherhood, Mary saw such a future unfurling before
her.
Usually Mary’s daughter helped with
cooking. But those bitter, biting comments had pushed her daughter away. Now
alone, Mary felt even more exploited. She added some thin slices of potatoes to
her hissing onions and blasting mustard seeds. Hot fat droplets flew into the
air above the pan, almost burning Mary’s hands. While the potatoes were turning
brown, she prepared the rest of the meal. She removed some sirloin steak from
the fridge and cut some garlic. The caustic smell of garlic fitted her caustic
mood and the metallic smell of blood from the meat made her think of war. She
cut carrots, podded peas, placed the potatoes mix in a hot oven, and then she
was ready. Finally, with just the vegetables to boil and the steak to fry, she
could go and sit down. But first she filled a small bowls with olives, pickled
onions and the salty pistachio nuts her daughter loved.
It was the time to join the rest of the family.
Carrying her tray of peace offerings, she moved towards her well-tended garden.
Her family were sitting at the end of the lawn enjoying a late summer’s evening.
Soft voices drifted toward her, her husband’s deep base voice was joined by the
lighter younger tone of her son-in-law and then her daughter’s fluttering fluty
interjections. Mary’s mother was silent. She could not hear their words, just
their cadences. She then felt bitterly paranoid; perhaps they were discussing
her reaction to their news, negatively. She startled a black bird that screamed
and scolded. Thorns from a rose bush snagged her sleeve, but Mary moved forward
to make herself visible and smiled. The party before her looked tense. Her
husband looked up, he seemed puzzled by her, her son-in looked angry, but her
daughter, who was sitting on a bench, patted the place beside her invitingly and
Mary sat beside her daughter, subdued.
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