by David Gower
white wine Spritzer
Faces in the dog eared album
brought back memories of childhood. It had seemed a big and heavy book in her
childhood. Now it seemed to have shrunk. She realised the book had not changed
but she was now a grown woman. As an only child she was clearing Dad’s effects
from the sheltered flat. Strange how his valued but simple possessions were now
just things. They had in a sense died with him. The album alone seemed to have
meaning and history within the covers.
Black and white images of people
long dead and places far away. Square photographs and wavy edged postcard sized
pictures told of travels around the globe to places which would once have been
coloured pink in her school atlas as part of the British empire. Pink was not in
evidence so much now in any atlas. That world was no more.
As the pages turned the
architecture in the snapshots evidenced their locations. Arid desert somewhere
in the Middle East, busy scenes in African ports, elephants in India and
Buddhist temples in Hong Kong. A pictorial record of a life in a post war
world.
Some of the pictures had been
taken by her father. Others showed him with his friends as they enjoyed shore
leave. Young men, smiling and waving at the lens, frozen in a moment of
time.
Her daydreams were interrupted at
the sound of the post falling onto the hall floor. The post these days only ever
had adverts and bills. No one ever seemed to write proper letters any
more.
How had her Mum managed to bring
up her child with Dad at sea so long? How had they maintained a life which held
them apart for several months every year and then brought them together only to
part again?
No time to fret about the past.
It was almost as her birthday card had said – Wine O’Clock – time to meet her
girlfriends and enjoy some bubbly and cake.
“Happy birthday Rosie, many happy
returns of the day.” Rosie’s best mate Alison smiled as she gave her a gift
wrapped parcel. Sheila and Rona produced their gifts. The wine flowed and the
only evidence of cake was crumbs and dirty plates.
Giggling and relaxed the women started to talk about television. Why would people expose their private lives
to the viewing public? That sort of thing was so awful nevertheless they
admitted their fascination and compulsive viewing.
The day after Rosie’s birthday
she was back at Dad’s flat. Clearing things just seemed to take forever and his
mail remained unopened on a side table. He was never one for opening post when
it arrived. Time to wade through that later over a cup of tea. How lovely it
would be to get home and get clean after all this clearing.
The doorbell chimed. She opened
the door to find three women standing in the rain. Rosie’s immediate thoughts
were that they were collecting for charity or wanted to convert her to their
beliefs. They were about her age but markedly different in appearance.
The tallest one, olive skinned
and dark haired, asked “Excuse me, is Mr Ron Andrews at home?”
“I am sorry to say that he died a
few days ago. I am his daughter. Who are you?”
The women looked at each other.
After a moment the tall woman spoke for the other two.
“We think we are your sisters.
Can we come in? We wrote to say we were coming.”
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