by Wendy Pike
Orange Barley Water
Unusually,
the unruly privet hedge is tamed and neatly trimmed grass does its best to mask
the former flower bed, a diamond-shaped centrepiece, in which daffodils once
grew in spring and musky, pink roses in summer.
Flaky
layers of faded red paint graduate into random patterns on the crescent-shaped
front doorstep. Formerly a beacon of pride, shining like ripe cherries in
sunshine thanks to an annual, mandatory coat of paint and regular buffing with
red tile polish. In the same way that you count the rings of a tree trunk, if
you totted up the varying shades of different layers, with some degree of
accuracy, you could tell how long this place has been a home.
A
breeze ruffles the leaves on the pair of giant, white poplar trees standing
sentinel at the bottom of the hill. With each gust their fluttering fuses with
the constant rush of traffic whizzing along the nearby dual carriageway. It’s a
familiar childhood soundtrack.
The
scent of lavender is a comforting greeting as I walk inside the gate. But my
eyes prickle and I swallow hard, trying to stifle the escaping emotion that is
already catching the back of my throat. I am not even close to halfway up the
garden path.
I
know there is nobody home. On the other side of the door there will be no
beaming smile to greet this unannounced visitor or outstretched arms inviting a
spontaneous, heartfelt hug.
This
ordinary looking, unassuming, sturdy, council semi was my second home. But from
today I’ll have no reason to return.
“Why
am I here?” I say aloud to no one. I shouldn’t be here really.
This
council house is a portal, transporting me back to my younger self. Somewhere I
had only to be myself to be totally and unconditionally accepted for who I am.
Where the people living within the soft, red brick walls, teased me occasionally
and laughed with me a lot. They used to call me pet names - something that would
be an unwelcome over-familiarity from anyone else.
Of
course I realise, it wasn’t utopia. Those residing inside these four solid
walls were, like the rest of us, only human. Petty disputes between them were
never really settled in the resulting heavy silences. Alternatively, like
family secrets, they were brushed under the carpet. Regardless, this duo was
among my most favourite people in the world. While I was growing up they were
like superheroes. Although life moves on, as an adult my fondness and adoration
for them remained. Of course, time moves on also. One died too soon, leaving
the other solo to live on in the house alone but hopefully not lonely.
As
much as I have had to say some heartbreakingly painful, final goodbyes over the
last few months, I had to visit this happy, loving, haven one last time.
Although, I acknowledge, it is peculiar to be saying farewell to a building.
But I need to drink in the spirit of this place. I need to recall so many happy
times, to cement them in my brain as I fear I’ll forget.
Some
are easy to recall. Like baking rock buns, cheese straws and marble cakes in
the tiny kitchen. Making lavender bags. Picking berries from the tangle of
brambles in the back garden in readiness to, under supervision, bake blackberry
and apple pies. Picnics of Orange Barley Water, in brightly coloured plastic
mugs, and packets of Iced Gem biscuits and pink and white Marshmallow biscuits,
covered in coconut. The feast spread out on stiff, scratchy, woollen blankets
that made us itch and sometimes lightly skinned our knees if we fidgeted about
too much.
But
there is a void where the good energy and positive vibe ought to be. Filling
the vacuum, instead, an atmosphere of deep sadness pervades the place, engulfing
it like a blanket of thick fog.
Despite
a showpiece doorstep and rambling roses competing for supremacy over honeysuckle
on the white plastic trellis framing the entrance, nobody ever used the front
door much. Instead, in daylight hours, the back door was never shut.
But
today it’s closed. No use trying the handle - it’s locked. The keys are with
the council. Nan’s not here. Nobody’s home.
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