by Anne Forrest
cocoa
I had two mothers and two fathers.
When I was a seven-year old I thought that was unfair because Gill Waterstone
only had one father and no mother at all, and James Jackson only had one mother.
Of course, neither went to our church, Our Lady of the Rosary, as my mum, dad
and sister did, so didn’t even know the father guardian, Father Ethelbert, or
our mother superior, Mother Providence. Charged with our spiritual welfare, both
were diligent and sincere, and I took in every word. Armed with the sign of
faith, Mother Providence wore her Rosary and Cross at her breast, Father
Ethelbert’s wooden Rosary was tied around his waist; his brown, hooded habit
made me think of Friar Tuck except that our friar was lean. I loved the way his
habit hung and swished with an authoritative sound as he walked. When he was
home at the Friary, he wore sandals on his bare feet; they smacked the tiled
floor as he came to answer the bell..
Mother
Providence was corvid-like; long, black, head-veil and gown over her white
wimple, from which her beaky nose peeped; black shoes. When I was seven, I
thought Mother Providence was over a hundred-years old because her boney fingers
looked like dried twigs. These she poked around inside a large glass jar to
loosen the pear-drops she dished out every Saturday morning if we had been good
in Catechism. Each week she said, Off you go and play in the grounds for ten
minutes, come back when I ring the bell. One week she withheld the sweets
because we dilly-dallied too long. I remember watching her from behind a tree,
her figure bent as she stood in the doorway shaking the little bell, its
querulous tinkling lost in the air.
The nuns were
lovely to us. But one of them was stealing our cocoa. Mixed with sugar in a jar,
the cocoa lived in a tall cupboard. At 10.30am, a spoonful was added to hot
water and milk for our morning drink. Arthur James pencil-marked the label every
week to see if any was missing, and often there was. Peter Brook said he was
going to tell Father Ethelbert when he came to give us extra lessons, but I
don’t think he ever did because we were all a bit afraid of the father guardian.
He arrived dressed as he did when he was out to business: a black suit with
Roman collar, a black trilby hat, shiny black brogues, and a brown briefcase.
Once he opened the briefcase and it held a railway timetable and an apple.
Mother Superior never went out to business.
Not a month went by
without Father Ethelbert telling us of the unrepentant man on his deathbed.
Unrepentant to his last breath. I was left shuddering at that dying man’s
audacity and wondered if the thieving nun would confess her cocoa sin before she
died.
About the
author:
Anne Forrest is
studying for a Masters at Chester University ‘Writing and Publishing Fiction’
2019-2020, after gaining a First Class Hons at Bangor Uni: MArts in ‘English
Literature with Creative Writing’. Her common-folk biography, My Whole World,
Penmaenmawr (in 2nd print) was published by Old Bakehouse
Publications, Abertillery, in 2000. Her Gothic novel, Lilies if the
Valley made the strong longlist in the Cinnamon Press Debut Novel Award
2019. She wrote a series of ‘Timothy Crumble’ stories, set in the NT’s Bodnant
Garden ‘to educate and entertain children’.
Visit her website
at anneforrestwriter.weebly.com
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