by S. Nadja Zajdman
lemonade
When my brother’s children
were small, we would accompany them to the Christmas pantomimes in downtown
Toronto. During a performance one
winter, a contact lens slipped out of my brother’s eye. When we left the theatre he handed the car
keys to his wife and informed her, “You’ll have to drive us back. I can barely see.” I looked up at my brother and smiled. Michael towers over us. He’s a gentle giant whom patients call “Dr.
Mikey.” Those who are able to speak,
that is. Wee ones recently arrived from
the womb into the world communicate by peeing on him.
My
brother caught my smile, but didn’t understand what provoked it. “What?” Michael was blank. My weak, heavy-lidded eyes twinkled behind
spectacles.
“Now you know what a Cyclop feels like! You don’t have twenty twenty DIVISION
anymore!” My nieces were puzzled. For my brother, a light switched on. He smirked.
“You remember stuff like that?”
“Buddy,” I was rubbing it in, “I can see it as
if it happened yesterday…”
My brother and I were at a
summer camp located in southern Ontario.
On a Sunday afternoon in midsummer we were taken by bus on a field trip
to Ottawa to visit our parliament buildings.
We were at the top of the Peace Tower when my little brother erupted,
“Shashi! Look! Daddy’s car!
Down there! I see Daddy’s
car! They’re here.” The future doctor diagnosed the
situation. “Mummy and Daddy are
here!” Our little lumberjack couldn’t
pronounce the sound of the letter R and knew he couldn’t, so he stopped trying
to call me “Sharon” and called me “Shashi” instead. The nickname stuck.
I looked down from the platform of the
Tower, onto the streets far below. It
was a cloudless summer day. The cars
parked along the downtown boulevards shimmered in the heat like brightly painted
dinky toys. Though I wasn’t yet wearing
glasses, it appeared impossible to single out a particular car. Nonetheless my brother pointed and implored,
“Shashi! Please. I can see the gween Chevvolay! And you shoes is on the miwwa!” Our father had tied my first cloth baby
booties to the rear view mirror. He
considered it a good luck charm. We were
taught to identify the family car by looking out for the tiny booties dangling
from the mirror. “You can’t see that
from up here!”
“But I
do. Oh why won’t you believe me?!”
Exasperated, Mikey turned away and tugged on the sleeves of our
campmates, insisting, “My mummy and my daddy are here!” Our campmates dismissed him as a pest. I was held responsible.
“Tell your little brother to shut up!” Mikey was hurt.
“Listen Mikey.” I put my arms around him. “I can understand that you miss Mummy and
Daddy very much, but you know they’re at home in
Montreal.”
“No they’re not!” Mikey pouted. “They’re here. They’re somewhere here! Maybe downstairs!” Mikey’s Thinking Cap was firmly set. “Please Shashi, let’s go downstairs and find
them!” I knew we couldn’t separate from
the group and go hunting through the House of Commons in search of a set of
phantom parents. I tried to comfort my
little brother, but he was inconsolable.
Our field trip over, Mikey sat silent
and sullen, next to me, on the bus. As
we rolled down a hill through the camp gates a green Chevrolet, parked in the
field next to the flagpole, loomed on the horizon. it seemed to be mocking us. Still, I wasn’t sure. If I could just see my baby booties, then I’d
be sure.
Mikey didn’t need confirmation. Instantly, he went berserk. “The car!
The car!” He bounced frenetically
in his seat. “I toll you! I toll you!”
He accused our fellow passengers.
Before the driver came to a full stop and before I could stop
him, Mikey dashed down the aisle, scampered down the steps and pounded upon the
locked door. He turned his sturdy,
stocky torso towards the driver and demanded, “My mummy and my daddy are
here! Lemme out!” The startled driver obeyed his
command.
Indeed, it appeared our parents were
on the site—but where? Frantically Mikey
scoured the camp grounds screaming, “Mummy!
Daddy! Where are you?!” His cries were answered by the figure of a
woman rising out of a lawn chair set by the lake.
“Here we are, sweetheart!” Mum
waved. “Abram! Look!
It’s the kids!” Our dad raised
himself from an adjacent chair. For me,
the beam on my father’s face was like a guiding light.
Our mother flung open her arms, and
Mikey raced into them. I could see the
top of his platinum-coloured crew cut as he nestled into her enveloping
embrace. As I got closer to the
shoreline I could also see two strangers with my parents. Unknown to my brother and me, our parents
were entertaining houseguests from overseas.
They had given them a tour of Ottawa, and since the camp was located a
few miles outside Perth, on the spur of the moment they decided to drop in and
surprise us. It was our parents who got
the surprise when they entered a summer camp at the height of summer, emptied of
its children. The kitchen staff assured
them that all was well; we’d been taken on a trip to visit the Parliament
buildings, and were due back in half an hour.
What tourist or student group doesn’t
visit Parliament when taken on a tour of Ottawa? Our parents were showing their guests the
Gothic buildings that house our government half an hour after we got
there.
The campers and counsellors were
dumbfounded. The grown-ups were
impressed. So was I. As for little Mikey, he was vindicated. I turned to our campmates and suggested, “I
think you should apologize to my brother.”
Sheepishly, they did. Our parents
stared at their tot in admiration.
“But Mikey, how could you see from so far away
that it was our car?”
“Hmmmph!” Mikey raised his chin, stuck out his chest,
and lifted himself up to his full height—which wasn’t yet very high. Proudly, he announced, “I have twenty-twenty
DIVISION!”
S. Nadja Zajdman is a
Canadian author. Her short story
collection, Bent Branches, was published in 2012. Her non-fiction as well as her fiction has
been featured in newspapers, magazines, literary journals and anthologies across
North America, in the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Zajdman has completed a second work of
fiction as well as a memoir of her mother, the pioneering Holocaust educator and
activist Renata Skotnicka-Zajdman, who passed away near the end of
2013.
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