(aka Bike) Part 1326 by Angharad Copyright © 2011 Angharad
All Rights Reserved. |
I explained why we’d come to Bristol, to put flowers on the graves of my real parents. The three of them were okay with that, and we set off with the flowers to the cemetery. I parked the car and set off to try and find their graves. Dad had got a headstone done with my mother’s name on it, and I know he’d left instructions for what he wanted done when he died.
Fortunately the church yard wasn’t that big, and we found it about ten minutes later, or Billie did. She called us and when we walked over, discovered she had found the correct grave.
Like Simon yesterday, I had bouquet made up with reservoir of water in it, so the flowers would last a few days, depending upon the ravages of the weather. I couldn’t come again to water them, so this was a very temporary gesture.
I managed to prop the flowers up against the headstone, and wanted to say loads of things to my parents even though I knew they couldn’t hear me. I felt embarrassed in front of my children. As if they sensed this, they asked if they could look inside the church. I agreed and they ran off, giggling and squealing into the distance.
I checked all round me, there was no one else in sight. “Hi Mummy and Daddy, I brought you some flowers, to say I remembered you. The three hooligans who just ran off are three of my children–so you were right, Mummy, I do have lots of children and I teach them in the same way that you taught me how to look after themselves and that I love them very much.
“They’re all damaged or have problems, but I’ve adopted them–so we’re stuck with each other for the foreseeable future. I try to be a good mother to them, as I tried to be a good daughter to you–Daddy would know more about that, but well you know...
“I have to go now, see what my girls are up to, I love you both, and you’re still in my thoughts. Goodbye for now.”
I chided myself as I walked back towards the church pushing the sleeping baby in her push chair–fancy talking to two boxes of bones and decaying flesh as if they could hear me? When you’re dead–that’s it–fin–all over bar the tears of those who are still alive–but you can’t hear them.
There is no afterlife or life eternal or whatever the con-men of religion like to sell us, just nothingness. So why do we worry so much about it? The manner of dying–yes, I can understand that, pain, humiliation and so on–but once you’re dead–it’s all behind you anyway.
Despite the warmth of the day I shivered a little–nah, that’s just my imagination. I strolled round to the church and the girls were playing some sort of tag game in front of it. Laughing and giggling. Just then a figure began walking up the path–the only path–back to the car. It was the priest who’d buried both my parents.
Of course it had to be Trish who ran smack into him and nearly knocked them both flying. I then had to intervene. He was laughing with her and telling her to look where she was running next time. She laughed back.
As I walked towards them, I heard her telling him that her mummy was putting flowers on her mummy and daddy’s grave.
“Oh who was that?” I heard him ask.
“Derek and Fiona Watts,” she replied, obviously having read it from the headstone.
He looked up and smiled at me coming towards him. “Hello again,” he said, “Catherine, isn’t it?”
“Yes, Reverend Peabody.” I’d always though pea-brain would be a better name, but he was being polite, so I tried to return the courtesy.
“So how are things?”
“Fine thanks, I just popped by to put some flowers on my parent’s grave.”
“Yes, I’m sure they’d appreciate that. Look, I’m just locking up here, why don’t you come back to the vicarage and have a cup of tea, and your girls could have a glass of pop.”
Before I could decline, the three of them whipped by Trish, all declared for going back with the vicar. It was a fait accompli and I found myself being led past my car and along to the vicarage. I hadn’t been in there for years.
“You’ll have to excuse the mess–my wife’s up at her mother’s for the week–so I have to cope as best I can.”
“Look, if this is too much trouble...” I tried to excuse myself out of it.
“No, I insist, I’d love to hear how you’re getting on–I did enjoy your dormouse programme–your parents would have been so proud of you.”
I was so close to tears, that I could say nothing but mumble and accept the seat he offered me. The girls sat down and before I knew what was happening, they’d switched on the telly and were watching some cartoon show.
He came back with the teas, “Oh,” he said when he saw them watching the television.
“Sorry, I didn’t spot them until it was too late.”
“No problem. Here you are, girls.” He held out the tray and they each took a glass of lemonade. “Let’s go into the study, and they can watch their cartoons in peace.”
I followed him like a schoolgirl into the headmaster’s study, feeling I shouldn’t be here–this is enemy territory, but he was being so courteous.
I sat and accepted the mug of tea, rejecting the offer of sugar, but accepting the milk. I sipped it, and as far as I could tell it wasn’t poisoned. So why was he being so nice?
“I know that we’ve had some differences in the past, I hope that we can overcome them with some Christian fellowship,” he started.
“As you know, Reverend, I’m agnostic, so I’m not sure I can accede to your suggestion.”
“Oh,” he said, “How about common decency, does that fit the bill?”
“Yes okay, I can go with that.”
“Fine, don’t worry, I’m not going to preach at you. I saw how you looked after Derek when he was in hospital.”
“He didn’t tell me you went to see him,” I challenged, already feeling mildly hostile.
“I asked him not to, in case it put you off–you were doing him a lot more good than I could–if I’d made him some soup it would have likely poisoned him, rather than nurtured him. You acted like a real daughter to him, in fact when I saw you together at your mother’s funeral, I could see the affection you both had for each other–despite your efforts to hide it from each other. I urged him to keep in touch with you, because you were his only child.”
I was gob-smacked, this wasn’t how I’d envisioned things at all. I had more a picture of him painting me as some sort of devil worshipping abhorrent.
“This is all news to me,” I gasped rather than said.
“Things are changing all the time, Catherine, society, the church, the environment–everything changes, and we must change to meet the challenges it gives us.”
“But you were so fundamentalist.”
“Only in some ways–I still don’t approve of homosexual priests or women bishops, but I have to live in the times we inhabit.”
“But I assumed you’d disapprove of me?”
“Years ago, and without meeting you, I would have done. But I watched you grow up and the tension in you as you discovered science and how that drove you from God. But God works in mysterious ways, in the way He made you question His creation, He must also have made you question your identity.”
I wasn’t going to agree with him, but I wasn’t going to argue either–just drink my tea and go.
“As all things must originate in and from God, we have to accept that some of us are different, and have to deal with that as best we can. I recognise you’re happier as Catherine than you were as Charles, and I also saw how well you’d accepted the role of a female when I saw you at the funeral, and the way you looked after Derek. He came to see it too, and regretted his being hard on you when you were younger.”
“I know we’d come to some sort of truce after he had his stroke, but I was never sure if he was doing it just to keep me onside.”
“No, not one bit–he loved you and came to realise he was wrong. We spent some time talking it over after your mother died.”
“So it was you who got him to contact me about the funeral?”
“He wanted to do it, but was frightened of it, in case he messed up and you went off and didn’t speak to him again.”
I felt tears beginning to form.
“He told me he thought he’d seen you at your mother’s bedside, but he wasn’t sure because you looked so natural–he somehow expected to see a drag-queen type figure, a caricature of a woman, and you weren’t. But you were still angry with him and he was frightened he’d lose you as well as your mother.”
“I was angry with him–deservedly so–he’d been a real bastard to me.”
“He knew that, and I implored him to seek both yours and God’s forgiveness.”
I wasn’t sure what God had to do with it but maybe I’d erroneously rated Reverend Peabody as a homophobe or transphobe.
“When I saw your film about dormice–I knew it was you, because Derek had told me you were a leading expert on them–I was very impressed with your presentation skills and your command of the subject matter. I was also impressed with the way you seemed so totally female, so you had to have made the right decision in that choice of identity.”
“I hope so–‘cos it aint gonna grow back.” I said and he frowned then smirked.
“The children called you, Mummy?”
“Yes, Simon and I have adopted a few waifs and strays.”
“Simon–Derek mentioned him–he’s your boyfriend?”
“My husband.”
“Oh yes, that’s permissible now, isn’t it–civil partnerships and so on.”
“It isn’t a civil partnership, we’re married as man and wife.”
“Oh, congratulations,” he said covering his initial surprise. “So that makes you Mrs...?”
“Cameron, Lady Catherine Cameron.”
“Lady?” his eyes widened.
“Yes, my husband is Lord Simon Cameron.”
“Goodness–talk about over achieving–double congratulations, I am impressed. I knew you were talented, your school and university career showed that–your Lady Macbeth is still talked about at the Grammar School–but I wouldn’t have thought you'd manage to land a peer.”
“I didn’t set out to, but his sister became a friend after she knocked me off my bike and introduced me to Simon. We liked each other and the rest is history.”
“I presume he knows about your–um–past?”
“He knew long before we married, but it was his choice to propose to me despite all that, and I accepted because I love him.”
“Yes–well, congratulations again, I hope you’ll be very happy together.”
“We are. I must go, Reverend Peabody, thanks for the tea.” I shook his hand and collected my children before going back to the house to take the bedding off the line and repack the car. Thankfully, Catherine had stayed asleep the whole time–I think breast feeding her might just have blown his mind.
Comments
Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 1326.
Glad that Cathy now knows that her dad truly accepted her.
May Your Light Forever Shine
May Your Light Forever Shine
Another great chapter,
ALISON
'full of warmth and humanity.
ALISON
I know that Cathy and I are far apart.
Yet, it is uncanny how we seem to be at the same business at once sometimes. She has aquitted herself well to not have told the old sod reverend to pack it in where the sun does not shine. And in spite of her own negative and paranoid fears, the truth seems to be different than what she expected.
It's been years since I last set foot in a church, but the other night at a performance of Romeo and Juliet, I found myself talking to an old gentleman when he asked me if I thought that Jesus was the son of God. Rather than take my usual hard line about it, I told him that yes, I did. It seemed to comfort him and reinforce his own belief. My roomate had a discussion about the weakening of my own integrity which I could not argue with. I only knew that I wanted him to be comfortable, my scruples be damned.
Much peace
Khadijah
Pastors can surprise...
Pastors can surprise us... As I've recently discovered - to my pleasure. They are human after all, and like any human they have their good points and bad ones. I know I have mine!
Thank you for providing this gimps into Cathy's past, and showing her another side to someone she'd come to a conclusion about. How many is this now? But, this also provided her with word that her father actually did love her and cared for her. Something you've had her worry about off and on a lot... There's no reason for the pastor to have twisted that bit of story. So, it's probably "true" (as much as anything is in a work of fiction).
Thank you,
Anne
It surprised me too
Unless there is a current thread in the plot line, I go with whatever turns up on the page - this happened tonight - last night it was the two teens in the bed. I didn't set out to write either of those - they just crystallised before my eyes. Tonight it was just going to be about laying the flowers on the grave - well it was sort of...
Angharad
Angharad
Awww come on Cathy
... a missed opportunity, you could have woke her surreptitously :)
Cathy is surely and slowly healing herself of her past. It was meant to be.
I will reserve my judgment on Pastors as for every positive story there is always a negative one somewhere else.
Kim
Hmmmm... he was actually
ok to talk to and didn't try to "bring her back to the church" that I notice anyway. I DID NOT like the "I wouldn’t have thought you manage to land a peer†thing. Found it demeaning. Cathy didn't set out to land anyone. She and Simon found each other. Definite lack of sensitivity in the priest. Almost surprised that Cathy didn't blow up at him. Maybe she's mellowing.
I Would Have Been Insulted
I would have been insulted at two of his statements. The assumption that her marriage to Simon was a Civil Union instead of a marriage and the part about him being surprised that she landed a Peer seemed to insinuate that he believed that people like us weren't worthy to have someone of such stature in our lives. I suspect that she might have let him have it over that if the kids hadn't been with her.
I can only say ...
WOW! What an episode. No wonder we like you and you story, Ang.
It’s not given to anyone to have no regrets; only to decide, through the choices we make, which regrets we’ll have,
David Weber – In Fury Born
Holly
It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice.
Holly
Another nice chapter.
Thanks Angie. Got my fix and so to bed.
Love and hugs.
OXOXOX
Bev
Growing old disgracefully.
I wish little Catherine had
I wish little Catherine had awakened. She could have challenged the good reverend's assumptions once again!!
CaroL
CaroL
thanks!!
I always like when you "toss us one". That the Reverend was a good and wise soul, was a happy and welcomed suprise! Thanks again for creating such a literary icon, in our cathy...I continue to enjoy each and every chapter, as i did the first! Kristyn
kristyn nichols
Dreams
Having visited her parents' grave for the first time, and left flowers, I can't help wondering what Cathy's dreams are going to bring.
Thanks A+B: I always enjoy it when Cathy crosses swords with someone, but I think the Rev. Peabody got off lightly.
Picturing Spectres
Bike Resources
Bike Resources
Nice to see
that Cathy while stubborn in a lot of ways was able to revise her opinion of the Reverend, When she realised just what he had done for her, Which i guess shows first impressions are not always right....
Kirri
i'll try to hold my tongue as much as possible.
while I'll mention those making comments, specially the UK ones, even if you've strayed from past upbringing, still hold in awe where thing like aristrocrats, and dealing with religious figures are concerned.
Not a bad thing, I dont believe, just an observation of an outsider.
In the story, kathy in awe of a priest, but also detests or thought she did, and the Priest, abruptly changing his tone towards the young woman, upon learning she was now Lady blah blah ... he may of not fully put in head the connection to the family name, but it was quite obvious that ANG had def. changed his tone in talking to Kathy VS the commoner, tho it was still his belief she didnt deserve it.
Well written ANG ... had you been from USA, I'm pretty sure that nuance would have never shown up, even in writing this story. but I've met enought folks from Europe, and UK to note that when such folks interact, there's always the seperation, even in very close relationships. the Way the chapter an interactions occurred, I dont even think kathy was written to be conscious of how it-the dynamics changed, cept using LADY as a weapon, and only then discovering that it indeed was a TRUE WEAPON the priest took quick note of and made adjustments in speech pattern, and manner even if he was UNhappy with how it came about.
YES, I do believe that latter comment in story about breast-feeding would of stirred up comment. I don't understand how so many tho can be so ignorant. In recent online Article on msn slate magazine... was a male author whom thought, tried, and discovered male breast feeding was a myth and aparerntly still does... and I was sitting there wondering how this highly noted author in general ignored a whole community of transgender moms out there whom have successfully breast fed children ... umm not trying to start a contraversy, but most of us started out male physically and yet some have indeed gone on to be mothers whom breast fed. This being TRUE --- then the statements men cant breast feed must be false, if they are doing certain things to cause lactation and this I believe would truely need a Doctor monitoring certain bloodtests to create the proper body conditions to do such.
UMMM - I've even lactated, it sure wasnt intentional, and it was very much a suprize to both the person playing with my breasts @ the time and myself.
Guess point i'm making is how much ignorance is out there n the world, even with the internet and all the susposed education.
There is a condition
called spurious lactation which can happen to anyone taking female hormones - it doesn't mean they're coming into milk, just a small amount of exudate from the nipple - it usually soon disappears.
Angharad
Angharad
Interesting
Another aspect of her work, converting people to understand and have tolerance.
Too bad it doesn't affect his attitude towards gays though, they don't choose either.