Joe slept on as she closed the back door noiselessly. The
sky was pink and pale, and hazy sunshine reflected on the sash windows of the
house facing theirs. Their road was steep; downhill led to the High Street; to
the restaurants and bars; the shops selling trinkets that people wanted but
didn’t need. She took the left turn uphill and then left again, past the Gardener’s
Arms and on to her beloved forest.
Her lungs craved the oxygen oozing from those towering trees.
She climbed to the woodland’s highest point where a lone Victorian house stood
sentinel over a worn track leading down to a narrow stream. A little bridge
crossed the brook which meandered along the forest floor for a mile or so. Most
of the year it was free-flowing, with silvery minnows swimming and jumping in
search of midges and dragonfly larvae, but today it was barely a trickle.
She descended, almost running till she reached the flimsy wooden crossing. Harry, her grandson, as a child, used to find it hilarious when Liz hid beneath the old rotting planks, pretending to be the ugly troll. He, the billy-goat, screamed in excitement as he clip-clopped over, terrified of being caught. Harry was sixteen now; tall, fair and delicate; her heart melted when she thought of him.
Liz crossed the stream and climbed up through a thicket of
brambles; the thorns tagged her skin. Clumps of fern thrust through the
menacing briars, but the tangled vegetation lessened as the sunlight
penetrating the heavy canopy, dimmed. She didn’t need a ball of wool; she knew
her way and wanted to reach the dark brooding centre.
A persistent breeze caused a thousand leaves to whisper in
the dense, web-like network, high above. She heard another sound, something
like the moan of an animal. In the forest canopy, rooks and jackdaws squawked,
but on the woodland floor, there was little to nurture them. She followed the distressing
cries, stumbling over broken-off bits of branches. Flickering sunbeams penetrated
the half-light and there she saw him. Her grandmother’s instinct had told her
it would be Harry. He was half-perched on a cheap wooden stool he had brought
along. A blue synthetic rope hung over a sturdy lower branch of a hornbeam, and
Harry was preparing a noose. She recognised the small packets strewn around;
paracetamols and aspirins, a pack of razorblades and a discarded half-bottle of
spirits. She gazed in horror at the sight of blood dripping from his left cuff onto
his cut-down denims.
Harry panicked as Liz approached. He wiped his bleeding
wrist across his face, smearing his cheek.
‘Oh Harry my precious child, what on earth are you doing?’
The gin bottle was empty, and she saw a discarded blade. She
caressed the cut wrist; the blood had started to clot, so a feeble attempt. He held back as Liz enfolded him, but his
resistance faltered and he sank into her breast.
‘This is our special place isn’t it? Do you remember eating
strawberries here Harry? And drinking coke?’
Harry took shallow breaths; he was physically shaking. His
life had been difficult she knew. When her son, Harry’s dad, had died after a complicated
illness, Harry’s light went out. Her daughter-in law, Harry’s mother, had
always been unmotherly. She was a Member of Parliament, spending time in London
or her constituency. When she met her new partner, Henry, things continued to
crash for Harry, an only
child.
Liz knew Harry’s issues. At Christmas family gatherings,
the young cousins used to entertain with little plays and Harry was always the
princess, never the prince. Sometimes he had dressed-up in Liz’s high heels and
pinned on her most glamorous brooch. Once recently, he had called round and
barely able to speak, told of finding a pair of girl’s knickers in his locker.
‘I know it was Eddie’s gang,’ he’d said. ‘They always wind
me up.’
He’d been too embarrassed to report them.
‘Gran, I don’t want to be here anymore; I hate school. I
hate living. Henry hates me and he can’t bear me around the house when mum’s
not here.’
He loved his mum despite everything.
‘He doesn’t hate you Harry, he hasn’t even tried to understand
you.’
Henry was a buttoned-up sort of man, repressed, Liz thought,
but she had to admit, he suited her daughter-in-law. He was sarcastic to Harry
for not wanting to go the races or watch a cricket match, and when he saw him wearing
nail varnish, he had exploded. She’d heard about that.
‘Harry, you are such a marvellous person; with so much to
live for. What more can I say or do?’
‘I don’t know Gran, but that business with the locker, it
made me want to end it.’
‘Harry, there are many ways to be; you are free to be whatever
you want. You remember Auntie Rachel? My friend? Well, Mia, her daughter, has struggled too. She’s
reaching out to people; like herself; like you. She’s started a project in Birmingham
getting friends in the LGBTQ community to talk about their lives; she’s going
to publish their stories. I know she’d love to meet you. Actually she calls herself ‘they’.’
‘That’s what I want to be called Gran; but I can’t tell mum;
or Henry.’
‘Don’t you worry about them; there’s going to be a serious conversation.’
‘Thanks Gran. I would like to meet Mia.’
I’m a bit unreconstructed Harry; please remind me what
LGBTQ stands for.’
‘Oh, Gran, it’s ‘Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer’.
Q can stand for the whole community but we never actually use ’Gay’.’
Liz gave him the biggest hug.
She definitely wasn’t going to give up that easily!’
6 comments:
There is so much love in this story, Jennie: love for the forest, love for family, (even when they aren't the best at showing love), love of special memories, and that special grandmother/ grandchild love. I love Liz's calm, accepting love for Harry, and how she has quietly observed his struggles over the years. You have drawn their characters within the word count, with just enough backstory. It is so relevant to present times too. Enjoyed hearing it at group, and reading it here 😊
Thank you Irena for your thoughtful words; I did feel as though I became Liz when writing the story. It is mostly fiction, but as always whatever fiction I am writing fiction, little bits of my own experience creep in. I'm struggling to write anything else at the moment. Maybe tomorrow!
Oops, too many fictions!
Little bits of our experience always creep in and probably should. Writing is about expressing ourselves after all 😊😊
Yes I just enjoyed it again
Some imaginative descriptive work, Jennie, which is very much your forte.
Yes, you managed to condense a lot into around, I'm guessing, a thousand words.
High time you wrote a haiku -- or a tanka!
Alex
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