Authors: Annah Faulkner
âWhy can't I walk?' I asked Nurse Molly.
She slid a lolly into my hand. âI don't know, Bertie. Polio's like that. Some people escape with just flu but others, well, you know. Legs, arms, the whole lot. Life in a wheelchair.'
Life in a
wheelchair
? Would that be me? I tried not to think about it. Or the iron lung. At the end of the ward there was a big metal tank with a pump that made your lungs work. It looked like a coffin. One day they shut a little boy in there with just his head poking out. Every night I went to sleep feeling its hands around my neck and I'd wake up coughing and gasping for air.
One day Orderly came in with a wheelchair. âThree weeks, kiddie. You're out of Isolation. Your parents are waiting to see you.'
My parents!
Down a corridor, around the corner and there . . . Mama and Dad! Tall and shining and
there
.
Mama leaned forward and kissed my forehead. âHow's my baby girl?'
Tears stung my eyes. I blinked them away. But they stuck like a lump in my throat and when Dad scooped me against his chest I thought the lump might burst. Dad unzipped his jacket. âLook who's here, CP. Flight Sergeant Moose.' I grabbed my bear and straightened his ear and Dad stroked my head. âWhat happened to your beautiful hair?'
âThey had to cut it,' said Mama as she pulled something from her handbag. âLook what I made for you, Bertie.' She held out a doll, a dear little rag doll with orange woolly hair, round black eyes and a smile wide enough to melt even Matron's heart.
âHer name's Raggedy Ann,' said Mama.
âWhy?'
Mama shrugged. âI made her; it gives me naming rights.'
âI don't like it. She's not raggedy. She's Molly.'
âMolly?'
âMy favourite nurse in the whole world.'
âOh . . . okay, but I'm your favourite mama. Yes?'
I nodded. âYes.'
Mama visited me every day. I still couldn't move my leg and I knew from the tight grey band that appeared around her chest that she was worried. One morning she marched in and tossed my overalls on the bed. A doctor flapped along behind.
âI only said,
might
not walk, Mrs Lightfoot. If you take her now she definitely won't. The child needs continuing treatment.'
âThat child, Doctor, is
my
daughter, and your treatment's done nothing. My brother walked after polio; Roberta will too. I'll
make
it happen.'
At home, Mama laid me between sheets as soft as clouds and smelling of mown grass and sunshine. She sat beside me and took my hand.
âRoberta Lindsay Lightfoot, listen to me.'
Roberta Lindsay Lightfoot. That was me.
Lindsay for my mother, Lightfoot for my father and Roberta all for myself. Tim got his name from Grandpa Timothy but Roberta was mine.
âListen.'
I listened. All I could hear was Mama's breath coming in and out, whoo
shhhh
, like waves on the shore.
âLook at me.'
I looked at her shiny black hair and owl-steady eyes and I waited . . . and waited, until I was sure I could hear the whole world holding its breath.
âYou are going to get well. You are going to walk. I will make it happen. Do you understand?'
I didn't understand, but I believed her.
âAnd the day you walk, you can have my locket.'
Her locket! â
Promise?
'
âPromise.'
She cut up old army blankets into strips, dunked them in boiling water and put them through the wringer. Then she laid them, ouch-hot, on my leg, covered them with towels and rubber sheets and every half hour she took it all off and did it again. She pulled my leg up and down and rubbed till I howled.
âI'm sorry,' she said, âbut I've got to get this leg moving.' She put a box at the end of the bed and told me to press my foot against it. âPush, Bertie, push!'
âI
am
.'
âHarder. Come on, sugar, I know it's tough but you can do it. We're in this together and you
are
going walk. You must. Thank God it's only one leg.'
Only one leg.
When she wasn't pushing and pulling Mama gave me lessons so I didn't fall behind at school. We played cards and puzzles and I listened to âThe Argonauts' on the radio. Tim put on Dad's air force jacket and pretended to be Biggles, or dressed up in Mama's hat and high heels and tottered around pretending to be a lady. Dad brought me paper from his office and a box of six colouring pencils which made me forget â more than anything else â that I couldn't walk. He built me a bed table with folding legs.
âWhat colour do you want it, CP?'
âBlue. Forget-me-not blue.' Locket blue.
âBorget-me-not flue,' he said.
I giggled. Dad and his silly spoonerisms.
Piddle-Lot
for Little Pot,
Hate-and-Dunny
for Date and Honey
,
Farting-the-Stire
for
Starting the Fire
. He was full of stories, too. How the American president, Franklin D Roosevelt, got polio and still ran the world's mightiest nation from a wheelchair; how the famous pilot, Douglas Bader, lost both his legs and still flew. But my favourite story was how he met Mama.
âWinter. Nineteen forty-three. The Air Force sent me to Canada to fly reconnaissance.' He leaped to his feet and saluted. âAtten-s
hun!
I was on leave in New York and one morning when I got on the train to go back to base, there â sitting in my seat â was . . .'
âMama!'
âLovely Mama. Even in her medic's uniform she was a real good sort, her figure just like that egg-timer your grandma keeps on her scullery bench, you know?' Dad brought his hands into a V-shape and then out again. âCurves in all the right places. I told her she was in my seat and she went to move but I stuck out my hand. Don't go, I said. But then I put my foot in it.'
âIn your hand?' I cackled.
âNo, you twit. In my mouth. You must be Snow White, I said. Snow
White
? she scoffed. Beans, then, I said. Coffee beans. She scowled at me. What I mean is you're the loveliest girl I've ever seen. That fixed it. We got talking, anyhow.'
Dad had to carry me everywhere: to the toilet, the kitchen, the living room. Our living room wasn't like Grandma's, stuffed with embroideries, figurines, painted plates and Daddy's shoes from when he was a little boy. There were no knick-knacks or shoes on our mantelpiece.
âThey got drowned,' said Mama.
âOr they're still swimming,' said Dad.
When she landed in Australia Mama had nothing with her but a small suitcase and a very large belly, full of Tim. All her trunks had gone on another ship which had been sunk by a mine. She had fat-clothes, photos, her camera,
that
locket and
that
box. No knick-knacks. She and Daddy had to live with Grandma and Grandad for two years before they got their own house and Mama said if she ever saw another doily or knick-knack again she'd be sick. So all that stood on our mantelpiece was a brass bowl of roses, camellias or forget-me-nots and photos: Uncle Bill, Mama's parents, Timmy and me. Every day I sat by the fire looking at the pictures of Uncle Bill and my grandparents, wondering what they were like. Some days I just stared at the dancing flames and made my own pictures, or watched Tim building barnyards with his Meccano set and filling them with toy animals. He wanted to be a vet when he grew up. He was nine and top of grade four, which is where Mama wanted me to be â top of my class. Tim went to Vic Grammar, the best boys' school in the state, Mama said. He'd been enrolled there since he was a baby. Mama said I would go to the best girls' school in the state when I was bigger. She said I had to work harder than Tim to get what I wanted. I didn't know what I wanted but Mama said I should be like Tim and aim to do something important. I thought Tim would make a good vet. There was a bubble of pink on his throat that got bigger whenever he saw animals. He couldn't see the pink, he couldn't see any colours, and neither could Mama and Dad which was a shame because colours were very helpful. They told you the truth about people no matter what they said. Words were like clothes; colours were what you looked like without them.
Every morning while Mama worked on my leg she told me about life in Canada. How she and Uncle Bill used to make snowmen and have snowball fights, how they raked up piles of fiery autumn leaves and fell in them, toasted marshmallows on forks and made faces out of pumpkins. When she was twelve, all the kids in her town got a Box Brownie camera from Kodak â the very one that escaped drowning. I often saw colours on Mama while she talked â raspberry and orange, and deep gold. Sometimes, though, she was mauve-grey. I knew my mother's face better than anything else in the world; her dusky skin and the little heart-shaped cowlick on her forehead. I knew her moods â her half-smiles, her frown and her getting-on-with-it look. I knew her faraway face, but I didn't know what they all meant. Even colours couldn't tell you that. They could tell you what, but not why.
One day a present arrived from Uncle Bill in Canada: a brass tube with a bubble at the end.
Tim jammed it up against his eye. âA kaleidoscope, Bertie. Look.'
I put my eye to the tube and a fantastic world sprang to life. Every movement of the tube changed the designs and colours over and over. A note came with the present.
Dear Nice Niece,
Mama read.
I'm sending you this gizmo to drive you nuts while you're in the sack. Hope you like it. Are you giving that nasty old polio a good licking? I hope so, because if I can lick polio, you can too. Get strong soon, huh?
Love from your Uncle Bill
âIf I lick my leg, will it get better?'
Mama snorted. âLicking a thing means beating it.'
Beating it? Well, if that's what it took . . .
She folded the blankets and the rubber mats and piled them in the corner. For tomorrow and the day after and the day after that. Then she dropped a Milly-Molly-Mandy book in my lap and went to get supper. I pulled the blankets over my head, curled up my fist and rammed it into my calf as hard as I could. My ankle next, my foot, up and down, beating and beating until the pain got so bad I had to stop. I tossed off the bedclothes and lay waiting for my leg to move. Nothing. Above me, I heard Tim pattering across the floor, his singsong voice, and Mama's voice echoing in my head . . .
You are going to get well. You are going to walk. I will make it happen
.
Would she? In two months I hadn't got any better. I stared out the window at the darkening sky. Winter lay over the vegie patch and the tree I used to climb stretched bare arms out to the air. Mama hurried to the clothesline to gather washing in a bucket. I remembered that bucket, remembered sitting in it, though I wasn't even three. Mama had wanted to take my photo.
âStick Bertie in the bucket,' she'd said to Dad. âShe'll look cute.'
The air was full of sunshine, the grass cushy beneath my feet. Dad hoisted me into the bucket and I folded my legs, thinking how silly it was. While Mama fiddled with the camera I leaned to one side, felt the bucket tipping and leaned further until I toppled over, just as she snapped the picture.
âLittle bugger. Put her back in, Ed.'
Dad righted the bucket but this time I refused to fold my legs. The photo shows me dangling from his hands, legs blurring as they pedalled the air, a big smile beneath a dome of black hair.
In my dreams, I pedalled the air still, I walked and ran. Every morning I woke and reached for the edge of the bed and wondered if I'd ever walk again.
One Saturday when Mama was out and Dad and I were in the kitchen working on my leg, the knocker on the front door banged. Dad wiped his hands on his overalls. âTighter than the ruddy fan belt on the Vauxhall, those muscles, CP. Who's that, do you reckon?'
Grandma swept in. She was short and stocky and had fire in her eyes. She tilted up her cheek for Dad's kiss.
He bent over and pecked it. âHello, Ma.'
âEdric.' Grandma was the only person in the world who called Dad Edric. Everyone else called him Ed. Mama said Edric sounded like he was supposed to be called Edward but Grandma hiccupped at the wrong moment and it came out Edric. Tim and I laughed our heads off but Grandma didn't. She unpinned her black straw hat and smiled at me. Then she saw my leg.
âLord in heaven, I could put my finger and thumb around that stick. The child will never walk on that.'
My heart crumpled.
âShe'll walk,' Dad said, carrying me to the couch in the living room, âor Lily May will die trying.'
Grandma snorted. âTrying? Where is she? Leaving you to do women's work.' She dropped into a chair and her brown wool skirt pulled tightly over her legs. My eyes sneaked past the top of the lisle stockings that sat in rolls over her knees, into the fleshy dark cavern beyond.
âWell, child, it is not for us to question God's will.'
God
gave me polio?
âGrandma . . .'
âQuiet now, dear. I'll read you a story.' She pulled a Bible from her bag. It had pictures in it. She pointed to one with a fingernail made strong by rubbing cream into it from the milk bottle tops. âThis is Moses.' Moses was a wild-looking man with hair down to his waist, a long dress and a big stick. âMoses believed!' Grandma hoisted a finger into the air. âAnd his faith was rewarded. Faith!'
âWho's Faith?' I asked Dad after Grandma had gone. There was a girl in my class called Faith but I didn't think Grandma meant her.
âNot who, CP. What. Faith is believing something we can't see, like faith in God or faith that you'll walk again.'
Faith I'd walk again. Dad might have faith I'd walk again but Grandma said I'd never walk on my
stick
. What if she was right?
That night I lay in bed hammering my leg. âCome on you rotten, horrible leg!
Move
.'