âThen perhaps you should begin thinking!'
âYes, Mother.' Cecilia's stammered apologies sounded inadequate even to her own ears.
âGo back to the chapel right now!' Mother Holy Angels said. âKneel in front of the Blessed Sacrament, with both arms extended, until I send someone for you.'
âYes, Mother.'
It was torture after ten minutes, but Cecilia remained determined. Within half an hour she was woozy with pain and exhaustion, but she kept her arms extended as she'd been ordered, alone in the dark church.
When Breda was sent to bring her up, she found her lying unconscious on the floor of the chapel, blue with cold.
âWake up, Nuncie! Come on, wake up.'
Cecilia jerked awake but didn't immediately recognise Breda. Her limbs were heavy and she could hardly move her face, but she was nevertheless filled with the overwhelmingly delicious feeling of having died and gone on to another life. Could that red flame flickering in front of the gold tabernacle be the Holy Spirit?
âWhat happened? Where am I?'
âHush. Mother Angels sent you down here.'
âOh.' Cecilia sat up a little, leaning her back against the polished wood of a nearby pew. The scene with the Novice Mistress flooded back. She groaned. âHow long have I been down here?'
âAn hour at least,' Breda whispered, rubbing Cecilia's cold hands with her own warm ones. âWhat did you do?'
âComplained about there not being enough baths.'
âYou idiot!' Breda gave a low chuckle.
Cecilia looked into Breda's warm smiling face and felt a sudden infusion of energy run into her lethargic limbs. She tried to get up.
âStay a minute.' Breda caught her arm. âTake a few deep breaths.'
Cecilia did as she was told as Breda set about straightening her veil.
âHow long did you last for?'
âI don't know,' Cecilia whispered. âI think I passed out.'
âI only lasted two minutes,' Breda chuckled.
âBut â¦'
âToo painful,' Breda went on casually. âI snuck a look behind to make sure no one was there and put my arms down.'
Cecilia smiled.
What about obedience?
she wanted to ask but didn't have the energy.
âDon't let her get to you, Annunciata.' Breda's face had become serious. She took Cecilia's hands in her own and rubbed them some more. âShe's not that important.'
âYou seem so happy,' Cecilia whispered wearily.
âWell, I stink too!'
âBut you're happy.'
âI
am
happy,' Breda admitted.
âEven though â¦'
âEven though I stink and can't manage most of what I'm meant to manage â¦'
âSo â¦?' Cecilia waited.
Breda met her eye with a shrug. âThis is what God wants of me.'
Cecilia nodded. Yes. She understood that. It was what she felt herself. She looked across at the Blessed Sacrament and prayed for strength.
Within minutes she was on her feet again. Breda helped her up and they made their way together up the wide gloomy stairs to the dormitory.
On their way back from chapel they stood back as Reverend Mother passed them on the stairs with only the coolest of nods. Cecilia took this to mean that news of her misdemeanour had been reported and that the Provincial would be keeping a closer eye on her now.
Oh God!
She might not get the votes needed to get through to the next stage. Some novices were taken aside and told that that they were unsuited to the life and should go home. Their relatives were called and asked to come and fetch them. Imagine that! The humiliation of knowing that she'd failed. More than anything in the world Cecilia wanted to be professed.
Breda nudged her when the nun was out of view.
âSour old biddy,' she whispered, laughing under her breath. âDon't let them get to you, Nuncie.'
âBut how do you manage that?'
âBecause I'm loved,' Breda said softly. âI know God loves me, and he loves you too.'
Cecilia stared at her wonderingly. Breda broke more rules than all of them put together and yet she seemed happier than all of them too. Somehow that was difficult to fathom. It didn't add up.
âPray!' Breda said as they tiptoed along the corridor towards their dormitory. âYou'll be okay if you pray. God listens.'
Before I put my key in the door I stop, close my eyes and offer up a prayer to whatever God is on duty that day.
âPlease let her be at Ruby's. Let my sister be out doing
something
.' I open the door and I'm immediately hit with a blast of Roy Orbison's âPretty Woman' and hope dies an instant death. I head for the stairs. To say I don't need Stella right at this moment is a gross understatement.
âIs that you, Peach?'
I stop on the fifth stair and sigh. âYep,' I call back, âit's me.'
âWhat you doing home?'
I go back down to the family room. Stella is lying on the big couch. There is an empty cardboard noodle container on the table nearby, a crushed packet of chips and a number of lolly wrappers around her. She smiles at me, but I ignore it and turn to the screen. She's watching an old concert of Bruce Springsteen, Roy Orbison, Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt. Stella senses my mood and turns it down.
âWhat's up?' she says. âI thought you were going to hang out with Det and Cassie all day.'
âSo did I.'
âSo what happened?'
âI dunno.'
âHas anything amazing happened to you yet?' she asks casually.
â
What?
' I look at her blankly, and she gives me a knowing smile. I remember her pronouncement that morning.
âNot yet,' I say sourly. Det's pregnancy does not come under the
amazing happenings
heading as far as I'm concerned. It's more suited to
diabolical tragedies
.
Stella looks at her watch. âPlenty of time.'
âWhatever you say, Stella.' I stare at the old stars jiving around with their guitars and wonder, not for the first time, why the hell a seventeen-year-old on the edge of a new century wants to watch a pack of performers from her parents' generation.
âI got an email from Mum,' she says, switching off the telly and looking at me.
âAnd?'
âEverything is fine. Loving Paris. You know the drill. They're going to call us.'
âWhat time?'
âTonight. Late.'
âOkay,' I sigh. I go to the fridge and take a long slurp of milk straight from the plastic bottle. I would kill Stella if she did the same thing in front of me, but seeing as how I'm running this domestic situation, I don't care. I pick up my big canvas pool bag from the hook and check it. Shampoo, conditioner, soap, face moisturiser, bathers and a towel. Stella watches me intently.
âWhat are you looking at?' I say sharply, as I pull a comb from my other bag. I need to get out of the house. I'm no good to anyone like this.
âWhat's the matter, Peach?'
âNothing,' I say again.
You, Stella. You are the matter!
âI'm going to the pool now.' I head towards the hall. âAnd then I'm going out again later as well, so I might not be home to talk to Mum and Dad.'
âYou're going swimming
now
?'
âYes. You should come,' I say, knowing she won't and that I don't really want her to either.
She shakes her head. âWhere are you going later?'
âTo see Nick's band at the Night Cat,' I say. âYou wouldn't like it. Too loud.'
âOkay,' she returns mildly.
I turn my back and walk out to the front hallway, hating myself because, apart from Mum and Dad, I love Stella more than anyone else in the world, but right at this minute I'm finding it hard to be even civil to her.
âI brought the mail in,' she calls after me cheerfully, as if I'm meant to congratulate her. âI left it all on the table in the hall. There's a letter for you.'
âWho from?'
âI don't know,' she says, âbut the writing is vaguely interesting.'
âOkay, thanks.'
âHave a good swim, Peach.'
âShall do!' I try to sound light, but then I can't help myself. I turn around and walk back into the room. âDid you even ring up Ruby?'
âIt's going to rain.' She looks away.
âYou could have hung out together.'
âYeah, well ⦠I think she's got stuff happening.'
You used to make stuff happen too, Stella!
I'm on the point of yelling.
âI'm going swimming now!' I shout at her. âA bit of rain won't kill me and it wouldn't kill you either!'
âOkay, okay,' she says. âDon't take out your hang-ups on me!'
Hang-ups!
I go back into the hall and it's then I see the a mauve envelope sitting innocuously on the hall table. The loopy letters of my name and address on the front have been written in blue ink with a fountain pen. Apart from official letters from banks and phone companies and the university, I don't get any mail. But here it is, a fat letter addressed to me. I turn it over in my hands. No name, but an address in Castlemaine that I don't recognise. It's obviously from an old person, but ⦠what old person do I know, and why would they be writing to me?
I put my swimming bag down and set the envelope back on the table next to the little vase of white flowers and stand looking at it a while. It's almost as if I've stumbled on an artefact from long ago, or received a message from another planet. As far as I'm concerned it has value, sealed up tight as it is. Why actually
open
it? Why spoil the delicious sense that all kinds of possibilities are hidden inside that sealed square?
But of course I have to open it. I go out onto the front porch, tear open the envelope and take out eight pages of cheap, lined writing paper that have been carefully filled back and front with the same blue-ink loopy scrawl as on the front of the envelope. As I read each page I let it drop onto the brown tiles, one by one, and at the end I'm left staring down at them.
Eventually I pick them up and sit down on the top step to read them again.
To my dearest granddaughter Perpetua!
My only daughter's only child!
I think of you every single day. Every day I wonder what became
of you, if you are happy and healthy, if you are good at school, if
you have friends. Lord, if I could just see you!
My own daughter, Cecilia, your mother â who used to slam
down the phone whenever she heard my voice, and now I don't
even have a phone number for her â her brothers think she has left
the country, but where would she go? It feels just as though she has
disappeared off the face of the earth. I am eighty-eight years old;
I'm not a fool. I know I don't have much time left.
Forgive me for writing, Perpetua. I woke up one morning with
this strong conviction that I must contact you. So I got onto little
Evie, who is Declan's girl, and I asked her to see if she could find
you. I won't go into how she did it but I don't think it was strictly
above board. Anyway, after I had the address I prayed long and
hard before I sat down to write. But I decided in the end that there
are things that need to be said. There are things you need to know.
I never knew my own mother. I was brought up by the Good
Shepherd nuns, in a convent in Abbotsford, quite near where you
live. So you and I have that in common, not knowing our mothers,
I mean. All I know about her was that her name was Sadie. When
I left the convent I lived at the Catholic girls' hostel of St Anne's
on the corner of Rathdowne and Victoria streets, which burnt down
some years back. I worked for the public service in Melbourne for
nearly eight years at Treasury Place. They were by far the happiest
years of my life. I mean the ones after school and before I got married.
Maybe one day I'll get a chance to tell you more.
Please keep reading! I'm not just some crazy old woman. I am
old but I have all my wits about me! If you saw me you would
be proud of me! I stand quite straight and every day I walk to the
shop. Until last year I was able to kneel by my bed on the mat to
say the rosary every night. My knees have gone now so I've taken
to sitting in the chair while I pray. The man Louis at the shop is
my best friend now that Evelyn has gone. He is from Greece and
has had a sad life. He tells me he has no faith because of all the
terrible things he saw during the war in his home village, and who
am I to argue or try to convince him? He helps me up the steps
and I sit with him a while before we decide what I need that day.
If I'm there before eleven in the morning he gives me a cup of that
strong coffee. I don't tell him that I'd rather a cup of tea because it
might hurt his feelings. He saves me something every single day.
Sometimes it's a choice apple, the next day it's a banana or some
of those big black grapes that I love. When he gets things on special
then he tells me. I tell you, he is more use than any of my damned
sons and their interfering wives! A terrible thing to say I know,
but it is the truth.