Blame, blame, blame. Nag,
nag, nag. That’s all Margaret heard, all she felt. It was, for the most part,
all she knew. For years now she had craved a different kind of attention from
her mother. Instead of recriminations and impatience, she wanted warmth, joy,
love. Above all, she wanted to make her mother proud.
That
was her ultimate goal, her main aim. It was an obsession, a compulsion, a need
in her. Not because she particularly wanted her mother’s approval. It was too
late for that now, too much water had spewed mercilessly under the rickety old
bridge that she stood on to watch her life pass by. No, the reason was one of
satisfaction for her; it would be a job completed that had been started decades
ago.
And
now, at almost forty, Margaret thought it was about time she got on with it.
This year she would succeed.
Living
with her mother made it both much easier and much harder to come up with
schemed and plans and plots to get that small smile, that nod of the head, that
hug. Easier because Margaret could pounce on the least little thing and make it
into something that would help her get what she wanted. Harder because each
time the idea failed, she had to live with the jibes and snide comments that
went with it.
Nonetheless,
she kept trying.
Cleaning
the house. That, she had thought, would please her mother. Top to bottom every
Saturday, and a run round with the Hoover on Tuesdays and Thursdays to keep it
fresh. And all this before work. Or after it if she got up late. Or sometimes
pushed to the next day if it had to be, if the car wouldn’t start or she got
held up. But whatever and whenever, it was done. Eventually.
But
apparently it was not done well enough.
“Look
at this dust, Margaret. You’ve missed this whole shelf, Margaret. Did you use
the blue cloth for the toilet, Margaret?”
“Sorry,
Mum.”
It
was always, “Sorry, Mum.”
Even
when she wasn’t.
These
days, most of the time, she wasn’t. She was usually already thinking of the
next thing she could do to make her mother proud as the words came
automatically from her mouth.
After
the cleaning idea came the driving. She became a taxi service, when she wasn’t
at work, anyway. Each evening it was bingo or the pub or the book club. Every
evening there was something. Her mother was a busy woman, very sociable and
very keen on late finishes, whether it be a friend’s birthday party or a trip
to the theatre. It was all so tiring for Margaret, who enjoyed being at home
early, tucked up and snuggled in, warm and comfy cosy. It was time consuming.
It was not, she felt, appreciated.
“You’re
driving too fast, Margaret. You’ve missed the turning, Margaret. You’re going
to hit that car, Margaret.”
Margaret
was within the speed limit, she knew a shortcut, and she was nowhere near the
car in front of her.
But
still; “Sorry, Mum.”
“I’ll
drive myself from now on. I don’t know why you insisted on doing it for me
anyway. I’m perfectly capable.”
“Sorry,
Mum.”
Margaret
did, sometimes, wonder why she was so bothered. She wondered why she stayed.
After all, she could quite easily afford it.
Of
course, Margaret’s pride was at stake. That was the reason. And she promised
herself that once she had made her mother love her, or like her, or at least be
mildly pleased with her, she would leave.
It
was serve the old bag right anyway.
Why
couldn’t she break through? Even as a child it had been the same. Marks in
school had been too low (even when they had been the highest in the class). Her
friends had been too common. Her uniform always looked a mess.
When
she got a little older, her boyfriends had all been rude, ungrateful, potential
thieves and mass murderers. Or they may as well have been, according to her
mother.
So
eventually, Margaret gave up on having one.
It
was easier that way. Much, much easier.
And
the easy route was always the best one, wasn’t it? Which was probably why she
had never said anything to her mother about the problem. It was just easier not
to. Margaret supposed the habit of criticising had just stuck, and now her
mother didn’t know how to stop it.
Margaret
didn’t know either. Which was a problem.
And
she was close to running out of ideas that would – or could – make her mother
proud.
She
had been awarded a first class honours degree in English. Her mother asked her
why she hadn’t done any of the sciences.
“Sorry,
Mum.”
She
had already changed her job. Twice. To no avail. She had loved nursing, but her
mother mentioned that she might be better off teaching. And when she had
settled in at the new school, her mother had suggested that all the best jobs
were to be found in banking.
Margaret
sat at the dining table, sighing loudly, Open University brochures sprawled out
in front of her, reams of job applications to this school or that hospital
piled up to her side.
She
was making a decision.
It
was time.
Mother
be damned.
Margaret
could her hear mother complaining on the phone to a long-suffering and
terminally patient friend. “I’ve lost my glasses again, Henrietta. Lost them
completely. I only had them a moment ago and now I’ve no idea where I put
them.”
Mother
may not have known, but Margaret did.
And
Margaret had an idea. She got up from the table and rushed away to the other
end of the house, to the kitchen, where she had seen her mother’s glasses
earlier that day. She would retrieve them, and all would be well. So off she
went.
She was soon busy searching for the glasses
that she knew – just knew – had been
left in the kitchen. And there they were, wedged up against the bread bin,
squeezed in next to the toaster.
Margaret
plucked them out and held them up, triumphant. She smiled to herself,
forgetting all about the plans she had been making to live her own life. No,
these glasses were the key to everything.
And
then there would be no more excuses.
No
more reasons to stay behind.
No
more reasons to not do what she wanted, to have to stay where she was.
Where
it was comfortable. Where it was easy.
Where
it was safe.
Margaret
slowly put the glasses down on the counter, where they could easily be seen.
Where they could easily be found.
She
shuffled back to the dining room and sat again, pretending to look through
brochures that she would never really read.
Her
mother’s voice drifted in through the open door and the words settled on
Margaret, heavy and damning.
“And
I’m worried about my glasses. I wonder if Margaret knows where they are?”
Sorry, Mum,
Margaret thought. You’re just going to
have to thank St Anthony when you find them. It’s nothing to do with me.
She
gathered the shiny prospectuses and crisp forms together and wondered whether
they would all fit in the bin.
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