It is late spring and already quite
warm, so, in accordance with the current ideas on childcare, I am put outside,
rain or shine, for my afternoon nap. Mama likes me to sleep as much as possible.
Not, as she maintains, to ensure healthy growth, but because I am less trouble
asleep in the garden than awake in the parlour, waiting to be entertained and
not taking ‘no’ for an answer.
On this particular afternoon, a black
cat of uncertain age and origin slinks up to my pram and joins me with an
elegant leap into its confines. This cat has the long spiky fur of a scruffy,
unkempt alley cat. She is heavy with sleep and the four kittens she is about to
deliver. She covers my face with her warm furry body and we drift into an
in-between world where cats and humans have the same status. I am happy. I can hear music – rhythmical, spherical
pulsations - through the contented purring of my feline guardian. This world
has been a strangely perturbing experience that I am not anxious to prolong.
Perhaps this is the day my unborn sister and I are to be reunited.
There is an angry screech and I am
snatched from the warmth and security of my cat’s cradle. The tabby leaps to
safety and disappears into the safety of the bushes, never to be seen again.
How can I forgive Mama for plucking me back from the
threshold of eternity?
From now on, I am closely guarded. I no
longer sleep in my pram in the fresh air, but in a barred cot in a room closed
to all but those who can reach the high doorknob. Apparently I have had a
narrow escape. My encounter with the cat has been interpreted as a bad omen and
Mama is ashamed that she has been leaving me outside for hours on end instead
of tending me lovingly.
So in future she will
make more serious efforts to love me. Is it my fault that I never sense actually
being loved, but only her well-meant efforts in this direction?
I can forgive her, though. Left to my
own devices in the confines of my cat-free cushioned prison, I watch the
shadows of other friendly spirits playing upon the walls and listen to the music
my inner spirit plays and sings, and a kind of love reaches out from me to that
lonely spirit out there fighting against her paucity of motherly love. I don’t
really need people to amuse me. I am at my most creative when uninterrupted by
the niceties of behaving suitably in company, even though I am only an infant.
By the time Dada comes home from the
office, I am usually bathed, powdered, fed and back in my padded cell for the
night. But I always listen for his footsteps in the hallway. He comes into my
room and lifts me out of my reveries, despite Mama’s protests to ‘leave her
alone’. He throws me into the air and catches me and never lets me fall. I
gurgle a short sequence to let him know that I am happy that he is back and we
laugh into each other’s eyes and I forget that I am only me alone, and that my
sister rejected this life together.
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