Ride the Tortoise by Liesl Jobson
Author:Liesl Jobson
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Jacana Media
Published: 2013-10-15T00:00:00+00:00
Crest
Iâm ten minutes early at the psychologistâs rooms where the mediation is being held. Kateâs father is there already, talking to his lawyer, whose mascara is punishing. I hold out my hand. Her fingers are sticks, her handshake pointed, hurting.
Iâm wearing my black work skirt, ironed, the mauve silk jacket I bought at a second-hand shop for its good label. The heels do it, make me look competent, perhaps even pretty.
Her father returns to his car, retrieving a folder from the boot. The last jacaranda blossoms fall on the roof. I say to the lawyer, Did he tell you today was the day? She scrutinises me as if sheâs hearing-impaired. Itâs too late to stop the story. I say, Twenty-one years ago today, we got married.
She says, No, he didnât tell me that.
I feel an idiot. But Iâm not finished. I say, I was nineteen.
He returns and rings the doorbell. While we wait, a woman in the street answers her cell phone. She talks loudly, saying, That wasnât the deal; I canât possibly agree. Sheâs big, with cropped hair, wearing quilted salmon. From the way she opens her car door, I know sheâs unafraid.
I carry my laptop in a briefcase. Moral support â that self Iâm still proud of: photographer, writer. Digital codes more real than paper, than court orders.
Inside is dark and cool. A dragonfly hovers above a decorative koi pond at the entrance. This is going to be an expensive two hours. Iâll pay the child psychologist; heâll pay the lawyer.
They open their folders, take notes when I talk, and say things like, Let me remind you⦠find a way forward⦠in the childâs best interest⦠appropriate developmental stage⦠manipulation.
The lawyer tells me Iâm still playing the victim game, but I donât listen too closely because my daughter has changed her mind, doesnât want to go to boarding school after all.
Iâm not sorry her father found out about her overdose from the school. Iâm glad he was humiliated. I donât say so, donât need to. I am sorry I said terrible things about him to my daughter. I promise not to do it again, not because theyâre extracting the words from me, but because I made her cry. Mostly Iâm relieved that the fightâs gone out of this thing, because nobody can make a fourteen-year-old do what she doesnât want to do. No judge in the land. Thatâs what the lawyer says.
I study a framed print of Beethovenâs ear on the wall. Was he still alive when they sloshed his head in blue paint, lying him sideways on the canvas? Was he already deaf? Already dead?
The notes of a symphony wander along the edge of his cheek, superimposed in silver. Strings of quavers crest the helix and anti-helix, twirl about his earlobe, and march out toward the frame.
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