Elsie held the little porcelain figure in her hand and
regarded it thoughtfully. She'd always hated it - ever since George had first
brought it home on her birthday and laid it proudly before her, like a cat
presenting an expired mouse to its horrified owner.
"It's horrible" she'd growled, contemptuously. "Whatever made you buy that?" she spat, without even the
slightest attempt to season the cold nakedness of her words with a hint of
gratitude for the thought behind the gift. Elsie was the kind of person who
called a spade a spade and was proud of it.
George looked
pained... crestfallen... devastated. Like a small child receiving an unnecessarily sharp rebuke for a relatively minor offence. "I... I thought you would like it" he stammered, trying to conceal his hurt. "Look - it's a little bear - with a
hat - and a collar and tie. I thought it was cute" he ended,
lamely.
"I'm not having it in the house. I don't want the ladies from the
guild thinking I've no class, cluttering up the house with cartoon ornaments. It's junk - get rid of it!" she ordered. And that was that.
Or at least,
it would have been... had George not been made of sterner stuff than his wife
gave him credit for. He just couldn't - wouldn't - discard the porcelain
testament of the love he held for the unappreciative Elsie. Over the ensuing
months, he would tuck it away, half-hidden, behind a picture-frame or a vase
until, inevitably, she would discover it and the game of 'hide-and-seek' would
begin anew. Many a time she wondered why she simply didn't throw it away or
'accidentally' drop it, but there was something about its irritating 'please
love me' expression that mysteriously prevented her from doing so. That was
impossible, but she hated it - hated it with a passion. "Blast the man!" she
would say.
And so it went. Until the fateful day she received a call from
George's office. The voice on the 'phone sounded like that of a concerned parent
speaking to a little child. Was she sitting down? They were terribly sorry. There had been an... 'incident'. It was so sudden. He wouldn't have felt a thing. If ever there was anything they could do, it said. She put down the 'phone,
slunk into the chair beside it - and let the tears explode from her soul. She
cried for two hours, then put on her best coat and went down to the hospital
mortuary. When she returned, she was clutching a bag containing her late
husband's personal effects. Along with his watch, wallet and wedding ring was a
little porcelain bear which was found in his pocket when he died. For a moment
she wondered why, but other concerns drove the thought from her mind. She made
herself a cup of tea, watched 'Coronation Street', then went to bed. Elsie never
cried again.
A few months later, the sum total of poor George's life lay
in an assortment of boxes and carrier bags in a corner of the hall. In one of
the boxes, lying on top of George's best lambswool sweater, was the object of Elsie's
loathing - smiling inanely at the ceiling as if it expected the ceiling to smile
back. "Hark at me" she thought. "It's almost as if I thought the blasted thing
was alive." She laughed at her foolishness and consoled herself with the
knowledge that, from tomorrow, it would be gone forever. Sam from next door had
offered to drive George's things down to the charity shop in the town. Then it
would be time to forget the past and move on. A new optimism had recently begun
to permeate her soul and she looked forward to the future with enthusiasm. Life
with George seemed almost like a dream.
"This all there is?" Sam asked
when she opened the door to his knock the next morning. He took the carrier bags first, then
carried out the boxes one by one, puffing and grunting as he did
so.
"Last one" he said. As he stooped to pick it up, Elsie's eye fell
upon a small porcelain object and a strange sensation suddenly welled up within
her. Feelings of grief, loss, pain, remorse, pity - a Kaleidoscope of emotions
that threatened to engulf her. "Wait a minute" she heard herself saying as she
plucked the figure from atop the sweater. "That's it, Sam. Thanks very much for
all your help" she said, in a slightly bewildered tone.
Elsie held the
little porcelain figure in her hand and regarded it thoughtfully. She had always
hated it - but - now she was astonished to find that she couldn't stand the
idea of being parted from it. She couldn't explain why, but that's how she felt. Sometimes
people are surprised to find that they are not as hard, or as heartless, or as
unfeeling as they imagine themselves to be.
And so it was with Elsie. She
looked at the little porcelain bear and thought of George - and remembered how
much she'd loved him - and realized just how much she missed him. Tenderly, she caressed the small figure, kissed the top of its head, and then placed it on the
top shelf of her very best display cabinet where visitors would be sure to see
it. Then she
smiled to herself, made a cup of tea, and sat and thought of all her wonderful
years with George. "Bless the man!" she sighed. From its prize position in the
display cabinet, the little bear sat and smiled at Elsie.
And - wherever
he happened to be - no doubt George was smiling too.
2 comments:
Is this another of yours, Kid?
If so, by heck, you're on form today!
Now, stop trying to make us all gulp, you sentimental old buggah, you!
This reminds me, we have all manner of things saved from pets departed!
I'm far too modest (as everyone surely knows) to say, JP. The 'author' (ooh, that'll keep you guessing) wrote it a few years back.
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