The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Síða 28

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Síða 28
138 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING/SUMMER 1995 AGE CANNOT WITHER By Betty Jane Wylie In the spring of 1965 Catherine is still re- covering from the accident that killed her husband and left her with two broken arms and a broken head. Head patched and both arms still in casts, but home from the hospital, she has been unable to refuse her mother’s offer to come and stay with her to help with the children. Catherine sits for hours, doing nothing, eyes sightless as she gazes inside herself down a tunnel of time to a sunlit place in the past when she was whole and fearless and never thought to question life. Yes, but there had been fears. Fear was in other people. They put it into her. Looking back, Catherine can’t remember Kate — herself as a child — be- ing afraid of death, but she still remembers the first fear of age that Kate encountered. Aunt Lorna had given it to her, no gift. Lorna was Kate’s aunt by marriage, un- cle Hans’s wife, a strong, beautiful woman who wanted more than she realized she had. Kate didn’t know that, Catherine re- bukes her own present editorial judgment. If this trip down memory lane with her childhood self is to have any value at all, Catherine must not impose her adult con- sciousness nor her hindsight knowledge on any of these early lessons Kate was learn- ing. Kate has something to teach her now. Catherine can reconstruct and supply later information — facts only, for clarity’s sake — but she must not interfere. She knows that. Let the child Kate unreel the past on a private viewing screen. Let Catherine make of it now what she can, without shad- owing Kate’s world with her own dark present. Time enough. World enough. Dark enough. So — Lorna. Kate’s mother Anna said that Lorna was a jealous woman. Maybe that explained something to her, but it did not mean any- thing to Kate. Aunt Lorna lived in a tiny house that was a duplicate of the summer cottage next door that Kate and her family occupied each summer, except that Lorna’s house was winterized and crowded, with plastered, painted walls and real curtains and good carpets and an indoor bathroom. On the other neighbouring side of the house, but farther away, across an expanse of lawn, stood the Big House, the one Lorna’s husband, Hans, and Kate’s mother, Anna, had grown up in, still occupied by Kate’s grandparents, Petur and Anna, and by their eldest child, the widowed Karin, and their unmarried sons, Svenn and Johann. When Svenn married, he built a mod- ern two-story house across the street for himself and his bride, and drove a car to work. Hans continued to walk with his fa- ther and Svenn. In bad weather he would drive the store delivery truck and act as chauffeur. If he minded that he had never left Paradise to go to university as Svenn and Johann had done, he never said.

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The Icelandic Canadian

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