emma vip Sheila Hocken

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emma vip Sheila Hocken Page 10

by Emma V. I. P. (Lit)

again and I was apprehensive as I sat there, Kerensa on my

  lap, getting nearer and nearer home. What would Emma think?

  I was bringing a stranger into the house. Somebody that Emma

  didn't know. Somebody that would need a lot of my attention,

  a lot of my time. I felt a traitor. I felt, after all Emma had meant

  to me and still meant now she was twelve, as if I was somehow

  doing wrong. It may sound incredible, but I didn't want to take

  the baby home. It was as if I was pushing Emma aside for

  something else, something better. I didn't know what to do.

  And when you have a baby, you don't love it instantly-I didn't

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  anyway, and I am sure many mothers feel like this. The baby,

  much as I wanted her, was a stranger, someone I had to get to

  know and love. And at that time in the ambulance, Emma

  meant far more to me than a baby could.

  When we got to the house, I asked the ambulance driver if he

  would mind carrying Kerensa in for me. At least if he did that

  Emma would not be put off by me actually carrying a stranger,

  and we could say hello to each other before she had to accept

  the new being. And that is how it was. The door opened,

  and there was that loving chocolate-brown shape waiting, tail

  wagging and eyes saying, 'Here you are. Where have you been?

  What have you been doing?' I bent down to her. 'Hello,

  sausage,' I said, and she gave snuffles of delight as the ambulance

  driver slipped in behind me and handed the baby to Don.

  In fact, I needn't have worried about Emma accepting the

  baby. The older Kerensa grew, the more Emma took her as

  truly a part of the family. At the same time.I made sure that, in

  Emma's thoughts at least, I made more of her than the baby.

  She got far more titbits than she had ever done before: the

  long-standing rule had to go by the board, although I still had

  to be careful that she didn't put on too much weight. But it

  didn't seem fair to Emma to see this new little creature being

  fed all the time and for her to get nothing. So she got extra

  bowls of milk, and extra biscuits. Also, and more comically,

  squeaky rubber toys sent as gifts to Kerensa inevitably ended

  up, sooner or later, in Emma's paws.

  Ming, on the other hand, was rather jealous of Kerensa when

  she first arrived. So every time I fed the baby, Ming had to

  come and sit on my knee. With her there and Emma at my feet,

  I had more than enough to cope with. But all the animals came

  to accept Kerensa eventually. More than that, in time, Emma

  quite obviously became fond of Kerensa. I don't think she

  would have liked me to know that, but one day I caught her out.

  Kerensa was in her pram outside the back door and Emma was

  pottering about the garden. Someone came round to the back

  of the house and, instead of coming to the door and knocking,

  they stopped to speak to Kerensa. I have never seen Emma

  react so quickly. She raced from the bottom of the garden,

  barking furiously. She got to the pram, hackles raised, and-so

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  unlike her normal sedate self-actually snarled at the woman

  who was bending over the pram. She, in turn, was so frightened

  she took offimmediately in the direction of the gate. Emma had

  given the game away. She really cared for Kerensa!

  Later, Emma suddenly developed an even closer relationship

  with Kerensa. It coincided precisely with the time that Kerensa

  was old enough to sit and eat biscuits on her own. Emma

  discovered immediately that nothing would have been easier

  than to take a biscuit out of that little hand. But to give Emma

  her due, greedy as she may be, she would never do that. She

  used to sit and look furtively at Kerensa, occasionally looking

  away to pretend that she was not in the slightest bit interested.

  And, if she happened to catch my eye, a look would spread

  over her face that suggested she was successfully grappling with

  the temptations of Satan himself. I almost began to think I

  could see a halo beginning to form over those velvety brown

  ears.

  I believe that Kerensa must, from the beginning, have

  thought that Emma was a part of me, because we were always

  together. When she started to talk I was not called 'Mummy'.

  I was called 'Emma'. And Emma was called 'Emma' and most

  other things, too. When she was a young baby and I had to get

  up and feed her in the middle of the night, Emma came too and

  watched all the proceedings. It was as if she had to get up. I

  don't think she was particularly keen on being dragged out of

  her basket in the small hours, but if I was doing it, then she

  considered it her duty as well. No doubt in time she could have

  told me how to make a bottle and change a nappy.

  And whenever Kerensa went out in the pram, Emma

  naturally went too. It was surprising how quickly she adapted

  to the fact that there was a pram in front of me. Emma elected

  to keep on the left side and walk a bit out from the pram. At

  these times it was Kerensa I felt sorry for, however. I still

  hadn't got the hang of going up and down kerbs, and having a

  pram to push made it all the more difficult. Often I wouldn't

  anticipate a kerb, the pram would leap down in front of me,

  Kerensa would get a shaking and Emma would look at me as if

  to say, 'Do be careful.'

  Still, Kerensa survived. I wish I could say that in the early

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  ',I

  part Of 1977 we were as happy about another, more serious,

  aspect of her existence. From the moment I knew I was

  pregnant I had thought about it; so had Don, although he

  rarely said anything about it. Would our baby inherit the family

  eye defect that had so altered the lives of my mother, my father,

  my brother and myself? I was convinced in an odd wayperhaps

  it all went back to Alasdair Macdonald and the circumstances

  of his strange prophecy-that any baby I had

  would have perfect sight. But I knew Don was worried. I also

  knew that if I had not made optimism my defence, I would

  have been as worried as he was.

  There was no way of telling, short of a thorough examination,

  whether, even if her vision seemed right at the outset, it would

  remain so. We had to wait six weeks before Mr Shearing, the

  specialist who had performed my operation and given me sight,

  could make that examination.

  One day his secretary rang to say that Mr Shearing would

  see Kerensa the following Tuesday. As I put the phone down I

  remembered the words of this kind and understanding specialist

  when he had said he would operate on me: 'I don't work

  miracles, lassie.'

  I knew that Don, at least, would be hoping for nothing short of

  a miracle on that next Tuesday.

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  CHAPTER SEVEN

  OVER THE INTERVENING days Don became progressively

  quieter, strangely withdrawn, and tense; not at all his easygoing

  and cheerful self. It was as if there was a spring inside

  him, being wound up tighter and tighter, nearly to breakingpoint.
/>   I tried talking to him about his anxiety, but it was no good. I

  tried getting his mind away from thoughts of Kerensa's eyesight,

  getting him to talk about his painting, the hobby which

  took up most of his spare time, but that was of no use either. I

  knew, equally, that my telling him I felt convinced she would

  have perfect vision would also be useless. All attempts at

  conversation led inevitably back to the only certainty he would

  entertain: the uncertainty of Kerensa's ability to see, and the

  fact that Mr Shearing would dispel all doubts-one way or

  another.

  It was like living with someone who was incessantly spinning

  a coin in his mind, and when Tuesday came I was relieved even

  at the mere action of us all getting in the car for the journey. I

  was beyond thinking of the outcome, or its possible implications.

  Emma curled up on her seat and went to sleep. I had Kerensa

  in my arms. We put a bottle in my bag in case she was upset by

  Mr Shearing looking at her eyes.

  As we went along I looked out of the window and saw the

  trees and fields beside the motorway. Even though they were

  leafless and bleak they held some sort of magic for me because,

  in reverse, this was the journey I had made coming back from

  the hospital the very first time that I could see. Even eighteen

  months later it still made my heart beat faster to go on that

  same journey. But there was one great difference: this time we

  went along in almost complete silence.

  At last we reached Mr Shearing's. 'I'm glad he likes Emma,'

  I said to Don as we got out of the car and I put her lead on.

  8o

  i

  'There aren't many specialists who would let a dog in their

  surgery, are there?'

  'No,' said Don.

  'I mean, he's always so pleased to see Emma, isn't he? I'm

  sure he'd be disappointed if we didn't bring her.'

  'Yes, I expect he would,' said Don.

  I remembered so well that strangely clean and antiseptic

  smell mixed with floor polish. I decided not to bother trying to

  make conversation. We sat in the waiting-room. Kerensa was

  on my knee and Emma sat at my feet. I tried to lose myself in

  the open fire burning in a huge fireplace which took up almost

  a quarter of the room. I watched the flames and was fascinated.

  I loved watching and making pictures in the fire, and imagining

  all sorts of things being there.

  I came out of my dream when the door opened and Mr

  Shearing came in, greeting me as he always had: 'Hello lassie,

  hello there. Come on in.'

  At that moment Don suddenly came across the waiting-room

  and took Kerensa off my lap. I knew how he felt: somehow if he

  held her, everything would be all right. Emma and I followed

  him into the surgery. Don hardly said a word to Mr Shearing.

  'I see Emma's well,' said Mr Shearing over his shoulder; and,

  when we were all in the surgery: 'Now, let's have a look at this

  new little bundle.'

  Don held tightly on to Kerensa as Mr Shearing took his

  various instruments and started peering into her eyes. Don was

  trembling and looked desperately apprehensive. I sat looking

  across at him, wanting to say, 'Don't worry, I know she'll be all

  right-because we love each other. Perhaps she won't be able

  to see, but we would still love each other and any difficulties

  can be surmounted that way.'

  'Hum,' Mr Shearing kept saying infuriatingly. 'Hum ...

  yes ... hm . . .' Apart from that there was a silence in which I

  could hear him breathing, and the clock ticking, and an

  occasional sound from Kerensa.

  'Hmm . . .' said Mr Shearing again. 'Well, you look a nice,

  healthy little girl.' And there was a further silence as he went

  over and put his instruments away.

  Don cleared his throat. 'What's the verdict?' I had never

  8I

  heard his voice tremble like that before. Mr Shearing came

  back across the room and patted Don on the shoulder. Then he

  smiled. 'It's all right, laddie,' he said. 'She'll be all right. She's

  got away with it.'

  Instantly Don's face was a sunburst of relief, happiness and

  pride, all at once. 'Thank God,' he said. 'Thank you lir

  Shearing. Isn't it wqnderful?'

  'I knew she would be able to see,' I said. 'I just did. Oh,

  thank you Mr Shearing.'

  'Ah well ... you're both looking well. You've got no troubles

  with that little girl.'

  It was the way he always, almost self-consciously, brushed

  aside any thanks. I was surprised he didn't start talking about

  Nottingham Forest Football Club, as he had when I thanked

  him after my operation. Instead he turned his attention to

  Emma, bent down, and patted her.

  'Well, how are you, old girl? How's retirement suiting you?

  Has she been taking you out for walks? It looks as if she's been

  feeding you well, anyway, lass.' Then he looked up at me.

  'How are the contact lenses going, lassie?'

  'Oh, marvellous. I'd never go back to glasses.'

  'Good. I wondered if you'd get on all right with those soft

  contact lenses.'

  And with that he showed us out into the February sunshine.

  We stood there for a moment saying goodbye on the

  pavement and I realized, much as I had been convinced that

  everything would turn out for the best, the sun was confirmation

  of our relief. At the same time, I thought: And it will never go

  dark for Kerensa. At that moment, perversely, she began to cry.

  In the weeks that followed the sense of relief changed into

  something quite different, something that could never have

  existed when all I had was a dogged private conviction that

  Kerensa would be able to see properly. Sight to me was like an

  extra faculty that had suddenly been grafted on to my being;

  now Kerensa's sight brought another dimension. I had not had

  a sighted childhood, but now I was able to share hers and it was

  an utterly joyful experience.

  It gave me yet another fresh view of the importance of sight,

  its part in discovery for a child and in the child's growing

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  awareness of everything in the world around. Sight-as I had

  only recently learnt, as an adult-augmented touch and smell

  and hearing, but only through sight were most new experiences

  exciting and beautiful. When I give Kerensa a biscuit, she feels

  it, she smells it, she shakes it to see if it will rattle like a toy; but

  above all, before she bites it, she looks at it so that every piece of

  information about that biscuit is stored in her brain.

  I know, of course, part of the excitement of coming into a new

  world visually, but how much more exciting it must be for a

  baby. Every sound, every smell, every touch-they are all new

  and have to be investigated visually. There are so many things,

  I realize now more than ever, that a blind child will miss in life,

  and so much education is lost because the visual learning is cut

  off. I will never forget the pleasure I saw on Kerensa's face

  when she first saw a b
ird fly over her in her pram. It was a

  miracle to her. As a baby, I would never have seen such a thing.

  And that is why I realize now that birds, apart from their

  sounds, had no place in my consciousness before I could see. I

  had no direct means of knowing they fly about the sky, or

  perch in trees, or hop on the lawn. Kerensa knows from the

  beginning, just as she will know from the beginning that every

  tree is different and that grass is not simply green, but every

  shade of green. I hope I shall be able to bring her up in a way

  that ensures she never loses that first fascination with life, and,

  particularly, the appreciation of the visual side of life.

  Bringing up Kerensa intrigued me and occupied me most of

  my time, especially at the crawling stage-as I need tell no

  parent-although for me there was an extra interest in the way

  Emma dealt with this now-mobile object at her own eye level.

  She was very patient, even when, before I had got the message

  across that it was not allowed, her tail and cars were used as

  painful handgrips to an unsteady standing position. Apart from

  all this, I was also finding time to write a book about Emma and

  myself. And I had other ambitions as well.

  I had always wanted a cattery. Not (at first, anyway) a

  commercial boarding cattery, but a place where I could look

  after the kittens of my own Siamese cats which I had sold to

  people, to make sure that they would come back and be well

  looked after when their owners had to go away. Ming, still as

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  wise and mischievous as ever, was and still is with me, joined by

  Hera, a Red Point, and Rahny, a Tortie Point and, from time

  to time, their offspring, so quite a variety of colours were

  stalking about the house.

  When I was able to see, I was appalled at some of the catteries

  I went to. I would not have trusted them with a pet goldfish, let

  alone my Siamese cats. One in particular left a deep and black

  impression on my mind. The cats were kept in tiny cages, about

  the size of rabbit hutches, perhaps two foot by two to be

  generous. They were lined along the wall of a long shed,

  stacked one on top of the other. When I went in there and saw

 

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