Chapter 2.
My mother
taught me how to be a tea lady. With
admirable patience she trained me in every aspect. From boiling water to
reading tea leaves. I have such fond
memories of sitting alone with my mother at our kitchen table, late into the
night, dunking biscuits into teacups brimming with hot milky tea, radiant
warmth coming from the old Metters stove, the soothing sound of the radio in
the background. In hushed tones mother would tell me about her life. She told me with great understatement, how she
represented not only our home town of Wattlebird, but also Western Australia in
the State finals which she then went on to win, thus becoming — Australian tea
lady of the year.
And as I sat and sipped my tea, mother
would feed me one, or more, of her secrets. ‘Warm the pot, always warm the pot, child.’
Mother also had firm ideas on marriage.
“Marry the dullest man you can possibly find, child.That way no woman will ever
take him away from you.”
I’ve since had much time to reflect on this
pearl of wisdom. You see, my father, as I was later to find out, had many years
before when I was still a babe in arms, run away with a Cabaret singer, never
to be seen again. I suspect my father was a bit of a livewire and a ladies’ man
that could charm the birds out of the trees. But he broke my mother’s heart.
And so not wanting my own heart, broken, I vowed to my
mother that I’d marry the dullest man I could possibly find.
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