I need to say a big thank you to Randi, who helped convert this rambling chaotic monstrosity into a story. How she manages to untangle my scribbles, always amazes me.
Kalvin my husband, stumbled ashen faced into the living room. His eyes vacant.
Frightened, I asked, "What's the problem sweetheart, you look terrible."
He raised his phone, to indicate he had received a call, adding, "I just got a call from Leo." He flopped down on the sofa beside me.
"Is he okay?" I asked nervously.
He didn't answer, just sat staring into space as if he hadn't heard me. "Kalvin, you're scaring me. Is everything all right?"
He turned slowly. "No, no it's not. He's ill."
Starting to feel a little panicky myself. I asked, "What do you mean ill?"
He reached for my hand. Gripping it tightly, his words stalled as he spoke. "He has a brain tumour, and it's bad."
I raised my other hand to cover my shock. Being a nurse I understood what this meant. "How bad?"
"They have given him six months at best."
"What!" Now I was shocked, I felt the blood drain from my face.
Kalvin stared at me, empty, catatonic. I squeezed his hand. "Where is he?"
"Apparently, he's at the batch."
"By himself? God, that's not a good idea, Hon."
"No, I agree. I'm going up there. He can't be left by himself."
I nodded in agreement. "Yes, that's a good idea, Hon. When are you leaving?"
He looked down at his watch. "Now, I'm going now. I can sort work and other stuff out from up there. Jesus, Phoebe, six months."
"Hon, it'll be okay; there's new treatments, medication, it might not be that bad. Medicine has moved forward a long way. There are so many new treatments."
"Apparently, he has turned down treatment. He said he wants quality over quantity."
"That's ridiculous. You need to try and convince him."
"I don't know, Hon, he sounded pretty adamant, although he did sound lost."
"I'll get a bag packed. How long are you going for?"
"Plan on a week, but we'll take it as we find it." He leaned over and wrapped me in his gloriously strong arms. I always felt safe and comfortable in his arms.
We rushed through packing his bag and before I knew it, I was waving goodbye as he sped off in his work truck.
As I walked back inside the concern and worry crept in. Poor Leo. I met Leo when I met my husband. They were best mates. I was a nursing student studying at Dunedin university. Kal and I met, as everybody does, at a pub. The Bats were playing and the place was packed. I was with a bunch of other nurses when he barged in, beer in hand, sending me flying.
Helping me up from the floor, he apologised without being able to mask his laughter. "Sorry, are you okay?"
As I dusted myself off. Not a very ladylike position spread-eagled on the floor of a pub full of students, I said, "Christ watch where you're bloody well going next time aye."
"Sorry, Doll, but, you were standing in the doorway."
"We were waiting for friends."
"Yeah, okay, my fault. Let me buy you a drink."
I handed him my now empty glass. "Bacardi and coke please."
I turned back to my friends who were all laughing. "Cor, Phoebe, he's a bit of all right."
"Fucking clumsy, that's what he is."
Emily piped up loudly, "Well if you don't want him babe, step back because I bloody do."
The others all laughed.
That was my introduction to my spunk husband. Kalvin, or as I called him, Kal. When we started dating, it didn't take long to meet his best mate and lifelong friend Leo. Kal was the quiet one, really. Well, not quiet but more reserved. Leo was the boisterous party animal. He was a student, as well studying business. Kal was an apprentice carpenter. They were both Dunedin boys. I was an Aucklander. Not a match made in heaven, not at first, but it didn't take me long to figure out Kal was the man for me. He was special: good natured, hard working and yet still fun.
Separating him from Leo was the hard part. They were best mates and I mean best. They did everything together: played for the same rugby team. shared flats, cars. They were worse than my girlfriends.
Leo was best man at our wedding. Kal, returned the favour. Leo was the high flier. He joined his father's property development firm, and his career took off.
Kal was the opposite: he focused on his building career, and thankfully, me.
Leo, on the other hand, liked the high life, parties, lots of girlfriends.
Kal and I found a nice house, and once I started work at the hospital, we were able to save enough to buy our first house.
It was Leo's dad who helped us with the deposit.
After Leo's first marriage broke down he decided he had enough of Dunedin and moved to Auckland to make his own mark on the world.
His first wife, Chloe, caught him having an affair and divorced him. Their relationship was so toxic. He decided that he was going to get the hell out. It was the first time I saw Kal and Leo fall out. Chloe had barely delivered their son, Jacob. Kal was pissed off that Leo wasn't going to stick around to help out his son. Kal felt like Leo had abandoned his family, and that did not sit well with him.
It took several years before they reconnected. That turned out to be his second wedding. If nothing else, it got the terrible twosome back together.
Their big thing was their love of rugby. They were both huge Highlanders fans, and Leo brought them both season tickets. Yeah, money was tight in our household, but not for Leo, he enjoyed splashing the cash, and to a certain degree, rubbing it in Kal's face. Not in a nasty way, but he did like to let Kal know.
Leo's second wife, Katherine, was the glue that helped reunite Leo with his son Jacob.
Leo's family had a holiday home, slash batch, at Stephens Bay in Tasman Bay. It wasn't anything flash or expensive, just a small three bedroom batch. School holidays and Christmas, Katherine made a point of ensuring Leo collected Jacob and taking them to Stephens Bay. Most times we got dragged along, as well. Katherine and I actually managed to become good friends.
We often sat on the beach watching Leo, Jacob and Kal, out in the dinghy setting nets fishing and just generally clowning around. "Look at those two idiots," she used to quip. We sat with out glasses of wine relaxing, enjoying the sun. They were great days, especially after our daughter Drew was born. They became real family holidays for us all.
What I did notice, though, was that by the seventh year things were cooling between them. There was a gap opening.
Leo and Kath flew down for a weekend visit. The boys never missed a Highlanders/Crusaders clash.
Anyway, while they were off at their game. I organised a girls' night out. I invited some of my friends from the hospital and we went out on the town. God it was a fun night, more like a hens' night than a girls' night. We all got seriously trashed.
When we got home, we opened another bottle of wine and sat in the lounge. It was then,that Kath opened up. "Phoebe, Bloody Leo is driving me crazy. He goes off with his mates all the time. I want a family and he doesn't. It pisses me off."
"Hey, sweets, he'll come around. Just do it."
"Do what?"
Well, stop taking the pill, don't tell him. Once you're pregnant he'll get over it."
"God no, he would freak. He is adamant he doesn't want any more kids. I love Jacob, but I want kids of my own."
"Wow, so what are you going to do?"
She gave me a funny look. "I've met somebody else."
"Oh my god. Do you mean as in another fella?"
"Yes, exactly. He's lovely."
"Oh, honey, that's going to kill Leo. He will be broken arsed."
"Well, it's his own fault. He goes off with his mates. If it's not motor racing, it's the horses. Out drinking till all hours. He doesn't care that I'm stuck at home by myself. Half the time I think he's seeing other birds, anyway."
"You think he's cheating on you?"
"Yeah, he does have a track record."
"Yeah, but Hon, he loves you. Kal and I both see it."
"I think he does in his own way, but I think he just likes to have his cake and eat it, too."
"No sweets, you're wrong. He wouldn't do that."
We drank our wine and she said, "I am so close to leaving him."
Just then the boys barged in, arm in arm singing and falling all over each other. Leo stumbled drunkenly over and fell into Katherine's lap. "Hey babe, feeling horny?"
She pushed him off onto the floor. "Piss off, Leo."
Kal stumbled over and flopped beside me. "Hey sweets. Do I get a kiss?"
I loved him when he was like this. Usually he is a bit straight and maybe a bit too rigid, but after a few drinks he is so funny and loveable.
We had a great night, but I'm not sure Kath and Leo's was so good.
It was about eight months later when Leo called with the bad news. He was drunk when Kal answered the phone. "The cheating slut's left me, mate. She fucked off with some fucking knob from the gym."
I heard the whole conversation. Kal was distraught and invited Leo down for the weekend.
Leo always had some scheme he wanted a hand with. He dragged Kalvin all over the country on stupid boys' trips. I have to say, at first I was a bit nervous, after what Katherine said about Leo, I wondered exactly what did they get up to on those bloody trips?
Kal, however, was a different man. There was never any doubt in my mind that he loved me.
So here we were, our daughter Drew off at University in Wellington studying Psychology.
Kal called about eight thirty that night. "Hi, Hon. I made it."
"How's Leo?"
"Not so good. Wow, I have never seen him like this. He is depressed. I mean he looks okay. On the outside you would never know."