1. Recessional –
The final week..
No. I don't regret anything that I've done: why should I? She's my daughter: I carried her for nine months; I struggled to raise her; I put up with the pitying, disapproving glances, the barbed insults and the sneers. They hardened me against what she herself would hurl at me as she grew up: she was always stubborn – she gets that from me and I wouldn't have had her any other way. But – and its what we call a big but – I have no real idea where the vicious and vindictive streak came from; that could only have been from her father's genes (whoever he was)!
No, the older she got the nastier she became, to other people she was a perfect English rose but to me she was a little queen-bitch. When she was fourteen she found out what a 'lesbian' was and strangely enough, she went quiet for a few days. Then soon after discovered that I was one. I won't repeat any of the vitriol that she hurled at me on an almost daily basis: or at least when she didn't want anything: when she did, she was all sweetness and light: the perfect loving daughter. Again. Some of it was my fault: I tended to spoil her; often because it was the only way to get any peace and quiet.
In my own defence I would like to say that I never consciously tried to influence her sexuality although this never stopped her from claiming that I was trying to "turn her into a dyke". May be I should have tried: at least we would have had something in common other than the constant rows.
Things came to a head the weekend before her eighteenth birthday: it was the Saturday before she was due to 'come of age' on the following Friday. Like every other concerned parent; I was waiting up for her. She was supposed to be in by eleven but by midnight I was worried – really worried! The eleven pm deadline was one that she herself had suggested after a discussion.
As the hands on the wall clock got closer to half past midnight, my internal demons began to nag at me.
Is she hurt? Has she been in an accident? Has she been kidnapped? Is she...
.
The front door slammed...
"Samantha?" I called out in a relieved voice.
"W
H
A
T
?"
The answer might as well have been: "Get out of my face!" because that was what my daughter really meant.
She poked her head around the lounge door and glared at me and I steeled myself for the row that we were about to have. I looked at her: her long blonde hair was dishevelled and her heavy make-up smeared.
"What?" She repeated slightly less aggressively.
I smiled a conciliatory smile. "Is everything alright?"
She came into the room and flopped down in the chair opposite me. "Is this going to take long? Only I'm tired and want to go to bed!"
I repeated the question. "Is everything alright?"
"Why shouldn't it be?" She asked shrugging off my concerns.
I swallowed and tried to get rid of the sour taste in my mouth. "I do worry about you, Sammi... I really do."
"Yeah, well..." Her anger seemed to subside. "I'm okay, honest, mom. We were just celebrating my birthday. That's all."
I carefully avoided mentioning her street-wise precocious friends of whom I did not approve: what mother ever does? I sniffed: and said the wrong thing entirely. "Have you been drinking?"
I regretted it as soon as the words were out. "I'm eighteen!" She snapped.
"No you are not!" I countered. "Not till next Friday you're not." My voice sounded tired: she really was wearing me down.
"Linny's folks let her drink when she was seventeen!" My daughter snapped.
I sighed. "I'm not concerned about her: only you." Then I made my next mistake. "Who else was there?"
She rolled her eyes theatrically. "Oh just us girls... And our
boyfriends.
" She really emphasised the last word.
I sighed, I had already suspected that she was sexually active to some degree or other and added. "Do be careful, Sammi."
Was it guilt? I don't know, but she suddenly exploded. "Oh I am! I take precautions every time. I don't care what you say, I love it! What's more: you can't stop me! I love Alan and he loves me... Or would you rather I slept with Linny?.. I know that you hate boys... So what do you know?" She shrieked, jumping to her feet. "I'm not gay, you know. I'm not going to become a lesbian!"
I closed my eyes, bit back on my next remark and tried to tell her the real reason that I was waiting up. "Sammi... I've got some good news..."
"I don't care: I'm going to bed!" She snapped and ran out of the room.
"... we've won the lottery." I announced quietly to the slamming door.
* * *
I didn't see her before two the following afternoon: I put Sunday lunch on hold and waited for "her Ladyship" to appear. Eventually the door swung open and a sickly, hungover figure tottered into the kitchen. She looked even more pale than usual.
"Been sick!" The apparition mumbled. "Don't want nothing!"
I sighed... Lunch was off. I watched her as she folded herself onto a chair at the opposite end of the kitchen table: she looked so small and frail. "Oh, Sammi!"
"What?" She tried to snap, but her heart just wasn't in it. "Leave me alone!"
I winced. "Try a bit of dry toast... It can help settle the stomach." I said trying to be helpful.
Suddenly she made a gagging noise, clamped her hand over her mouth and ran out of the room. I heard something splash onto the hall floor and went to get the mop and bucket.
That evening, I left her watching television and drove across town to the club where I was a member. It was a lady's club: I had been going there for years and it was a sort of second home to me. As you will realise,
"Lady's"
is a euphemism for
"Lesbian's"
and yes, there still are a few of
those
clubs left in the UK, although
"The Fish on a Bicycle"
was probably the only one left in the whole of the Midlands. It had a shabby gentility about it, which suited me. It's still there and is much the same even now, so I'm not complaining.
I sat in the lounge at the club: I was deep in thought and nursing a cup of coffee. The lounge was rather like a large sitting room, but without a TV. I was there for one reason and one reason only – to give myself somewhere to think. I had a homophobic daughter who was beyond my control and was, I feared, going to get herself pregnant by one of the spotty morons that she hung around with. I needed to do something: but what? Had I actually any right to interfere? Oh, sure; I was her mother, but in less than a week she would be an adult and I would lose her completely.
No I was not a "clingy" parent but I was HER parent: her only one: I felt responsibility: but was that all? I know that I am stubborn: that's where Sammi gets it from. She'd backed me into a corner with her torrent of abuse and assorted insults: but she hadn't worn me down. I felt that I had a parental responsibility to make sure that my daughter grew up into a well-balanced woman and not an obnoxious brat. In my own way I had taken that responsibility seriously.
I signalled to the young Asian woman who was hovering over in the corner of the lounge. She came trotting over to me and addressed me with a cheerful. "Yes, Ma'am?"
She was tall and leggy, a fact emphasised by her ultra-short waitress's costume and little white pinafore. "Ah, Wendy..." – Not a very 'Indian' name – "...is there any more coffee please?"
She smiled and answered in a surprisingly deep voice. "I'll just get you another cup."
A familiar voice behind me added. "Make that two!"
I didn't need to turn. "Hallo, Maud, what brings you here on a Sunday?"
She sank untidily into the armchair opposite as the click-clack-click of Wendy's heels vanished towards the kitchen. She sighed. "Oh you know; same old, same old.."
Which I translated from middle-aged-lesbian-speak into English and got: "I was lonely!" Maud was perhaps twenty years older than me and of the faction that described its self as 'butch'. Me? I'm a woman... I've never thought I needed a sub-gender.
Wendy reappeared with a silver tray on which she balanced our coffee, the cream jug and the sugar basin. She had not quite mastered the art of balancing on 4" heels and carrying a tray of drinks, so she apologised for the spillage.
"Don't worry about it." Maud reassured her. "How you feeling?"
Wendy grimaced. "Still a bit sore: but its worth it. Can't wait to go all the way. Dr Kaur says that she can fiddle the whole 'living as a woman' bit and I can start surgery as soon as she can sort out the paper work."
I felt as if I'd been slapped: this beautiful, tall and willowy creature was actually transgender?
My bump of curiosity was niggling at me when she walked away after serving the coffee. "She's never a transwoman?"
Maud chuckled. "Give her chance: she only got castrated her last Wednesday – she's still transitioning!" She smiled wistfully. "Personally, I can't wait for her to finish her, er, upgrades."
"Maud!" I snapped in surprise.
"What?" She laughed as she poured cream into her coffee. "If she wants to be a beautiful woman and work at this club then she can expect us all to be queuing up to get into her panties and pop her cherries."
"I didn't know that we allowed pre-op TG's as members: or employees." I said in an attempt to cover my surprise.
She sipped her coffee genteelly, which was at odds with her appearance. "We have to move with the times, old thing." She said in her public school voice. (Yes, she had been expelled from one of the best schools in the country.) "Besides she's one of Milly's converts."
"Ah. That Milly!" Milly, the former stress councillor whose hobby seemed to be turning men into women.