When the television news reader began reading the item about the aircraft crashing in the Amazon jungle, nothing in particular registered with Sally Miles. The reader went on to say that the aircraft had not been located, and the crew and passengers must be presumed to have died in the crash.
It was only when the reader said that it was believed some Australians, yet to be identified, had been on the plane that she took a little more interest.
When next morning she picked up her copy of a tabloid newspaper her interest in the plane crash sharpened.
"Young Man Mourns Parents' Tragic Death," the front page screamed, then the names of the Australians presumed dead were given; Harrison and Angel Harvey.
A picture of a tragic looking young man accompanied the article, and in the top right hand corner a circular black and white photograph of a man and woman had been inserted.
There was no doubt; they were Sally's son-in-law and daughter.
The young man pictured, whose name was given as Ethan Harvey, was there son, and therefore her grandson.
After twenty years of rejection it was hard for Sally to feel much grief for her dead relatives, but her thoughts were for her grandson. She had not seen him since soon after his birth. Now she wondered if she should contact him.
She thought about it for a while, and then went to her writing desk and taking out an address book hunted through it until she found her daughters address. Of course there had been no contact for so many years that they might no longer be at that address.
That morning she went to the Post Office and looked though the telephone directory of the state and city where they had lived. They were still listed at the address she had.
Returning home she sat at the desk thinking for a while. She could telephone, but she decided against this. A letter would keep a little distance between her and Ethan, which she felt appropriate at that stage.
She settled down to write:
Dear Grandson,
This letter may come as a surprise to you but on hearing about the death of your parents I thought it appropriate to write to you.
I do not know what your parents have told you about me, perhaps nothing, but I wondered if you would like some contact with me.
Recently bereaved myself I understand how you must be feeling, and so if, even at this long distance, you think I can do anything to help at this time, please let me know.
If you choose not to respond to this letter, I shall be sorry, but will understand.
Your Grandmother Sally Miles.
Several days later Sally received a reply from Ethan.
Dear Grandmother,
I was delighted to receive your letter.
I knew that you existed and lived in Queensland, but mother and father would never tell me anything about you or the reason for the long standing rift in your relationship with them.
I wonder if you would be prepared to explain the reason for this rift. Of course if you choose not to tell me, then I must respect your decision, but I hope that this will not mean that any further contact between us will cease.
It seems that I have few relatives apart from yourself, and what there are have moved overseas, and so I would welcome continuing contact with you.
Your Grandson Ethan Harvey.
Sally waited a few days before replying to Ethan's letter. She looked several times at his picture in the newspaper and decided that, despite his tragic appearance he was a nice looking and well set up young man.
Like Ethan she had found herself to be without close relatives and what there were had rejected her long ago.
She wrote:
Dear Ethan,
It has made me very happy that you wish to remain in contact with me.
I do not know what your situation is, but I wonder if you would like to spend a little time with me so we can get to know each other.
If you wish to know what caused the break between myself and the rest of the family, I will tell you as truthfully as I can.
You will be very welcome to come and stay with me at Dolphin Heads. If this suits you, please write and tell me.
If you are in need of money I am prepared to pay your air fare.
Let me know how you feel about us meeting.
Your Grandmother Sally Miles.
Almost by return post Sally received Ethan's reply:
Dear Grandmother,
I would certainly like to meet you very much.
There is no need to pay my air fare because I have been left comfortably well off.
I can arrive on the twenty fourth if that is agreeable, and shall travel by car, since I have now inherited my father's car.
Please let me know if this suits.
Your Grandson Ethan.
After sending a letter confirming the date of his arrival Sally began to wonder if she had made the right move.
Since Ethan was sure to ask her about the family rift, and she had said she would tell him about it, she knew she would be risking the loss of yet another relationship before it had really begun.
"I must tell him the truth," she told herself, "because if I don't and he finds out later, it will only be worse. If we are to begin a relationship it must be on an honest basis."
* * * * * * * *
Ethan wondered what his grandmother would look like. No photographs of her, not even old ones, had been kept by his mother.
On the basis of other peoples' grandmothers that he had met he put together what might be called a mental identikit. This was of an elderly lady, probably suffering from arthritis, slightly deaf, wearing thick glasses and having false teeth and a squeaky voice; the sort of caricature that every young person seems to have of grandmothers, even thought the reality is often quite contrary to this.
He did not even know how old she was, and trying to work it out from his mother's age didn't seem to help. He ended up with an age range from early fifties to mid seventies.
It would take him two days to complete the long drive to Dolphin Heads with a night stopover at Goondiwindi just over the Queensland border.
He left his house early on the 23rd and began the drive in his late father's Jaguar, a considerable advance on the Toyota he had been given for his eighteenth birthday.
Leaving Goondiwindi the next day his excitement mounted. His paternal grandparents were both dead, and even while alive he had seen little of them, because like his maternal grandmother they lived a long way from Adelaide.
His maternal grandfather he had never met, and from the little his parents told him, he had been divorced from his grandmother and gone overseas to live, and he had died there.
Ethan traveled east until he met the coast road and then turned north. Late afternoon on the 24th he entered Dolphin Heads, and after making a few enquiries he found the street in which his grandmother lived.
Her house was his first surprise. For no particular reason he had imagined her living in, not poverty, but in modest circumstances.
The house was single storied and stretched out laterally over a wide block. Appropriately it was named, "Long House." Ethan was no judge of architecture but he thought place looked as if is had been built some time in the late nineteenth century, it's wide verandah being something of a give away in this respect.
He hesitated for a moment at the front gate, and then opening it, made his way to the front door. It had an old fashioned bell pull and a brass lion headed knocker. He chose the bell because he had never used or even come across one like this before.
There was a distant clang, a pause, and then footsteps approached. The door was opened and Ethan got his second surprise; the woman who stood before him in no way fitted his arthritic little granny image.
To begin with she was fairly tall for a woman - about three inches shorter than him so he judged her to be around five feet nine. She was dressed in cream slacks that indicated that she had long legs, but how shapely he could obviously not see. She wore a matching cream shirt and its buttons were undone to show just a little of her cleavage.
He was unable to determine her age but she certainly had silver hair that was parted in the middle and then flowed down the sides of her face like a curtain, to spill out over he shoulders.
Confused Ethan said, "Er... I...I've come see my grandmother...er... Sally Miles."
"That's me," Sally said brightly, "and you must be Ethan, I can recognise you from your photo in the news paper."
"Er...yes...I'm...er..."
There was a pause as they seemed to be having difficulty in knowing how to greet each other. Were they supposed to hug and kiss?
Sally dealt with the matter as she extended her hand and said, "Welcome to Dolphin Heads."
As he took her hand in his Ethan noticed her long fingers.
"Yes I...er...thank you."
He had made up so many speeches he'd intended to make when meeting Sally, but they seemed to have got lost irretrievably in some corner of his brain, and so somewhat lamely he said, "I'm...ah...pleased to meet you."
"Come in...come in," Sally said.
She ushered him along a passage and into a gleaming kitchen and indicated for him to sit down.
Ethan had been sitting down in the car for hours, but he was glad to sit now as he tried to come to terms with the now revised image of his grandmother.
"Have you eaten?" Sally asked.