It was a total shock. The telephone rang and on picking it up a voice asked, "Mrs. Rawinsky?"
"Yes."
"Look, I know this might come as a bit of a shock, but I think you're my mother. My name is Noel Vane."
I nearly fainted. "Dear God, after all these years."
As I struggled to respond the images of that time eighteen years ago came back, flashing before me with lightening speed.
Michael Vane...I was so young and he so experienced... the pain of child birth...holding the child... feeding him at my breast...and they took it away from me.
"Its best," said the hospital chaplain, and my parents, relatives and friends. All of them told me, "It's for the best. You're so young, your whole life before you. You don't want to be saddled with a child at your age."
So I signed their papers and saw them take my baby son away, leaving me with a great gaping emotional wound that had never healed completely.
They took my child away and I wasn't supposed to know whom he went to, but I heard; heard the social worker whispering.
"His father's taken him. His wife forgave him. They have no kid's so they've taken him."
"Is that allowed?"
"She signed and it went through all right."
"Poor kid, it's been bloody hard for her."
"Shouldn't have let him get into her knickers."
"Suppose so, but I wouldn't mind him trying to get in to my knickers; bloody nice looking guy."
So Marcia Vane had "forgiven him" and taken my baby.
All that was so long ago, but hearing that never before heard voice on the telephone, there it all was, as if it was only yesterday it had happened.
"Mrs. Rawinsky, are you still there?"
I was jolted back into the present; "Yes, I'm here." "Am I right that you are my mother?"
"You are Noel Vane...? I mean your parents are Michael and Marcia Vane?
"Parents by adoption, yes; but I think you're my real mother."
My brain cleared enough for me to think intelligibly.
"How...how did you find me? They're not supposed to tell you things like that."
"They've changed the law. If someone is adopted and wants to know who their real parents are, they have to tell you."
Of course, I'd been away for so long. I met Pyotr Rawinsky at a conference where I was working as a translator. Dear gentle, loving Pyotr. He was representing his government and I met him quite by chance in the corridor during a break in the session.
I had heard of love at first sight and had always thought it nonsense. When I experienced it, I knew it wasn't nonsense. We looked at each other and in a moment knew.
We said nothing then, and walked on, but for the rest of the conference he sought me out, finding any excuse to talk to me; and I made sure I was well in his way.
After the conference was over he returned to his country; a land of mountains and flood, but his letters came almost daily. He was considerably older than me, but I knew I was in love and certainly he constantly wrote of his love for me.
His proposal came by letter, but before I accepted I wrote to him of my affair with Michael Vane and the consequent pregnancy. I wanted nothing hidden, and if what I had done was unacceptable to Pyotr, then now was the time for me to know.
He wrote back immediately, and the letter consisted of only three words; "I love you."
It was enough. After months of bureaucratic wrangling I joined Pyotr and we were married.
I knew that Pyotr occupied a position of some importance in his country, but had no idea of his actual wealth. It was only when we were married and I met many of his friends and colleagues, I realised that I had married someone who in a country with a monarch as head of state, would have been an aristocrat.
I had not even seen our home before we married, and was therefore astonished and a little overawed when I saw the house seeming to cling to the side of a mountain. There were servants who scared me at first; I was still only twenty two and they seemed so haughty and remote.
In fact we spent little time in the house as Pyotr took me everywhere with him as he travelled the world on his government's business. "Took me everywhere" except once. That one time when he said, "Darling, it's a lightening trip and I'll be rushing about so much, I don't think you should come this time." I agreed, but oh God, I wished I hadn't. If only I'd gone with him!
He was on the way home when the plane blew up in mid air. "Terrorists", they told me. "It wasn't your husband they were after. They weren't really after any of the passengers. It was the country who owned the airline they were striking at.
Whatever or whoever they were striking at, it was my husband, my dear, lovely Pyotr they killed. We had just ten years of marriage; ten wonderful years of love and passion; and in seconds it was all over.
The voice on the phone went on, "You were Sarah Wells before you were married, weren't you?"
"Yes."
"Then you are my mother."
"I don't know...Yes possibly...I can't really say.... Why are you calling me?"
"I want to meet you."
"But we live so far apart."
"Yes, but I'm backpacking for a year and I'm in your country now, as a matter of fact I'm in the city where you live."
After Pyotr was killed I could no longer stand living in the house were we had loved. I moved to the capital and had been living there for three years.
"You've gone to a lot of trouble to find me."
"Yes, I've wanted to meet you ever since I found out I was adopted. Can I come and see you?"
I hesitated. This could be some sort of trick. I was a wealthy woman and had received plenty of offers from men since Pyotr's death. I was no longer the innocent I had been when Michael Vane seduced me.
Even if I had wanted to remarry I soon discovered that the men who pursued me wanted one of two things; my body or my money; or to be fair, some wanted both. What they didn't seem to understand, and Pyotr had, was that I had more to offer than money and a body.
If I had the slightest desire to remarry, it would have to be with someone who appreciated what Pyotr had understood and loved in me. After all, Pyotr had taken me without my having money, and as for my body, many would have called it "second hand goods."
Now there was a disembodied voice claiming to be my son. What was he after?
"Please, the voice went on, it really is important for me to meet you." There was something in the voice that touched a chord in me. In all the years since I had seen my baby taken away, that moment had often come back to haunt me. I would be asking myself, "Where is he now? What is he like? Does he look like me? Is he a good or bad person? Would he love me and me him if we were together?
The endless curiosity about what had become of the child I had carried in my young womb now took over. My travelling with Pyotr and meeting politicians, business men heads of departments and all the hangers on had given me a shrewd insight into the scheming ways of the powerful and not so powerful. If the disembodied voice became a fleshly presence to me, I felt I should soon know what his scheme was, if any.
"All right," I said, "I'll meet you. Can you lunch with me at the Coronal Café tomorrow?"
"Yes, I'd love to."
"Have you got pen and paper handy? I'll tell you how to get there."
"It's okay, I'm stopping at the backpacker's hostel a couple of streets away from the Coronal, and I went past it yesterday. What time?"