Toes, nails and clippings

‘Cut my nails, Hannah,’ my father asked, and not for the first time.

Hannah dragged herself out of her chair and took up the clippers from the table beside him. I watched from the corner of the room, eyes towards the television screen, but every so often back in their direction.

There was a rhythm to this task. My sister’s bottom close to the ground as she squatted and moved from one of my father’s feet to the other, from one toe to the other, big toe first.

My father’s toes were long, finger like, much longer than my own, relative to the length of our respective bodies. His toes looked as though they could get up and start doing things, rather like the toes of children I had seen on television, children born without arms who could paint with their feet.

These children were nimble, not like my father who was tall and awkward and who had trouble bending over.

Clip, clip, clip, and the nails flew up and around his feet. My sister then gathered up the clippings like so many bits of twig and chucked them into the waste paper basket.

‘You haven’t finished yet,’ my father said and threw out his hands, palms down. ‘What about my fingers?’

My sister straightened, then took a deep breath as she picked up the clippers again. This time she leaned into my father’s body to get closer and then held each finger aloft and separate from the other as she moved from one hand to the next.

My father’s expression suggested he had complete confidence in her, while her matter of fact manner did not convince me that she had any such confidence in him.

Like me, my father was right handed. Even I had trouble trimming the nails on my right hand with nail scissors, but his toenails and the nails on his  left hand must have been easy for him to get to. Even so he sat like a rajah on his throne while I cringed and looked down at my own toes in their blue plastic sandals.

My baby toes peeked out of the holes at either side of my shoes, the nails thick and stubby. They reminded me of miniature rams horns only their layers were not even. I had too often worn shoes that did not fit me when I was little and when my toes were in their formative stages such that my littlest toes had developed nails that were hardened and deformed.

I would never ask anyone to cut my nails again I decided even as I remembered my older sister trimming the nails on my fingers short. She could be careless with my nails, not like with my father who never once winced. With me my sister had a way of getting under the nail too close to the quick. Sometimes she drew blood.

I learned fast to cut my own nails or to leave them long and dirty and to watch the thin line of black that day after day crept underneath them.

‘In future, wash your hands before you do your needlework,’ Mother Mary John had said the day before. ‘This is a disgrace.’

How could it be that the dirt from my fingers could spread so easily to the pattern on my needlework? Sky blue cornflowers and red poppies with bright yellow and black stamens. We held the fabric firm with a circular frame the nuns had lent us.

I kept my needlework in a paper bag.

The nuns taught us to keep the thread at an optimal length, too short and you would be needing another thread too soon and your work on the back would be full of knots and finishings off. Too long and the thread would get tangled and knot up to the point it could no longer pass through the fine weave of the fabric.

My fingers pricked blood on the sharp point of the needle, faded brown spots appeared between the cornflowers.
‘You’ll need to ask your mother to wash this once it’s done,’ Mother Mary John said. ‘You can’t present it like this.’

My insides blazed with shame whenever Mother Mary John looked my way. She dressed entirely in black, apart from the white band across her forehead. She smelled of mothballs and musk. She wore an apron, also black, over her long black dress which never seemed to attract a fleck of dirt.

It was then I decided that nuns did not have bodies. They were machines underneath. They did not eat, and because they did not eat, they never used a toilet. The nuns gave off no signs of being human apart from their faces where their eyes, ears, noses and mouths suggested they could see smell, hear, and speak.

The fact of their legs and arms suggested they could walk and carry things, but their thoughts were circumscribed to quotes from the bible and injunctions about what to do and what not to do.

I figured the nuns did not sleep. They only taught and prayed.

These semi-human creatures were my first teachers for the first fifteen years of my life. They terrified me. And taught me about the sanctity of the body as if preserved in aspic.

My father, on the other hand, taught me a different sense of my body.

I looked across to the neat line of his toes, as he admired them from his seat.

‘Good job,’ he said to Hannah.

She said nothing, put down the clippers and looked over in my direction.

Once again the clippers sat on the coffee table beside my father’s chair, silver and squat.

My turn next.

 

 

Heard this and thought of you.

Your baby boy eyes in a grown man’s face, an open face, as wide as a plate. You’d be bald now if you were still alive.

Gordon Lightfoot on the radio, ‘If you could read my mind love, what a tale my thoughts could tell’. You introduced me to the singer and his lyrics spoke to me.

‘We could go down the coast for the weekend,’ you said, just like that and my stomach somersaulted with joy.

I took a train down the tracks to Edithvale and your parents’ house where you were ready and waiting with a small holdall.

‘Travel light,’ you had said. ‘We don’t want too many extras,’

So I brought a carry bag, bigger than yours, enough to tote spare jeans, a jumper against the cold, underwear and toiletries.

We walked back towards the station but once we reached the highway you changed your mind.

‘Let’s hitch hike’ you said. ‘It’ll be faster.’

My brothers hitched rides when they travelled interstate or to the country but girls only hitchhiked in the movies where there was often a sense of impending danger.

With you it was different. With you I was safe.

You took the lead, your thumb out at an angle tilted towards the road.

I tried to imagine how the people in the cars might see us. A young man and his girl friend; in jeans and t-shirts, the man clean-shaven, and the woman with all the innocence of her long fair hair.

Nothing threatening here.

Then my thoughts shifted to our potential driver. Would we be safe with him?

A man who might pull up because he saw an opportunity, not only to rob us but also to have his way with me.

My mind ran wild but not long enough before a yellow Toyota stopped and we ran after it.

A couple in the front seat, man and woman, elderly, and I was awash with relief. Older people were safe.

‘We’re you headed?’ the man asked.

‘We’re wanting to go as far down the coast road as possible.’

‘We can take you to Mount Martha,’ the driver said and there the conversation ended.

The wind erupted during the course of our drive and the sunny day we had hoped for had turned to grey. Undeterred, we booked into in a boarding house over the road from the beach. From our upstairs room we could see out to the ocean through a thick line of tea tree. The sea was choppy.

No matter, we could spend an afternoon in bed, an afternoon between the sheets.

‘If you could read my mind…’

Not that you tried. You were always so sure of yourself, so confident of your direction and I followed along, my own agenda, hidden.

My own agenda, one of wanting only to fit in with you and be loved by you, no matter the cost.

I leaned back against the pillows and thrust out my chest hoping to entice you with the slope of my breasts, covered under their thick jumper, but you were reading the form guide and had started to fiddle with the dial on the radio beside our bed.

I tried to look as though I was not fussed about your lack of attention to my body.

I could wait.

‘If you could read my mind, what a story my thoughts could tell…’

I had eyes only for you.

But you weren’t interested in the contents of my mind. You wanted only to check whether your horse – the one you’d bet on at the TAB that morning – would earn you a fortune by winning.

When the race caller croaked out the words, ‘Dark Sorrow by half a head,’ I knew we were safe at last, bills could be paid and no more races until, the following week.

I knew you’d be ready then to open yourself to me, at least to open your body, for your mind stayed closed.