Jump to content
    Rigby Taylor
  • Author
  • 3,190 Words
  • 1,253 Views
  • 13 Comments
Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Mortaumal - 11. Zoltan's Mother

On Saturday morning Zoltan and Mort had the run of the house while his mother was at the shop. It was a low, ranch-style place with a shallow front garden jammed full of native shrubs that concealed the house from the road. The rear garden was the same only larger—a quarter acre of trees and shrubs crisscrossed by meandering sandy paths. A patio beside the house held a small, free-form saltwater pool in which the boys swam and splashed until it was time to make lunch in an ultra modern kitchen. Zoltan proved to be a competent cook.

At one o’clock a dark blue Subaru sports car drew into the carport. Mrs. Etroit looked pleasantly normal. Medium height, slender build, wavy auburn hair cut shorter than Mort’s but longer than her son’s. Symmetrical face with no makeup, eyebrows not plucked, small gold studs in earlobes, slender hands with long fingers, short finger nails. No rings.

‘Smells good,’ she said passing bags of groceries to the boys. ‘You must be Mortaumal,’ she announced with no attempt at warmth. ‘The boy Zoltan’s in love with.’

‘Mum!!!’ He turned anguished eyes to Mort. ‘She’s joking.’

‘No she isn’t,’ his mother stated brusquely, marching into the house.

Mort frowned. ‘Are you?’

‘No! Yes! I don’t know. I like you a lot and I guess I talk about you all the time, but hell, I don’t even know what love is. If what I feel for my parents is love, then I certainly don’t love you. Does it matter?’

‘It’s just that that when people say they love you, they expect you to think like they do and like what they like and so on. They think they can tell you how to live and what to do. At least that’s how my grandmother was before she went crazy. She said it was because she loved me.’

‘I’m not like that, Mort! I like you because you’re different from me. I sit and smoulder but you let loose with your verbal flamethrower when you feel like it. It’s OK, I don’t expect you to love me, I’m not totally stupid.’

‘Lets settle for that awful American expression... fuck friends.’

‘You mean fuck buddies?’

‘Yeah, that’s it.’

‘Except we haven’t fucked.’

‘Yet.’

Laughter concealed nervous excitement and images the f word triggered, as well as a sense of foreboding.

 

After lunch, Mrs. Etroit took them to an old people’s home run by her church, where she was welcomed by a servile Matron who led them along urine-scented corridors to the recreation room. Mrs. Etroit gazed around the depressing space as if inspecting her troops, nodding vaguely at anyone who evinced the slightest interest. A covey of crones in soiled bibs were draped over mismatching, wooden armed, vinyl-upholstered armchairs. Others were in wheelchairs. They gazed in bewilderment at each other and the visitors, as if wondering where they were, while two nursing aides wiped dribble from their chins, plumped cushions behind them, and made no attempt to rouse those who were either asleep or preferred to sit and dream, wisely allowing their decay to continue without hindrance.

After a short wander around the room, heels clacking unpleasantly on the wooden floor, Zoltan’s mother arrived at an upright piano, wiped the seat with her handkerchief, sat, opened the lid, took a pile of sheet music from her capacious handbag, selected several pieces and placed them in order on the holder.

With a sudden pouncing movement she played five crashing chords, causing everyone to jump. Those who had been nodding off gazed around in fear; seriously disoriented.

Playing confidently, though with little subtlety while Zoltan turned pages, his mother hammered out a series of rousing hymns urging the soldiers of Christ to get a move on, beseeching Jesus to save their souls, and instructing them to lift up their hearts in praise of a vision of Jerusalem. About a dozen quavering voices were fortified by the two nursing assistants whose ability to hold a tune didn’t match their apparent enthusiasm.

Mort crept from the room, unable to bear such inane attempts to instil gaiety in people whose interests had obviously moved beyond such emotions. His heart filled with pity and he wondered how his grandmother was doing—if she was still alive. His grandfather had made the right choice—get out while he could do it himself and retain his self respect. To force people to end their lives like this was possibly the most degrading thing you could do to them.

In a small courtyard he found two ancient men in wheelchairs, one with no legs, the other with one arm and a neck brace.

Mort greeted them pleasantly and introduced himself.

‘You’re missing the singing,’ One arm said with a wry smile.

‘Unfortunately, we’re not; the caterwauling is audible from here,’ Legless snarled. ‘And the way that tart hammers the keys is enough to destroy anyone’s pleasure in music.’

‘If she wasn’t one of the owners of the place she’d never be let in.’

‘Surely,’ Mort said, astonished at their honesty, ‘she’s trying her best?’

‘She’s always nagging at us to go to her bloody church, telling us we’re ungodly heathens who will go to hell and fry for eternity. She gives me nightmares sometimes. Stupid, I know, but she’s so positive she’s right. And she shouts. The other day she grabbed me by the ear and shook my head; it hurt for hours afterwards.’

‘‘Didn’t you complain?’

‘She runs this place. Matron’s scared of her.’

‘Mind you, I’d go and watch if she did a striptease,’ One arm said in an effort to lighten the mood.

‘I’d sooner watch her hang herself.’

‘If you don’t like it here, can’t you…?’ Mort left the question hanging.

‘Would you like it? But what’s the alternative? Our children say they haven’t enough room in their houses, and their kids think we’re a waste of space. We can’t live alone, we’re not allowed access to any drug that would put us out of our misery, and we’re stuck here because we didn’t read the fine print and bought a strata title to our rooms that we can’t bloody sell, so we can’t afford to pay for anywhere else.’

‘Why didn’t you jump off a bridge, or tie a rock round your foot and leap into the sea while you still could?’

‘Bloody good question,’ Legless said appreciatively. ‘You’re a smart fellow! I often ask myself the same thing. The trouble is that as you age things only slowly get worse so you keep putting up with the changes without realising you’re running out of time and options. It seems silly to jump ship too soon, but by the time you’re ready it’s too late and you can’t climb onto the railings, or make your way out to deep water, or buy a gun to do it neatly.’ He sniffed and looked searchingly at Mort as if seeking confirmation of something. ‘Actually… I did try... and would have died when my legs were sliced off by the train,’ he continued softly. ‘But the bastards revived me despite an Advance Health Directive I’d signed with my doctor. So instead of jumping ship, I’m stuck here labelled as a mentally unstable depressive, which makes further attempts to do things impossible. I’m a fucking prisoner! When I got pneumonia they gave me penicillin! When I stopped eating they shoved a tube up my nose and into my stomach. That was more painful than my legs! I’ve been begging them to let me die for years.’ He fell silent.

Mort felt as if his heart had been wrenched out of his chest.

‘It’s as if those bloody politicians want to torture people. They’ll happily send planes and soldiers overseas to bomb, shoot and murder innocents, but won’t let people like me decide for themselves when they’ve had enough.’ One arm shook his head. ‘It’s enough to make you spit. I’m legally allowed to kill myself, but the only means I’m allowed are messy, dangerous and uncertain. So I’ll need help to do the dirty deed. But if anyone helps me, they’ll be done for murder.’

‘I understand... I really do,’ Mort said with such heartfelt emotion the two men looked at him strangely.

‘You know about this then?’

Mort nodded. Unable to speak.

At that moment Matron arrived. ‘Ah there you are, Mortaumal. Mrs. Etroit was worried you’d got lost. I hope George and John haven’t been telling you tall stories.’

‘No. It’s been very interesting.’ He turned and with great seriousness shook each man’s hand. ‘Thank you for talking so honestly with me. I would like to visit you again one day, if that’s OK?’

‘Very OK. A sensible young man like you is always welcome.’

The matron was becoming twitchy. ‘Hurry along now, Mortaumal.’

As they traversed the corridors she observed that the Home was very fortunate to have the patronage of Mrs. Etroit—such a lovely lady. So kind and thoughtful. So understanding. Such an upstanding Christian woman.

Mortaumal thought the lady protested her appreciation rather too emphatically.

Afternoon tea was underway and the boys handed round biscuits and mugs of weak coffee or tea – it was impossible to tell the difference. Both departed the establishment depressed, whereas Mrs. Etroit’s batteries seemed to have been recharged by the experience and she droned on about the trip to a farm she was planning for the old folk, and the Christmas treats she organised every year.

*****

The meal that evening would have been delicious had Mort not been badgered by questions he preferred not to answer.

‘We will be going to church tomorrow, I’m reading the bible passage. Are you a regular churchgoer, Mortaumal?’

‘No, I’ve other things to do on Sundays.’

‘Do you believe in God?’

‘Which one?’

‘Don’t be facetious! The one true God. The Christian God.’

‘Grandpa told me humans have worshipped over twenty thousand different gods. I don’t see how I could be expected to know you meant the Christian one. There are loads of gods who’ve been worshipped for longer.’

‘Now you’re being cheeky and deliberately offensive to God and me. You do realise that if you refuse to believe in him you will spend eternity in hell after you die?’

‘Mrs. Etroit,’ Mort said, his face a picture of incredulity, ‘Do you honestly believe there’s an omniscient, omnipotent, invisible man who created the universe and makes sure everything goes according to his plan, and that he cares if I believe in him or not?’

‘Yes.’

‘But how do you know that?’

‘I believe it because I have faith.’

‘But you don’t know. Sometimes when you think about it, don’t you wonder if it’s true?’

‘I don’t need to think about it—I just know.’

‘But it doesn’t make sense to believe something when there’s no proof.’

‘There is proof; it’s in the bible.’

‘Isn’t that just stories written by men to explain things they didn’t understand?’

‘They were guided by God.’

‘How do you know?’

‘They said they were.’

‘And you believe them?’ Mort shook his head in despair.

‘That atheist lawyer, Marshall Trimm has a great deal to answer for, filling your head with all this nonsense!’ she stated angrily. ‘It’s criminal that a ward of the state should be entrusted to a single man like that. A boy needs a mother.’

‘I assure you I do not need a mother! I’d like to have had a father, but I haven’t missed out on much because I’ve been brought up by three of the nicest and bestest men in the world. I can’t imagine anyone nicer than Marshall! No father could be better.’

‘Marshall Trimm has taught you to be godless and therefore without morals.’

‘Marshall and I never talk about religion. It was Grandad who told me about gods and religions. He said that the original religious stories of every religion are more or less the same, and they make sense, because they’re about reality.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Well, for example... some Bedouins in what Christians call the holy land, say Nature is god and thought is prayer. And that explains everything. The natural world created us through evolution over millions of years, and when we die at least a part of us lives forever, because we rot and become part of the natural world from which we evolved and which has supported us during our life. It’s an endless cycle. And when we think about life, nature, our place in it, and how we should live if we want the natural world to continue to take care of us, then that is the same as praying. The big things in nature like trees and rivers used to be worshipped because nature is our sole means of surviving. When Nature dies, we will die, so we have to revere Nature.’

Mrs. Etroit’s eyes opened wide in horror. ‘That is animism!’ she snarled. ‘You’re a pagan heathen! Christians know the real truth about everything, they understand that it all began with God, and will end with him.’

‘As long as we accept that Nature is God.’

‘That is blasphemy! God is peace and love and perfection.’

‘No,’ Mort insisted nervously. He could see she was upset but hoped to calm her by telling her the truth. ‘There is no peace because men who want power frighten ignorant people by telling them they know what god wants and if they don’t believe he is the one true god they will suffer terribly forever. So they fight with people who believe in a different god, and in the process they're destroying our real creator—Nature.’

‘You’re an animist!’ Mrs. Etroit hissed with enough venom to fell an ox. ‘Never have I heard such egregious nonsense!’

‘Is it bad to be an animist?’ Mort responded with a worried smile.

‘Yes. You will go to hell!’

‘But Marshall says…’

‘Marshall, Marshall... You’re obsessed with that man.’ Mrs. Etroit suddenly stopped, her lips drawn back in an unpleasant sneer. ‘Mr. Trimm is good to you, is he? How good I wonder?’

Mort was unpleasantly reminded of the horrible Mrs. Pettie who had made insinuations about his grandfather. ‘He’s like the best possible father and brother, and I don’t like the way you said that.’

‘And I don’t like your tone, young man. I am showing concern for your welfare. You should be grateful that someone cares about a boy left to the mercy of foster parents. Before Trimm you were living with that male prostitute who murdered his son then suicided, weren’t you? I’m not surprised you’re such an arrogant little heathen, completely unsuitable as a friend for my son who has been raised decently.’

Mort stood, heart pounding in his temples. His head was bursting. He could scarcely breathe. Suddenly his self control broke, not as a shout but as a low growl that caused the hair on Zoltan’s arms to stand up.

‘You are an evil woman, Mrs. Etroit. Even the men at the home we went to this afternoon told me they despise you. You preach love, humility and caring, but you’re full of self-pride, hatred, and bigotry. You lack compassion and are one of the rudest women I’ve ever met. Leo was the kindest, nicest man in the world, and he loved Fystie more than his own life. And I loved Fystie too. And I know that he begged Leo to stop the pain he was in and Leo sacrificed his own life for Fystie. And anyone who thinks like you do is rotten, foul, sick and perverted. I’m not surprised your husband left you and... and I pity Zoltan!’

He ran from the room, slammed the door behind him, threw himself onto his bike and rode as fast as he could back to the sanity of Marshall’s flat.

 

At school on Monday Zoltan was incoherent with shame. Mort, who had forgotten he’d turned fourteen that morning, told him not to be silly; it wasn’t his fault his mother was such a galah.

But her poison had done its work, and their relationship lost its joyous innocence.

 

At five-thirty the following Sunday evening, Zoltan appeared at Marshall’s apartment accompanied by a man to whom he bore a striking resemblance. They were both somewhat agitated, so were invited in.

‘I’m Zoltan’s father,’ the man said quietly. ‘He has something to say to Mort.’

‘Mort, I’m so sorry about everything. Mum had me watched by one of the teachers and I was so frightened of her that’s why I sort of ignored you at school. But she was right, the first thing she said to you. I do. But it’s too late now because I’m going to Perth with Dad because…’ overtaken by the shakes, Zoltan stopped mid sentence.

Mr. Etroit was watching the exchange with a frown, as if hoping it wasn’t what it looked like.

Mort gave him a glance of contempt, resisted the urge to hug his lover, shook his hand manfully and, with his back to the father, pursed his lips in a secret kiss and soft smile. ‘I understand, Zoltan, and there’s no need to apologise, honestly. I still think you’re a great guy. I’m glad you’re going to live with your father, but it’s a shame it’s so far away. What about your mother?’

‘That’s the second reason we’re here,’ Mr. Etroit said with a frown, still staring watchfully at his son and his strange too-clever friend. ‘It’ll be in the papers tomorrow, but Zoltan wanted to tell you first. My ex-wife was murdered yesterday at the old people’s home where she liked to play queen. George, an old bloke with no legs, lashed out with a sharpened spoon and sliced through her jugular, then wheeled himself away without telling anyone, so she was dead by the time they found her.’

‘I know George!’ Mort said excitedly. ‘I spoke to him that day we went there. He is really nice, but he hated your wife because she was always trying to make him go to church and telling him he was an evil old heathen and would go to hell. What will happen to him?’

‘He’ll be declared criminally insane and locked away. When questioned he said he wanted the death penalty because he was a murderer; but of course we’re a humane society and don’t do the Old Testament eye for an eye any more.’

‘Oh, the poor man,’ Mort said with feeling. ‘That’s one of the things he was so angry about, he wasn’t allowed to die. Every time he should have died like when his legs were cut off and when he got pneumonia, he was taken to hospital and brought back to life. He’s been begging to die for years. Poor, poor man. I must visit him and tell him I admire him.’

The others were staring in disbelief.

‘What about Zoltan’s mother, Mort? Have you no pity for her?’

‘Of course not. She was a horrible woman. It’s so unfair that she should die while George is condemned to live.’

Copyright © 2018 Rigby Taylor; All Rights Reserved.
  • Like 16
  • Love 2
Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
You are not currently following this author. Be sure to follow to keep up to date with new stories they post.

Recommended Comments

Chapter Comments

I do so feel for George. While there is absolutly nothing wrong with being old, and nothing wrong with being disabled, it is truly wrong and cruel to be kept "alive" against your will.

I can imagine the George felt he was killing two birds with one stone, by killing Zoltans peculiar mother, he too would get a death sentence.  I am so glad we have assisted dying laws here in Canada. While I don't fear dementia (my brains gone and my body is someone elses responsibility!)but being mentally agile but physically incompetent frightens the bejesus out of me. 

Edited by Canuk
Link to comment
4 hours ago, Canuk said:

I do so feel for George. While there is absolutly nothing wrong with being old, and nothing wrong with being disabled, it is truly wrong and cruel to be kept "alive" against your will.

I can imagine the George felt he was killing two birds with one stone, by killing Zoltans peculiar mother, he too would get a death sentence.  I am so glad we have assisted dying laws here in Canada. While I don't fear dementia (my brains gone and my body is someone elses responsibility!)but being mentally agile but physically incompetent frightens the bejesus out of me. 

My sentiments precisely. Canada [and New Zealand) always seem so much more liberal than this benighted land. Perhaps the cold is worth it.:unsure:

Link to comment
3 hours ago, Okiegrad said:

And....another one bites the dust hahahaha

Ah!! Exactly the reaction I was hoping for from you Okiegrad. :2thumbs:

  • Love 1
Link to comment
10 minutes ago, Rigby Taylor said:

 Perhaps the cold is worth it.:unsure:

 

nope.

7 months of winter and today is only the 5th day above zero.....

Link to comment

Wow, what a chapter.  Bravo to George and to Mort for standing up for himself. He obviously listened to his Granddad and to Leo, because he is continuing to be an opiniated youngster.  I wonder if we'll see more of George.

Link to comment
1 hour ago, skyacer said:

Wow, what a chapter.  Bravo to George and to Mort for standing up for himself. He obviously listened to his Granddad and to Leo, because he is continuing to be an opiniated youngster.  I wonder if we'll see more of George.

Bravo to you, for supporting those two brave guys. No more of George, but loads more of Mortaumal. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
2 hours ago, Canuk said:

 

nope.

7 months of winter and today is only the 5th day above zero.....

Multiple commiserations! 

Link to comment

Etroit means narrow. As in narrow minded? Will Mr. Etroit be another problematic adult? I am glad Mort feels comfortable saying what he thinks. I wonder if someone could/should coach him about talking to adults. So far he mostly has "escaped" the adults he was frank with. Most could have caused problems for him because he is still a child. Still really enjoying these characters, this story, the names, and your views on life as expressed by your characters. Thank you.

Link to comment

I seem to have published this comment twice, So I've wiped this one. 

Edited by Rigby Taylor
Link to comment
3 hours ago, JeffreyL said:

Etroit means narrow. As in narrow minded? Will Mr. Etroit be another problematic adult? I am glad Mort feels comfortable saying what he thinks. I wonder if someone could/should coach him about talking to adults. So far he mostly has "escaped" the adults he was frank with. Most could have caused problems for him because he is still a child. Still really enjoying these characters, this story, the names, and your views on life as expressed by your characters. Thank you.

1 hour ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Exactly, étroit as in narrow minded. How clever of you. It was mainly directed at the mother. Mr Etroit is now 3,000 kilometres away in Perth and out of the picture.

Someone should coach Mort in how to talk to adults? Mmmm. pander to their insecurities, their self-importance, excuse their ignorance, bigotry and narrow mindedness... You are correct, if he wants an easy life. In that sense Mort is the author of his own misfortunes - at least some of them. But he couldn't live with himself if he wasn't honest and true to his opinions. It's a very difficult question. Why do some people make life difficult for themselves? - protesters for example. With the benefit of hindsight we can see that all those brave protesters in my life time who went to prison protesting about clear-felling of forests, imprisonment of refugees, the increasing gap between rich and poor, trying to stop wars... have had zero effect. In every case they have been totally ignored and forests are being cleared ever faster, more and more people are incarcerated, the planet's heating up, the Great Barrier Reef is dying, the 0.1% who own 99% of the planet's wealth are becoming ever richer while the rest are getting poorer... The protesters suffered for nothing! But they die knowing they did their best. We govern ourselves very strangely for a supposedly intelligent species. 

I am very pleased you are enjoying the stories, thanks for telling me, it is greatly appreciated. 

 

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
View Guidelines

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Newsletter

    Sign Up and get an occasional Newsletter.  Fill out your profile with favorite genres and say yes to genre news to get the monthly update for your favorite genres.

    Sign Up
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Our Privacy Policy can be found here: Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..