I wrote this a little while ago, as an attempt at a short story, for a competition. It didn't win anything, but I thought I would share it here, for anyone who is interested. It is based on real life, with my Nan, who was a very capable lady and an avid jam-maker, right up until she had a debilitating stroke, last August. We are still working our way through her stock of jam and, knowing that, soon, we will reach the last jar, is heart-breaking.
Anyway, I hope you enjoy the story!
The Last Jar of Jam
It
had always felt as though the jam jars had a life-cycle of their own – a
perpetual circle of being: Nan would spend hours in her kitchen, humming as she
stirred bubbling saucepans and filled jars by the dozen, lined up like
soldiers, with matching red and white berets, on the kitchen side board.
My
boys (her great-grandsons) would charm and beg more jars from her each time we
visited, hastily making the desired exchange: a clanking bag of empty jars, for
two fresh jars, re-filled. They craved
the jars’ sticky contents on warm buttered toast, dismissing the very idea of ‘shop-bought
jam’ with utterances of contempt and disgust.
“Blackcurrant, July 2018,” the label on
this one reads, in Nan’s spidery handwriting. I imagine her, on the day it was
created, weaving her magic in the kitchen – stirring, tasting, checking the
temperature and pouring the boiling, oozing liquid into the jars to cool.
If
the jam wasn’t poured into jars, it was spread thickly between fluffy layers of
sponge cake, baked especially for our too-infrequent visits. There was always a
cake hunt; it was always hidden in the microwave. The children knew that, but still the game
was on, the hunt never got old; eyes sparkled across generations.
Gramps
would pretend the cake was only for him, feigning horror when Nan offered it,
with milky tea, to the boys, or suggested we take the rest home. Tea and cake
consumed and laden with even more jam, we would say our goodbyes and set off
home. In recent months, only one goodbye was needed, since Gramps’ days of
tea-drinking and jam-filled cake-eating had come to an abrupt end.
I
wonder if I would have treated the moment with more gravitas, relished it
longer, if I'd have realised, that day, that it was the last time jam would
pass from Great Nan to great-grandsons. But these moments don't come with
warnings to linger, do they?
And
yet, time passes, stealing from us that which felt immortal, unending.
Nan
can’t make jam or cake any more, now. In the care home, the staff can't work
out why she curls her lip at the packets of jam, lined up on the breakfast
table, uniform and tasteless in their gaudy, plastic packaging. But
we know that she remembers how it felt to pop the lid off one of those
beautiful red and white-topped glass jars, to taste the fruits of her labour on
bread freshly sliced, to offer it, in cake, to excited children or a weary
husband.
Robbed
of her speech so suddenly, she can’t tell them any of this, but we know. We
tell her how much we still love her jam, which we have to take, now, from the
cupboards of her empty house, and how the taste will always linger in our
mouths, long after the last drop is drained from the last jar.
The
empty jars sit on my windowsill, lined up like soldiers with red and white
berets. I can’t yet condemn them to the recycling, can’t quite bring myself to
face the truth that the perpetual cycle is broken.
"Blackcurrant, July 2018," declares
the last remnants of Nan’s handwriting, stuck to the lid. The hot tears well up
in my eyes. I can’t face the thought of reaching the bottom of this particular
jar. The finality aches in my throat.
I
know, when I do reach it, that the final drop will not taste sweet at all.
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