The Birthday Cake
Mummy
made
me a cake,
once,
in
the shape of a dinosaur.
Its
long, fondant-icing neck,
stretched
to
the edge of the board,
bulbous
and pink.
She
had tears in her eyes,
as
she carried it in.
The
adults exchanged glances.
One
guffawed.
Mummy
giggled.
I
wasn’t sure why,
but
I think they
liked
the cake very much
and
were proud
of
Mummy,
as
cakes weren’t really her thing.
I
remember it,
because
I asked for it
and
she made it.
I
felt happy
in
the warm glow
from
the candles
and
from her smile.
One
year,
my
Auntie
had
to make my cake instead.
Mummy
couldn’t
make cakes any more.
I
asked for chocolate cake
with
chocolate buttons
and
my Auntie
spread
them
all
across the cake,
and
joined some together,
in
the shape of a
six,
for
me.
The
adults’ eyes
Had
tears in this time, too.
They
sang
And
I blew out
Six
candles.
I
think it had
only
been six days,
that
birthday,
since
Mummy had to go,
so
there wasn’t
much
warmth
from
smiles or candles,
though
the adults did their best
and
my Auntie’s cake
tasted
good.
I
had nine candles,
this
year.
Each
year,
my
Auntie asks me
and
I say the same –
chocolate
cake
with
chocolate buttons.
When
my Auntie
carries
in the cake,
candles
dancing,
we
look,
each
into the other’s eyes
and
smile.
I
sometimes think
she’s
remembering
Mummy,
and
I am too,
and
we both understand,
somehow,
that
we’re each searching,
for
that expression,
that
reflection,
that
glimmer
of
the eyes
that
shared DNA,
that
makes us both
a
little bit like
her,
so
that we both feel
that
she’s still with us,
somehow,
laughing,
as
the candle flames dance,
like
she did at the dinosaur cake,
marking
with us,
somewhere,
the
passing
of
another year.
My niece with one of my cakes |
The famous dinosaur cake! |
Oh Georgie, so beautiful and heart-breaking. Thank you for being brave enough to share this with us.
ReplyDeleteThis is just so beautiful and tender and stunningly written. It comes straight from the heart, as much of your writing does, Georgie, which is partly why it's always so powerful. Thank you for sharing this xxx
ReplyDeleteHow beautiful. Thank you for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteI loved this, Georgie. Moving and beautiful. The moment when they look into each others eyes is the moment that most stands out to me, and the 'shared DNA.' Wonderful.
ReplyDelete