Brent and Zeuss are busy preparing the car for our trip
up north at Easter.
They have inspected the car inside and out. Zeuss even got
right up into the motor to give it the once over. Together
they changed a couple of tyres, vacuumed the inside of it
and did stuff to the mechanics.
“Carforce Inspection Unit, Ground Crew,” said
Zeuss importantly to Sticky, “can’t be too careful
you know”.
Sticky yawned and rolled his eyes at Grommart.
I had a meeting with a course coordinator and we got on
like a house on fire.
I gave her a ridiculously long list of courses I’d
like to teach and she approved every one of them so I added
some more on the spur of the moment.
‘Drawing for the Pencil Challenged’ and ‘Shooting
Your Friends and Family’ may well be joined by ‘The
Cathy Dee guide to the difference between Astro-turf and
Astro-physics’.
I may have to do some actual research for this one.
March 21st Good Friday
We are sitting on the deck of the ferry going across to
Wellington bathed in warm sunshine. It’s a fabulous
day and the ferry is packed. I may have forgotten to mention
we were going up to Hawkes Bay for Easter.
Brent has been making all sorts of wise cracks about sinking
boats and announcements in loud silly voices and I have
been pretending I have no idea who he is.
After
about ½ an hour of wise cracks he finally pulls
out a book. Einstein’s Theory of Relativity;
I kid you not.
It’s the sort of book that impresses the snot out
of everyone around you and makes them think you must be
a genius until they realise you are not actually turning
the pages; or, as in my case, you are holding it upside
down.
Brent has it the right way up; and, he is remembering to
turn the pages at suitable intervals. He really does
look like he is reading it and he even has an interested
expression on his face and his ears are forward.
I can’t believe he’s not even falling asleep;
I tried reading it once and found it to be the best sleeping
aid I’ve ever tried. They should write WARNING may
make you drowsy, on the back cover in large print. I once
saw a packet of sleeping tablets which had this warning
on them.
March 22nd
We stayed the night with Brent’s brother and sister-in-law;
Ken and Maria.
We all get on like a house on fire. They have a bunch of
pets too – 4 beautiful Burmese cats, 1 baby boxer
pooch, 3 kids and a gorgeous parrot who answers to the
name Lord Nelson.
Lord Nelson took one look at Brent and fell in love. He
had been busy rearranging my hairstyle (suspiciously nest
shaped) when he spied Brent who was sitting on a stool
bobbing his head at him.
“BRAAAARRRK” shrieked Brent.
The parrot looked at him quizzically; “HELLO” he
said and bobbed his head politely back at Brent. Then he
clambered down my arm and onto Brent’s outstretched
hand. He gave Brent a thorough inspection, bending his
neck this way and that before finally deciding that Brent
looked best upside down. He then proceeded to plaster Brent’s
face with tiny parrot kisses complete with tongue action,
before helping himself to Brent’s wine.
He
remained firmly stuck to Brent’s shoulder until Ken
got home. Ken is Lord Nelson’s favourite person in
the whole wide world since Ken rescued him a few months
ago from a tree top where he was perched shrieking insults
at the cats milling around the bottom of the tree waiting
for him to fall out of it.
I think Lord Nelson got a bit confused when he saw Ken
walk in. Brent and Ken look very similar and they sound
the same too. He looked from one to the other before deciding
to test drive the new Ken. He remained teetering on Ken
for the rest of the evening taking the occasional sip of
wine from Ken’s glass. Every now and then he suspiciously
eyed Brent before deciding he must be seeing double and
ignoring him.
I now understand where the phrase ‘pissed as a parrot’ came
from.
March 23rd
I should know by now, never to trust Brent with buying
anything – unless it’s ‘mans stuff’.
We stopped off on the way up to Hawkes Bay to buy some
Easter Eggs for the kids. I decided to stay and guard the
car with the help of my trusty water pistol.
Brent cheerfully arrived back at the car with a big bag
which he deposited on the back seat; Easter eggs for his
nephews, Alex and Nicholas; two boys.
“What did you get them?” I asked, “Let’s
take a look”, I said, expecting to see ‘boy
shaped’ eggs in the form of say, dinosaurs, or space
rockets, or even just plain eggs wrapped in ‘boy
coloured’ paper.
Imagine
my surprise to behold two pink buckets with fairies dancing
around the sides and the word BARBIE printed clearly over
the fairy toadstools in silver glitter.
“It said they were ‘Winnie the Pooh Eggs’ said
Brent plaintively as I stared incredulously at him.
It took about half an hour before I could get my lower
jaw to close again.
March 24th
We finally made it to Hawkes Bay and Brent’s Mother.
We were rushed in for a meal of unidentifiable vegetarianism
which subsequently made another four appearances at various
meals during our stay.
The next night there was a family dinner during which
Brent’s brother Gareth managed to make what appeared
to be a flax doily and his wife Gine tackled a complicated
looking embroidery.
Rachael and Kobus arrived with their two children, one
of whom plonked himself in the middle of the floor with
a fleet of Transformers. Nobody else seemed to notice that
there was an entire war of the worlds being re-enacted,
complete with stereophonic sounds in the middle of our
conversation.
I could feel my temper rising.
I asked Nicholas if he’d mind moving to the other
side of the couch. He stared at me as if he didn’t
understand what I was saying and carried on where he was.
Finally I gave up being polite, I’d had enough. I’m
allergic to noisy children and I’d had enough. I
lost my temper. I don’t know where it went but I
still haven’t found it.
I doubt that Rachael and Kobus will ever speak to me again
and I’m not sure Brent will either, and Nicholas
will probably have reoccurring nightmares in which I will
star.
March 25th
We stayed the night at Ken and Maria’s again on
the way back.
My brother Nigel had phoned out of the blue offering to
fly me back to Christchurch to meet him and drive down
to Gore for my Uncle’s funeral.
As I hadn’t heard from Nigel in about a thousand
years I didn’t recognize his voice. I thought it
was one of my other brothers playing a joke. “Yeah
right Chris” I said; “no”, said Nigel,
it’s me, Nigel, your brother”. “Oh sure
it is, Stephen” I said. It was Nigel! Imagine my
surprise.
We hired a car at the airport. I asked the girl at the
car-hire whether she thought anyone would notice if the
car we brought back was a beaten up Mitsubishi with cathydee.com
plastered on the sides of it. She thought they would.
I also asked her if the no-alcohol clause included Brandy
on account of it being medicinal and when I asked her
if she thought the car was capable of doing 180km, Nigel
dragged me away before I even had a chance to query whether
my dog might be allowed a spin in it.

We decided to surprise my Mother and not tell her I was
coming. She had no idea. On the way down we placed bets.
We bet on whether Our Mother had guessed something was
up, and then we bet on the time it would take for Our Mother
to get to the door of the motel and then we moved on to
betting how long it would take for someone to wind her
up at the family gathering.
Nigel told me that Our Mother thought the motel was splendid.
This could only mean two things…
1. That the motel was spotlessly clean and
2. That it had an actual tea pot.
Seven hours later we arrived. “Oh!” shouted
Our delighted Mother and Aunt, “It’s YOU!”
I was glad to have myself reconfirmed as being myself.