Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 414

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Bike 414.
by Angharad

“Where’s Simon,” I realised he was absent from our little party.

“He caught a train up to London, about midday, a little local difficulty, apparently.”

“Goodness, I hope everything is okay,” I said sounding awfully awfully.

“I’m sure it is, young Catherine.” Tom, winked at me, “There’s a bottle of white in the fridge how about we have a glass as we talk?”

“If you’d like to forestall a little, I could cook us up something and we could talk over dinner.”

“An excellent idea.” Tom smiled, no, he beamed a smile at me.

“You will still tell us about Catherine, won’t you?” I asked.

His smiled faded rather rapidly, “Sounds like you already know.”

“I know bits.”

“So who’s been blabbing?”

“No one you could take action against.”

“Oh, go on then, get some food. I’ll pour us a drink anyway.”

I ran into the kitchen and Stella followed me. “You know all about her then?”

“Out the way, I need that pan.” I pushed her aside and set up a large frying pan on the top of the cooker and began melting some butter. Then I washed some potatoes and began slicing them. I was doing sautés.

“Well, how much do you know?”

“Only how she died, okay? Happy now? Here, chop these up.” I handed her some spring onions.

“Oh God, my hands will smell after that.”

“Would you prefer to do the garlic?”

“Where’s the knife?”

Despite having her under my feet, I did stir fry chicken with sauté spuds. In just over twenty minutes we were seated at the table and eating it. “That was delicious, Cathy.” Tom wiped his mouth on his napkin.

“Stella helped.”

“Yeah, like I chopped some onions.”

“The best chopped onions I’ve ever tasted,” Tom said, smirking. Then he said, “Ouch,” as she kicked him under the table.

I cleared away the debris and we sat with coffees and wine and I invited Tom to tell us about his daughter. I thought he was trying to escape, but he only went as far as his jacket, where he removed his wallet from the inside breast pocket and came back to the table. From this ancient leather pouch, he extracted an envelope, yellow with age. He pulled out a small passport sized photo in black and white. “This is my daughter, Catherine.” He handed the picture to me.

“She’s beautiful, Tom, you must have been really proud of her.” I touched his hand as I spoke.

“Lemme see,” squeaked Stella and took the picture. She kept looking at it and then at me. “If your hair was darker, this could almost be you.”

“Don’t be daft, she’s beautiful.” I felt myself getting hot.

“And so are you.” Tom, took back the photo and replaced it in his wallet. “Sorry, it’s the only one I have.”

“I’ll do you some copies if you’d like, my scanner could do that and I could enlarge it for you.” I volunteered because it was a relatively easy job.

“Yes, okay, sometime.” Tom postponed my offer. His face became wistful and he looked into the distance. “She died in October of nineteen eighty seven. She was brilliant with dead languages, read classics and Latin at Oxford and also Anglo Saxon. Must have got it from her mother, it certainly wasn’t from me.” He paused to sip his wine.

“She was reading Anglo Saxon studies for a PhD at Oxford, a department made famous by JRR Tolkien, although he’d long gone. Driving back from Portsmouth to the university at Oxford her car, a little Peugeot, was hit head on by a coach, a charabanc. The driver was under the influence of alcohol and was later prosecuted for drink driving. He was banned from driving, and fined two hundred pounds.”

He paused, still looking at the wall, tears now in his eyes, “That was all her life was worth, a measly two hundred quid.” He paused again and blew his nose. “It devastated us. My wife, Celia, who was already fighting multiple sclerosis, gave up the fight and in less than six months, I’d lost both my darlings. I only had my work to keep me alive.”

I put my hand on his and squeezed it gently. He looked at me and smiled. I smiled back at him and Stella dashed to the kitchen and brought back some more coffee. She then poured us another cup each.

“You can imagine my surprise when I got a letter from a student from Sussex, commenting upon a paper I did. It piqued my curiosity and I invited him to come and see the department. I was intrigued by the cheek of a new graduate making some comments about the methodology we used on mammalian surveys. It wasn’t really my subject, I did the physiology, but the young tyro had some relevant points.

When he arrived, I nearly died, he could have been my grandson–except for the small matter that my Catherine, couldn’t have kids. So after a meeting where he stated a few points we could have improved, I challenged him to come here and do a master’s degree and show us how it could be done better.

A few months into the course and he came to see me. He was transgendered. It hit me like a bomb. He was too pretty to be a boy, and I wondered if he was gay, except he kept much to himself and his work was first class. It was so coincidental, it almost felt as if my daughter had been reborn, except this Cathy, was already alive when mine, died.”

I felt my ears burning, I was blushing so much and the alcohol seemed to make it worse. Tom took a sip of his wine and continued his narrative. “You see, Cathy, my Catherine was also transgendered.”

My blushing got a sight worse. “Oh,” I squeaked as my throat seemed to constrict around the words. It made it obvious why he was so unfazed by my revelation and why he was so supportive on a personal as well as official level. Stella had told me she’d learned from him a bit of this, so it wasn’t entirely a revelation, but it still choked me.

“We knew from early on, that there was something different about our son. At first I thought he was gay and while it didn’t exactly disturb me, I saw it as a complication for his life. However, it wasn’t a case of homosexuality, it transpired to be a gender thing. That did disturb me, I mean, it’s so obvious to all who know you, once things start changing. Anyway, we pulled together as a family and her mother was brilliant. So just before going away to Oxford, my son became my daughter — Cameron Agnew, became Catherine.”

“Cameron!” Stella squeaked loudly, “How many more coincidences are there going to be? If you tell me her second name was Stella, I’m going to ask a paranormal researcher to investigate.”

“No, that was my mother’s name.”

“Geez, I bloody knew it,” she said taking a gulp of wine.

“Cameron Simon Agnew, became Catherine Simone Agnew. Oxford were quite helpful, given this was in the late seventies and I paid for her to go to the States for surgery at John’s Hopkins in Baltimore. She had it done during her first summer vac. After that she didn’t look back, she had a girlfriend and they loved each other. It broke up and she had several relationships afterwards, all with blonde girls–which she had a thing about. So when I am presented with a blonde, almost look-alike, it nearly blew me away.”

I finished my coffee. “No wonder you found it so easy to accept my changeover?”

“The hard part was stopping myself from projecting the person I had lost onto you. At times it was so hard. Then when you moved in here, it was like the gods had rewarded me, they had given me back my daughter and another reason to live, other than just my work.”

“Except, I wasn’t your daughter.” I touched his hand and he held mine.

“No, more like my wilful granddaughter, who constantly gets herself into scrapes.”

“Yeah, erm, sorry about that.”

“You know the Dean is retiring?”

“No, when?”

“He’s actually gone, Dr Mathers has taken on the role temporarily.”

“Who?”

“He’s from Marine Biology, so you probably haven’t met, oh, yes you have, he was witness to your little outburst.”

“Oh, oh well.”

“I’ve sussed him out, he told me on the QT, that he had some sympathy with you. Which means, I’m offering you your job back.”

“What?”

“What is it with you young women, don’t you ever bloody listen?”

“No, erm, I mean yes.”

“Oh goody!” said Stella, and she began a little dance around the kitchen.

“Tom, where is your daughter buried?” I asked him quietly.

“She was cremated and interred at the local church in Portsmouth, why?”

“Next time I’m there, I’d like to take her some flowers, if that’s okay?”

“I’m sure she’d have liked that, she loved flowers.”

“Is that where you take the dog, every week?”

“Damn you, woman, how did you guess that?”

“Intuition, I suppose.” I squeezed his hand again, and he put his second one on top of mine.

“So are you coming back?” He asked as Stella danced in with another bottle of wine.

“I don’t think I have any choice, do I, granddad?”

“Still as cheeky, but then with my daughter being similar, I should have been used to it, shouldn’t I?”

“Absholutely,” said Stella, her tongue poking out of her mouth as she tried to get the corkscrew into the bottle.

(no picture tonight, it wouldn't work.)

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Comments

Sniff, sniff

Dang you, you've got me crying now.

Wonderful, sis!

Karen J.

"Being a girl is wonderful and to torture someone into that would be like the exact opposite of what it's like. I don’t know how anyone could act that way." College Girl - poetheather


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Well, hell

she has me crying on a regular basis, she should get royalties from tissue manufacturers.

The Coincidences Are Amazing!

jengrl's picture

It is like their lives were meant to intersect with each other. The names of all the principal characters being interconnected with each other is like an episode of the "Twilight Zone". It is amazing that in a very real sense Tom gets a second chance to be a father to Cathy, Stella and Simon. Even though Simon and Stella's father is still alive, Tom has been a strong presence in their lives much like a father should. Cathy needed his love when her own parents shunned her and he understood her and helped her come out of her shell. The name coincidences are so eerie that it is not hard to see destiny is playing a hand in healing so many lives.

PICT0013_1_0.jpg

Very nice episode

Shocking with the name thing. Poor professor never had a chance did he.

Soooo Moving

Such a sweet chapter, Sis. It brought tears to my eyes. It is now plain to see why Tom is so fond of Cathy, even if she is like a naughty granddaughter.

Thanks for giving us such a delightful chapter,

Hugs,

Gabi

Gabi.


“It is hard for a woman to define her feelings in language which is chiefly made by men to express theirs.” Thomas Hardy—Far from the Madding Crowd.

Beautiful, Just Beautiful Angharad!!!!!

Now we know why Tom loves his adopted children, especially Cathy!! And I wonder if his daughter read Tolkien? Now will Simon know about this too?
May Your Light Forever Shine

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

It's all seems so good

for them now but what happens when des's will gets read? Enjoying the ride Amy"May your pen never run out of ink and your brain out of ideas"

Awww. And I was sooo looking...

forward to seeing the picture of Stella trying to open the wine...

Thanks Angharad. Tom sounds more like a wonderful dad.

Annette

Hurray!

Cathy and Spike are going "Home"!!!
Huggles,

Winnie

Huggles,

Winnie
Winnie_small.jpg

Even after 414 episodes

this is still fresh and throws up more surprises. How is it I get the impression that Portsmouth Uni is being run mainly for Cathy's benefit?

This script has more twists and turns than Eastenders, Corrie and The Archers combined.

Not complaining, merely gratefully observing.

Susie

Wow!...

Angharad you are full of surprises. That episode was just... like Stan and before him also Ellie Arroway* were saying 'beautiful, soo beautiful...' It still drives tears of joy into my eyes. Cathy found the father she never had in Tom while he got his daughter back in a way. Yet I still miss Tom telling what Catherine was like. He didn't tell much about her personality but let Cathy discover most of it herself.

Angharad, I have no idea how you feel about it, or how any of the other readers might think, but I do hope you continue that serious for many many more years.

*hugs*

Saphira
--
>> There is not one truth only out there. <<
* Dr. Ellie Arroway - radio astronomer - when she first met the extraterrestial intelligences and saw space - http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118884/

--
>> There is not one single truth out there. <<

just the best!!!

Angharad that was just the best!!! It was so sweet to find out more about Tom's daughter,what a lovely girl she sounded... Just like our Cathy!!!

hugs kirri

P.s.Great to see Cathy's got her old job back!.

Tom

It is interesting to see his take on things. It also seems the Dean may have been involved with some shenanigans. He is retired though, so he should be get off lightly. It could have been worse for him, as I suspect Cathy will continue to climb and be a superstar in her profession, and he has to explain why her project was dismantled whilst she lay helpless near death from an assault.

Wonder if the truth will come out?

Two transgendered people named Catherine

Nicely explains and ties up loose ends, and why Tom Agnew is so forgiving.
. And lets' not forget, Cathy is brilliant on her own.

Cefin