Mz Shalot lived at the end of the last lane off the main road before the esplanade along the river. In a rambling old white weatherboard house. Just beyond her place is the path to the wetlands. Every day she walked down to the esplanade, along the river, round by the pub and back along Terry Street past the shop and the post office. Except Tuesdays. On Tuesdays she caught the ten o'clock bus to the city. I followed her one day but she just sat in the mall. She always wore her brown raincoat, sensible black lace up shoes, a scarf around her head and dark glasses, even when it rained. Except Tuesdays. On Tuesdays she did not wear the headscarf. The local newspaper reported her missing presumed drowned after the awful floods last spring.
Vicky
Court is our local historian. I asked her to do a thingo on Mz Shalot
for her history stall at the annual arts and craft fair this year. It
keeps her busy. Some people don't like Vicky, they say she is a nosy
parker. Francie calls her Victoria. She can't stand her. I like
Francie.
Vicky
did a thing on old Ted down the road instead. Honestly there was not
much to tell. When I asked her about Mz Shalot she said there was
nothing to tell. The son she had located was no help.
So
I asked around. Phil who has had the local shop for zonks said yes,
he knew Mz Shalot. She came to the shop most days. She never spoke,
only nodded. He reckoned she lived on baked beans, white bread and
bacon. That's what she bought. Tony at the Post Office, cum bank,
cum news agency etc, said she had used an old blue commonwealth
bankbook like you don't see any more. Her name was Evangeline
Shalot. The electoral rolls were no help and there was no birth,
death or marriage certificate to be found.
Doris
who is ninety this year said Evie Shalot had lived at Pipers End all
her life. Like herself. She said she was a silent sort of creature,
even at school, without any friends. But she remembered that she had
won Miss Australia one year. Or maybe it was Miss Pipers End the year
they had the regatta. Francie said she was actually a duchess, had
been jilted at the altar in England by a prince or maybe a duke, and
had arrived home with twin boys. But she was a queer sort and kept to
herself.
No,
none of that is true said Betty. She won the lottery the year her
mother died. At one stage she went off to America and bought those
boys from some orphanage there. She was a terrible mother.
Old
Ted, the non-hero of the arts festival history display, said she was
a looker when she was young but would't have anything to do with the
local lads. She was on herself. Thought she was some lady muck thing.
Rachel,
who has just retired from her life long job as the doctor's
receptionist , said Mz Shalot was an interesting case. She was
related to royalty. When she bought the twins back from France she
hinted they were the sons of a prince who met with an unfortunate
accident. Come on Rachel. Mz Shalot never got that many words
together! No she said. But she did bring them in for regular checks
that had to be posted off somewhere.
On
the way to the wetlands last week I passed the house. It looks the
same. Closed venetian blinds, trimmed grass, one geranium down the
side and the rambling buttonhole rose coming through the front fence.
There was a car in the drive. I thought he was a shabby real estate
bloke so I asked him if the place was for sale. No he said. I can't
sell it till she has been missing for seven years. Seven bloody long
years. Take a gamble Lizzy, I said to myself. Are you her son?
Well
out it all tumbled.
That
bloody woman, Victoria something or other, came nosing round after
she went missing, but I told her there was nothing to tell.
In
a way there wasn't. But in another way there was. This is Philip's
story.
His
name is Philip Pennycourt. Dr Philip Pennycourt. He had been born a
Shalot but changed his name as soon as he grew up. He has a brother
named Jason. He is still a Shalot. Their childhood was strange,
silent, isolated, and without much comfort. He always thought Jason
was his twin. Looking out for Jason has been his life's
preoccupation. Jason is two sandwiches short of a picnic. He had
looked out for him at school and protected him at home when the
welfare called. Made sure he had enough to eat. Though the welfare
were mighty helpful at times he said. They arranged a special school
for Jason and books and a scholarship for himself.
His
silent mother, he said, was a cleaning maniac. She mopped the old
wooden floors everyday with an old fashioned mop and wring bucket.
The floors were permanently wet and smelt of pine o'clean. When they
were smaller she stripped them every afternoon when they came in,
tossed all their clothes in the washing machine including the canvas
shoes they wore, and put them in the bath tub. Scrubbed them with
Dettol. We always wreaked of disinfectant he said. He left home when
he turned seventeen and took Jason with him. Worked at night and
studied all day. But Jason went nutty and got into heaps of trouble,
ended up in court and was committed to the nuthouse. I had seen Jason
sometimes when he visited his mother. A big awkward man, lumbering in
white gumboots behind her.
When
he had waded through all the necessary study, intern stuff etc.,
Philip said he bought a practice in the Redhills district to be close
to Jason. He doctors two days a week, raises miniature pigs and grows
organic vegies. He is available for emergencies – both man and
beast. Jason was placed in group homes when they closed the nuthouse
down. But his brain, what there was of it, is so addled by alcohol
that he is now cared for at St Jude's Hospice in the city. Philip
visits once a month.
One
day he arrived with two old brown suitcases. The only things she left
he said, apart from her clothes.
Mz
Shalot had been born Evangeline Gamel Pennycourt in 1931. Her father
was Gamel Augustus Pennycourt. Her mother was
Colette Senne originally from Lyon. At thirty-nine Gamel was
expecting to become the 6th
Baron Mulcarster when his brother was dying of tuberculosis. But on
his deathbed the dying brother's wife produced a son and Gamel took
off to London. Here he met Collete and they were married on 7
December 1904. She was twenty-one and he was forty-one.
In 1907 they somehow ended up in Australia and bought their block of land at Pipers End. No one knows how. No one knows why. No one remembers. Their only child was born when Colette was forty-eight and Gamel sixty-eight. Colette’s diaries start with Evangeline's birth. Hardly diaries but a starting point.
In 1907 they somehow ended up in Australia and bought their block of land at Pipers End. No one knows how. No one knows why. No one remembers. Their only child was born when Colette was forty-eight and Gamel sixty-eight. Colette’s diaries start with Evangeline's birth. Hardly diaries but a starting point.
August
15, 1931 – had the child
January
1932 – Gamel and I look at the child
September
19 1932 – child walked Gamel built fence
January
1937 – child started school at the convent in Singlefield
March
1939 – Sister Evangeline says the child played up in sewing - she
is calling herself Shalot
What
happened?
Miss
Pinner took sewing. In grade three all the girls had to make a sewing
bag, embroidering their name in red chain stitch across the blue
gingham. Christ they were eight! Check it out - it's in the old Ed
Department archives. Evangeline pointed out to Miss Pinner that while
she had twenty letters to chain stitch, Sue Kay only had six. So
between them Sister Evangeline and the young Evangeline came up with
the name Shalot. Six letters. One would like to speculate but come on
that's enough poetic licence.
January
1941 – Gamel becomes the 7th Baron Mulcarster
The
2nd World War is taking its toll. One Baron down
March
1941 – sailing April 7 - have to take child
May
1941 – Gamel had heart attack. Buried at sea
So
that was a bit short for his Baron-ship. But Gamel's death had left
his wife and daughter well off. There is a photo of Mulcarster
castle, Ireland, in the diary. So now Mz Shalot is actually the Hon.
Evangeline Shalot but not a lady. Her mother is a lady.
May
1945 – war ended bonfire down on the esplanade Evie stayed out all
night.
I'd
like to take a bit of poetic licence with that one.
January
1948 – Evie new bathers for beach girl competition
Oh
come on Colette don't tease – where's the photo?
June
1950 – need to go to hospital what about Evie
Lady
Colette Edith Senne died 5 January 1951 according to the Registrar.
The cause of death kidney failure.
Philip
is unable to throw any light on the next twenty years of his mother's
life except that old passports show that a woman by the name of Lady
Evangeline Pennycourt travelled to Ireland a number of times. So she
took a bit of poetic licence with the Lady bit! Maybe she went to
look at the castle he said.
The
next items of interest are appointments for his mother in 1968
onwards at the Monaster University, medical research department. In
fact both he and Jason were born at Monaster and when he looked into
it he found they were not twins. Records show in fact they were born
eleven months apart, the result of early fertility trials. He
presumes he got the gung ho sperm from one of the young doctors while
Jason got the short end of the stick from some dead-beat druggie
short of cash. Yes they paid them to jerk off he said. That's the way
it worked.
He can shed no light on why or how his mother got into this or who their biological fathers are. Records are absent. He thinks he probably has dozens and dozens of half siblings scattered around the country. So much for the legendary paternal duke or prince, although as he points out one would probably have just as many half siblings. It's why he does'nt have children. Don't talk about the ethics he said – there aren't any.
He can shed no light on why or how his mother got into this or who their biological fathers are. Records are absent. He thinks he probably has dozens and dozens of half siblings scattered around the country. So much for the legendary paternal duke or prince, although as he points out one would probably have just as many half siblings. It's why he does'nt have children. Don't talk about the ethics he said – there aren't any.
The
rest is history he said. Or not even history. You know the rest. She
was such a silent woman. The original environmentalist. Not much of
a carbon footprint for eighty years of walking. Off she went. To quote
T S Eliot: not with a bang but a whimper.
So
there Vicky, there was a story. But Victoria as always, has to have
the last word. She has started her story Mz Shalot was an Alien...

