Catherine Sevenau

Opener of doors, teller of tales, family scribe.

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You are here: Home / THROUGH ANY GIVEN DOOR (web serial) / Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies / La Habra, San Francisco, San Jose 1958-1968 / 3.24 The Hillman Minx

3.24 The Hillman Minx

September 16, 2018 By Catherine Sevenau

Betty and Mom

Southern California ~ Mother attempted suicide like clockwork, usually with pills and alcohol and always next to a hospital or police station so someone could rescue her in time. My mother wanted to kill herself, but she didn’t want to die; there’s a difference. Carleen no longer took the calls to come get her, so Larry, now living in Carmel, got the call from Loma Linda, a teaching hospital 400 miles away in Riverside. Trying to end her life just outside their doors, they found a final letter on Mom, donating her body to Loma Linda for medical purposes. Larry called Betty because she lived closer and told her to call and find out what was going on.

After identifying herself as a next of kin, Betty queried the head nurse, “Is my mother dead yet?”
“No, but she doesn’t have long. She’s not going to make it.”

My sister called Larry back with the good news. He immediately drove down, picked up Betty, and insisted she come with him to say goodbye to Mother.

“I’m not going,” she snipped. “Cole of California is having their yearly 50% off warehouse sale and I’m not about to miss it.”

They had a terrible row and he finally browbeat her into seeing Mother. The hospital had sent him the letter they found on Mom and on the drive over he demanded Betty read it. She refused.

“I’m not reading this junk. It’s the same old crap, Mother whining and wallowing. I’m not interested …grumble, grumble, grumble.”
“Read it,” he ordered.
“No!”
“READ IT!”
She finally gave it a cursory once-over, just to get Larry off her back. Then she wadded it up and threw it on the floor.

Mom, unconscious when they got to her room, was on oxygen, tubes up her nose, needles in her arms and ankles, the needle holes ulcerating. Arms crossed, Betty leaned against the wall in the hall outside.

Larry

“This is the last time you are ever going to see your mother,” Larry snapped, “Get over here and say goodbye to her!”

Betty refused. “Thank God. It’s about time. I’ve seen this once too often …grumble, grumble, grumble, and I’m not interested in seeing it anymore.”

She didn’t go in.

After saying final his goodbye to Mom, Larry made Betty take Mom’s 1959 Hillman Minx packed with all of her belongings back to Huntington Beach. The mailman, who at Christmas delivered twice a day during the week and once on Saturdays, knew Mother from her occasional stays with Betty and recognized the car in my sister’s open garage.

“Your mother’s car has been here for a few days but I haven’t seen her around. Is she visiting you?”
Betty thinks, What am I going to tell him—my mother’s in the hospital from her umpteenth attempted suicide? so said, “No, she died.”

to be continued…

© 2018. Catherine Sevenau.
All rights reserved.

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Comments

  1. Jean McQuady says

    September 17, 2018 at 10:21 am

    Mental illness is so difficult to deal with for the person and family. Praise to those who come out the other side much stronger.

  2. Judy Altura says

    September 17, 2018 at 10:16 am

    Sadly, so damn funny.

    • Catherine Sevenau says

      September 17, 2018 at 10:40 am

      My sister was so damn funny. She was so mad when she told me the story, ranting and raving and chewing on the inside of her cheek, that I was cracking up. She failed to see the humor in it.

  3. Barbara Jacobsen says

    September 17, 2018 at 9:13 am

    Such suspense! Did she or didn’t she? (I know, “wait and see”!)

    • Catherine Sevenau says

      September 17, 2018 at 9:54 am

      no spoler alerts

Through Any Given Door

Web Serial

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Through Any Given Door

  • Web Serial: Part I, Faded Snapshots
    • Complete Part I
    • 1. Front Matter
      • 0.i Teller of Tales, Family Line
      • 0.ii Ded, Billet-Doux, Credits, ToC
      • 0.iii Prologue
    • 2. Sonora 1943-1947
    • 3. Sonora 1948-1953
    • 4. History and Backstory
  • Web Serial: Part II, Torn Pictures
    • Complete Part II, sans photos
    • 1. San Jose, San Francisco 1954-1957
    • 2. Hawaii 1957-1958
  • Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies
    • Complete Part III, sans photos
    • La Habra, San Francisco, San Jose 1958-1968
    • Post Memoir Sketches
  • Through Any Given Door, Part I (in full)

Web Serial: Part III, Home Movies

Post Memoir Sketches in full

4.10 Larry’s Later Life

4.09 Lore, Libel and Lies

4.08 Cutty Sark and Carleen

4.07 Final Migration

4.06 I Must Have Lied

4.05 My Sister Liz

4.04 Elegy to My Father

4.03 Letter from Liz

4.02 Letters From Claudia

4.01 Unleashing the Flying Monkeys

Through Any Given Door, Part III (in full)

3.46 Sin and Prayer

3.45 A Kind of Holiness

3.44 No Flowers

3.43 Rainbows and Red Devils

3.42 Positively Haight Street

3.41 Killing Time

3.40 A Full Mass

3.39 “Oh Yeah?”

3.38 Homesick

3.37 Summer in Europe

3.36 Leaving the Hive

3.35 Riverside Campground, Big Sur

3.34 La Habra High (part 2)

3.33 La Habra High 1961-1966 (part 1)

3.32 Riffraff and Hippies

3.31 Quit Gawking

3.30 It’s Not Fair!

3.29 The Sunset

3.28 A Longer Scorecard

3.27 Sweeney’s Candy Shop

3.26 1644 Haight Street, 1960

3.25 “Listen, Dearie”

3.24 The Hillman Minx

3.23 Purgatory

3.22 “You Writin’ a Book?”

3.21 “Chu-uck”

3.20 Simon Legree

3.19 The Furies

3.18 Gus the Helms Man

3.17 Queen of Hearts

3.16 Smoke Gets in Your Eyes 1960s

3.15 Beach Camping

3.14 Waiting, Waiting, Waiting

3.13 Jesus, Mary, and Joseph

3.12 Chutes and Ladders

3.11 Sunday Drives

3.10 Tie Pin and Cufflinks

3.09 The Amana

3.08 KRLA and KHJ

3.07 Saving Grace

3.06 My 1954 plain

3.04 Nana

3.03 Sierra Vista School 1958

3.05 A Mother’s Instinct 1959

3.02 Orange Groves and Crackerboxes

3.01 La Habra 1958

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