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The Emma Kate Collection

  • HOME
  • About
  • Connect
  • Archive
    • She
    • The Letter
    • The Outsider
    • Death and Picnics
    • Hands
    • The Runaway
    • The Wait
    • Them and Me
    • Push
    • Vanishing Shapes
    • The Swim
    • Sometimes...
    • Cocoon
    • The Sum of My Parts
    • Just a Simple Melody
    • Bloom
    • Ids Narda Toomur
    • Dear Maggie
    • The Passenger
    • Tips of My Toes
    • Secrets
    • The New Kid
    • Code Blue
    • Home Sweet Home
    • The Jacaranda Tree
    • Too Much to Camambert
    • Nanu Nanu
    • Unexpected Love
  • In The Spotlight

The Wait.

February 22, 2017 Emma Brooker
the wait.jpg

I once had to sit quietly, in the heat and the dust and the hot wind and wait a long time for a train.

My mum and sister were passengers and they had been away for about 3 weeks.

To an 8-year-old, 3 weeks felt like forever.

A tiny train station with a tiny platform, on the outskirts of our tiny dirt road town.

Its main purpose was for long, brown coal trains – loaded up with sparkly, black coal to be switched from one rail track to the next as they clickety clacked their way through the village in the dead of the night, shaking all the houses in their rows.

The small yellow bricked train station was also sparingly used as a lightning fast whistle stop, for locals to hurl themselves and their weathered possessions on or off the incoming or outgoing train as fast as they could, before it churned itself along to bigger towns and bigger platforms.

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Tags memoir, fertility, infertility, ivf, feminism, female, mother, daughter, pregnancy, relationships
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