When at seven minutes to midnight on Friday I received a message full of wrong spellings from an old friend who is a stickler for correct spelling because he knows that I am a stickler for correct spelling, I knew that there was something wrong.
I immediately texted back, "OH NO!!! What shocking news!!! It's just on midnight and my phone makes a noise and then this! I tell Padma tomorrow morning and we come up to see you. Hang in there, mate. This is just so terrible to hear. We all know the old man will come one day, but when it happens, it's too much of a shock. You'll never be forgotten, mate! You lived a good life, and you have many friends."
My friend and I had worked for the ANZ Bank in the 1960s, I for just two years; he for the rest of his working life. If that made him an ordinary man, he was an extra-ordinary man who defied convention in many other ways. In recent years, having both battled with cancer, a strong bond had developed between us and we had been in regular contact.
We "saddled up" very early on Saturday morning for the long trip to Wollongong. For someone who used to relocate from a job in Samoa on a Saturday to start the next one in Malaysia on a Monday morning, to call a 200-km trip 'long' seems silly, but that's what old age does to you.
We popped in at our friends' Chinese restaurant just across from the Bomaderry railway station, where we received a hearty welcome and a light lunch over heavy discussions about the current state of the world.
Then on we drove for the next hour to arrive at the hospital to find our way to my friend's private room. For years we had planned a road trip to Bonegilla where he had done his National Service and, after the former army camp had been turned into a makeshift migrant reception centre, I had spent my first two nights in God's Own Country. My suggestion that I had come to pick him up for our long-planned trip evinced only a tiny smile from him, as he was highly sedated with painkillers. We spent several hours reminiscing and making light of what was a sad situation.
We left just in time to snatch the very last vacancy at our favourite motel at Figtree, where we were known from many previous visits.
We were back inside the hospital the following morning, but what a difference one night makes! My friend had deteriorated to the point of no longer recognising me and being even more highly sedated than the day before. Out of respect to him and his family, I took no more photos and I must confess I left in tears. Perhaps the doctors' prognosis was right. Perhaps it is only seven minutes to midnight for my old friend.
















