The white tablecloth starts pristine, covering and protecting the tabletop. The family gathers around it to drink and eat. Breadcrumbs spread around as the loaf is cut and they gently coached into little piles to be swept away.
Main course and the cloth endures a splash of water, a piece of chicken skin and a sneaky wipe of a greasy palm.
The family ebbs and flows as does the conversation, cryptocurrency, prime ministers, weather. They all ebb and flow around the table. The main course is done, and the table arises, some head off to the TV for the Friday night footy match, others to the kitchen to deal with the remnants of the meal, stragglers sit around as the table is cleared, glasses removed, plates and cutlery stacked and carried off the kitchen.
There’s a respectable time before the final course appears. The time between sittings is not something that can be solved with a mathematical formula. It must wait until the newspapers have been flicked through, mobile phones have been checked and new apps downloaded. The kettle boils, coffee is brewed, tea-bags are dangled, and a fruitcake, a crumble and choc chip biscuits appear. Nobody needs to be called; the family knows that the magic sweet spot of dessert has arrived. As the crumble is put into bowls and passed around, milk and sugar added to the hot drinks a packet of Tim Tams appear on the table.
There’s only five left. Tim Tams come in a packet of 11, not 12, not 10. 11. The outer packaging is stripped and the five tempting biscuits sit on one end of the inner hull. Tempting those around the table.
The final ritual of the evening begins. Light-hearted chat while eating the sweet treats.
Then there’s one left.
The lone Tim Tam has the gaze of the table. Silence as all eyes are upon it. Who will break the convention and eat it?
Then the question and the offers.
“Are you going to eat it?”
“You have the last one.”
“That has your name on it.”
The final call is the forlorn question, “What’s so important about that Tim Tam?”
Then like a cold, soggy tea-bag the Tim Tam is forgotten.
The table breaks, everything is whisked away. Good nights are said, kisses exchanged. Lights dimmed.
All that’s left is a few crumbs, a couple of spills and the lone Tim Tam on the white tablecloth.