Jean is
lying on the sofa in a cinematic attitude of distress, her towelling robe
rucked up around her, one hand on her forehead, the other drooping out to the
side. Her husband Malcolm leads us into the room, his big red face slack.
They’ve
both been drinking, although I suspect Malcolm cleared the evidence away soon
after making the call. I’ve been out to him before – non-compliance with
medication, exacerbated by alcohol, emotionally volatile - but he doesn’t
remember.
‘I’ve
taken all my medicine, but it just hasn’t worked,’ says Jean, her eyes as wide
as she can make them. ‘I’ve never known pain like it. D’you know what? Without
wishing to appear dramatic, I had one of those whiteout moments, you know? That
was it, whoosh, my life was over. I thought I was going to die.’ Her voice
tails off into a stage-whisper; she grasps the collar of her dressing gown
tightly to pinch off any further horror at the neck.
Rae
examines her; I start filling out the form. Malcolm wanders around picking up
things and putting them down again.
‘I bet
you get fed up going to old farts like us, don’t you?’ he says.
‘No. Not
at all. It keeps us in a job.’
‘I like
that! You’re not denying we’re old farts, then?’
‘I think
you need some help tonight.’
‘Spoken
like a politician. But seriously. I’ve never seen Jean so bad as this. I
wouldn’t have phoned, but I just didn’t know what to do.’
Rae
calls out the figures; I write them down, along with all her other details.
Jean sends Malcolm off to fetch her medication, and for the next few minutes they
squabble over the random selection of boxes he wanders in and out with.
Eventually
Rae comes to review the situation.
‘I don’t
think the chest pain is your heart, Jean, but we’d need to run you down the
hospital to be doubly sure. And I think it’d be as well to talk to a doctor
there about your pain medication. Okay?’
Jean
nods, then looks at her husband.
‘I’ll
need my shoes, then, Malcolm.’
‘Your
shoes?’
‘Yes, my
shoes. Or slippers, or something. I can’t very well go out barefoot.’
‘Let me
just make a few calls.’
‘Get me
my shoes first. There’s plenty of time to make calls later.’
‘For god
sakes, woman. Can you just… you’re going to the hospital. You’re seriously
unwell. I have to make some calls. I have to tell our son. I think he has a
right to know, don’t you?’
He drops
down into an armchair and holds the phone close up to his face to start
scrolling through the address book.
‘Malcolm!’
‘What?’
‘My
shoes.’
He
lowers the phone and stares across at her, his temper riding up on a flushed
wave of booze. There’s a moment where I think he might actually throw the phone
at his wife, but it passes, and he drops it on the coffee table instead.
‘Right.
Fine. What shoes? Where?’
‘Maybe
you shouldn’t come.’
‘What?’
She
looks at me. ‘I don’t think he should come with me. I don’t want him.’
‘It’s up
to you.’
‘Why
shouldn’t I come, darling? You’re my wife, for Chrissakes. I’ll get your
shoes.’
He
wanders off into the kitchen.
‘No! In
the bedroom!’
I stand
up.
‘I’ll
get them for you.’
‘Would
you?’ She holds out her hand, rests it on mine, and looks up at me with puppy
eyes.
‘Thank
you,’ she whispers. I wouldn’t be surprised if someone shouted Cut! and she
suddenly dropped the act and looked away.
Whilst
they’ve made every effort to keep the rest of the place tidy, the bedroom is
surprisingly chaotic. All their clothes are out of the drawers and wardrobes,
as if someone had ransacked the place looking for something. I manage to find a
pair of slip-on sandals, and take them back to Jean. She steps into them on,
one hand on my shoulder, thanking me profusely. Malcolm re-emerges from the
kitchen, such an artlessly innocent expression on his face it’s obvious he’s
been taking a few last gulps before we leave.
‘Okay?’
he says, his lips and tongue barely in synch. ‘Okay then? Ready?’
*
At
A&E I’m waiting with Jean and Malcolm whilst Rae goes to hand over. Jean is
telling me about her son, Sam, something influential in the business field.
‘Not a
bit like us,’ she says. ‘Not an artistic bone in his body. No idea who he takes
after. He’s always coming over, tidying up.’ She pulls a comic kind of po-faced
expression, waggling a finger at me.
‘I’ve
got two girls,’ I say.
‘Really?
How old?’
‘Seven
and eleven.’
‘How
marvellous!’
But
Malcolm frowns, the sudden change in weight distribution almost pitching him head-first
onto Jean.
‘Seven
and eleven?’ he says. ‘Aren’t you a bit old for kids that age?’
‘Thanks,
Malcolm.’
‘You’re
very welcome.’
‘But you
know what – I can’t decide whether it’s better to have kids earlier or later.
Probably later, I think. What’s that line in that film? Something about Charlie
Chaplin still having kids at seventy-three, but he just couldn’t pick them up?’
Jean
reaches out and rests her hand on my arm again.
‘Do you
know what we call Sam?’
‘What?’
‘Hitler.’
‘Uh-huh.
I see. Affectionately known as Hitler,’ I say.
Now it’s
her turn to frown.
‘No, no,’
she says, and leans in to whisper: ‘We don’t like him.’
8 comments:
That last line caught me by surprise; what a pair!
I know! I'm guessing their son doesn't have an easy time of it these days (or ever, probably). :/
I'd be tempted to take Sam's details Spence.It'll save time when you're called out to him.
Miserable buggers the pair of them.
It's probably a good thing he lives quite a way away.
Alcohol - a problem yet again!
You have The Best Punchlines.
Nasty old geezers - you make them come horribly alive...
I'm a bit of a magpie when it comes to shiny bits of conversation...!
Wow. I wonder if it has anything to do with him coming over to tidy up all the time. Like he's trying to make some sense and order out of their lives (being a businessman, and all), and they (the "artists") resent that... especially since it's their son trying to help them, and the natural order of things is that the parents help the children.
I tell you what, though, from that snapshot it sounds like these two could use a little extra parenting.
I think that's a pretty fair reading of it, Invictus. I think you're right about the extra parenting, as well. I had the distinct feeling that as an ambulance crew we were being asked to act in loco parentis.
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