‘Thanks for
coming. This is quite a strange one – although I don’t know, maybe you see this
all the time. But I must admit it’s thrown me. It’s all a bit of a shock. So – let
me tell you what happened. I wasn’t supposed to come over today. I was meant to
be going over to see Jean, but Jean’s had trouble with her eldest and was
called into school unexpectedly, which left me the morning free. So I came
round to see Dad, and let myself in with my spare key when he didn’t answer the
door. He wasn’t downstairs and I thought maybe he’d gone out shopping or
something. Like I say, I wasn’t expected. But then I heard a noise upstairs and
I thought – Dad? And that’s where I found him. In the bath. I mean literally in
the bath. He’d fallen backwards into it sometime early this morning and hadn’t
been able to get himself out again. He’s been there about five hours or so.
Initially I thought I’d be able to get him out on my own, but he’s a large chap
as you’ll see, and I realised I wouldn’t be able to do it on my own. He doesn’t
appear to have injured himself all that much – just on his back, some bruising
and minor lacerations from the taps, I think.’
Listening to Stephen talk is like witnessing
the relentless spread of a fractal pattern, an endlessly expanding thing, each
word suggesting five more. The only way we can break the spell is by talking across
him.
‘Can you show us where your Dad is, then?’
‘Yes. Of course. I have no idea how you’re
going to get him out, but I’m guessing you have specialist equipment. Just up
here. I don’t know why he ended up like this. His mobility hasn’t been great
lately, but not all that bad, either, considering his advanced age. He doesn’t
take many pills. And he’s pretty active. Jean and I are round as often as we
can. Only last week we took a trip out to a lovely country pub for a family
lunch. The weather wasn’t great but that’s not the most important thing. You
know - I hope I’m as hale and hearty as Dad when I’m eighty-five. Or
eighty-six. No. Yes. Eighty-five. Mum died a few years ago now, so he lives here
on his own. But like I say he has plenty of people round. I only live across
town. Five minutes if the time’s right. Twenty at rush hour, but I’m lucky in
that I work from home so I I’m pretty flexible. Jean is closer but then she’s busier,
so she doesn’t get over quite so much. Here we are. My father.’
He pushes open the bathroom door.
‘Dad? Some people to help.’
James is lying on his back in the empty
bath, his head at the tap end. There’s a bunched-up towel to cushion his
shoulders, and an old blue dressing-gown draped over his knees. His face has
such a jowly hang to it, his eyes weighed down so mournfully, he could be a
gigantic, hairless basset hound scrutinising the latest disappointment.
Unlike his son, he barely says a word.
Rae starts checking him over and asks if
I’ll fetch the inflatable cushion and a slide sheet.
‘That sounds promising,’ says Stephen – and
carries on from there as I head back down the stairs to the truck.
*
‘Right. Now.
I’ve put your watch and your wallet in the big brown holdall. I’ll put today’s
paper in there, too, so you’ve got something to read. I have to go home for
childcare duties but once Lisa’s home we’ll sort something out and I’ll meet
you down the hospital. Okay? I can’t think of any other way of doing it, but
you’ll be fine. I expect the first couple of hours you’ll sleep anyway, after
all the long trauma of the bath. Once you get on one of those comfortable
hospital beds you’ll be away. And then when you wake up, I’ll be there to keep
you company. The important thing is we get you checked out, and get to the
bottom of why you fell. You’ll be home before you know it, Dad. I’ll make sure
all the lights are turned off, the windows closed and the back door locked.
It’s landfill bin today, so I’ll put that out, too. Jean says she can probably
make it over sometime after six if you’re still there, but hopefully they’ll
have you discharged home before then. We can all reconvene here in the evening.
The girls have got tap and karate. Mae’s got that show coming up and Ellie’s
got a grading, but don’t worry, we’ll sort it out.’
And on and on, like some benign species of
domestic spider, playing out an endless spool of detail. James sits impassively
in the carry chair, swaddled in our blankets. He doesn’t say a thing. I give Stephen some tasks – bringing out the
equipment for us, the bags and so on. It means we won’t have to come back in to
get them, and I’m also hoping it might act as a distraction. But his facility
for talking is such a separate thing, I’m sure he could do three things
concurrently and still be able to chat.
Once we have James on the ambulance
trolley, we store the gear and make ready to go.
Stephen stands looking in, continuing his
monologue, still without any sign of stopping.
In the end, despite trying to steer things
to a gentler conclusion, I have to close the door on him. I do it as slowly and
respectfully as I can, nodding and smiling the whole while, but even so, Stephen
manages to squeeze a hundred more words through the closing gap before the door
clicks shut.
I take my seat next to James as we move
off.
‘Takes after his
mother,’ he says, then shuts his eyes.
9 comments:
"and endless spool of detail" -- love it!
This exhausted me just reading it. Can't imagine having to listen to it.
Hah! I ran across a few of those during my years selling books door to door... Basically, I ended up either backing away slowly (or not so slowly!) or just cutting them off and saying goodbye. Much like you did. Seems like that's really the only way to extricate yourself...
I suppose the stress of the situation means Steven talked a lot.
Either that or he's a big fan of Chas and Dave.
"Takes after his mother", priceless. Nicely written as usual Spence.
Alan - It was very exhausting - esp. given the difficulties of getting his dad out of the bath. But his heart was in the right place!
Invictus - Coping strategies, from 'Oh! Is that the time?' to a straight-out faint.
Jacks - More rabbit than Sainsbury's? I've never seen rabbit in /Sainsbury's. (Hmm. Plenty of rabbits round here, though. Business opportunity, perhaps?)
Mike - It's funny where these family traits come from. You're either a talker or not, etc. The great gene lottery, I suppose.
:)
My goodness, that poor man - imagine both his wife and son talking like that simultaneously! But then I suppose he did marry her...
That's a good point, JM! But maybe the whole bath episode temporarily made him more sensitive to stuff like that.
Wow, tired just reading that!
At least there's no worries about awkward silences (only blissful ones...) :/
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