Harry is being transferred to the main
hospital for his operation. He doesn’t want to go; it’s an emotional farewell.
He puts on a brave face as we wheel the trolley out through the ward and down
the corridor, but the great downwards arc of his moustache and his deeply hooded
eyes give him an exaggeratedly mournful expression. Everyone there – his fellow
patients, the nurses, cleaners, even the doctors – they all seem happy to see
him off. They wave and shout things out. Take
Care, Harry and All the best, mate and
Good luck with the ol’ whasisname.
Outside in the lift he hugs his bag.
‘They’ve been so good to me here,’ he says.
‘Couldn’t have asked for more.’
*
It’s a forty-five minute ride, a routine
journey, nothing to be done, the end of another long and busy day. I’m
dangerously comfortable on my chair, the ambulance rocking gently from side to
side as we hush along the road. Everything about me is folding inwards and
downwards, an irresistible, gravitational collapse. At this rate, when we get
to the other end and Rae opens the back door, all she’ll find is an empty
uniform draped over the seat, and a trickle of warm sand from my boots.
I blink hard, sit up straight. Take a lungful
of air.
When I breathe out, it’s like the deflation
of a balloon character.
I rub my face for the tenth time, fold my
arms, and smile across at Harry.
He smiles back.
He’s a sweet old guy, no doubt about it. But
he hasn’t got his top plate in, so his mouth is loose and squashy. He speaks in
a monotonous, rounded kind of whisper, hard to make out against all the
background noise, and it’s difficult to lip-read because of the overhang of his
moustache. And then, when I can make
out what he’s saying, it seems to be nothing more than lists. And when he says
each item on the list it’s accompanied by a little shrug of his shoulders, like
a machine giving a little puff of smoke.
‘All right, Harry?’
He nods.
‘Did you get something to eat?’
‘Oh yes. The food was good there. Very
good. They do very good food there, I must say. Yes. No complaints about the
food.’
I stare at him.
‘What kinds of things?’ I say, pathetically.
‘What .. erm... what do you like to eat?’
‘Oh – all sorts. I like pretty much
everything. Pies. I like pies. Your steak and kidney. Chicken and mushroom.
Leek and potato. I like a good pie. Shortcrust, flaky. Shepherd’s pie, so long
as the mash isn’t lumpy. I can’t stand lumpy mash. It makes me sick. Pretty
much all pies, basically. Fish pie. Fish
pie’s nice. So long as it’s not too fishy. I don’t like tuna. Tuna’s for cats.
Cod, of course. With chips. Haddock. and chips. Plaice and chips. Kippers. Then
there’s sandwiches. I like a good sandwich. Cheese and tomato. Cheese and
pickle. Ham and tomato. Ham and pickle. On white bread, though. Not brown, or
wholemeal. Brown bread plays havoc with me plate. Then there’s paste, of course...’
‘Paste? What – you mean like Shippam’s?’
‘Shippam’s, that’s it. I like Shippam’s.
Crab paste, salmon paste. Beef. I like a good paste sandwich...’
‘Horse?’
‘Never had that. No. Don’t like Chinese
food. Don’t like Indian food. Rice, pasta - none of that old muck. Just good
old plain English food. Potatoes, I like. Cabbage. Runner beans. Fruit. I like
a nice bit of fruit. Apples I like. Bananas. Plums. Pears. Grapes. Red grapes.
White grapes. Red more than white. Oranges. Tangerines...’
The ambulance slows to a stop. We’re at the
back of a queue a thousand miles long. I feel like throwing the doors open and
running off into the night. Starting a new life somewhere. A cave in the hills.
Tattooing myself with leopard spots. Living on seaweed.
But instead I say: ‘So what did you do
before you retired, Harry? What line of ... erm ... work, were you in?’
‘Painting and Decorating,’ he puffs. ‘Started
when I was fifteen. Stopped last year on me sixty-fifth birthday. And it’s been
one long round of illnesses ever since. First I had the right knee done, then I
had the left. Then my back went and I had to have that dug out. Asthma,
prostate, cataracts...’
Desperately now: ‘What was it like,
painting and decorating?’
‘Painting and decorating? Well – I liked
it.’
‘Hard work?’
‘Oh yes – hard work. Very hard work. But
you get used to it. I started off mixing the paint, carrying the ladders
backwards and forwards from the van. Odd jobs, you know. They kept me busy.
Next thing they got me rubbing down, sanding woodwork, filling holes, cleaning
and scrubbing. Preparation. Tidying up. Making tea. Then there was the putting
up of the pasting tables, preparation of the glue, pasting the paper. I loved
that, pasting paper. On the walls, of course. And the ceiling...’
I close my eyes.
Open them.
For a horrifying second I think I must have
fallen asleep.
The ambulance is bouncing along quietly. Did
we turn off? God I hope so.
I rub my face.
Harry is staring at me mournfully, his arms
still folded.
‘Tired?’ he says.
9 comments:
I hate having to make polite conversation, when you both know that you're just desperately trying to fill the silence. Harry does sound nice, though.
Hey PH.
I don't mind silences in the back, especially if I think that's what the patient wants. But on this occasion, Harry wanted to chat, and I wanted to try to stay awake. It was just a shame I lacked the conversational wherewithal. Maybe earlier in the day I'd have had a little more pep. Normally I like talking about food. (DIY? Not so much).
mmmmmmmmm pies........
Love the fantasy about running off into the hills and living on seaweed! Inspired!
jacks - I'm with you on that. Who ate all the pies? (me)
JuliesMum - I'd have done it, too if the traffic hadn't started moving again when it did.... :/
There was something of Alice in Wonderland about that conversation.
I know what you mean, tpals! Increasingly nonsensical lists in a sleepy setting:
'Reeling, writhing, fainting in coils...'
"all she’ll find is an empty uniform draped over the seat, and a trickle of warm sand from my boots."
That's likely a Star Trek reference, but the best I can come up with is 'By Any Other Name'.
Hi Blair
It wasn't a conscious ST reference, but now you mention it...
Did you see that one with the salt-sucking monster? I think that left a few of the redshirts as little more than icky deposits!
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