Late at night. Maybe it’s the exhaustion I feel, or
maybe it’s the streetlamps shining through the mist, but everything seems fragile
and one-dimensional. When I cough, too
loudly, I half expect everything to fall back soundlessly, like a poorly built set
in a play about Jack the Ripper.
We’re standing outside a Victorian workhouse that’s
been converted into flats, trying to figure out from the haphazard cluster of
buttons and speakerphones which buzzer to press. In the end we take a guess. No-one
comes on the intercom to ask us who we are, but the door buzzes open and we take
that as a nod.
We step inside.
The hall light doesn’t work, but the dark ahead of us
has a texture and smell to it that tells us it goes back some way. Whilst we’re
figuring out where to go next, a light snaps on somewhere overhead, spilling
down a staircase to our right.
Up here, mate.
There’s a bitten-down meanness to the place, a scrawl
of poverty in the air.
We go up two flights, to an unmarked door without a
handle or any sign that anyone lives beyond it at all.
I knock, hesitate, and we go through.
Two men chatting in what seems to be a tiny galley
kitchen in front of us. Neither of them make any acknowledgement that we’ve
come in. I smile and say hello; one of them nods behind him and says: Through there.
Do they live here? Are they workmen? But at this hour? It’s
impossible to tell.
We struggle past with our bags, into another, tiny
room, more like a storage facility than a living space.
There are three people there: Janine, sprawled in an
armchair; her mum Joan, playing a zombie shoot-em up on the laptop; and Carl,
Janine’s partner, mixing himself a whisky and coke from the two bottles on the
floor.
‘Hello. I’m Spence. This is Rae. Are you the patient?’
I ask Janine.
‘Well it’s not me, love,’ says Joan, blasting away at
the creatures on the screen without looking up. ‘My baby days are over, thank
god.’ There’s a hard quality to her face and eyes, which, framed in a fall of
lank and greasy ringlets, looks like a porcelain doll on smack. I wouldn’t be surprised if one of the zombies
on the screen reached out and claimed her for one of their own.
‘It’s me,’ says Janine.
There’s nowhere to sit, the room cluttered with junk,
building materials, old pizza boxes, so
we both stand either side of her chair whilst Janine tells us the story. She’s
eleven weeks pregnant – Not mine! says
Carl, waving his hand in the air then taking a swig from his glass – and she’s
been having trouble with nausea and vomiting. She went to the hospital the
other day and was on a drip for a while; they discharged her home with an
anti-emetic; she still feels nauseous, though she hasn’t actually vomited
today.
‘Let’s do your blood pressure and the rest, and then
talk about what we can do tonight,’ I say, writing down her details. It’s Janine’s
second pregnancy. The first was uncomplicated, except the baby was taken away
at a year for adoption. The only other health problems she has are psychiatric,
behavioural.
‘It’s my turn now,’ says Carl, putting his whisky and
coke down and nudging Joan in the ribs. She hands him the laptop without any
change of expression, then settles back on the sofa to read something on her
phone. Carl puts some earphones in. He’s more energetic with the gun than Joan;
he gets into his stride almost immediately.
All Janine’s observations are normal. I try to persuade
her to rest at home for the evening and then see her GP in the morning, but she
says she’s worried and wants to go to hospital.
‘What do you think?’ I say to Joan.
‘I’m staying out of it,’ she says.
I look over at Carl, who’s obviously monitoring the
situation despite having his earphones in and shooting zombies. He lifts his
chin in the air but doesn’t look away from the screen. ‘I’m not getting
involved,’ he says.
‘Come on then, Janine. Have you got your pregnancy
notes, keys, phone...?’
There’s a spindly kitten staggering around the flat. It
appears from behind the sofa and stares at us.
‘Cute kitten,’ I say.
‘You can take that as well,’ says Carl. But then
something happens in the game. He grunts, puts the gun down, then reaches down
and pulls a slice of pizza out of a box on the floor by the bottles.
‘I love cats,’ I say. ‘We had our one for nineteen
years.’
Joan reaches for a whisky and coke of her own.
‘I had a friend,’ she says, pouring out a tall glass. ‘I
had a friend, she had ten cats.’
‘Ten! That’s a lot!’
‘It is a lot.
But they all died.’
‘Oh.’
She smiles and looks up at me. ‘Over the years, though.
Not all at once.’
5 comments:
A charming family.
I'm not the greatest lover of cats,although Mrs Jack is.Consequently we always have cats....Although one of ours,Jess (you can guess what she looks like) soon discovered how to fly.
That's what you get for biting my toe at 3am.
Funnily enough, our second daughter is called Jess. We asked our first daughter for some name ideas and she came up with it. Only after, we realised where she got the idea... still good, though!
What great portraits you draw. Just the right details. Love the sketch of the building as you enter. Bravo!
I read this and wonder, like in so many posts of yours before, how you can tolerate seeing such squalor practically every other day.
Even more, I wonder how and why people do this do themselves; let themselves slip into desperation and utter passivity without really noticing, considering, contemplating. Like they are acting out a story, unaware that they are writing it themselves.
It was adoption for the first child, no need to guess where the second is heading. A truly sad state of affairs when an adoption is a big step up the ladder..
Thanks v much, Kirby!
I suppose it's one of the perks of the job (in a perverse kind of way, sometimes) that you get to go into these places. Often I think : this'd be a great set for a film!
Hi Travelhun.
I think we have a higher proportion of social cases where I work because of the location. I met up with a friend the other day who's transferred forty miles away. He says he hasn't used Narcan in over a year (the drug we give to reverse the effects of heroin in OD situations). Very telling!
I try to stay neutral to the lifestyle choices people make, but it's hard sometimes. I felt sorry for Janine, and even though she didn't need to go to hospital, in a way I was happy to take her out of that brutalising environment even if it'd only be for a few hours. (And I did want to take the kitten, too!
Cheers for the comments :)
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