‘Have
you come for me?’ says Lionel. ‘Well. Bye, bye, dear.’
We help
him out of his chair. As soon as he’s up and stable, his wife June gives him a
kiss on the cheek, then stands back, anxiously smoothing her apron.
‘You
don’t mind if I stay, do you?’ she says.
‘No. Of
course not. You’ve only just come out yourself. You don’t want to be going back
to that place. No, no – you stay here and get an early night. I’ll be okay.
Maybe David will come up later? Anyway – bye, bye, dear. Bye, bye.’
I pass
him his walking stick. The hallway of their flat is bare, just a couple of
framed pictures on the wall, and a row of energy-saving light bulbs glowing
without shades above our heads.
We start
the long shuffle out to the ambulance.
*
Lionel
has an extraordinary mouth. The upper jaw is tight, rounded out like a quarter
of coconut, utterly immobile. The lower jaw hardly moves much, either – just enough
to get the words out, past a row of pointed, grey and fish-like teeth. In fact,
hunched over in that grimy raincoat, flicking a sideways look in my general
direction every now and then, he might easily be an ancient species of
land-dwelling fish, in old man-disguise for a trip to the vet. He speaks softly
and rapidly without much pause for breath, none for questions. All he needs
from me is the occasional grunt to show I haven’t wandered off.
‘When I
came out of the army I had no idea what I was going to do next. My father didn’t
help all that much. He wasn’t any good. He used to say “What nonsense have you
been thinking now, Lionel?” In some ways he was right, I suppose. I didn’t
apply myself, you see. I thought I could do all kinds of things, but they just
didn’t seem to go my way. So when I got out of the army I found myself a job in
the stores department of an engineering firm. That was a good job. I liked that
job. But then after seven years I got made redundant. So I gave myself a jolly
good talking to and I said: “Right! On with the new!” And I came to London. And
I went in to the Labour Exchange there, and I said: “What have you got for me?”
And in turns out, what they’d got for me was another job in stores. In a… in a
fabrication place. You know. A place where they make things. Anyway, I was
there for seven years, I think. And then I got made redundant. But by that time
June had got her eye on me. I used to work with her brother, you see. That’s
how we met. Well one day she came up to me and she said “I’ve got tickets for a
show. At the Royal Albert Hall.” And I said “Oh?” And she sort of waved them in
my general direction. Well – we went to that show, and it was very good. But we
took things slow, d’you follow? I don’t like to rush things. We didn’t even
hold hands until a week later. And stuck at that for a month. But anyway,
things happened, and here we are now, forty years later.’
He
pivots in the chair and tries to look at me.
‘Do you think
David might be up later?’ he says.
6 comments:
I find this scary - we've been together over 40 years. But we were very young when we met at Uni.
It is still scary.
Hi Anon
Congratulations on the 40 years! A wonderful achievement. Here's to the next 40...! :)
Gosh that's made me fill up.
I often joke about my 30 years being a few life sentences but I can't imagine life without my old g*t.
Bless them I hope he was ok.
xx
Hey Anon
He was going in for a fairly minor procedure, so the chances are he was fine.
Congratulations on your 30 years, too. It's lovely to hear about these long relationships. x
Mouth like a coconut?
It's a little known fact that if you cut a horse in half and tap the two halves together it sounds like a coconut.
Actually what his mouth reminded me of most strongly was the apes in the early Planet of the Apes films.
Love the joke about the horse. Reminds me of that Woody Allen line about a mythical beast "with the head of a lion and the body of a lion but not the same lion.
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