The carer shows Josh and me down the
basement steps to the front of Jane’s flat. The ragged yellow curtains drawn
across the bay windows have just enough of a gap to let us peer inside. Jane is there, lying face down on the floor.
She’s moving her head, at least.
‘I don’t know how you’re going to get in,’
says the carer. ‘I haven’t got a key.’
The door looks pretty substantial; when I
foot it, there’s a suggestion of a bolt as well as the Yale. We turn our
attention back to the windows. There’s a deep gulley between them and the
steeply sloping bed that rises back up to road height. Jane has stuck a planter
there, some kind of lush, tall grass and a giant yucca straining up to capture
what light it can.
‘Nam, sixty-seven. I’m getting flashbacks,’
says Josh, struggling through the foliage. He climbs up onto the ledge and
starts testing each sash window. Most of them are either locked or painted
shut, but the furthest one top right is unsecured. He slides that one down,
reaches in, unlocks another, slides open a lower pane, crawls inside. A few
seconds more, and he lets us in the front door.
The flat is unkempt, dark, with childlike
drawings ripped from a notepad and sellotaped to the wall. June is lying in the
front room, face down, half-naked. Her left leg is lying abnormally flat; it’s
apparent she’s fractured her hip even from here. It’s also apparent she’s been
on the floor some time. There are faeces on her legs and a wide, dark stain
around her on the carpet. But despite the dreadful injury, and despite the fact
she’s lain three days on the floor like this, Jane’s remarkably chirpy.
‘I’m an artist,’ she says. ‘Retired,
anyway. See that mural up there?’
She can’t point, but doesn’t need to. Above
her on a wall that’s been unceremoniously stripped of its wallpaper, is an
approximate view of mountains, dobbed out in a heavy brush from some peach and
mauve tester pots.
*
A difficult extrication, but it goes smoothly.
It’s like a three-dimensional puzzle – what furniture to move and where, the
angles needed to negotiate the narrow hallway, the way to get over the little
metal railings (I balance the feet-end on the railings / I walk round / Josh balances
the head end on the railings / Josh walks round). Jane seems to appreciate it, too,
periodically toking on the gas and air, blissing-out on the movement and the attention
and the blue, blue sky.
The carer hurries off to her next
appointment; we go to A&E.
*
Josh explains the situation to the triage
nurse. She comes over and strokes Jane on the hand.
‘You poor love. They’re telling me you fell
over, hurt your hip and couldn’t get up? In your flat? How long have you been there?’
‘Fourteen years.’
2 comments:
Great answer there from Jane.
It's all in the erm.. the whatsit... the timing
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