Who’s there?
‘It’s
the ambulance.’
Come up. In the lift.
The lift
is a substantial Thirties affair, with a steel door that clanks shut like the
springing of a trap. It lurches up, makes two floors in so many seconds,
bounces to a halt, and vomits us into the hallway.
Mrs
Fontaine turns out to be as old and abrupt as the lift. She’s sitting on a
wooden stool in the hallway of her flat, the door open, waiting for us.
There you are. Now look. I want
you to take my blood pressure because I think it’s through the roof and I’m
quite worried about it.
She
talks emphatically, at an excitable rush that makes no distinction between
important things and the stuff of casual conversation.
I’m sorry to drag you out in the
middle of the night but I woke up and my heart was thumping and I thought I
might be having a stroke. Do you think I’m having a stroke? A heart attack?
Something like that? Well I must say you don’t look like someone who thinks
someone might be having a stroke or a heart attack, so you’re either horribly
callous or cool as a cucumber. I suppose you have to be cool as a cucumber in
your job. It wouldn’t do to be flapping about at the slightest provocation,
would it? Where shall I sit? Here okay? Here? Let me tell me you about my
ailments. I have high blood pressure. I have arthritis in my knees. I am
bi-polar. Bi-polar means you’re up one minute and down the next. It’s a damned
nuisance but I’ve lived with it for fifty years so you could say I’m used to
it, as are my acquaintances. Except they call it something else – eccentric, I
don’t doubt. There goes St Agnes the Eccentric, and jolly good luck to her. My
medications are listed here. I live on my own. I can make you tea if you’d
like?
She
stares at me as I take her blood pressure, breathing noisily through her nose, her
lips pursed. She’s like a steam train in the siding, impatient to be off.
Ow! That’s quite tight, you know?
Okay? Is it okay? Through the roof, I ‘spect.
‘Sorry.
Almost done. There. Yep – I’m afraid it is a bit high, Mrs Fontaine.’
Yes I thought it would be. I lay
there for ages thinking Damn Damn Relax, but then I just knew I’d have to call
you chaps out and have something done about it. I’ve got a fluttery feeling in
my chest, as well. Is that my heart, d’you suppose? Still, not surprising
really, given my extreme decrepitude. What d’you recommend? A mallet? I can
tell by your expression you think a mallet’s the thing. I expect you’ve got one
in that bag of yours. You’re a professional sadist, that’s what you are. Rather
too fond of inflicting pain for my liking.
Rae goes
to get the chair. I carry on with some more observations whilst Mrs Fontaine
chatters.
I don’t mind the heat. I lived in
Africa for years, so one acclimatises. See that picture there? I took that.
She
points to a framed photograph on the wall – a large spotted cat draped over a
tree branch.
‘What is
it – a cheetah?’
It’s a leopard, dear. Cheetahs
can’t climb trees. Leopards often like to sleep like that. And they like to drag
their prey up a tree to keep it safe from hyenas and so on. Hyenas are noisy,
nasty brutes. I used to know a man who trained them, though. He got them to
take meat out of his mouth.
‘Out of
his mouth?’
Yes. His mouth. Look – am I going
to hospital or not? Because if you don’t do something about my blood pressure
soon I’ll go pop. Although I’d bet you wouldn’t mind that, would you? A
professional sadist, that’s what you are.
6 comments:
Oh the temptation to prove her right.
Although the other option would be the caring,sharing Spence and Rae that would do all she asks,take her (eventually) to A&E then have a quick word with the triage nurse and ask her to be put right at the top of the queue,treated by the finest specialists available (flown in if needs be) and then taken home in a Rolls Royce via Claridges for tea.
I know which one of those two I'd take.
I'm sure it won't be long before we're given extra bits of kit, Jack. Esp the way this gov's going. *shock - SK gets political* :/
Ha! If you had a mallet in your bag, it would have been used many times before this one. ;)
I'd have a bag of mallet-like implements. I'd be like Bruce Willis in Pulp Fiction, testing each piece, unable to make up his mind which to use .... :/
that's quite a picture you paint there.
a mallet. huh. we should be so issued...
Maybe not a full-sized mallet. Something smaller, brighter, like a toffee hammer - autoclaved and properly licensed, of course. I scare myself... :/
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