Jeremy
has run out of juice. It’s difficult to understand the story exactly, but it
seems he left his home on his mobility scooter yesterday, travelled the thirty
miles or so along the coast into town, eventually running aground on this
traffic island sometime in the early hours. And here he’s sat, slumped on his
seat, waiting for what, it’s hard to say – a lightning bolt from heaven to
reenergise his vehicle, because any other offer of help he’s refused. Not
politely, either.
‘You’re
only a police woman because you’re fat and ugly,’ he says. ‘You can hardly fit
into your uniform.’
‘How
nice!’ says the police woman. ‘Well I think you’re extremely rude and
unpleasant.’
Jeremy
doesn’t react. He soaks it up along with everything else.
An
elderly man in a drab grey overcoat and dirt-shiny trousers, he looks and talks
like Droopy. So this is what happens
to old cartoon characters. They drift around town in the early hours on
mobility scooters, insulting people.
‘And
you’re a lesbian,’ he says, moving his head just sufficiently to cast his sad
eyes up to Rae. ‘No make-up and a man’s haircut.’
‘Jeremy?
Stop being vile and listen. You can’t stay here in the middle of the road. We
want to take you to hospital to get you warmed up, something to eat and a
check-up.’
‘I’d
really rather not, thank you.’
‘We’ve
got the trolley here. We’ve put all your things in a bag. All you’ve got to do
is pivot your seat round, and we’ll help you transfer over.
‘No,
thank you.’
It’s
gone on like this for half an hour.
‘I
must insist.’
‘If
you touch me I’ll sue you for assault.’
‘By
all means. But we don’t think you have capacity, Jeremy, so we’ve got to act in
your best interest. That means one way or another you have to come with us to
hospital. Don’t worry about your scooter. We’ll make sure it’s safe.’
‘I’m
not going to hospital.’
‘Why
not?’
‘MRSA.’
‘I
can understand your worries about MRSA, Jeremy. It has been a problem in the
past. But over the last few years they’ve made enormous strides with infection
control. What else is bothering you?’
‘I’d
rather not go, thank you.’
‘Come
on, Jeremy. We’ll help you.’
He’s
actually pretty easy to put on the trolley, soaking up the move with the same
lumpish inertia.
‘There
we go. That’s better.’
‘I
shall be contacting my lawyers.’
‘Please
do.’
The
police wheel the scooter to the side of the road; we load Jeremy onto the
ambulance.
* * *
There’s
a small crowd outside the supermarket.
Bob
is lying on the pavement at the centre of it, a woman crouched down and holding
his head.
‘He
fell over when he came through the doors,’ she says. ‘He’s been going in and
out of consciousness.’
A
rough-faced figure of about sixty, Bob’s coat seems strangely full, bulging at
the pockets with bags of crisps.
‘I’m
all right. I’m okay,’ he says, trying to get up.
And
on first glance he does seem to be. He’s fairly drunk, though, so we help him
onto the ambulance to check him over and decide what to do.
‘Let’s
have this coat off,’ I say to him. ‘We need to get to your arms to do your
blood pressure.’
‘I’m
all right,’ he says.
‘Come
on, Bob.’
Rae
frowns when she tries to free his arm.
‘What’ve
you got down here, Bob?’
‘What?
Where?’
She
pulls out a bottle of wine.
‘How
did that get there?’
He
shrugs, and then pulls out a bag of crisps and makes as if to open them.
‘Don’t
start in on your crisps yet, Bob. We’ve got to check you over first.’
He
drops the bag on the floor, and closes his eyes again.
‘Whatever.’
At
least that’s what I think he says. Because of his accent, and because he’s had
so much to drink, it’s almost impossible to make anything out.
‘What’s
your last name, Bob?’
‘Nub.’
‘Nub?
Bob Nub?’
‘North!’
‘North?
Is that right? North?’
‘Napp’
‘Spell
it for us...’
And
so on, through everything else.
All
his obs check out, but he does have a small cut on the back of his head. He’s
too unsteady to let out again, so we have to run him down the hospital to be
monitored.
I
hand the bottle to someone from the supermarket when I step back out to drive.
‘He
didn’t pay for this,’ I tell her. I don’t mention the crisps.
*
When
I open the doors at the hospital and look inside, Rae is sitting on the trolley
shaking her head, and Bob is sitting eating crisps on his chair, fragments
sticking to his beard and his jumper, the rest scattered around him on the
floor.
‘Prawn
cocktail, before you ask,’ she says.
2 comments:
Jeremy should have been left on the roundabout,perhaps Green Flag could have picked the miserable old scrote up.
As for "Fingers" Bob it could have been worse.It could have been a kebab.
We did toy with the idea, but the problem was we'd have had an endless number of calls about him, so something had to happen.
And with Fingers, at least all the crisps cushioned his fall. The bystanders might have been a bit worried about the noise, I suppose. :/
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