A dark, wet
night.
A juicy scrunch
as I step on a snail.
‘What a dreadful
night!’ I say, reaching over to flip the latch of the garden gate, getting
soaked as I brush up against the hedge.
‘Especially for
the snail,’ says Rae.
Enid is waiting for
us at the door, clutching the fluffy collar of her pink dressing gown around
her neck, the light from the hallway spilling out around her onto the wet path.
‘He’s in the
kitchen,’ she says, shuffling ahead. ‘Bert’s out looking for his other slipper.’
Enrico is slumped
on a high-rise kitchen chair, resting his bloodied head against the door frame.
He has on a khaki jacket and jumper, but below the waist just a pair of boxer
shorts.
‘He’s ninety-six
you know,’ says Enid, standing next to him and holding his hand. ‘I mean, I’m
eight-three. But ninety-six.’ She
gives his hand a squeeze. ‘Aren’t you, petal?’
‘Huh?’
Enrico lives over
the road. He was going up to bed when he tripped and fell backwards, cracking
his head on the way down. He managed to get himself up again, but instead of
dialling 999 he decided to come over to Enid and Bert for help. It took a while
for them to answer because they’d gone to bed, and anyway, they were nervous
about opening the door so late at night. I mean, who could it possibly be? When
they did they found poor Enrico, slumped amongst the pots and snails in the rain.
They helped him into the kitchen, called us.
He has a nasty head
wound, the scalp scraped open at the top, the dull cream of his skull below.
‘What? What’s
this?’ he mumbles.
‘He hasn’t got
his hearing aids in,’ says Enid.
I give him the
quick once over. It’s going to be difficult to fit a collar on him because of
his size and shape. We decide to get him out to the vehicle and immobilise him there
on a vacuum mattress, as naturally and comfortably as we can.
I dress his head wound
whilst Rae goes to fetch a carry chair.
‘What’s your past
medical history?’ I shout in his ear.
‘Huh?’
‘Your past medical
history. What do you suffer with?’
After a moment he
raises his left arm.
‘What am I
looking at?’ I shout.
‘It’s his arm,’
says Enid.
‘What’s wrong
with your arm?’ I shout in his ear.
‘Strafed. By the Luftwaffe,’
he rumbles. When I push up his sleeve I can make out the scar tissue, visible as
an odd ruck of pale skin, an incomplete tattoo.
Rae comes in with
the chair.
As we’re helping
Enrico onto it, there’s a stamping of feet in the hallway and Bert appears, a
mac over his pyjamas, a torch in his hand.
‘I went up and
down,’ he says, ‘but I couldn’t find it.’
He stands next to
Enid as we help Enrico onto the chair. They watch with an appalled slack to
them, witnesses to something they probably guessed must happen sometime soon
but that came so unexpectedly tonight.
They snap out of
it, though – Enid to move the hall table out of our way; Bert to light the
path.
* * *
We’re rocking
gently along to the hospital. I’ve dimmed the lights in the back. Enrico is
held snug by the rigid sides of the vacuum mattress, the criss-crossing straps,
the head blocks, the blankets. He opens his eyes when I ask him questions, but
otherwise lies as still as an Egyptian mummy.
‘Who’s your next
of kin?’ I ask him.
‘My mother and
father,’ he says.
I stroke him on
the shoulder and carry on writing.
He breathes
gently and easily and seems to fall asleep for a minute or two, but then
suddenly opens his eyes wide, his mouth open – not in fear, though. More in
wonder.
‘What is it?’ I
say, leaning forward in my seat again. ‘What’s wrong, Enrico?’
‘I can see a naked
man,’ he says, looking up at the ceiling. ‘A naked man, shining.’
6 comments:
Shining what?
All over, presumably - that was all he said about it.
We never know what is in the sight line of others. Sometimes I try to guess...
It is intriguing to think. My guess with Enrico was that he'd fallen asleep and had a vivid dream, something transcendent. I must admit it freaked me out a bit. I thought maybe the head injury was even more serious - but luckily his vital signs remained good, and I learned later that the CT scan was clear. A tough cookie for 96, that's for sure.
There are days I wish I could still claim my mother and father as next of kin...
I've seen it a few times where very elderly patients have talked about their parents as if they were still alive. At the risk of sounding morbid, I draw a lot of comfort from the idea that you'll get to see each other again one day (even if it is just in your head). x
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