An elderly man
meets us at the entrance to the block.
‘I’ll show you
up,’ he says. ‘Second floor.’
He has a
greyhound with him. Even though the dog is immaculately dressed for the weather
in a smart brown gabardine coat snugly fastened round the neck and tummy, it
looks utterly woebegone, staring up at us with a disappointed sag to its face,
like all this was just bloody typical. He turns in sync with the old man, and
they both trudge ahead of us to the lift.
We’re carrying
lots of heavy bags; this is a possible resus, after all.
When the lift
fails to arrive, Rae says:
‘Maybe we should
use the stairs.’
‘The stairs?’ says the man. ‘It’s three
floors up! Anyway, it’ll be here in a minute.’
The dog stares
up at me.
The numbers are
lighting up as the lift descends, maddeningly slow.
‘I think we’d
better take the stairs,’ says Rae, re-shouldering the bags.
‘Are you mad?’ says the man. ‘Her flat’s just
opposite the lift. One step out and you’re there.’
‘Well...’
But just as we’re
about to head off up the staircase, the lift arrives.
‘Here we are,’
says the man. ‘Come on.’
We all pile in.
It’s a struggle, what with all the bags and the dog, too, who makes room only
reluctantly, and then stares up at me with a novel hybrid of clinical
depression and chronic disappointment.
Just as the man
reaches for button number three, an elderly woman sprints in from nowhere and
hits button number one.
‘Gladys!’ he
says. ‘This is an emergency!’
‘Oh! Sorry love.
Is it?’
‘Yes, it is!’
‘Sorry.’
As the lift door
slowly closes she cranes forward and peers at me and Rae.
‘What kind of emergency?’
‘An emergency kind of emergency, Gladys.
These are paramedics.’
‘Ooh. Who’ve you
come to see?’
‘I’m afraid that’s
confidential’ says Rae.
‘Winifred,’ says
the man. ‘The carers found her collapsed on the floor. She could be dead.’
‘Poor Winnie,’
says Gladys. ‘Well I hope she’s all right. Give her my best.’
The man sighs.
We ride the rest
of the way in silence, with the dog still staring at me, so intently that
eventually I crack. I put a bag down to free up a hand and reach down to gently
scruffle the dog between the ears.
‘Good boy! Who’s
a good boy?’
He closes his eyes in
a resigned kind of way, and then when I stop, carries on staring at me again, as
if to say: Seriously. Is that it?
3 comments:
This did make me laugh. I can just picture the dog in my mind. x
It's a dog's life sometimes Spence.
Pleased that your tour guide kept to the confidentiality of the situation as well.
He was a cutie, BT - kinda sad-looking, but lovable. (I'm quite partial to greyhounds & lurchers, though - Declared Interest - we have a lurcher...
I know, Jack. He was straight in there! I bet the whole block knew by the time he made it back downstairs.
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