You can almost
see Jean’s loneliness. It’s palpably there in the room with her, a witch’s
familiar, sadly pacing the carpet between the window and the chair.
‘Hello me duck,’
she says, her head nodding slightly, her eyes shining. ‘Sorry to call you out but
I was having another one of my do’s you know and I got me’self in a bit of a
lather.’
I’ve met Jean
before. She’s been checked out a number of times for chest tightness and
palpitations, but nothing’s ever being found. She gets plenty of help at home,
and her son comes over regularly through the week. Despite it all, for whatever
reason, sitting quietly in this pristine room, with the sunlight shining in on the
rich green leaves of the umbrella plant, and glinting off the framed pictures on
the wall, and the gold coloured casing of the carriage clock gently ticking on
the mantelpiece, with the sound of children shouting and laughing and screaming
in the playground just across the way, for some reason Jean gets overcome with
a feeling of doom, and her heart skips up, and she presses the red button on
the cord round her neck.
‘Sorry love’ she
says.
I chat to her
whilst I go through all the obs and wire her up to the ECG.
‘You used to
work in a shop, didn’t you, Jean?’
‘I did. I was in
women’s underwear. Lacy knickers, camisoles, combinations. You
name it. All very high-end. I loved it. All the girls under me. We had a right
laugh.’
‘Sounds like a
nice thing to do.’
‘It were. I used
to do the windows, n’all. Dress ‘em up nice. Different times of year, you know.
Valentine’s Day. Christmas, with all the fur. We had a right laugh. But the
shop got bought out by one of them big chains. And not long after that I was
walking by and I tell you what it almost broke my heart. Just a load of bras,
piled up in the window. I mean, what’s the good in that? Who’d want that?’
‘You’d think
they’d take a bit more care.’
‘I used to take
a lot o’care. All interesting poses, dressed up nice. Enticing, you know. But
this! This was just bra, bra, bra.’
She holds still
whilst I take a print out of her heart.
‘No wonder they went
bust,’ she sniffs, as the paper spools out. ‘How’s me heart looking, mate? I’ve
still got one I tek it?’
8 comments:
Only thing likes change is a wet baby, I've heard tell. Seems to be playing out that way too, as life whips past me on silver skates. Thanks for sharing, Spence, I enjoy reading every one of your posts. Bloglovin brings them to me, since google reader went walkabout.
That's a good saying, Lynda - not heard it before. It never gets any easier, change. And then just when you think you've got it covered, something comes along to turn it all around again (shop window displays as much as anything else).
Thanks for the comment, Lynda. Always lovely to hear from you :)
I love the line about going bust.How do you keep a straight!
S
I know! Great line - and Jean was completely deadpan when she said it, so I don't know whether she knew or not. Mind you, she probably heard it said so many times all those years when it happened, it desensitized her to the joke.
Aw bless
Thank you as always
lollipop
xx
Cheers L! Hope all's good with you x
A decent frequent flyer it sounds like Spence.All helps pass the time on shift I suppose.
Yep. You never really mind the entertaining ones (even though you know at the back of your mind that they're a drain on resources...) :)
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