The hostel has a brisk, administrative
feel to it, corridors and fire doors, numbered rooms, informative posters on pin-boards and a
reception desk in the foyer. Natalie, the young key worker, meets us there and
takes us up in the lift.
‘Bernadette’s lived here ten
years or more. She lost her husband and went a bit crazy, ended up on the
street, then here. She’s never been any trouble, no drinking or carrying on.
She just keeps herself to herself, smoking away in her room, popping out every
now and again. The mental health team have been keen to get involved for a
while now but unfortunately Bernie’s a bit – how shall I put it? – independent
minded?’
‘So what’s happened today?’
‘She pulled her alarm cord.
Apparently she had a fall of some kind, don’t know why. She’d got herself up by
the time we got there, and she doesn’t seem to have hurt herself. I wouldn’t
have called you only she was behaving a little strangely so I thought we
should. I hope we’re not wasting your time.’
‘It’s fine. Don’t worry. You
should always call if you’re worried about anything.’
‘She’s just down here. Oh – and,
one more thing. Don’t worry about her hair. She always looks like that.’
Natalie smiles reassuringly, then
knocks on a door and opens it with her key.
It leads into a tiny hallway with
a kitchenette and shower room straight ahead and two rooms, right and left.
Natalie knocks on the door to our left, and lets us in to that, too.
‘Hello, Bernie. I’ve come back
with the ambulance,’ she says.
Bernie is sitting on the edge of
her bed. I’m glad Natalie warned us about her hair, because it’s the first thing
anyone would notice. Whilst the rest of her long grey hair falls down around
Bernie’s shoulders a little tangled a but otherwise quite normal, the top of
her head is extraordinary. If I had to recreate it, I’d have to put a nest of baby
yellow spiders on the crown of my head, spray them with a mist of sugared water
and then get someone to pass a flamethrower over the whole affair.
‘Hello, Bernie,’ I say. ‘My name’s
Spence, this is Rae. How are you feeling?’
‘Not good,’ she says. ‘Dreadful.’
‘I’m sorry to hear it. Natalie
here tells us you had a bit of a fall earlier.’
‘Yes.’
‘Tell us about that. Did you hurt
yourself?’
She rubs the small of her back.
‘Not much. Just where I landed on
my bottom.’
‘Did you bang your head? Were you
knocked unconscious or anything dramatic like that?’
‘No.’
‘Okay. So why did you fall? Was
it a trip or something? Did you have a funny turn?’
Bernie looks at Natalie for a
moment, then down at her hands.
‘I felt it coming through the day
but I didn’t think much of it.’
‘Felt what coming?’
‘A darkness in the room. Coming
over me. But I just ignored it. I went out shopping. Got some things. Had
lunch. Chicken and chips. Came back. Felt tired, so I got into bed and fell
asleep. I had some bad dreams, like the darkness had followed me there. Then
when I woke up, it was right there, hanging over me. I couldn’t say nothing.
Then it grabbed me out of bed and threw me on the floor. That’s when I rang for
help.’
‘What do you think it was?’
‘A whatsisname. A poltergeist.’
‘A poltergeist?’
‘Yes.’
‘Okay. Wow! Have you seen it
before?’
‘No. I don’t believe in ghosts.’
‘Well I have to say, neither do
I. But something’s happened today, Bernie. Shall we run a few checks and see if
anything’s amiss?’
‘If you like.’
There’s a curiously inert quality
to her, the way she raises her arms and lowers them again, following
instructions as neutrally as a mannequin. But everything seems normal, her blood
pressure, blood sugar, temperature and so on. Up close like this it’s difficult
not to look at her hair. There are two bold, brown streaks of matters from the
temple back, like she dipped a finger in mud and swiped herself above each ear.
‘What have you done with your
hair today?’ I ask her.
‘What do you mean?’
‘It’s just I haven’t seen that
done before. What did you use?’
‘Lacquer.’
‘Is that what it is?’
‘I put it on every morning. For
control.’
‘I see.’
I wrap up my cuff and steth.
‘Have you had any alcohol today,
Bernie?’
‘I don’t drink.’
‘Anything else out of the
ordinary?’
She shakes her head.
‘Well I must admit I’m a bit
stumped. I’m glad you didn’t hurt yourself when you fell, but I’m a bit
concerned about the reason for it all. The poltergeist, and so on.’
‘It picked me up and threw me
down.’
‘Hmm. You see – I don’t think it was a poltergeist. I think it was
something else, a hallucination of some kind. And it would be good to get a
blood test done to see if there was a reason for it. Are you okay about coming
with us to hospital for a check-up?’
‘I want to get dressed first.’
‘Of course. Shall we step outside
and give you some privacy?’
Natalie helps Bernie get some clothes
together whilst we wait in the little hallway. The place is having a
refurbishment, because even though the walls in Bernie’s room are stained with
ten years of tarry cigarettes, the kitchen and shower room are bright and
white. In fact the kitchen has a notice taped to the sink: Wet Paint, and every surface is bare.
‘I suppose you’re just as likely
to see a ghost here as anywhere else,’ says Rae, folding her arms and looking
around. ‘They’re not obliged to hang around old houses and graveyards, are
they?’
‘I suppose not.’
‘But I hardly think it can be a
ghost.’
‘Why’s that?’
‘Her hair would scare it off.’
6 comments:
I don't suppose you got a surreptitious snapshot with your cell phone, did you? Or maybe you can recreate it on the Paint program of your computer? I'm really curious to see an artist's rendition or something.
That reminds me… what did Don King's wife say?
"Boo."
Maybe it's the Hair Fairy that turns up each night when Bernie is asleep and messes her hair up?
Cass - I suppose the easiest way to recreate it on the computer would be to do a mash-up of a termite's nest, a tornado and an aerial shot of a rock festival - then blur the whole thing, add an orange glow, and stand proudly back.
Jack - I think the Hair Fairy visited me last night. I mean - look at this... :/
I don't know if "proudly" would be the adverb I'd use, actually… maybe "hurriedly", "alarmedly", or even "incredulously". Good thing you were warned. Maybe it was the fumes from the accumulated lacquer that created her poltergeist? (And you're certain she did that to her hair on purpose? Maybe it was an accident the first time and she just rolled with it?)
'Incompetently'?
I do think it was deliberate. When I asked her about it - very tentatively, it has to be said - she was surprised. Why on earth would I ask about her hair? Did I think there was something wrong with it? :/
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