The update from
Control is unexpected.
Pt says she is dying. Has punched dog.
Stand-off for police
I park up
outside the block and turn the engine off.
It’s still
early. Above the cooling and clicking of the engine, the sounds of sparrows
squabbling in a tangle of shrubs by the roadside. The air through our open
windows is super-fresh, the sky through my sunglasses mega-blue. Even the
vapour trail of that plane could not be whiter or more perfectly formed.
A few minutes
later, the computer screen buzzes again.
Patient not aggressive on phone. Safe to
approach.
‘Hmm,’ says Rae,
grabbing a pair of gloves.
The block is such
a wretched slab of seventies planning even a morning like this couldn’t ease
the pain. Refurbishment would only prolong the agony; razing to the ground is the
only option.
Just as we stand
at the intercom to buzz, a man in a helmet and biker jacket opens the door.
‘Good timing!’
I say to him, but he just shakes his head as he lets us through. I’m confused by
his body language. Does it mean there’ve been calls to Sheila before? He didn’t
want to let us in? Or he actually enjoyed the moment? But in his tinted visor
and biker’s gear, I may as well try to second-guess the motivation of a robot.
He slams the door behind us.
We walk a short
way along a crapped-up balcony to Sheila’s flat, where the door stands open.
A plump Jack
Russell waddles out, his tail crooked but wagging at least, his one good eye
fixed up on us. With a wheezy bark that’s like a back-firing model steam engine,
he clatters around our legs demanding attention.
‘Hello?’ says
Rae, knocking on the door and pushing it wider.
The dog skitters
ahead of us, round a corner.
‘In here. You
can come in.’
The flat is a
terrible mess, tossed papers, cans, unopened letters and scattered clothes, a
whole bag of dog biscuits tipped onto a dirty plate, with a metal bowl of water
beside it. Sheila is slumped against the far wall on a filthy mattress, as
discarded as everything else here, her knees drawn up, her hands either side.
‘I’m surrounded
by vigilantes and murderers,’ she says. ‘I’m dying of cancer. The drink is
eating me up and I haven’t got long . That’s why I want Barney taken away. It
don’t matter if I die in a flat with shit on the floor but Barney deserves better.
He needs a walk and I just can’t do it. I’m dying, d’you see? Look at me. I’m
Bi-Polar. I’m not the same person two minutes running. Barney can’t live like that
no more. He just can’t. So take him away. Can you?’
Just at that
moment Sheila’s phone rings. When she sees who it is she grimaces and passes it
to Rae.
‘Brenda, my
CPN,’ she says. ‘You talk to her. She’ll tell you all about it.’
Brenda says
that Sheila is alcohol dependent. She’s been bad for a while, but lately she’s
fallen off the edge, a serious decline, mental and physical. They’ve been
trying for a while to get things sorted, but so far Sheila has resisted any
help. Brenda says the situation is known about, though, and things are happening.
She asks if we’d mind contacting the RSPCA to have Barney collected; Brenda
will be making arrangements to treat Sheila a little later in the day.
I step back
outside onto the balcony to make the call.
The RSPCA
switchboard takes a while to answer, but when it does they take Barney’s
details with a brisk but sympathetic manner that makes me think they’ve done
this before. I describe the situation, Sheila’s problems, the appalling living
conditions.
‘And you say
she attacked the dog?’ says the operator.
‘That was what
she told Control. But I can’t see any obvious signs. Barney has a damaged eye
and a crimp in his tail, but they look like old injuries to me. He seems quite
content in himself. He’s got food and water.’
‘Bless,’ says
the operator. ‘And has Sheila said to you she wants him taken away, that she
can’t cope?’
‘Yep. She was
quite clear about it. Her CPN thinks it’s a good idea, too.’
‘Poor love. We’ll
get someone out as soon as we can. Will Sheila be there to let us in, do you
think?’
‘She says yes.’
‘Okay then.
Thanks for your call.’
I go back
inside and hand Sheila the phone back.
‘Thanks,’ she
says. ‘I like men. You’re so – stubborn.’
Barney jumps up
on the mattress next to her and she strokes his side.
‘I’d never be
without him,’ she says. ‘I take him down the offie and he waits for me outside.
I don’t tie him up, so he could run away. But he doesn’t. He just sits there
and waits for me to come out. Everyone round here knows him.’
She looks up at
us and winks. ‘That’s got to be worth something. D’ya think?’
4 comments:
There is nothing more faithful than a dog.Always happy to see you,tail wagging away.
In fairness to Sheila,at least she's aware enough to realise that she can't look after Barney (he wasn't purple was he Spence?)
Sadly the PDSDA,Battersea etc etc have far too many dogs.(Speaking of which,I may have to ban Mrs Jack from watching the Paul O'Grady show about dogs otherwise we'll have them all)
That's sad. To be so…dependent upon the love of the animal, yet to want better for him than what she can give… must be a horrible emotional predicament. That's got to be part of what's eating her up.
And the whole "stubborn" thing. I'd wager she's tried to get up the courage to turn him in herself before, but has caved. Your "stubbornness" means you actually went through with it where she has failed in the past.
Jack - Love dogs! Barney was such a chipper little Jack Russell, despite his ill-health ?old injuries, and despite the dreadful living conditions. I was a bit worried about calling the RSPCA, because I thought it might be a bit of a one-way journey for him. I can't imagine anyone's going to adopt an elderly JR with his problems, which would probably mean euthanasia. It was difficult to figure out if Sheila had actually abused the dog. When I asked her if she'd hit him (as Control had said) she said she'd only pushed him away a little harder than usual. So it could all be in her head. She didn't go to hospital (refused), so we weren't there to see what luck if any the RSPCA officer had when they turned up. It would be interesting to find out...
It's such a wrench, going down the kennels to adopt. So many lovely dogs there, all of them needing a good home. You do want to take them all - but then again - when we picked up Lola, the lurcher, they said she was just one of thousands that come over from Ireland every year, let alone the home grown ones, so we'd have to live in a slightly bigger house. Still...
Cass - It is very sad, and I'm sure it adds to the emotional trauma she's experiencing. Her drinking is at the heart of it all, of course. Rampant alcoholism has utterly destroyed her life. I know I seem to be writing a lot about alcohol just lately, but that's because we're going to a lot!
Maybe you're right about the 'stubborn' thing. I must admit I was surprised when she said it. After all, I was only doing what she asked!
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Cheers for the comments! :)
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