Hilda is still
on the phone to ambulance Control as we walk in the door.
‘Just a minute’
she says, holding up a gnarly old digit more like a twig than a finger.
‘It’s okay,
Hilda. You can hang up now.’
Hilda frowns,
makes an impatient gabbling noise and puts her finger up again.
‘What’s that
you said? Someone was talking to me.’
‘Hilda? You can
hang up. We’re here now.’
She stares at
us, then speaks loudly into the phone again. ‘They say I’m to hang up.’ She
does, then rests her head forwards on the table and closes her eyes.
‘I just want to
sleep,’ she says.
*
Hilda is
ninety-four, and so resolutely independent she may as well be living in a
stockade.
‘I’ve outlived
everyone I knew,’ she says. ‘I’ve got to shift for myself.’
The chest pain
she called us out for looks muscular in origin. Yesterday Hilda tried to drag an
old tumble drier from the pantry; she’s had sharp twinges in her left side ever
since.
‘Ooh, I had a
bad night last night,’ she says.
‘Was that the
pain keeping you awake?’
‘What? No. It
was windy. Didn’t you hear it?’
‘Yep. Now that
you mention it.’
‘If I could
only sleep it’d all come right.’
Hilda is
adamant that she doesn’t want to go to hospital, but she’s not safe to be left
alone like this.
To buy us a
little more bargaining time, I offer to make her a cup of tea.
‘Through here,
is it?’
The little
kitchen is cold and dimly lit, its fifties’ work surfaces only clear in small patches
where some minimal activity has stopped the detritus from settling. Here and
there the ruins of previous meals are composting into richly-colored patterns
of mould. The fridge has one ready meal and a packet of ham, the milk busily
converting to solid through four stages of lactic horror. But there is some
edible food here, in two neatly stacked columns of boxes – fondant lemon fancies
to the left, chicken and mushroom cup-o-soup to the right. When I manage to locate
a cup and saucer in the sink – exhuming them carefully, at gloved fingertip –
the Spode tea cup and saucer are actually so cute they wouldn’t look out of
place in a chintzy cake shop (once you bead-blasted the tannin).
‘There you go,’
I say, giving her the tea. ‘Sorry it’s black. Who gets your shopping for you?’
‘Who does what,
dear?’
‘All your cakes
and things. Who buys them for you?’
‘My lovely next
door neighbour, whenever he goes down Morrison’s. But he’s on holiday at the
moment so I don’t know when I’ll see him next. He got me plenty last time,
though, so I think I’m all right.’
I don’t think
the neighbour could ever come in with the shopping, though. Anyone who saw the
state of that kitchen would back out slowly and reach for the phone.
‘I really think
you should come with us to hospital, Hilda,’ says Rae. ‘You’re obviously in
some pain from your side, you say you get dizzy when you stand up, and there’s
no-one here to keep an eye on you.’
‘I shall be all
right, love. I’ve got my tea.’
‘But what if
you fall over, Hilda? You’ll only hurt yourself and end up having to stay even
longer in hospital. Why don’t you come in with us now, let the doctors have a
look at you, sort you out, and then maybe think about getting you some help at
home. You’re ninety-four, Hilda. I think you’ve earned a rest.’
She doesn’t say
anything, but carries on drinking her tea.
Propped up on
top of the TV is a paint-by-numbers picture of a tiger, its head slightly
tipped back, looking down its nose. Whether it’s the fault of the design or the
way the painter followed the pattern, but the tiger has a strange expression, like
a cross-eyed clown who just remembered where he left his hat.
‘I like your
tiger,’ I tell her. ‘Did you do it?’
‘Did I what?’
‘Did you do the
tiger?’
She carefully
puts her cup down on the saucer.
‘No,’ she says.
6 comments:
'Lactic horror'
Sounds like you've been in my house..;)
I poured a concoction down the sink today that had the consistency of cottage cheese. Actually, if I had been smart enough, I would have packaged it and sold it. I'm sure there'll be a company somewhere that does that..
I suppose when you think how some cheeses and yogurts are made, it probably isn't any worse. But honestly - is there anything more dreadful than a pint of off-milk? Yeuch! (Actually, spots of mould on slices of bread & ham looks more dangerous than nuclear material...) :/
Hilda slipped through the care net Spence?
Not so much slipped through as cut a hole for herself with some nail scissors. A very independent lady indeed - until she wasn't, that is.
Detritus, mold, lactic horror…. *shudder* I know what that's like, though, to be unable to shift for yourself, really, and to just have to leave things where they are. I would (and do, actually) live on cereal and milk before I let things get to that state, though. Never!!
You can't beat a nice bowl of cereal & milk. Very satisfying. (I could totally work in advertising...)
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