There was rain
last night, but the sky cleared by mid-morning and Ken thought the park looked dry
enough for a kick-about. His twenty-year-old son Rio was staying with him for
the weekend, so they both got dressed in their Man United gear and headed out.
It didn’t last
long.
When Ken
dropped the ball to punt it out, his left leg slipped from under him and he
landed flat on his back. And even though the ground was soft, still it was
enough of a jolt to aggravate an existing weakness, and he lay there, groaning,
unable to get up.
Jill, the
paramedic first on scene, has already given him as much morphine as he can
take, topped up with Entonox, which Ken sucks down in workmanlike bursts, like
a diver negotiating a hazardous wreck.
‘Please help my
Dad,’ says Rio.
‘We’ll do our
best.’
Even though Rio
looks like any other urban twenty-year old – buzz-cut hair, low-trousered
slouch, mobile phone permanently in his hand – there’s something different, a
blunt and unfocused quality that makes you take a little more care of him than
you otherwise might.
Jill says she
thinks the trolley will just about make it over the grass. With a scoop
stretcher, we should be able to lift Ken up without disturbing him too much,
and take it from there.
‘Other than the
pain he doesn’t have any concerning symptoms, no neurological deficit or
anything,’ she says. ‘The mechanism of injury wasn’t all that, so all in all I
think we just have an exacerbation of chronic back problems.’
Ken groans,
toots on the Entonox.
‘Almost there,’
she says to him, patting him on the shoulder. ‘We’ll soon have you off this wet
grass.’
‘Is he gonna be
all right?’ says Rio.
‘Yep. He’s
going to be fine.’
Rio feels a
text arrive, and turns round to answer it.
*
It’s a long
ride to the hospital. Ken is as comfortable as we can make him, supported with
blankets and pillows, only groaning when the bumps in the road are deep enough
to shake through his generous buffering of analgesia.
‘Why’s he
making that noise?’ says Rio, licking his lips.
‘It’s still
painful for him, but he should be fine.’
‘Yeah? But that’s
not wot I aksed you. I aksed you why he’s making that noise.’
‘He’s got some
pain in his back, and he’s feeling all the bumps and shakes.’
‘So why does
the ambulance shake like that?’
‘It’s these god
awful roads, Rio. It was a hard winter, and they got broken up. These
ambulances weren’t all that comfortable to begin with.’
He stares at me
with his mouth half open.
‘It’s the
weight distribution. It’s got a heavy tail lift on the back, so that makes us
see-saw…’ I do the motion with my arms. ‘And then we’ve got some big gas
cylinders on the right, so that makes us rock from side to side. And then of
course it’s quite a tall cab, so...’
No reaction.
‘…so all in
all, what with the terrible state of the roads, it makes it a rougher ride than
we’d like.’
He looks upset.
‘But don’t
worry. He’s perfectly safe, and I think the pain-relief is helping.’
Rio flares.
‘If something
happen to my Dad, yeah, I’d go fucking special.’
‘Yeah, but
nothing’s going to happen, Rio. You’ve got to help your Dad by staying as calm
as you can.’
‘Cos’ it’s my
Dad, yeah?’
‘Absolutely,
and of course you’re worried. But it’s all going to be fine. The fall hasn’t
affected his spinal cord or anything. It was soft earth, not concrete. And
quite low down. Honestly, Rio, it’s all going to be fine.’
‘It’s my Dad,
you get me?’
‘And we’re
taking care of him.’
Rio settles
back into his chair and starts thumbing through his phone.
We pass the
next mile in silence.
‘Do you often
play football with your Dad, Rio?’ I ask him at last. He answers without
looking up.
‘Yeah. I come
over sometime and we go out, like. Football and dat. I’m proper hectic, innit. What
team d’you go wiv?’
‘Me? No-one
really. When I was younger I liked Arsenal, but that was a while ago.’
‘The Arsenal?’
‘Yeah. Charlie
George.’
‘What the fuck
is Charlie George?’
‘A cool
footballer with sideburns who used to play for Arsenal in the seventies.’
‘Charlie
George? What kinda name is dat? It’s like two names.’
‘I never thought about it.’
‘I support Man
You.’
‘Yeah?’
‘Yeah. They’re sick.’
‘You’re right.
They haven’t been winning much lately.’
Rio looks at
me, his eyes perfectly small and round.
Luckily, Ken interrupts
with a groan, slowly letting the Entonox mouthpiece drop to his side.
‘What’s he
doing that for?’ says Rio.
‘He’s resting.
It’s pretty tiring, being in pain.’
‘Is he dead?’
‘No. Just resting.’
‘How can you
tell?’
‘You can see
him breathing. Look.’
No-one could
miss it, the great curve of his belly rising up and down.
‘He’s fine,
Rio. Don’t worry. We’ll be there in a minute.’
‘What will they
do?’
‘Well – the
doctors will take a look at him. They’re the experts. They might X-ray his
back, I don’t know. But they’ve got all the equipment they need to figure out
what the problem is. And then they can think about how to treat it.’
‘What d’you
mean, treat him?’
‘It could be
different medication. It could be a referral to physiotherapists to give him
exercises that might help. There are lots of things they can do, Rio. As soon
as we get to hospital they’ll start helping your Dad to get better.’
‘Cos I don’t
like this.’
‘No. I know.
It’s not nice.’
‘I don’t like
this at all, ya get me?’
‘No. I think
you’re handling it very well.’
‘Huh?’
‘I said I think
you’re handling it very well.’
He rubs his
hands on his knees and bites his lip, and the rest of the journey he rides in tortured
silence.
*
The transfer from our trolley to the hospital
bed is as smooth as we can make it. I try to involve Rio as much as possible,
even though he gets in the way and makes things more difficult. It’s a relief
when Ken is safely across, and officially handed over.
Rae says goodbye
and wheels our trolley out of the cubicle. I’m just about to follow her when
Rio says ‘Hey!’ with such an aggressive bark, his right hand drawn back over
his shoulder, I can’t help flinching a little. But then I realise he just wants to do one of
those street handshakes. We bump fists (which I fluff, of course), then he
throws his left hand round my back and draws me to him.
‘Safe, man,’ he says, slapping my back. ‘Safe.’
8 comments:
Yikes, that sounds like the body of a man combined with the mind of an upset child. Scary, but you handled it well!
Think Rio was dropped on his head as an infant?
Sweet kid despite the front he puts on, I always find that endearing in a young man. So often they are really not who they want us to think they are.
Thanks for sharing, Spence; I always appreciate your stories.
Thanks TV. It didn't feel like I was handling it well - until the end, when I got that unexpected 'street' hug! (Still not sure what for...)
Tpals - Couldn't rule it out at this stage
Lynda - Yep, not quite the urban gangsta he seemed to begin with (thank goodness). Optimistic of the dad to go for a kick-about. A pub lunch, maybe...
‘Is he dead?’
‘No. Just resting'
This reminded me of Monty Python's parrot sketch!
Rio trying to sound cool and unruffled by it all but worried sick (no pun intended Spence,ya get me bruv?)
Yeah, I think he had already "gone special"… (over here, "special" means mentally incapacitated, or retarded, as it were). What a strange guy. It's like he held you personally responsible for all of it, even though HE was the one out playing football on the slick grass with his dad. Weird.
Petrolhead: It is an ex-parrot. It has ceased to be. (Not sure if that's an accurate quote...?)
Jack - I getcha, innit.
BTW - a more un-street man than me you will never meet. A handshake is as good as a hug...
Cass - He was a bit strange, no doubt exacerbated by the stress he was under. He seemed to flip-flop between hostile and super-friendly - although that might have been more to do with me being unable to accurately read his mood!
* * *
Cheers for the comments! :)
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