Sister Agatha
meets us at the door.
‘Good morning,’
she says. ‘Thank you so much for coming. Peter is up on the fourth floor, so
we’ll take the lift.’
Sister Agatha
presses the button, and then stands with her hands lightly clasped in front of
her as the doors close and the lift rises up.
‘So what
happened?’
‘Peter was
absolutely fine yesterday. Oh he has his health problems, of course, but
nothing that’d leap out and bite you. Fine when he went to bed, no problems.
Janice, one of our carers, she went in about half past three just to check on
his catheter bag, you know. She didn’t want to disturb him so she just crept in
and out like a little mouse. Janice is very, very good. But then when she went
back in to give him his medications at six-thirty and tried to rouse him she
found she couldn’t, poor thing. So then she rang the emergency bell, and we all
came running. But I’m afraid it’s all too late.’
The lift slows
to a stop and opens unexpectedly behind us. We follow Sister Agatha along a
thickly carpeted hallway. In her blue robes and headdress, she seems to float
rather than walk, a serene progress past beautiful old paintings of biblical
scenes, intricately carved crosses, and, in a sweetly-kept alcove, lightened
with a glass of blue wildflowers, the statue of a praying saint. The furthest
door along the corridor stands open. Sister Ramirez is waiting for us there
with Janice the carer, still wearing her plastic bib, shifting anxiously from
foot to foot.
We go over to
the narrow bed in the corner of the room, where Peter is lying on his back with
his head turned to the side. I lay my hand over his chest and it feels cold,
his pupils are wide and fixed, and there is already signs of pooling along the
underside of his torso
‘I’m afraid
Peter has died,’ I say to them. ‘I’m sorry.’
All three women
give a collective sigh. Sister Agatha puts her hand on Janice’s shoulder, who
leans her cheek against it. Sister Ramirez comes over to stand with me.
‘’Would you
mind if I covered Peter with a sheet?’ she says.
‘That’s fine.’
‘Bless you’
The three women
quietly convene round Peter’s bed, fetching out a clean white sheet from the bottom
of the wardrobe and spreading it over Peter. I go back to my paperwork.
‘Because it’s
classed as an unexpected death,’ I tell Sister Agatha, ‘we notify the police
and they come to take over.’
‘Ah yes.’
‘But don’t be
alarmed. It’s all just procedure. The police will guide you through the next
stage, which is either for the coroner’s office to collect the body, or for you
to organize something through your undertakers.’
‘I see, yes,’
says Sister Ramirez.
‘Sometimes it takes
a while for the police to get here,’ says Rae.
Sister Ramirez
smiles and opens her hands philosophically.
Sister Agatha
steps forward.
‘What am I
thinking?’ she says. ‘Wouldn’t you like something to eat? Some porridge,
perhaps? A nice cup of coffee? You must be hungry.’
‘Coffee would
be great, thank you. We can finish our paperwork downstairs.’
We collect all
our equipment and follow her back to the lift.
*
The dining room
is as neatly ordered as the rest of the home. Each table has been laid out for
breakfast, bone-handled cutlery, china cups, saucers and plates, stainless
steel jugs, toast racks, condiment pots.
‘Please,’ says
Sister Agatha, walking over to one of the tables and silently pulling out two
chairs. ‘What would you like?’
But no sooner
have we settled in than the police arrive.
We go back
upstairs with them to describe what we found, what we did. The officers are
quietly spoken. One of them, an enormous guy with great tattooed arms and a
monolithic, Easter Island head, has a permanent crook in his back as he tries
to makes himself smaller. The sisters are as benign as ever. They answer all
the questions with the same kind of calm composure that seems to run through
this home as effectively as spiritual air-conditioning.
‘He was a good
man, Peter,’ says Sister Ramirez, once the officers have replaced the sheet.
‘Can we get you something to drink? Some coffee perhaps?’
They decline.
I hand our
paperwork over to them, and then Rae and I go back down to the dining room to
finish our tea and toast.
*
‘Would you like
fresh?’ says another Sister, bustling across the room out of the kitchen to
answer the front door.
‘No, thank you.
This is fine.’
‘You do a grand
job’ she says. ‘We’re all very thankful for it.’
She hurries out
to the door.
‘I’ve forgotten
how fantastic marmalade is,’ says Rae.
‘Hmm?’ I say, folding
another slice into my mouth.
Just at that
moment, a woman comes into the foyer. The Sister speaks to her in a low and
urgent whisper. After a moment or two I glance in their direction. The Sister
is still whispering to her, but now the woman is staring straight at me, her
eyes wide and her hand over her mouth. She gasps, sobs once, loudly. The sister
puts her arm around her shoulder and leads her off into another room.
2 comments:
Very pithy from Rae at the end there Spence (almost Frank-like)
I must admit sometimes I get them confused in my head, Jack (esp. when there's a pithy punchline to be had...) My bad! :/
Post a Comment