Ralph is sitting
on a bench in the garden, his hand raised in the air, wrapped in a bloody
tea-towel.
‘Hey! I think I
hit an artery,’ he says, lowering his hand and starting to pull the towel free.
‘Just a minute.
Keep it up until we’re ready.’
‘It was
squirting all over the place. I’ve made a right old mess.’
‘How did you do
it?’
‘I was slicing
up the chicken and I slipped and did my hand instead.’
‘Show me on my
hand where you cut yourself.’
I hold out my
gloved hand. He traces a line from the base of my thumb to the root of the
index finger.
‘It’s deep,’ he
says. ‘I got a new knife out of the packet and it was sharper than what I
thought.’
‘Are you on any
medication for anything, Ralph?’
He shakes his
head.
‘Fit and well?’
‘I wouldn’t go
that far.’
‘Let’s have a
look at this hand, then.’
Rae unwraps the
towel whilst I stand by with a dressing.
It’s a deep
wound. Blood starts running out so I wrap it quickly and supplement the
dressing with a few gauzes, tying the whole thing off to apply pressure.
‘We need to keep
it elevated, Ralph. So look – we’ll use this triangular bandage... There! Can
you feel me touching your fingers? Give them a wiggle. Excellent. Okay. I think
we’re good to go. How much alcohol have you had this afternoon, Ralph?’
‘Dunno. About
seven pints.’
‘Is that a
normal amount for you?’
‘Depends what
you call normal.’
‘Special
occasion?’
‘Yep.
Definitely.’
‘What were you
celebrating?’
‘Wednesday.’
He trudges up
the steps and sits down in the seat we’ve made ready.
‘It really
stings,’ he says.
‘I bet.’
‘I can’t afford
to lose my hand.’
‘No. Are you
right or left handed?’
He holds up the
good hand.
‘That’s
something, then.’
‘Yeah,’ he
sighs. ‘That’s something.’
A quick round of
obs and we’re ready to go. Rae shouts the leaving scene time back through the
hatch and we set off.
‘What were you
cooking?’
‘Chicken.’
‘Fresh or
frozen?’
‘Well I weren’t
chasing it round the yard or nothing.’
He pulls an
angry face – Yargh! – and raises his
good hand like he’s waving a cleaver. Then laughs, and settles back again.
‘Nah, mate. I
just got it out the freezer. I was slicing it up for a stir fry.’
‘Alcohol and
cooking. A deadly combination.’
‘Tell me about
it.’
‘I cut the top
of my finger off, once.’
‘Did ya?’
‘I was showing
my eldest daughter how to make an omelette. I was chopping the bacon and she
was breaking the eggs. I just glanced over to say careful you don’t get egg on the floor when I sliced the tip of my
finger off.’
He laughs.
‘So you know all
about it, then?’
‘Yep.’
He blinks, thickly,
with the buffered precision of several pints, then rests his head back on the
seat.
After a while he
says: ‘Am I gonna die, d’you think?’
‘Well. Yep. One
day, Ralph. But probably not from this.’
He turns his
head and glares at me.
‘Great. Thanks,
mate. Cheers for that,’ he says. ‘I hope I get better treatment at the
hospital. Although knowing my luck, they’ll probably mix me up with someone
else and cut me leg off.’
‘Only if they’ve
been drinking, too, Ralph.’
‘Yeah. Well,’ he
says, closing his eyes again. ‘Like I say. I was celebrating.’
‘Happy
Wednesday, Ralph.’
‘Happy Wednesday to
you, too. Wake me up when we’ve landed.’
7 comments:
Poor lad, but you wonder how he'll celebrate Thursday or Saturday.
Nice to meet a reasonable drunk for a change, Though judging from his behaviour he's gone pro a long time ago.
Sabine - Hopefully with a pizza!
Tom - I'm afraid he had a bit of a shock when he saw how busy it was at A&E. It's a mark of how shocking the over-crowding is these days that despite all his pints, he still blanched... :/
Our neighbours always have a bottle of wine on a Wednesday to celebrate making it half way through the week.
Any excuse,I suppose.
I like the idea of Winesday. Mind you, Thirstday is also probably a good idea :/
Don't forget Frieday, everyone needs a greasy breakfast!
The perfect hangover cure! (Cure's most things, actually).
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