As
I mentioned in my last post, I was delighted when this story of mine won the
TSS Flash Fiction of the Month for November 2015. I am reprinting it here for
those who may not have had a chance to read it.
And
in my next post, I will reprint two of my micro fictions that won the weekly Ad
Hoc fiction contest in December 2015 and January 2016. Let’s hope I can keep up
this momentum!
On Warren Ward
When I tell my grandmother I’ve been drinking
the gin she keeps in her pantry, she squeezes my hand. That’s how I know she’s
still in there, behind the ramparts of that twisted body. We both know death is
coming. It’s why I’m here.
She sleeps most of the time, but her dark eyes
open as the nurse tips her gently to ease the soiled pad from between her legs.
“Hello, Annie, my lovely. Don’t you fret.
We’ll have you looking like a picture in a jiffy.”
Bridie in the corner bed died yesterday. Her
daughter came out from behind the curtains, a ratty Kleenex pressed to her
nose. Her husband nodded at me as they left the ward, “It’s a struggle, int
it?”
They are birthing their own endings, these
women, in this shabby, beige room, riding waves of pain, confusion, denial.
When Ethel needs to pee, she calls high like a bird, “Queek, queek!” From
behind the curtain, I hear a nurse say, “Ethel, what’s your hand doing down
there?” From the next bed, Clarissa calls out, “I’ve got me boots on. Someone take
me boots off.” All day long she drapes her extra blanket over her Zimmer frame,
then pulls it off again, over and over.
Doris in the bed beside us broke her hip when
she blacked out in her home. Her husband shuffles in every afternoon, the
stains of his lunch visible on his tie. He asks her, “Did nurse do your ears
for you today?”
“What?”
“I said, did she do your ears for you today?”
“I can’t hear you.”
“Oh never mind.”
A moment of silence.
“She did my ears for me today.”
“You daft beggar, I just asked you that.”
“What?”
“I said, did she do your ears for you today?”
“I can’t hear you.”
“Oh never mind.”
A moment of silence.
“She did my ears for me today.”
“You daft beggar, I just asked you that.”
Doris takes a friendly interest in me. She
asks where I’ve come from – “Ooh, that’s a long way” – and asks about a husband
and children I cannot come up with. She nods towards the bed where my
grandmother lies, her toothless mouth open on the pillow. “They get like that,
don’t they? They let themselves go.”
If you call two strokes and a long, hard life
letting go. A chilblained, gas-masked, penny-pinching struggle of a life.
Ninety years, give or take.
Nurses bring me tea in cups that smell of disinfectant.
They touch my shoulder as they pass. Under the fluorescent lights, time is
transparent. The hands of the clock take forever to move from one black digit
to the next, yet hours are swallowed whole in the long pauses between each of
my grandmother’s noisy breaths. She is the flesh of my flesh, the bones of my
bones. As darkness fills up the long windows, the ladies shift and mumble in
their sleep, dreaming of flying, while I sit on a hard plastic chair, keeping
vigil for the fallen.
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