The Love of My Afterlife(91)
After day four of this routine, I press my buzzer for my usual eleven o’clock fix of mind-softening drugs. Manny, the head nurse of the ward, turns up and perches on the edge of my bed.
“We’re cutting you off,” he says plainly.
“What?”
“No more morphine. No more sedatives. The doctor said you shouldn’t need them at this point.”
I tut. “But I do! I really need them.”
“I know your beloved is down in the ICU. And that is troubling, for sure. But drugs are not gonna fix the pain, believe me.”
“That is literally what drugs do.”
“No more.” He throws me a smile, full of pity. “Your knee is improving. I’m sorry, Delphie. The doctor says it’s time to start reducing the meds.”
When he’s hurried off to help another patient, I huff and grab my phone for a distraction. There’s a text from Mum. I squint my eyes and scroll up, realising that I appear to have texted her yesterday. I don’t remember doing that—I must have been drugged up.
My text to her says:
Mum I’m in hospital. Car accident. Knee, ribs. Ward 8 UCL. I miss you x
I scan her reply.
Darling, oh no! Sorry to hear it! Get well soon!
I stare at the message for several seconds. Then I scroll upwards and upwards and upwards. All the messages from me, all the brush-offs from her. My chest aches. I think of what Cooper said the night of the gala after Jonah ran away from me. If people want to go, sometimes it’s easier to just let them.
I tap into my contacts and finally delete her number.
* * *
The next afternoon I am in possibly the worst mood I’ve ever been in in my entire life. This morning the doctor told me they were having trouble understanding why Cooper had not yet woken up and that I needed to be prepared for the prospect of it never happening.
I’m having myself a little cry when Leanne shows up. She’s dressed in a jumpsuit made out of yellow and green pineapple fabric that looks lit up amongst the muted pale blues of ward eight. Her eyelashes are somehow even longer than they have ever been and so heavy it looks like they’re slightly weighing down her eyelids. She’s holding a carton in her hands and approaching me gently, eyes wide, like I’m a lion in a cage and she’s a kid tempted to stick her finger in between the bars but is too scared to do it. My face must be an exact reflection of my mood right now.
“You look like you used to,” she says.
“What?”
“Grumpy. Like you don’t want anyone to talk to you.”
“Yet here you are.”
“I brought you soup,” Leanne says softly, waving the carton at me.
“Why?” I lean forward and sniff the carton. It smells good.
“That’s what you’re supposed to do when people are sad,” Leanne says.
“That’s what who does?”
“People. Pals.”
“Okay, but why?”
She blinks and stares into the distance for a moment. “I actually don’t know. It’s just…that’s what they always do in books and films. I think it’s a comfort thing.”
We ponder this for a moment.
“When I had endometriosis surgery, the food was horrid,” she continues. “The peas were mashed into a single ball. Like one giant soft pea. It makes me want to chuck up just thinking about it. Anyway, this soup is from Baba’s, so it’ll be delicious.”
She reaches into her bag and pulls out a paper napkin, unwrapping it to reveal a silver spoon. My bottom lip begins to wobble at her kindness and I feel immediately guilty for my shortness with her. I hadn’t really thought about the hospital food being gross because I’ve mostly not been hungry. But now that the soup is in front of me, my stomach growls.
“I didn’t know you had endometriosis. That’s rubbish.”
“You never asked.”
“I’m sorry for that,” I say with a wince. “All these years I thought I was protecting myself by keeping my distance from people. But I’m starting to think that maybe I was—”
“A massive fucking bitch?”
I laugh out loud, immediately yelping as it pulls my ribs into a direction they’re not ready for.
“Yeah.” I grin. “A massive fucking bitch. Why did you even want to be friends with me?”
“Because it would be a terrible reflection on my personality if my only workmate was my own mum.”
I laugh.
Leanne shrugs. “Seriously, though. I like you. And that night we drank wine after work? You told me about your mum leaving.”
“I did?”
“Yeah. And you were so funny too, when you didn’t have that guard all the way up. I knew I’d break through eventually. I mean, I thought it might take another year or two, but here we are. Sharing soup.”
“Sharing?”
“Yeah, I was actually hoping you’d dish it up now.” Leanne pulls out another napkin and spoon from her handbag. “I’ve not had any lunch yet because Mum brought in a tuna sarnie, which absolutely no thank you.”
“You don’t like tuna?”
“God, you really haven’t been listening to me for all these years, eh? I once had someone come into the pharmacy with persistent bacterial vaginosis. Haven’t been able to stomach the scent of fish since. Mum loves tuna though, so whenever she has it, I bail.”