
Offline

HE USED TO WALK DOWN THE STAIRS BACKWARDS
Squeezing a tennis ball was out of the question. He'd throw it under his hospital bed. Sometimes across the room, to the side where the other patient was. The old Portuguese man he wouldn’t let watch his TV. Who he’d pull the curtains on if he saw him looking at it.
“Let him pay for his own”
Dave was different after the stroke. Called all of his black nurses Sambo. Those poor nurses who always pretended not to hear it.
“He doesn’t mean what he's saying”, Norma had to keep telling them.
When he was finally allowed to go home, he never stopped feeling sorry for himself. When the cat died a few days later, he hated that everyone cried for it. Angry they were upset over that, and not him.
“Oh, stop it”, he snapped. “Such a fuss about a cat”
Because Dave continued to refuse to do any of the exercises the hospital had insisted he do, his right hand quickly withered. Could do nothing but hang limply at his side and from then on he would have to come down the stairs, holding the banister with his left hand. Walking backwards very slowly, very carefully.
Offline

WET ANNIVERSARY
Why did he kiss her? What a strange thing to do. Not a particularly important anniversary and yet, without warning, put his arm around his wife and pulled her close. Did that thing to her cheek. Made the big noise. Everyone watching from the kitchen table.
Andrea gasped when she saw what he’d done. Couldn’t unsee it and she had seen some things in her life. Had worked her whole life in a hospital. Just that week had a patient who’d been given the wrong medication and all her skin fell off. Just like damp toilet paper.
It was called sloughing.
Left behind a bright pink slug of a woman gently bleeding through her bedsheets.
And yet the sight of her father standing in the kitchen with his cheeks aglow, laughing as his wife used the sleeves of her sweater to scrub her horrified face clean, got Andrea shrieking in horror.
“It was so wet. Eeeek! What the hell is happening in this house?”
Her father offering no explanation.
Happy Anniversary, Norma.
From your ever smiling husband, Dave.