Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 1404

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The Daily Dormouse.
(aka Bike)
Part 1404
by Angharad

Copyright © 2011 Angharad
All Rights Reserved.
  
-Dormouse-001.jpg

Episode One hundred and seventeen dozen.

Billie was awake, “I’ve been thinking, Mummy.”

“Oh good, all those school fees are paying off.”

“Mummm–mmeee.”

“What were you thinking?” I asked sitting on the edge of the bed.

“About what happened–I nearly killed Sister Maria.”

“I don’t know about that, I was there.”

“Yes, you saved her didn’t you?”

“I wouldn’t go that far.”

“She’s going to be cross with me when I next go to school, isn’t she?”

“I don’t think so, but it might be nice if we take her some flowers and a letter of apology.”

“Will you help me write it?”

“I tell you what, you do it first and then I’ll help you from there, so do a rough draft first and I’ll help you, okay?”

She sat up and hugged me, “Thank you, Mummy, you’re the best mummy in the world.”

“I think that might be a slight exaggeration, so how about we say the best one in this room–but only until you have some children yourself.”

“But I can’t have children–can I?”

“I didn’t necessarily mean you gave birth, but adopted or fostered some–that’s how I started.”

“And look what you ended up with.”

“I have the loveliest children I could wish for, and I love you all.”

“Thank you, Mummy.”

I hugged her and kissed the top of her head, “C’mon we’re keeping Stephanie waiting.”

I left them to it, having sat with them both to explain what had happened at the church and its consequences. Stephanie’s eyes nearly came out on stalks when I mentioned the accidental stabbing.

“So, this woman survived?”

“Yes, of course she did, so you’re not working with a pair of criminals–besides it was an accident and Billie was in a strange place before and throughout the episode in the chapel.”

I left them to it, making some bread for the morning and doing myself a boiled egg for my tea. I love boiled eggs, they were the first solid food I ate after surgery, when I had to cope with clear soup and milkless tea–yuck. Years later I heard someone had drunk Bovril, I wished I had instead of the tea.

I’d made a bowl of cereal for Billie which she ate, and I’d done a quick omelette for Stephanie with some ham and mushrooms. She wolfed it down, then she and I shared a cup of tea, while I breast fed Catherine.

“Watching you do that, I can’t really believe you’re not a natural female.”

“I thought I was the officially deluded one.”

“Yeah, sure–you’re one of the sanest people I know.”

“Could I have that in writing?”

“For a fee, yes.”

Billie went off to play with the others and I shouted, “Ten minutes and then it’s bed time, see if Gramps will read to you.”

“How is she doing?” I asked Stephanie, closing the kitchen door.

“Okay–today was traumatic but she said she saw some woman standing behind you pouring blue light into you when you were trying to save the nun.”

“She saw it?” I gasped.

“So she said.”

“Today’s incident is quite bizarre, but what would you say if it had been suggested by someone I respect, that it was all designed to make me communicate with the Shekinah?”

“I’d say you were absolutely barking, why? This is the sort of paranoid delusion associated with severe mental illness and some personality disorders of a sociopathic type.”

“I thought you might.”

“You’re definitely a cycle path.” She sniggered and I rolled my eyes.

I explained about the energy–she knew about some of it–but was astonished when I suggested I’d actually brought one or two back from the brink–I didn’t like to say i was raising the dead, she might have Christian qualms about that.

“So, let me get this right, you feel that some ancient Hebrew goddess is channelling this energy into you for you to heal people?”

“Yes, in a nutshell.”

“What does she get out of it?” Stephanie had asked what I’d been thinking for some little while.

“I’m not su–I don’t know,” I shrugged.

Quem Jupiter vult perdere, dementat prius” said Stephanie.

“Something about Jupiter sending madness. It’s a long time since I did any Latin.”

“Those whom God destroys, he first sends mad.”

“Oh, is that a diagnosis?”

“No, it was something that I learned verbatim in my first lecture on psychiatry. From then on I saw it as a challenge to try and stop as many destructions as I could. Sometimes I win, but not always.”

“Do I detect an element of hubris?”

“Possibly, psychiatrists are apparently the group of medics most affected by the God complex.”

“I just thought they were all mad?”

“Perhaps, but as they say it takes one to know one.”

I made us some more tea. Sitting down I glanced at Stephanie’s abdomen. “What are you staring at?” she asked suspiciously.

“Are you seeing anyone at the moment?” I asked her.

“Why, what did you see–cancer?”

“There is something growing there.”

“Oh hell–can you fix it–I mean blue light it, or however you term it?”

“No, I can only help things which are broken.”

She looked at me, “Waddya mean?”

“You’re having a baby.”

“What? How can you tell?”

“I just can.”

“This Shekinah thing?”

I shrugged.

“Can you tell if it’s a boy or a girl?”

“No, only that it’s healthy.” I lied but she wouldn’t thank me for saying.

“Shit–how did you do that?”

“Could you be pregnant?”

“I shouldn’t be, I’m on the pill and he used a condom to be double sure.”

“Well, you are.”

“Shit.”

“Stephanie, please don’t abort it, will you?”

“I think that’s for me to decide don’t you?”

“It is, but I have a feeling you need to have this baby.”

“So it can screw up my life?”

“No, look, I’ll help all I can with babysitting and so on.”

“I need to think about it.”

She left a little while later in a sort of daze. I was bit worried for her driving and asked her to let me know she got home safely. Perhaps I shouldn’t have told her, but the energy was insisting I did. Now she’s going to avoid me and what will my kids do when she’s on maternity leave?

Tom had put the younger children to bed and read to them, I checked on Danny and he was lying there staring at the ceiling. “What’s the matter, kiddo?”

“Oh hi, Mum.”

“What’s on your mind?” I asked sitting by the bed.

“Billie told us what happened–pretty frightening.”

“So why does that make you think?”

“Well, is she cracking up?”

“Certainly not.”

“She’s not going to stab one of us is she?”

“No, of course not, she’s fine.”

“She was going to do a Trish, wasn’t she?”

“A Trish?”

“Yeah, chop her goolies off.”

“Was she?”

“So she said.”

“I don’t know.”

“Makes me sweat just thinking ’bout it.”

“Well don’t then.”

“Mum?”

“Yes, Danny?”

“Thanks for being there for us all.”

“Darling, I do my best to be there for you all as much as I can, but we’re a family so we’re all there for each other, not just me.”

“Yeah, course.”

I bent down to peck him on the cheek and he put his arms round my neck and kissed me on the cheek instead. Once more I went downstairs with a glow in my whole being.

“He kissed you again, did he?”

“Who?” I gasped at Si.

“Danny, who else?”

“How d’you know?”

“You have something about you, which I recognise from the last time he did it: either that or you’re ovulating or pregnant.”

“I wish,” I sighed.

“We can go and have another try,” he said his whole face lighting up.

“C’mon then,” I couldn’t turn him down again–well I could have, but I happen to love him.

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