(aka Bike) Part 589 by Angharad |
Tom took me to the hospital; Stella was a little more with it–for a few moments anyway. I told her I was keeping an eye on the baby for her, and she smiled, said a very quiet ,”Thanks,” and then seemed to drift off into her trance again. I hugged and kissed her before we left, “Shoulda let me jump,” she said suddenly and cried silently.
I wiped her tears and held her, “You’re far too precious to me, to let you do something like that.”
“If I was, you’d have let me do it.”
“No, Stella, you’re ill, this will pass and when you get back to your usual self, you’ll realise that.”
“As soon as I get outta here, I’m gonna finish it.”
“Please don’t say things like that.” She slipped back into her trance and ignored me. We left, Tom gave me a tissue to wipe my eyes as we went. It was awful, I’d never seen her so sad. She’d spoken in a monotone, almost as if she wasn’t really at home. If we ever get her well again, I am going to love her to bits and try to stop these destructive urges she gets.
As we walked to see Puddin’, I recalled hearing about the son of a lecturer at Sussex, who was Bi-polar or Schizophrenic, in severe cases it can be difficult to diagnose apparently, who jumped off a roof from a unit where he was being treated. He hit some railings on the way down. The way she looked tonight, she could well be up for such a thing. Looks like I get to bring up Puddin’ unless Henry and Monica do it. If I do, it’s only until Stella gets well again.
Puddin’ had gained another few grams and they were well pleased with her. She seemed to know she had a visitor and she became a little more active, maybe she wanted her fix of energy. Goodness, I’m getting as daft as the rest of them. This blue light stuff–it’s all bunkum. I’m a scientist for goodness sake, I don’t do all this mumbo-jumbo. If the child is growing it’s because she’s receiving excellent care from experts and mother’s milk.
“How long before she can come home?” I asked the nurse in charge.
“Depends on her progress, her lungs were undersized, but she’s doing all right. So I would suggest about a month.”
“Thanks,” by then I might have two hands again and Stella might be feeling better. Even the weather might be better–actually, it hadn’t been too bad for a week or so, although it was trying to rain as we drove in and the wind had freshened. It had been some very good cycling weather, and here I am doing my impression of Nelson.
I touched Puddin’ and she began gurgling and kicking. “She only does that for you, you know.”
“I hope you’re not just saying that to make me feel better.”
“Miss Watts, my responsibility is the child, I don’t care how the adults feel unless it impacts on the child.” That was telling me. “She seems better when you visit and she becomes more active as well.”
“Is that good or bad?” I asked.
“Good, it’s very good, it’ll help her coordination as she grows.”
“Sister, Stella seemed to be of the opinion that she heard two doctors talking about her baby which suggested she was brain damaged in some way.”
“Not that I’m aware of, mind you it’s early days yet and it can happen.”
“So it could have been her baby?”
“I doubt it, we did have badly brain damaged neo-natal last week, but he died.”
“So it could just as easily been that unfortunate baby?”
“Indeed, possibly was. No this one is doing fine for the moment. Do you want to give her a bottle?”
“Yes please, how long before we can cuddle her?”
“Another month, we do stroke them regularly to keep them happy, but it’s nothing like them cuddling with their mums.”
“No, I suppose not.”
“How many children do you have?”
“I have two foster daughters.”
“From babies?”
“No, one is three and the other coming up five.”
“Have you had them a long time?”
“A couple of months or so.”
“I thought it would have been longer than that?”
“Why?”
“The way you touch and speak with Baby Cameron.”
“Why? What am I doing that makes you think like that?”
“It’s hard to say, except it’s usually easy to tell a new mum and an experienced mum from each other. You definitely appear to be in the latter category. You’re not a nursery nurse or teacher?”
“I teach at a university, and at times it feels like they could do with a nursery nurse, but no, I’m not. I do look after baby dormice, or did. I’m on secondment, or was until this happened.” I moved my arm in the sling and winced.
“Collar bone?”
“Yes.”
“Fall off your bike?”
“Something like that.”
“Painful,” she said shaking her head and left me to continue tickling Puddin’, who was chuckling to herself and moving her legs. The scene was reminiscent of a baby bird trying to develop it’s flight muscles before it tries to hop out of the nest. With a bit of luck, this one will be leggin’ it down the road any day now–I wish.
Another nurse brought me a bottle of warmed milk and after testing it on the back of my other hand, I fed the baby. I could stay here all day doing this, well maybe not in here, but I love feeding babies. Okay, when they throw up and poop everywhere it isn’t so much fun, but I still love it, dunno why. But then I don’t know why or where I got this urge to become a woman, but I sure as hell don’t regret it.
Neither do I regret looking after two kids and standing here feeding a third. I do have regrets, however–the first is not being able to use both hands, and secondly, not being able to cuddle this lovely skinned rabbit, I’m feeding. I’m sure she’d love it too.
I managed to break away from this self indulgence and go and see Henry. Monica was there and she was quite miffed that when she’d visited Puddin’ they hadn’t invited her to give her a bottle.
“Perhaps they’d just fed her?” I offered, hoping it was true.
“Ah, but you don’t have Cathy’s special hands do you?” said Tom and I wondered if I could strangle him with just one hand.
“What’s special about Cathy’s hands?” asked Monica sounding slightly miffed.
“She gives healing to the baby, which is why she’s getting stronger.”
“Tom, you’re winding me up,” said Monica, sounding a bit like Prunella Scales in Fawlty Towers. “Healing hands, come on then Cathy, shove a bit of that stuff into your father in law to be.”
I was so embarrassed, I blushed like an atomic tomato. “Tom’s just winding you up,” I said defensively, “Tell her, Tom.” I almost pleaded with my eyes.
“Aye, you’re richt, I was just teasin’ ye.”
On the way back to the car, I spoke sharply to him, “People are going to think you’ve either gone barmy or religious if you keep on about this healing nonsense.”
“Cathy, I’m a scientist, I’ve used my eyes and my ears to measure and record things all my life. I can only speak what I’ve seen, and that is a blue light emanating from your hands into the bairn.”
“I think you need your eyes tested,” I said and walked on ahead of him.
Comments
Being a scientist
Doesn't mean you have to be a big mouth. Surely by his age he has learned that sometimes it's best not to tell everything he knows.
They know they can survive
I like that
Tom is a scientist. He's reporting what he's observed. Just needs to be a little more thoughtful about it when sharing this kind of observation. I also wish Cathy could cuddle the baby, if a finger or hand does what it has, imagine what a cuddle would do.
From Monica's comments
I wonder if Cathy has a rival for carring for the baby. Sure hope it doesn't come to that. Currently she is not really related. Guess she needs to marry Simon soon. Stella's saying that Cathy can have the baby doesn't carry much weight right now.
Two things...
1. What kind of a word is "wronking"? It's definitely not in the SOED.
2. I find it a bit spooky that Cathy breaks her collarbone just a few days before her hero does: Armstrong breaks collarbone
Keep up the good work Angharad...really enjoying EAFOAB.
Bike Resources
I would have thought ...
... that Cathy was more pleased that Manxman Mark Cavendish won Milan-San Remo at the weekend leaving Armstrong over 8 minutes in arrears. Collarbones are funny things. My SO's is a very funny shape when it healed crooked after she was fetched off her bike by an errant moggie a few years ago. Good job she's not bothered about wearing strapless dresses. Hasn't stopped her from building up the miles though - she's down for a 100 miler on Saturday - not bad for an old lady pensioner.
'Wronking' is obviously derived from the Welsh 'Wymllyng' which means whatever Angharad chooses it to mean :)
Geoff
It's slangy
Wronging in a bad Russian accent. Vat? Zis is not wronking us?
A real word, portmanteau of "wrong" and "rank."
Rank can mean several things: ugly and disgusting; stinky; musty; nauseatingly grotty, and so on.
As a verb it can mean putting someone down in a game of oneupmanship, being superior, and several other competitive meanings.
Put these all together and you have:
1. A stench of Biblical proportions, what God has planned for the end of the world now that floods are off the table; the simultaneous and monumental farts of three Sumo wrestlers after a feast of lentils, raw asafoetida, fried chicken, and garlic in a Volkswagen Beetle with the heater full on, the doors locked from the outside, and none of the windows will open; smelly knickers or y-fronts after wearing them for three months straight in the middle of a tropical jungle without washing them.
2. In online gaming, to do something totally awesome or totally messed up, either completely inappropriate for your character (or any sentient being) or so grossly appropriate that none of your so-called friends will ever talk to you again...
3. An obscure, but oddly appropriate, literary reference.
Puddin'
------------------
What did I care about all the irking hurts
and tedious wronks of the world, the human
bones are but vain lines dawdling, the whole
universe a blank mold of stars.
--- Jack Kerouac, The Dharma Bums
-
Cheers,
Puddin'
A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style
Puddin' is right as always,
Wronking means disgusting pong, and it's British slang.
Angharad
Angharad
Tch, tch...
"Dogbreath" surely gave it away from the start...
Puddin'
-
Cheers,
Puddin'
A tender heart is an asset to an editor: it helps us be ruthless in a tactful way.
--- The Chicago Manual of Style
Shoulda done...
but we're dealing with people to whom English is a second language, after 'Merican :)
Angharad
(Now in hiding).
Angharad
Cathy Needs To Understand That She Is Healing Puddin
Tom is smart enough to know what Cathy is doing is helping Puddin whether she want to think so or not. I really hope that Stella doesn't follow through with her threat to "finish it" If Cathy would realize that there are some things that just have no scientific explanation, then she will see the beauty that exists in the things of nature. The blue power could be used for good if she would just realize it and believe it. I have learned a long time ago, not to put limits on the power of healing. As a scientist, Cathy needs to open her mind to possibilities and not dismiss them because she is bound by scientific principles. It might make a huge difference in Stella's life just as it is in her daughter's.
I Wonder If
Trish told Tom off screen.
May Your Light Forever Shine
May Your Light Forever Shine
Lance Armstrong
In the news today Lance fell off his bike this weekend in a race in Spain and get this he broke his collar bone.
Hugs,
Jenna From FL
Hugs,
Jenna From FL
Moderator/Editor
TopShelf BigCloset
It is a long road ahead but I will finally become who I should be.
Cathy
Needs to put her preconceptions aside. She has physical evidence, and two eye witnesses. A scientist would accept the evidence and move on the hypotheses stage.
She's going to do it !
"Merican" Wot kind of talk is that ? Sure speaking in tongues again are u. Where is a good Aussie, whose language us 'Mericans can understand ? Or a real Rugby players like the Irish, them I can understand.
Cefin