Showing posts with label Sara Crowley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sara Crowley. Show all posts

February 25, 2015

Sara Crowley




What's Coming


I’m sitting on a slightly not big enough chair and Bob stands between my legs facing me. His hands are flapping and I try to still them in mine. They flutter inside my fists. Little birds. He looks at me and I am triumphant. See, I think, eye contact. So he’s not… you know. He’s not. We’re in a waiting room. There are plastic toys in primary colours scattered throughout. More traditional ones too. An abacus. Books. There’s even a slide. It’s a room carefully designed to appeal to children. In the corner two kids are pretend cooking wooden biscuits in the toy oven. Expensive biscuits; I’ve seen them for sale. Designer toys for designer mums. Not for… well…me, us. I let go of his hands, tug my top down, check my phone, glance at a couple flicking through magazines.

Do you want to play, Bobby? There’s a brmm brmm down there.”

I pick the car up and run it along the arm of my chair. Bob takes it from me and puts it in his mouth.

No. Dirty. Yucky,” I say, pulling it away.

He squats down by a table puzzle, moves beads along coils, click, click. The doctor is late. There have been tests. Bob has been observed at play, at pre-school. Blood has been taken. I’ve been asked, many times, if I smoked during pregnancy, breast fed, vaccinated. How many times a week I bath him. I lied about that one. He has eventually met age appropriate milestones, but… well, yes, I can see there is cause for concern. It’s best to check.

He is moving all the beads back the way they came now and he’s absolutely focussed on this task. He’s beautiful. Thank God! I couldn’t cope with an ugly child. There’s a boy in pre-school who dribbles and his chin is red and sore. He has these wishy washy pale blue eyes and too much forehead. Bob’s eyes are conker brown and shiny, his face a perfect round. He does not dribble. This matters. It’s not everything, but it’s something. Bob is humming. At least… it’s sort of a hum. It comes from his throat, a deep guttural mm mm mm. The kids in the corner have given pretend biscuits to their parents who are exclaiming over how delicious they are.

A nurse says that Dr Hameed will see me.

I’m sorry, Bob just needs the loo,” I say, and we leave the stuffy room, walk through the overheated corridors and exit into an outside where the air feels clean, perfectly chilled, full of oxygen, and I breathe deep.


CP

Sara Crowley feels awkward writing the obligatory third person accompanying blurb. She spends a lot of time not writing her first novel. She wishes her fingers were more elegant. She blogs at saracrowley.com and appreciates you taking the time to read this.

April 23, 2009

Sara Crowley


Four Skulls


I have a photo of Helen, Keith and Bob, sitting on the greenest, lushest grass imaginable. The sky above them is poster paint blue, the sun so bright that Helen is squinting a little into the camera, despite her wide brimmed hat.

I have looked at it often. Cornwall: Bossiney Cove. Keith has a spliff in his hand. We smoked many joints that holiday. Skinny rollies filled with "giggle grass" that worked like magic. I have never laughed so much again. All four of us saw a cloud elephant.

"This is an important sign," said Bob.

"What of?" I asked.

"Well, what do elephants make you think?"

We shouted out, India, curtain tassels, boxes, mice. Stupid answers to elicit more mirth.

"Never forget," he said, solemnly.

"What shouldn't we forget Bob?" said Keith.

And he said "This," and gestured to the hill, the sea, the sky, us.

We went to a teashop, ordered scones and clotted cream, but it took us ages to get the words out. Then, when the tea came in delicate china cups we rattled them in the saucers with our laughing hands. We snorted, spluttered, and thought they were going to ask us to leave, but they didn't. They smiled at us; infectious we were with our big fat youthful happiness. We drank pints in the pub and ate cheesy chips, we played pool, and smoked. We gossiped and sung along to the jukebox.

Fifteen years is a long time, and no time. I haven't seen Keith in fourteen of those years. I see Helen once in every couple, and we hug, squeeze, and promise to catch up but we don't. I didn't see Bob after his diagnosis; he didn't want to be remembered as a dying man. So I look up to the clouds and every one of them is an elephant, no matter its shape.

CP

Sara Crowley has had fiction published by Pulp.Net, 3:AM, elimae, flashquake, Litro, Cella's Round Trip, Dogmatika, Red Peter, Better Non Sequitur, and a variety of other lovely places. Salted, her novel in progress, was shortlisted for the 2007 Faber/Book Tokens Not Yet Published Award. She blogs here.