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Grace

by Jenniren 

Posted: 21 June 2006
Word Count: 1282
Summary: Just another wee thing i found. An idea i got while working in an old fokes home, where we had a several patients that could not communicate or move or eat. So thats my setting, the end of life in a home haunted by death.


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It was there waiting for her, patiently hiding in the dark corners of the room. Looking at her with longing just waiting for it’s moment. After all the years she’d spent chasing it off, it had finally come for her. She could smell it’s stench on her skin, feel its chill take root in her bones.
The dawn was breaking, finally. Shafts of peach light cut into the room through the crack in the haphazardly drawn curtains and she knew that the shadows would soon be gone, but that it would remain hanging like sour breath in the air as the sun travelled it’s long slow arch through the vaulted blue sky.
The pain twisted in her back and legs, sent sharp metallic slices through her brain. She wanted to move, to take the pressure off to relieve the sensation but she knew she would just have to wait. Sooner or later they would come. Full of chatter as they stripped the warm blankets from her, ripping the dignity of her night shirt off and wiping the sweat from her body with a dirty damp cloth before dragging a fresh night dress onto her skeletal form. They would come and move her upwards into a more painful position and shovel food into her. And never once would they look at her or talk to her.
Those girls with the dead eyes, who hated the work they did and the stale air that filled the corridors of purgatory. Young things that thought that age would never weaken them, as it had the breathing corpses they herded to earn drinking money. How she pitied them. What small lives they lead, when they lay where she did what would they close their eyes and remember to block out the horror of it all.
She had few regrets. Her life was a Technicolor dream. She had always known she had to make the best memories possible. She just had to close her eyes to see African bush land, a patchwork quilt of greens, browns and gold, stretching to the hazy blue horizon. She could still feel the warm dusty wind that wandered across it on her skin.
Then she’d be standing by the Atlantic Ocean, tasting the salt in the rain as it fell on Ireland’s heathered hill tops or looking up at the dizzying heights the tree tops reached in Amazonian rainforest.
Yes her work had taken her all over. In a job she had found both adventure and satisfaction. She had seen war and death and children dying in the streets. But she had done something about it. She was glad that she had at least helped changed a few lives along the way.
And she had found the two people who her heart had cherished most. She had met her husband, the doctor, with his kind eyes and hearty laugh, giving vaccinations to street kids in San Paulo. He had swept her up into his life and married her in a falling down church were they didn’t even speak English. They had kept each other strong in the face of the worst horrors and encouraged each other to celebrate the smallest victories they won against them. She would be with him again soon.
The other person was, if truth be told, the source of the one regret that kept her holding on to life. Her daughter, Grace, so beautiful and sweet and intelligent, was the light of her life. Oh Grace! She uttered the name into the dim twilight filling her room.
The child had arrived into their lives so late. Even now she was still so young. It had always seemed like they had more time, and so things had been put off. But then Her husband had died and Grace had taken it so badly, and a wall had gone up. Grace had moved away from her, and there had been no opportunities to do the things they ahd put off.
She had always meant to tell Grace, when the child was old enough to understand, but Grace was never ready and now it was getting late. How did you tell a child the truth of her origin when it was so awful. It still made her shutter to think of it now.
Maybe she deserved her never ending end. Perhaps if she had done things differently Grace would have lived a completely different life. But then they would never have had their child. All those shinning faced she had looked into over the years, all those sweet eager children, still playing when surrounded by such poverty, by death, by war. And Grace was the only one she ever brought home.
It was not their fault. He had often said that. The men would have killed Grace as well. But all she could remember when she thought of that night was the chilling choice between their lives and that of so many others. He had always told her it was not like that, that they could have nothing to save that camp. That they had saved the children and that was more than anybody could have hoped for.
But he had not looked into the faces of those masked men and stood between them and Graces mother. He had not had the chance to say or do something that might have changed the outcome of events. He had not been told to take the child and run it he wanted to live. And he had not lifted a screaming infant from their mother’s arms and turn as the sound of gun fire ripped through the air. He had not felt the splatter of that child’s mother’s blood landing on the bare skin of his calves.
She had always meant to tell Grace these things, but when was the right time to tell a child of such evil? There was so much to say and so little time left to say it…
The door to her room was thrown open and in they came, the carers, two of them in full conversation about the weekend. They turned on her radio and stared the robotic routine with only a glance in her direction.
She looked at them, Carer A had blonde hair tied back from a chubby face, the brown eyes bulging as carer A laughed at carer B’s story, carer B’s face contorted, an unhappy meeting if a big noise and small eyes, decorated with access black hair. Carer B’s thick ugly tones filled the air as they worked. They were pitiful creatures, she though as they turned her over, only half alive. The blond one bent down to meet the old woman’s eyes as the other wiped her backside and changed her incontinence pad.
“Do you think she’s still in there at all?” Carer A said softly as they straightened her up.
“Old Bitch is long gone!” Care B pronounced as the rolled her onto her back, and heaved her upward on the bed, “God knows what keeps the body going.”
“I suppose it’s just a good thing she doesn’t know whats happening to her eh?” Carer A signed a fresh nightdress was from the drawer and rolled onto a chubby hand before it grabbed the old woman’s arm and began to put the garment on.
Through the growing pain and discomforting she chuckled to herself, little did they know! She was still there alright, she was just waiting for Grace to come and then they would see. She’d scare the living delights out of them, they wouldn’t know what hit them. Just as soon as her Grace got there….If only she could find a way to get Grace to come.






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Comments by other Members



niniel at 14:02 on 22 June 2006  Report this post
Hi Jenni,

Liked this story. Having done a bit of work in a care home myself I found very realistic and quite moving. You capture the indignity of it all very well. It would be interesting to see this made into a longer piece. There's a lot of stuff in there that could be expanded on like her time as a volunteer, the relationship with her daughter etc. Good stuff, keep it up!

Katerina at 19:39 on 23 June 2006  Report this post
Hi Jenni,

Nice writing, although this felt more like the beginning of a novel than a short story.

Quite a few typos and spelling mistakes, I won't point them out, if you read it through again, you'll find them.

The coldness of the carers came across well, and all the undignities that come with old age and a body that cant move. You conveyed the feelings of an old woman who had been someone once and done wonderful things, but was now reduced to an old scrap of nothingness, very well.

Good work

Katerina

darrenm at 12:47 on 25 June 2006  Report this post
Hi Jenni,

A sad tale, and lots in there, so yes this could be a much longer piece.

The opening two paras are excellent writing; a brilliant depiction of lurking death, loved '..hanging like sour breath in the air..'

But I felt the rest of the story, good that it is, was let down by the spelling mistakes and typos and the odd confusing sentence. This line towards the end in particular I couldn't grasp:

'Carer A signed a fresh nightdress was from the drawer and rolled onto a chubby hand...'

I know this is an early draft but I don't think it would take much to iron these glitches out and make a much smoother and enjoyable read.

I enjoyed the MC's reminisces of a colourful life, it really is sad to hear the elderly talk of past glories with a twinkle in the eye. Also liked how you describe the origin of Grace, and how you end without us not quite knowing if she'll find out.

I thought it was a great idea to use 'Carer A' and Carer B' as names it really gets the MC's opinion of them across.

I hope you decide to work on this because there is a lot of potential in the story.

Darren.


Jenniren at 13:19 on 25 June 2006  Report this post
I think i would consider making this a lobger piece. However I'd like to do a bit of reserch into it, like visit africa again and find out abit more about some of the civil wars and stuff like motivations and long term effects.
Prehaps from the point of view of Grace going 'home' to africa to find her real family or something...
interlaced with her mother waiting for her and bits from her life.
Will have to think about it, let in mature in the back of my mind for a while.
Jenni

<Added>

Ps, Sorry about typos and that. Will have to find a way out how to use the read aloud function on my commputer see if that helps me see them...becaus proof reading to myself doesn't seem to be working.

Ava at 12:00 on 26 June 2006  Report this post
Jenni, I thought it was a fantastic story and it works so well despite being so short. In fact, I think that's why it works. Its blunt yet expressionate and poignant. I felt great compassion for the character as she pities the carers for their lingering lives yet she's delusioned by hope herself. you can still improve on this though, there are a few edits that need to be straighted and I'm sure when you re-read, you'll find more substance that can make it really shine.

Brilliant stuff though.

Sarah

Becca at 12:18 on 26 June 2006  Report this post
Hi Jenni,
One way to deal with typos is to get someone you know to read your stories for you and point them out. I did find that the numbers of them spoilt my reading and detracted from other criting angles that normally come into the picture. I think there are seventeen of them.
Another thing it's worth considering is the use of 'stock phrases', - sometimes called cliches. For example: 'the light of her life', 'dizzying heights', 'there was so much to say and so little time to say it'. Even if a reader doesn't consciously note cliches, they have a negative impact.
My own feeling was that the interesting story would be her relationship with Grace, I think maybe as the story now is, the brush-stroke, so to speak, is too broad and sweeping, I agree with Katerina about it feeling more novel like.
There's a lot of potential for a good story here, just needs thinking about and working on.
Becca.

Jenniren at 20:06 on 26 June 2006  Report this post
will do better as regards typos, and think getting somebody to read over them is a brill idea. Thanks.

Sibelius at 16:33 on 28 June 2006  Report this post
Hi Jenni,

Just a few pointers to add to the comments you've already received. It's worth going through and maybe pruning the text for too many adverbs or cliches.

I also think the story suffers a little from a lack of immediacy because a lot of it is general impressions of this woman's past life. Maybe it needs some specific incidents to bring us closer to the characters, for example the incident in the camp. The reader doesn't get a real sense of what happened, even those this is a pivotal moment (with the excellent exception of the image of the mother's blood spattering legs).

One method that helps editing and gives you some perspective on the story itself is to read it out loud to yourself.



Issy at 22:16 on 04 July 2006  Report this post
I felt this was a very strong story and like others have commented could be explored in more depth. I particularly liked that the main character is sorry for the shallowness of the carers lives, rather than the other way round, and I warmed to the acerbic old lady.

I didn't quite understand what was going on in the background and why Grace and she weren't on good terms. She seems at the end to be pinning her hopes on a reconciliation with Grace, yet from the strength of the old lady's character I would have thought she had enough internal strength for this end of life situation even without Grace. Could the incidents of the past just be hinted at a bit more clearly without too much research, maybe just specific flashes of memories, as Sibelious suggested?

Very thoughtful and thought provoking story.


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