She refocused her vision and saw that her mother's ulcer was
weeping again now that the compression bandage had been lifted. She started
massaging her toes for her. It was the closest locus away from the wound she
could caress without prompting further suffering in her mother. Tears were
welling up behind her own eyes.
Gazing upon her leg it seemed as though the sore was boring
through the layers of skin. But she knew the opposite dynamic was at work.
Failings in the blood supply within, had starved the skin of oxygen and thereby
corrupted the integrity of its tissue. A parochial suffocation.
She tore her gaze away from the suppurating wound and
instead scrutinised the veins and arteries around her mother's ankles. The red
and blue capillaries were raised right to the surface of her skin, like oxygen
starved fish in a waterhole receding under a fierce orange sun. The reds and
blues put her in mind of a road atlas, the major trunk routes and motorways out
of the city. A spaghetti nexus of escape arteries that she had never taken.
Held here in place by her mother's immobility and venous constriction. Her
mother splayed out on her bed there, like a catafalque. Yet it might be she
herself having her coffin drawn along by hearse to the cemetery at the city
limits. Her body undertaking the longest journey of her life and breaching the
confines of the city only once in death. As she disposed of the soiled bandage,
she apprehended that it could never be lipstick, only ever blood and purulence.
It hadn't always been like this she was certain. She had
seen the family portraits. Delicate colour photos sweated behind the dividing
wax leaves of an old fashioned album, that suggested it was consonant with the
days of sepia tints. But the evidence was still there in place. A porcelain
skin so alabaster white, that the lens managed to pick out the filigree blue
veins in all their delicacy. Her mother had assuredly been a beauty in her
youth.
But that white skin was now bruised, burnished and livid out of all recognition. She wiped the moisture from the corner of her eye with the heel of her hand. She didn't want to get any germs on her fingers that would soon have to reapply the bandage shroud. But her good intentions were undone when she reflexively scratched her own lower leg, bringing her skin up in a chalky sheen, though there was no eruption of any efflorescence.
"Hold on Mama, I have to wash my hands clean."
As she squirted the antiseptic soap into her palms, she
mused on whether the condition might be genetic. Her mother had been invalided
for as long as she could remember. Certainly at an age younger than she was
herself now, so that it seemed unlikely to be stalking her own vascular system.
And yet her circulation had also furred up, since she rarely exercised save for
errands after fresh food, clean bandages and repeat prescriptions.
Anti-septic was right. She had allowed herself to be
contaminated by the stasis of her mother's plight. Caring and tending had made
her utterly dependent on her mother's stagnant rhythms. She was actually the sore
and her mother the lint pressing her down. She didn't mean to, but when she
applied a new bandage, she pushed it with a bit more force than normal. Her
mother cried out.
"I'm sorry Mama, so so sorry."
taken from the Flash Fiction collection "Long Stories Short" available on Amazon Kindle free to download 3rd-7th June
taken from the Flash Fiction collection "Long Stories Short" available on Amazon Kindle free to download 3rd-7th June