It was Christmas Eve and the Hartley household in the village of Clerembeax St Giles was decorated for the season.
A large fresh cut
tree stood in the corner, perfuming the room and was festooned by a myriad of
assorted baubles, ornaments, tinsel and lights.
Christmas cards of
all shapes and sizes adorned every surface and more hung on bright red and
green ribbons suspended from the picture rails and bright colored Christmas
garlands hung gaily, crisscrossing the ceiling.
Outside, through a
break in the dark clouds, a shaft of week winter sunlight shone through the
window reflecting off the garlands and painted random patterns on the walls and
ceiling.
76-year-old Paul
Hartley sat watching TV in his favorite armchair in the front room of the house
he shared with his wife and soul mate Linda, the woman he loved more than life
itself.
Both of them had
been married before, but Linda was the love of his life and they had spent 30
years apart before they found each other again, when their own Christmas
miracle happened 25 years before.
And as a result of
that Christmas miracle they had had 25 years of incredible happiness.
Paul and Linda had
made good use of the years they had together to make up for the lost time when
they were apart and as a couple they had had the fullest of lives.
Christmas had
always held particular significance for them, it was their favorite time of
year and had always been so, because their most meaningful moments together
happened at Christmas time, finding love together, losing each other, finding
each other again, and marrying each other, that’s why Paul called her Christmas
Linda.
And because
Christmas was so significant to them they did Christmas big and they relished
every moment, they would pack away all the ornaments and pictures, and replace
them with the festive decorations they had collected over the years, then there
would be a houseful on Christmas day and Boxing Day where they shared the
celebration with family and friends, and when the festivities were over they
would fly off to the sun for a few weeks, just the two of them.
Neither of them
could abide the New Year’s holiday so they took themselves away to enjoy each
other’s company.
But alas on their
26th Christmas together the season held no joy for Paul, even James
Stewart in “It’s a wonderful life” could not lift his spirits and the reason
for his gloomy disposition lay in the next room, where the dining table used to
stand.
Where they had so
many wonderful Christmas dinners, the room full of the happy chatter of good
company, the table heaving under the weight of Christmas fare.
But in its place
now stood a stark and clinical hospital bed and laying upon it the most
precious thing in his life, Linda, surrounded by all the paraphernalia of
terminal illness.
Her once vibrant
body riddled with inoperable tumors, their evil spread consuming her from
within and as the cancer was so far advanced, when it was discovered she
refused what little treatment there was on offer and she also stubbornly
refused to die in hospital or a hospice.
Linda said she
wished to die in the home where she had known such great happiness, so how
could he refuse her such a simple wish?
He employed a
private nurse who sat with her at night and Paul tended her himself by day and he
watched her dying by inches every single day, it seemed to him to be the cruelest
of punishments for being so happy.
Paul’s first wife
was taken by cancer and that was hard enough to bare.
It was always so
hard when someone you love suffers before your eyes, but as much as he loved his
first wife and as hard as it was to watch her die, it was nothing compared to
the intolerable despair that he felt losing Linda.
She was not only his
wife she was his love, his life, his soul mate, she was the one, the love of
his life, his Christmas Linda.
He would sit with
her and read to her, sometimes Dickens, Stephen King or Tom Sharpe, depending
on her frame of mind.
On her brighter
days she would have him tell her jokes, she always said he was the only one who
could make her laugh.
Her brown hair
with its soft curls had long since turned silver and the sparkle was only
rarely present in her eyes and the laughter that used to play around them
replaced by pain and it was on the morning of that Christmas Eve when Linda told
him what she wanted for Christmas.
She was always at
her best in the morning but on that morning, she was having a good day so after
she had eaten breakfast she asked Paul to pass her the Mahogany filigree jewelry
box.
It was a very
precious object to her, not valuable in monetary terms, but precious
nonetheless, it was the very first Christmas gift he gave her, and she
treasured it, and she often told Paul it was her most prized possession, after him.
As he handed it to
her she smiled and just for a second there was a glimpse of her loveliness shining
through the pain and she patted the bed and bad him sit next to her and as he
sat on the bed next to her she took his hand and said quietly.
“I have to say
this to you today because I’m having a good day and I don’t know how many good
days I’ve got left”
“Don’t be silly”
he protested, and she squeezed his hand and then gave him a look which said
that he knew very well that she wasn’t.
Linda carefully opened
her jewelry box and from a draw within it she took out a neatly folded embroidered
handkerchief which she placed on her lap and carefully unfolded it to reveal
that inside were a dozen capsules containing her medication.
Linda looked at him
with her soulful eyes pleading with him and as the realization of what she was
asking sank in Paul violently shook his head.
On her good days
she had salted away some of her medication until she now had enough to hasten
the end and she squeezed his hand again and said
“Please do this
for me”
She explained that
she didn’t want him to do it right there and then she just wanted him to agree
to do it when the time came, but that that time would be very soon.
“It’s the only
gift you can give me this Christmas” Linda asked looking in to his eyes and then
he added
“I love you more
than anything in the world and I know with all my heart that you love me”
Paul could say
nothing as the tears welled up in his eyes.
“Please do this
thing for me” she pleaded, and his heart was breaking at the choice he had to
make, let her suffer an agonizing conclusion to her life or end her suffering
and kill her.
“I just can’t do
it” he said through the tears and got up and left the room, she didn’t call
after him because she knew he would be back, so with tears streaming down his
face he grabbed his coat and went out the front door and went for a walk.
The day was cold,
grey and damp and clouds scudded across the December sky and any hint of the
promised sunny intervals in the forecast were not in evidence, it was the kind
of day that chilled you to the bone, but he didn’t feel the cold at all, he
just felt numb.
You had to be
alive to feel the cold and he was dying inside, and he walked for miles under
the grey skies along the woodland paths they used to walk together, his mind in
turmoil his eyes red with tears.
If he did what she
wanted he would lose her forever, the loss of her would be devastating, but not
to let her go would just be selfish.
Paul’s head was spinning,
and he didn’t know which way to turn, images of their happy moments together
swam in and out of focus, then as he walked into a clearing in the woods where they
once made love on a sultry afternoon, there was a sudden break in the clouds and
the woods were bathed in winter sunshine and all at once he knew what he must
do and hurried homeward.
When he returned
to the house Paul went straight to her bedside where she was sleeping, so he
sat in the chair at her bedside and rested his head on the bed beside her then he
felt her hand gently stroking his hair.
Paul sat up and
her hand moved to his cheek, so he took it in his own paw and kissed it softly
and then said
“I’ll do whatever
you want me to do”
A week later
Christmas had past and he was glad of it, it was without doubt the worst
Christmas of his life, full of tears and sadness instead of happiness and
laughter
There was no
wondrous Christmas feast, no table laden with Christmas delights, no hearty
laughter or light-hearted banter, just an endless stream of visitors, friends
and family, as cheery as was possible, putting on a brave face as they all came
with forced smiles to bring the season’s greetings, but all leaving with tears,
knowing that Linda would not see the spring.
Paul tried not to
be ungrateful, but every visit ate into the precious time Linda and he had left
but he knew how important it was to Linda to see everyone and say goodbye.
Even the doctor
called in to make sure she was comfortable and in between visits Paul would sit
watching the needles dropping from the tree as if each dropping needle
symbolized Linda’s plight.
And as he sat
alone in his favorite armchair on New Year’s Eve staring at the pine needles
scattered beneath the tree he tried to come to terms with the fact that Linda
would die with the old year.
Since Christmas
Eve when she made her request of him, Linda had been in good spirits, she had
seen everyone in the world that mattered to her and said all the things she
needed to say so Linda had decided that morning, that enough was enough.
Paul tried to
remain cheerful for her, but she could see through it
“I know you’re
hurting too” she said, the pain etched in her face and with that they made their
plans for their last day together.
Firstly, Paul
phoned the nurse and told her she should have the night off to enjoy the New
Year’s Eve celebrations with her family and she was very grateful and accepted his
explanation without question.
After that he
filled the room with lighted candles and in the flickering light Linda and he
spent the evening together looking at photographs and reliving the great times
of their life together and played the music that formed the soundtrack of their
shared life then an hour before midnight she handed him the folded handkerchief.
He opened it and
inside were now close to twenty capsules, and one by one he broke them open and
emptied the contents into a wine glass and when he was finished he filled the
glass with Port and gave it a stir and put the glass on the bedside table
before sitting on the bed.
Paul took her hand
and kissed it and leant forward and kissed her mouth and started to say good
bye, but she put her hand to his mouth, so he reached over and picked up the
glass and held it up to her lips and she took a drink, then a little more and a
little more until the glass was empty and he wiped her mouth with the hanky and
she burped and then she laughed that wonderful laugh that he loved so much.
The candles sputtered,
and the flames flickered and then squeezing his hand she said
“I love you so
very much”
“I love you too” Paul
said as he sat holding her hand in his and then they just sat in silence
looking at each other in the candle light until her eyes closed.
The Village clock
began chiming the hour and her hand went limp and her breathing became shallow
and then all the pain in her face was suddenly gone as the clock chimed twelve,
marking the passing of the old year and unknowingly marked Linda’s passing.
He couldn’t have
said how long he sat there holding her dead hand with the tears streaming down his
face, but as he sat there he knew what had to be done.
Paul poured himself
a large whisky and sat in his favorite armchair where he wrote a long letter
explaining what he had done, and what he was about to do.
With the letter
written he put it into an envelope and placed it on the mantelpiece where it
would be easily found, then he drank his whisky and reached into his pocket and
removed the contents, placing them on his lap.
He filled the
syringe with the insulin he had stolen from the doctor’s bag the day before and
injected himself with the full syringe and as his eyes grew heavy he could feel
Linda’s hand on his shoulder and felt her fingers in his hair and as he drifted
into a coma she whispered
“I love you” in his
ear as his eyes closed.
When they opened
again he couldn’t believe what he saw, it was a place that was familiar to him,
it was Millmoor as it was more than 50 years earlier and it was snowing, and
the street was full of happy smiling people and there among them was Linda,
larger than life, vivacious and self-assured covered with snowflakes and
laughing.
It was his snow
angel, his Christmas Linda with snow covering her like sugar on a doughnut, a
delicious confection he would have gladly consumed, wrapped up against the cold
in a red woolen hat and coat and a long-knitted scarf draped about her neck.
Still laughing,
she shook her head and the light brown hair that hung beneath her hat danced
about her shoulders and the snowflakes fell away from her soft curls only to be
replaced by fresh ones.
There was a rosy
redness on her cheeks almost matching the hue of her coat and she was young
again, they were both young again and they had gone back 55 years to the scene
of their first embrace.
Linda threw
herself at him and she hugged him so tightly and he smelled her hair as he held
onto her and was intoxicated by her scent which over whelmed him.
They were stood at
the taxi rank and snow fell onto Linda’s soft curls as they took their place in
the queue and they kissed.
All too soon a
taxi arrived, as it had done 55 years earlier, but this time they both got in and
through the winter wonderland they departed, this time never to be parted again.
No comments:
Post a Comment