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A tribute to Edgar Allen Poe’s The
Tell Tale Heart. Enjoy. The Nurse The nurse left work at five o’
clock. If the old man needed help after that, he’d a button beside his bed
and the service could have someone there within ten minutes. On more than one occasion the old
man had pushed the button out of spite. When the unfamiliar nurse arrived,
the old man’s response was always the same, “Where’s the faggot?” The old man
liked to call the nurse “the faggot.” That the nurse wasn’t a faggot—at
least none of the other nurses seemed to think so—mattered little to
the old man. The
old man wanted the faggot, he wanted the nurse. The nurse’s brief notes indicated
it had been a regular day, that is to say a day spent suffering the drip of
the old man’s congealed humours. His tepid kicks and lashes from the bed: the
old man shrieked at the imagining of an I.V., spit
and cussed when it was time to be turned. It’s like that Chinese water
torture, the other nurses agreed, just enough to drive you insane. The detective imagined the nurse
shake the old man’s breath off his coat as he walked to the bus, shuttering
the teak and dust world behind him. He pulled a fingertip along a blue
hallway vase, brought it to his thumb, rubbed the grit. Word was the nurse wanted to quit
the job with the old man but needed the money, and whoever could afford to
quit a job in these times had some kind of scratch the nurse could only dream
of or see on TV. The detective nodded knowingly and scratched in his notepad.
He asked about the old man’s gold. The old man had plenty of gold sure, but
the nurse had hardly even thought after that. The detective nodded again. He
sat on the stoop and smoked.
Walking to the bus, the nurse’s
mind fixed around the old man. His head lodged into the crack of the old
man’s door. Peering at the old man, sickly asleep, slow trotting breaths,
hoof beats in lungs and throat. The old man’s rheumy eye shining the nurse’s
face like a reflection in a pool of milk. The nurse grimaced and choked to
stifle a gag. He passed the bus stop and walked to Eddie’s, the bar at the
corner. He sat and ordered a drink. The nurse stopped here on occasion and
the bartender knew him. “How’s the old man?” the bartender
asked. “Same as ever,” replied the nurse.
“Worse if anything. He’ll be dead soon enough.” “Gold in it for you?” asked the
bartender. The nurse shook his head.
“Just as well,” said the bartender and moved a rag over the
countertop. “Just as well.” The nurse started with a beer,
then a shot and a beer, then just the liquor. He put some songs on the jukebox and drank. It was early
and no one bothered the nurse, wanted to talk, or had questions about a
nagging ailment. At ten or eleven—no one knew for sure—the nurse
put three twenties down on the bar and walked out. It must have been easy enough: the
nurse was strong and the old man was weak. Too weak to fight, if the old man
even wanted to fight the nurse at all, which he probably didn’t. The
detective could discern no robbery, nor, in the weeks that followed, find any
trace of the nurse. He shrugged as if it was the way of things, the old man’s
death. Others nodded in agreement. |