The One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot by Marianne Cronin (e reader manga txt) ๐
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- Author: Marianne Cronin
Read book online ยซThe One Hundred Years of Lenni and Margot by Marianne Cronin (e reader manga txt) ๐ยป. Author - Marianne Cronin
โI want to see Father Arthur,โ I said.
She peered around for backup โ a passing doctor or another nurse would do.
โIโm not discussing this any further. I have a lot to do.โ And then she went back to the spreadsheet on her computer. Clicking and dragging and clicking and dragging and then pressing delete several times in quick succession. Ha, I thought, you made a mistake.
I think she hoped that if she ignored me for long enough, I would go away. Like a wasp. But I still couldnโt. She did some more clicking and dragging, and even though she was staring at the screen, I could tell her peripheral vision was on me. I stayed there, wondering if I, with my light hair and pink pyjamas, resembled a child in a horror film. She clicked and typed and I waited.
Finally, Jacky looked back at me. This time with fire in her eyes. โDo you know what? If you donโt move from this desk right now, I will call security.โ
โI donโt want to be at this desk, I want to go to the chapel and see Father Arthur.โ
โIโve told you, you have to wait.โ
โI donโt have time!โ I let out a growl of frustration which drew the attention of a passing set of parents.
โTo be honest, Lenni, I donโt have time either,โ she said. โI donโt have time for your theatrics and I donโt have time for this ridiculous stunt.โ
โBut you do have time.โ
โWhat?โ
โYouโve probably got a good forty years left. Well, maybe more like twenty-five or thirty if you keep smoking, but youโve still got more time than me.โ
Without my consent, a tear broke free from my eye and decided to make its own way in the world, rolling down my cheek and hitting the floor. I hoped that it would keep going, roll on and on, all the way to the chapel to find Father Arthur and tell him I was being held prisoner.
โThatโs it,โ she said, and she picked up the telephone and dialled three numbers. She waited, and I waited. Another renegade tear made its way to the floor, in hot pursuit of its comrade.
โSecurity to the May Ward please,โ she said when someone finally picked up on the other end, โI have a patient who is obstructing the nursesโ station.โ She waited again, sternly said, โOkay,โ and then put down the receiver. I said nothing.
She shuffled some papers on the desk and clicked off the lid of a green highlighter. When she started highlighting bits of her paper, I was sure that she was just pretending to be doing something so it would seem like I wasnโt annoying her in the slightest.
โCan I go to the chapel now?โ I asked. โIโll take myself if youโre busy.โ
โThis isnโt The Lenni Show, you know,โ she said. โI know that there are certain members of staff who give you special treatment, but you are just the same as everybody else, except you make twice as much work for everyone.โ
โNo I donโt,โ I said, but without providing any evidence to the contrary.
โRidiculous,โ she said under her breath.
Another tear broke free.
When security didnโt come at once, I wondered whether the hospital security hated Jacky as much as I was starting to. It was nice. It undermined her need to swiftly deal with me, so I stayed there, refusing to wipe the tears from my eyes. Clearly thinking the same thing, Jacky picked up the telephone again. โYeah, itโs Jacky from the May Ward,โ she said, โI called for security โฆโ
The door buzzer for guests, staff and other May Ward prisoners buzzed, and a tall figure emerged through the doors wearing a security uniform. He couldnโt have been older than twenty-five.
The tears were out of my control now, rolling down my face and dripping onto my pyjama top. My nose decided to get in on the action too, leaking down my top lip.
โHey,โ he said. โAre you โฆ okay?โ
โI want to go to the chapel, to see the priest,โ I said.
โExcuse me?โ Jacky said to him sharply.
โSunil. But everyone calls me Sunny.โ He held out his hand, but Jacky didnโt shake it.
โIโm the one who called you,โ Jacky said. โThis patient is obstructing my nursesโ station.โ
โI want to see my friend,โ I said again, as more tears slid down my face.
Sunny looked from me to Jacky and back again. โIโll take her,โ he said lightly.
Jacky looked like she was going to explode.
โNo,โ she said, โshe has to wait. Iโve told her to wait.โ
Sunny seemed perplexed. โItโs really no trouble.โ
โWe canโt have one rule for her and a different rule for everyone else.โ She jammed the lid of her highlighter pen into the palm of her hand.
โIs there someone else who wants to go to the chapel too?โ Sunny asked. โCos I can take them all, I donโt mind.โ He smiled.
The cruelty of strangers never usually upsets me, but the kindness of strangers is oddly devastating. As Sunny asked me if I was okay again and offered to take me wherever I wanted to go, I really started bawling.
โI called you so you could escort this patient back to her bed,โ Jacky said. โIf you canโt do it, Iโll find someone else who will.โ
Sunny glanced at me. He seemed unwilling to come and physically move me. He took a step towards me and said, โIn that case, young lady, would you mind escorting me to your bed?โ
I nodded and sniffed. I started walking and he walked ever so slightly behind me so that anyone else on the ward would think I was leading the way.
I reached my bed, from which Jacky and the nursesโ station were still visible. She had her neck craned round so that she could see if Iโd made it. Like a heron searching for a worm in the grass. I sat on the end of my bed and she turned away, satisfied.
Sunny pulled the curtain so that Jacky couldnโt
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