Nowhere to Run: Where do you go when there’s nowhere left to hide?. Judy Westwater. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Judy Westwater
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780007283804
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was always better to just let Roger rage. Any resistance was futile and only made things worse. Still, it was dark and I was terrified. I knew that he was usually even more violent than normal when he’d been drinking.

      ‘Christ,’ he shouted. ‘What the hell am I going to do with you?’

      Still sleepy, I was completely disorientated as he pushed me ahead of him into the black hallway and gave me a shove in the direction of the stairs. In the dark I stumbled and lost my balance, falling awkwardly onto the stairs and tumbling for several feet until I hit the floor of the hallway below. It happened so quickly that I was confused and all the time Roger was screaming: ‘You been out screwing other men? That’s why you’re tired, isn’t it?’

      As I landed, a sharp jab of pain in my stomach crippled me. It was difficult to breathe. I tried to get to my feet, but it hurt too much. Roger took the steps easily and, showing no concern for my welfare, grabbed me by the arm and hauled me into the kitchen. He pushed me roughly against the cooker. I felt another sharp jab in my stomach and tried to bend double. Roger caught me and pushed me upright, shouting right into my face.

      ‘…Too much to expect my bleeding wife to cook a bleeding meal for me when I get home, is it?’

      My breathing was shallow and I felt sick. I could feel things weren’t right in my body and my mind was racing with the possibilities. Over-riding everything else was the thought that I had to protect the baby. And then, sickeningly, I felt something sticky between my legs. I looked down and in horror, saw that there was blood pouring out of me.

      ‘The baby, Roger,’ I gasped and he stopped in his tracks, seeing what had happened and realizing that this was serious.

      ‘Stay there.’

      Roger ran out of the house. In a panic, I pressed my legs together to try to stem the crimson flow that was leaking onto the floor. I thought if I just stayed still it wouldn’t get any worse. My mind was racing. I was scared that Roger might just disappear and then what would I do, standing bleeding in my own kitchen, waiting for help that wasn’t on its way? That wasn’t his tactic though. A few minutes later he came back through the door, his face flushed. We didn’t have a phone in the house so he had run all the way to the call box on the main road.

      ‘I dialled 999,’ he said. ‘They’re sending an ambulance.’

      A tear rolled down my cheek and a sense of relief flooded me. He does care after all, I thought to myself.

      The ambulance came quickly. Two paramedics put me on a stretcher, carried me into the street and loaded me into the back of the vehicle.

      ‘How far gone are you, love?’ one of them asked.

      ‘About three months I think, maybe a little more’ I said.

      I couldn’t bear to ask about the baby. I was too afraid of what the paramedic might say. Roger didn’t come in the ambulance. He was the last person I wanted near me in any case. One of the men sat beside the stretcher for the journey to Crumpsall Hospital. He was encouraging and kind, but I found it difficult to speak. I was so worried. The only thing that mattered was the baby being all right.

      ‘We’ve radioed ahead,’ he said. ‘The doctor will be waiting.’

      At the hospital they rushed me up to the ward. The doctor examined me quickly and gave the nurse instructions I didn’t understand. The bleeding hadn’t stopped and I had cramps in my stomach that knocked the wind out of me. I didn’t mind the pain, as long as everything was going to be all right. A nurse smiled apologetically and held my hand. I could tell from the look in her eyes that something was very wrong.

      ‘Oh no,’ I thought, as a sense of annihilation engulfed me.

      The doctor simply said ‘I’m sorry.’

      It felt as though my world was caving in. The only good thing in my life was gone, finished. I couldn’t take it in completely. I just lay there in black despair.

      ‘We need to do a D and C,’ the doctor said, and then, seeing that I had no idea what he was talking about, he explained, ‘We need to go inside you and take out anything that is still in there.’

      I felt wracked with grief but I was so shocked that I didn’t even cry when they wheeled me into the theatre.

      Afterwards I was tucked into a bed on a ward with eight other women. It was late and I was completely devastated. My baby was gone. The nurses had been kind but for them it was a routine occurrence. I felt totally stripped, as if everything Roger had ever said about me being useless was all true. The nurse had left a cup of tea and a biscuit beside the bed, but I couldn’t touch them. I stared blankly at the empty hallway outside the ward and pulled the covers right up to my eyes. I had failed and all I wanted now was to hide from the world.

      It must have been about midnight when I saw Roger striding up the corridor. For a moment I felt a sense of relief. Here was my husband coming to visit me. Surely he was as devastated as I was? Then, as he got closer, I realized he was still drunk. I glanced round. The other women on the ward had also lost their babies. They were mostly asleep, apart from one who was sitting up reading in the corner. I saw her glance towards the door as Roger came through. He didn’t even say hello to me.

      ‘You are bloody useless, aren’t you?’ he started in a whisper, and I thought at least his voice was low. However, as he proceeded into his tantrum, the volume increased.

      ‘Well, I don’t care,’ he hammered home. ‘It wasn’t my baby, anyway. Christ knows what you get up to all day, you two-faced bitch. It could have been anyone’s!’

      His face was livid and contorted with anger and his eyes were bloodshot. I knew that everyone on the ward was able to hear those last words. The volume was getting too loud for anyone to sleep through.

      ‘I’m glad the baby’s gone,’ he said, grabbing hold of my arm. ‘Little bastard.’

      Then he turned and, losing it completely, he began to verbally abuse all the other women, who were waking up sleepily and staring in disbelief.

      ‘You’re all whores,’ he screamed. ‘All of you! Sluts and bitches!’ he howled.

      From the silent hallway I could see a flutter of nurses and a security guard approaching Roger, who was so loud by now that they had probably heard everything he’d said from several wards away. Everyone was awake and sitting up. I didn’t say a word. I couldn’t. I wanted to disappear.

      Roger continued regardless. ‘You women! Bloody cows! Two-faced slags!’

      ‘Excuse me, sir,’ said a low, male voice and the security guard put his hand on Roger’s shoulder.

      Roger shrugged him off and continued to shout in an uncontrolled fashion in my general direction. ‘You think I don’t know anything, you bloody tart. Well I do. I’m onto you.’

      ‘That’s enough, sir,’ the security guard said quietly but firmly.

      Roger still didn’t stop. He continued to hurl abuse as the guard pulled him away. I watched, horrified, as my husband was escorted down the corridor, his shrieks receding. I could feel everyone in the room pitying me.

      ‘You all right, love?’ the woman in the next bed asked gently.

      I nodded and sank back down onto the pillows.

      ‘What a bastard,’ I heard one of the other women say.

      Then a nurse drew the curtains around my bed.

      ‘He’s just upset,’ I tried to excuse him as the tears came and my chest heaved.

      ‘Now, now,’ she said kindly and gave me a hug. ‘You didn’t need that as well, did you?’

      Two days later I was discharged and I went home to Compass Street. Roger was waiting. As I came through the door he broke down.

      ‘I’m so sorry,’ he said simply, crying. ‘Here.’ He handed me a present.

      It