Umar Jay Merill
Today, Friday, a day in a million. Millieâs on her way. She winked it plainly with her eyes. So I get up, make myself ready. Want to be bright and early for the girl. When I get to the hospital I donât see her, and I ask the woman at the desk. Woman says she donât know who Iâm meaning. Millie, I tell her. She says there ainât no Millie here. I says must be. If Millie winks itâs as good as anybodyâs word. Says Iâll wait. Woman says I canât. No room for waiting. I insist I will. Woman goes: âYes, I remember. Youâve been in here, havenât you. More than once,â she tells me. âDonât know. Could of been. Canât remember stuff.â âYes, youâre one of ours. Umar. I got a good memory, love.â âOk,â I say. âWhere you livin now?â womanâs asking. I shake my head. Screams from somewhere and moaning sounds. Doors start banging, buzzer goes. More moaning and groaning then all turns quiet. Happens a lot at the hospital. Might of done a bit of screaming myself at one time. When I was a patient here. âAvenât seen you in a while,â goes the woman, peering at me close. âWhen did you see me last?â I need her to tell me. It may be a clue to something I should know. âOh, Iâd put it at about a year. Eight months the very least.â Her head goes nodding with the words. âSo whoâs this Millie youâre on about meeting here?â Eyes starinâ right at me, smile twitching in corners of her mouth.
And just for that moment, when sheâs putting me on the spot like that, I clean forget. âBetter get some rest. You look done in,â says woman. âCanât,â says I. âI gotta wait.â âFor Millie, you mean? Did she tell you she was cominâ here?â Iâm trying to hold onto those last winks that Millie gave me, but they keep falling sideways, slipping out of my eyes like tears. âNow son,â goes the woman, âWhat you cryin for? Hereâs a hankie. You takinâ your medication like you should be? Make sure and take it. Best to go on home.â She gets out a pen and piece of paper. âWhatâs your address?â âGreenwich Park,â I hear myself telling her. Her penâs poised above the paper. âNumber?â she wants to know. âBehind the willow trees.â Now sheâs gawking right up close to me, driving Millieâs face away. Make me lose my nerve those eyes of hers. Millie would go for her if she saw a stare like that. âYes, itâs coming back to me,â goes woman, writing something down, not waiting for my answer now. âYouâre the one as had that Staffie what got run over down the road.â All words comin die in my throat. I donât know what to do. In a panic I get out my packet of minty-chews, offer one to the woman to keep her fat mouth shut. âFanks for that, Sweetâart,â says she, stuffing the minty-chew into her gob. I run off. Millieâs not cominâ. Womanâs right. See the poor dog so clear now as she lay there, side of the road. All bleeding and weeping, 12