day, and, as bad days went, nothing was going to change that. Louise left Roxie with her pants hanging around her knees and went to the door.
âCome in, Bea. Weâre having a difficult morning.â Louise started walking back towards the hospital bed. âRoxie thinks the milk is rat bait and her blouse is a straitjacket. Sheâs fighting against everything.â She turned to Bea, who was following behind. âMaybe I should call and cancel the appointment. She can be a real handful when sheâs like this.â Louise sat down in the chair next to the bed. Roxie was trying to take off her underwear.
âNonsense. I mothered three children. I think I can handle things just fine.â Bea walked in the room and put her things on the coffee table. She took a look around, at the room, at the window, at the hospital bed, and finally at Roxie. âGood morning, Roxie. Iâm Beatrice. Are you having a bad morning with Louise?â Bea went and knelt down in front of Roxie.
âTheyâre trying to kill me. Whereâs the supervisor? He wonât put up with this nonsense.â She stood up and almost knocked Beatrice down.
Beatrice thought for a moment. âWell, the supervisor sent me here to check on things. Iâm sort of like the assistant to the supervisor. You can tell me all about the problems, but first Ithink you need to put your clothes on.â Beatrice picked up the blouse and pants. Roxie folded her arms about her waist and showed a determination for staying naked. Beatrice waited a minute, still standing with Roxieâs clothes in her arms, smiled at her, and then, much to Louiseâs surprise, Roxie let Beatrice put them on her. There was no struggle at all.
Finally Beatrice asked, âNow, why is someone trying to kill you? Do you know something youâre not supposed to know?â she whispered. âHave you done something thatâs made them mad?â
Roxie looked serious. She was giving great thought to the questions. âI think itâs about the red thread. I took some of the red thread.â She spoke very softly. âI think they know.â
Beatrice whispered in reply. âThen weâll put some red thread back so they wonât miss it.â She turned to Louise. âDo you have any red thread?â
Louise was baffled by this entire exchange. She sat watching until Beatrice spoke her name; then she jumped. âUm, yeah, sure.â And she went into another room, brought back a spool of red thread, and handed it to Beatrice, who gave it to Roxie. Roxie started to cry.
Beatrice sat beside her on the bed and rocked her. âThere, there, Roxie. See, we have plenty of red thread. Itâs okay. Nobodyâs ever going to try to hurt you again.â Then she reached over for a tissue and gave it to Roxie, who wiped her own eyes and nose.
âWell, Louise, you better tell me if there are any particular instructions I need to know, and then you need to hurry and get dressed.â
Louise looked down at her khaki pants bought from the menâs department at Sears and the University of North Carolina sweatshirt. She thought she was dressed. âActually, Bea, this is what Iâm wearing to the doctorâs, but, youâre right, I do need to get going.â
Louise began looking for her shoes. âShe usually naps after breakfast and then has a snack around ten thirty. She takes the orange pill then. I donât put a diaper on her during the day because generally she can tell me when she needs to go. But itâs always a gamble. Snack is a piece of fruit or peanut butter crackers.â Louise walked into the kitchen with Beatrice close behind her.
âHereâs the ten-thirty pill. Itâs a vitamin really. But I think they help her memory a little. Thereâs juice in the fridge. The fruit is in the small Tupperware dishes, and the crackers are there on the counter. She didnât eat breakfast,
David Stuart Davies
Charles L. Grant
Pete Hamill
Connie Stephany
Trice Hickman
Karen Booth
Willow Winters
Terri-Lynne Defino
Patricia Wentworth
Lucy Hay