Trafika Europe 4 - Armenian Rhapsody

waves of horror and gratitude and shame. Horror at the thought that Fergus might not have been in the right place at the right time; gratitude that he had been there; and shame, yes, even that was related with Fergus, because Paul believed he would never again have the strength to lift such a heavy thing as a bottle of beer, let alone get it up to his mouth. But there are moments that weld things together, and this was such a moment. Fergus lent my father not only his ear, listening patiently, nodding and giving him an encouraging pat on the shoulder every now and then, but he also handed him a bottle, at exactly the same moment as I got mine from Nurse Marianne in the neonatal unit. Fergus moved into Aza’s room. He didn’t need much: a mattress, some borrowed towels, bed linen, a clothes rack and a table lamp, which he placed on an upturned orange crate next to the bed. Irene gave him one of her potted cannabis plants, whose spicy fragrance helped me fall asleep when Fergus took me in on the odd occasion when Paul had a nocturnal visitor. Later, in a superannuated armchair that Fergus retrieved from the rubbish dump a few blocks away, I pulled myself up to stand unsteadily on my own for the first time. The purple flowery fabric of the armchair was threadbare at the edges and I loved poking my fingers inside the bursting seams, interring marbles inside it or hoarding coins that had rolled out of Fergus’ pocket behind the seat cushion and which he, with his broad hands as big as I was once small, couldn’t fish out.

63

Made with