I wrote a longer
version of this after the incident, years ago when I lived in Dublin.
I had forgotten all about it until I was throwing out some ancient
floppy discs (remember those??) the other day.
A nine year marriage and four children later it reminds me of how much I
have changed. How much my children have
changed me. For the better it has to be
said. Looking back, as someone with a very young nephew at the time, I’m amazed
and ashamed of my reluctance to help this woman!
I used to
live in an apartment complex where, a fact of Dublin life, no-one knew their
neighbours. The foreign family that
lived above us were not the quietest in the word and that evening it sounded
like mammy and daddy were having a row and the kids were providing background
vocals.
Here we go
again! It was a glorious spring evening
and I was finished work for the day. The
last thing I wanted was to be made privy to a domestic. The “row” continued for several minutes with the
noise level rising. I was reaching the
end of my tether so I marched out into the hall, grabbed the golf umbrella and
belted it a couple of times off the ceiling.
Home and Away was about to start and I wanted my bloody dinner! And
there was some laundry I wanted to put away.
I had just gone into the bedroom when I heard a knock on the door.
Straight
away I thought it was the daddy from upstairs, come down to have a go at me for
banging on the ceiling. I opened the
door a smidgen and peered out. It was
the mammy from upstairs, wringing her hands and looking very agitated. In broken English she said “you hell. Chilblains.
Police?”
Wha’?
The noise
was still continuing upstairs and all sorts of scenarios were racing through my
head. She spoke again in broken English
about hell, chilblains and the police.
Did she want me to call them for her, I wondered? I was waiting for her mad man of a husband to
come racing around the corner and drag her, caveman like, back up the
stairs.
She stood
there, wringing the skin off her hands and spoke again about the police and
chilblains.
A clumsy
mime show ensued involving lots of sign language, including me speaking to her
the way we all speak to foreign people – like they’re deaf.
Eventually
I figured out that she wasn’t talking about the police or her chilblains. What she was saying, it emerged, was that her
chilblains (children) had managed to lock themselves into the apartment while
she and her husband were outside the door. Could I help her, police. Sorry, please.
The “row”
was actually her husbands booming shouts of reassurance to the kids locked inside
that help was on the way.
I asked her
could she not call her landlord. The
woman managed to convey that she didn’t have his number – it was inside the
apartment. Her hands were fascinating
me. How there was any skin left on them, I couldn’t tell.
So after a
fooster around for the number for the fire brigade, I gave up and rang
Directory Enquiries.
I spoke to
a really nice fella who, when I told him what number I wanted, immediately
asked was it an emergency. I hoped he
couldn’t hear the kids roaring in the background as I assured him it
wasn’t. Then I dialled Dublin Fire
Brigade. I had since ascertained that
the trapees were a boy and a girl, three years and one and a half respectively.
I explained
the situation to the man on the phone and he assured me it wasn’t a problem but
was the woman ok with having her door kicked in? I turned to her and asked her in as little
words as possible was this ok. She twisted her hands inside out and repeated
“my chilblains. My chilblains.”
Yes, I told
the nice man, she doesn’t mind and by the way, would they be long. On their way, he replied.
Almost
immediately I heard sirens coming down the road. The mother was already on her way down the
stairs. I grabbed my own keys and followed her.
Outside the
building was the biggest, shiniest fire truck I had ever seen and jumping off
it like ants off an anthill were the firemen.
Evening traffic was slowing down to get a better look and two Australian
girls nudged each other in delight and wanted to know what was going on. I started to tell them and one of them
interrupted me. “Who cares? We’re just having a perv!”
I turned
away in a slight huff to lock eyes with this huge man dressed head to toe in
black.
“Howiay,
luv,” he greeted me. “Is this the right
place?”
I confirmed
that it was and the distraught mother came forward. As her childrens’ rescuers entered the
building, she grabbed me by the shoulders and I was pulled into her arms by a
grip so strong I heard the breath leave my body with a whoosh.
When she
released me she looked me straight in the eyes and whispered in perfect
English, “thank you! Thank you!”
Yes. I still feel guilty.
893
No comments:
Post a Comment