Somewhere
towards the back of the store a baby starts to cry. The queue
stiffens and, for a split second, conversations cease. The checkout
assistant glances up from the item she is scanning and rolls her
eyes.
ʻThird screamer today,ʼ
she says.
The crying becomes less distinct as it moves away. The women in front
of me resume their chatter but I follow the sound, straining to catch
every rise and fall. My sinews tighten and I press my hand to my
stomach, telling myself the answering pulse is in my own fingers, not
in what lies beneath. It is too small as yet. Barely formed. And Iʼm
still not sure I can do this.
Thereʼs a lull in the
wailing and I relax. The queue moves forwards and I will soon be gone
from here. Free to choose my future without influence or pressure.
We flinch as an anguished cry assaults us from a few yards away. I
swing round and see the young mother, her trolley piled high for
Christmas, absolute panic in her eyes. She stops, removes her baby
from the trolley-seat and tries to continue shopping with it clamped
to her chest. It writhes, red-faced, inconsolable. She passes her
free hand over her face and I notice the shimmer of tears. She
abandons her task and pushes her trolley to the till next to mine.
ʻI canʼt
stand it!ʼ our checkout
assistant snaps, tossing the mother a look of disgust.
The woman in front of me agrees. ʻI
canʼt think why they
bring such young children shopping. Surely someone could look after
it for an hour?ʼ
ʻOr they could shop
online. Itʼs so much
easier than in our day. Thereʼs
no excuse for all this palava.ʼ
My heart is racing, my clothes sticky with sweat. The heat in this
place is suffocating. The screaming fills my head and my stomach
responds with violent cramps.
Iʼm about to discard my
shopping and run for the door when I realise itʼs
my turn. Drawing a deep breath, I unpack my basket onto the conveyor
belt. Itʼs either that
or eat toast for Christmas dinner, and Iʼve
promised myself a proper meal while I consider my options.
As I wait for my change, I glance behind and see the customers at the
adjacent till ushering the young mother in front of them. An older
woman takes the child while she unloads her trolley. His crying
subsides and stops as the other shoppers stroke his tiny hands and
downy head. His mumʼs
expression turns to surprise, then pleasure, as she accepts compliments about her son, who is now charming them with peek-a-boo.
ʻMadam, your change.ʼ
My assistantʼs mouth is
a grim line. She isnʼt
happy, but the knot in my chest is easing and Iʼm
smiling as I hold out my hand.
One of my favourites of the day!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jo!
DeleteWhat an intense set of emotions in a tiny everyday scene. The concerns of the central observer give it such punch. Can we guess her final decision? So much in this piece. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Clare. I'm pleased you liked it.
DeleteYou got me. My innards are doing somersaults. Powerful writing, Susan.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks indeed, Celia!
DeleteLove it, Susan. John
ReplyDeleteThanks, John. I enjoyed yours too!
Delete