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S.O.R.T.E.D.

Jack stood holding the kettle, frozen in a world so suddenly
empty it sounded hollow. Suburban sound came flat and lifeless
echoing his grief. Mowers hummed and cars drove past but all of this
took place behind a thick opaque curtain that stood between him and
the world outside. His feet tingled and the floor felt like it would
crumble away underneath him at any moment. He reached a hand towards
the bench top to steady himself against the tilting room and
wondered if he was going to actually feel something solid beneath
his palm. Was anything real.
'This is so foolish' he thought briefly and then his red flushed
face began to twist with tears torn from eyes that he knew to be
much tougher. The kettle began to wobble in his failing grip and he
thumped it to the counter. Angry came and went so quickly it had
hardly made it's presence known.
"It's just a goddamn cup of coffee..." he lied to noone. "What's
wrong with me for god's sake. I've seen 3 wars. I'm stronger than
this."
"Your wife of 40 years is lying dead on the lawn, thats whats wrong
mate."
The other voice continued, "She was going to get the paper off the
lawn and you were going to sit and have coffee, just like you have
done every morning for the last 6 years since you retired. Her cups
still on the bench. Do I need to continue? You think if you make
that one cup, only one cup, of coffee that it will make it suddenly
real."
"Oh fuck off," and Jack hurls the cup at the floor. It bounces and
the handle comes off. He so much wanted it to smash. He feels so
impotent.
Walking to the window he looks down at the yard and sees the police
and ambulance people looking back. They look away, embarassed
almost.
"Suck it up man." says that persistant voice, the Sergeant back in
basic who had warned them all that he would be the voice in their
heads for the rest of their lives, "in the heat of battle you will
hear me, in the quiet of your dreams, in the silence before a shit
fight and even when you are in the arms of your girls back home it
will be me whispering, 'put it in her arse'."
Jack breathes in deep and calls himself back from all of the
wanderings of his mind down different memories of her. Gathering as
much 'Jack' as he can, he follows the rules again.
"Situation?" says the little voice.
"Betz is dead," he replies.
"Objectives?"
"Get through today... (Deep breath) Okay, Undertakers, the kids need
to be told, get those cunts downstairs out my yard."
"They are just doing what they have to."
"Fuck off"
"Resources?"
"Um, the funeral is organised - she insisted we do that a while ago
when she had the first lot of chemo. The rest is just phone calls
and... guts I guess."
"Time Frame?"
"Looking at 2-3 days till the funeral, the undertakers will be here
within a half hour of the call, soon as they've been the cops and co
will fuck off... time... " and he is frightened again thinking of
all the time he will have alone now.
"Environment?"
"Death has come to my home this time fuck it. I'm not in some desert
or the jungle where people are supposed to die. My front yard man!"
"I hear you mate, now 'DO IT' and it's 'SORTED'."
Picking the handleless mug off the kitchen floor he says to the
empty room, "'Sorted' I don't think this will ever be 'sorted'." He
makes the coffee he began earlier and sipping it he picks up the
phone.
The calls are made and he rises stiffly from his favourite chair.
Jason, his eldest answered the phone first and was going to let the
others know. They all live so far away now. All grown up with kids
of their own. Wasnt that long ago they were playing sword fights on
the lawn where their dead mother lay.
The undertakers were helpful and they weren't going to be long
either, half an hour or so they said.
He stops at the study on his way to the door and looks at all his
photos. The walls are lined with faded pictures. He looks at old
black and white photos and vivid colour memories fill his vision. He
picks up a dark framed photo that stands on the desk and studies it.
A young man in uniform smiles back at him with his arm around the
waist of a striking dark haired woman. She looks so small next to
him and even a stranger holding this photograph would know they were
in love. The couple seem so bold compared to the field canteen
behind them and the dirty tired soldiers almost don't exist. He'd
known Betz 36 hours when that photograph was taken. His throat
swells and his eyes fill then he notices his pyjamas.
He opens a mahogany door and takes his fresh pressed clothes from
the hanger. Dressing quietly, he tucks the photograph in a pocket of
his coat. The laces on his boots are strangely stiff today. Parade
gloss smells rise from the leather and he finally feels prepared to
meet the vultures in his yard.
Walking towards the door he stops abruptly and returns to the study
fetching some afterthought from the drawer of his desk and placing
it absently in his trouser pocket.
At the top of the stairs he stops dizzied by the bright of day. He
grabs a rail and sees a dark station wagon pull up in the driveway.
Two men in suits get out and start walking toward the police. Hands
are shook and nods are nodded and heads are turned to Jack. Jack
nods back and continues down the stairs.
Betz is alone now. A plain sheet covers her against the eyes of
neighbours and the vultures seem to have forgotten her for a moment.
He kneels down beside her and gently draws the sheet from her face.
She looks 19 again. So peaceful. So pretty. So - asleep.
Jack becomes aware that he is watched and looking up he's a little
surprised to see his best mate Andy.
"Gidday Mate, Betz is gone."
"Thats Sergeant Mate, you rude bugger" Andy laughs and Jack manages
half a smile.
"She's not gone mate, she's here with us. Even got a scotch waiting
to warm you up."
They are almost interupted by some urgent mumbling from the crowd
near the ambulance. "Two?"
"See you in a while then mate." says Andy and snaps off a crisp
salute to his old Captain.
Jack returns the salute...
Two tired police officers watch the old man as he comes down the
stairs. They are too polite to let their mouths drop open but
nonetheless they are openly surprised to see the old bloke in full
uniform. He had said he was in the army... Must have kept a uniform
or two... Grief does funny things to people.
They watched him steady himself on the rail then descend the stairs
and walk across to kneel beside his wife.
The undertakers arrive and introduce themselves. Hands are shook,
names exhcanged, details noted.
"Where's the second body?"
"Second body?"
"Our caller said that there were two deceased, Mr and Mrs Thompson."
"Two..."
And turning they see retired Captain Jack Thompson stand up beside
the body of his wife and pull himself to attention. His right hand
rises from his trouser pocket in a crisp prolonged salute... BLAM.
His knees bend, his hand drops out of salute and the browning falls
in slow motion to the grass. The old man in the uniform seems to
hover there mid fall for just a bit too long then he folds gently
down beside his wife.
Purple morning light finds them through a gap in the trees and plays
games of shadows around their bodies. It looks for all the world
like their spirits dancing on the precisely kept lawn.
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