Mum gave birth today. But my new little
brother or sister is dead. He/she was extracted as lumps of congealed flesh.
In pieces.
When mum found out a few days ago that the baby was coming eight months early, she said she wanted to be at home. “I’m not going to the hospital. I’d rather it happen naturally.”
In pieces.
When mum found out a few days ago that the baby was coming eight months early, she said she wanted to be at home. “I’m not going to the hospital. I’d rather it happen naturally.”
Over the last few days we have been waiting. Today was the day. There wasn’t much we could do. Mum
spent a lot of the time in the bath room. She called out every so often when
she needed help. Her voice was fragile, but mostly she sounded the same. Firm.
In control. She gave dad a list.
Towels, sheets and towels.
That’s when I knew the baby was coming.
Towels, sheets and towels.
That’s when I knew the baby was coming.
Soon she bled so much that she passed in and
out of consciousness. It was me who called the ambulance. They took ages coming.
Mum kept bleeding. I don’t remember anything more vividly than the
smell. It was the smell of rotting life. Now I know what death smells of. It’s
rank.
Mum was rushed to hospital in the
ambulance, whilst I scrubbed the bathroom clean. I could see a small sea of red
liquid floating in the bottom of plastic bags that dad hadn’t moved yet. I
looked in the opposite direction as I picked them up. I needed a big bag for
disposal. Then I proceeded to disinfect.
As the smell of ‘’bouquet’ disinfectant
overpowered the pungent smell of death I thought about the irony. People tend
to deliver flowers to mothers when they deliver their baby. But mum didn’t
deliver a baby today. She delivered fragmented limbs, flesh that wasn’t quite
flesh, bits and pieces of a human being. What would they give her?
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