I am thrilled to be able to share an exclusive extract from the wonderful thought-provoking The A to Z of You and Me by James Hannah as part of the Blog Tour. Thanks to Becky Hunter from Transworld for inviting me to be part of the event.
I know exactly what you’d be saying to me now.
You’d be telling me that I have to try.
To try to try.
But I want to give up. I want to just lie here, in this bed, in this room, with nothing to look at but the wall and the window, the magnolia tree beyond.
A little robin’s flitting in and out of the branches. That’s enough for me. Away she goes. She’ll be back.
So now – familiar thoughts start to build up. They never leave me alone. What have I got to keep them down? You? If I could sit here and think of you, I would.
No, no. I can’t go there.
Sheila understands. She knows there’s a problem. But what answers does she have for me? The same old ideas. Stupid mental exercises like the A to Z game.
Maybe the older patients are content to keep themselves occupied with parlour games. But I don’t want any of it. I’m forty. My mind’s too active. I need it deadening.
I want to ease the mental churn. The foam. I want it all to stop.
You have to try. You have to keep going forward.
You never let me get away with anything.
You’re better than this.
Adam’s Apple
ADAM’S APPLE MEANS the Reverend Cecil Alexander.
Adam’s apple means me coming out of church, down the stone steps, trailing in the wake of my mum. We leave the chapel every Sunday, and take our turn in line to bid thankses and goodbyes and see-you-next-Sundays to the Reverend Alexander. I’m a kid. Short trousers, short legs. I’m actually scared by his enormous Adam’s Apple. It’s the biggest I’ve ever seen. It leaps and bounces around, like an angular elbow fighting to free itself from his throat. It makes me feel sick even looking at it. I just think, how doesn’t the man choke? What if he got punched right in it?
I know it might not be the right thing to do, to point it out. But you know me.
‘What’s that in your throat?’
The kind of questions a minister must have to deal with on the hoof.
If there’s a God, why must he allow the suffering of children?
Got your shirt on back-to-front then, eh?
So, what about the dinosaurs, then, mate? Explain that. See, you can’t, can you?
Frank says you said he could do the flowers next week, but you told me last week I could do them. Did you say that to Frank?
‘What’s that in your throat?’
He must have been asked this question a lot. Despite the embarrassed gasp and laughter of my mum, and a censorious hand swashed about my face, he is quick with his answer.
‘Oh, that’s a piece of apple.’
I frown at it very hard.
‘Why don’t you swallow it?’
He’s a great one for thinking on his feet. Part of the job description.
‘I can’t. Do you remember the story of the Garden of Eden? Well, it’s put there as a reminder of the moment that Adam was discovered eating the apple that Eve had given him. It stuck in his throat, see?’
‘My dad’s got one of them.’
‘Well, yes, of course. All men have them.’
‘I haven’t.’
‘Ah, no. No, no. Not yet.’
He smiles as he says this, with the air of a chess player goodnaturedly checkmating an opponent.
I’m very fond of Adam’s apples for that reason. I was totally satisfied with it as an explanation. And it didn’t put me off apples. But it was years before I understood all the repercussions that were echoing around his head as he said those words.
‘Ah, no. No, no. Not yet.’
You’ll fall, he was saying.
You’ll fall.
‘Morning, Ivo!’
It’s Jef. Jef the chef.
‘Any ideas what you fancy for breakfast this morning?’
Jefrey with a single ‘f’. Since school he must have had one career in mind. Except in the end they called him a catering manager.
‘Can I get you some eggs? Scrambled eggs? A bit of toast?’
They make him wear the black-and-white-chequered trousers and everything. Is that health and safety? In case his trousers fall in the soup, so he can ladle them out more easily?
‘You didn’t have any of your porridge yesterday, so I’m guessing you don’t want porridge today?’
He’s hiding behind his clipboard a little bit, lingering respectfully in my doorway. Half in, half out. He should have a black leather notepad, like a proper waiter.
I have never been less hungry. Not full, just not—
‘Hallo, Jef.’ It’s Sheila.
‘All right, Sheila, you still here?’
‘Yeah, I’ve got another hour and a half yet. You just got in?’
‘I’ve been in about twenty minutes. I thought I’d get these breakfasts sorted before the workmen arrive. Do you know what they’re doing?’
‘It’s nothing major, is it?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘I thought it was only going to be looking at the security lights outside. They can only get to them from the inside or something. Are they still on?’
Jef ducks to look out of the window.
‘No,’ he says, ‘they’ve gone off.’
‘God, isn’t that always the way, that it fixes itself before the workmen arrive?’
‘Sod’s law.’
Sheila looks down at me. ‘How are you supposed to sleep with a big security light on the whole time?’
I shrug inside, but I don’t know if it reaches my limbs.
‘I reckon it’s the hedgehogs on the lawn,’ says Jef. ‘These sensors are really over-sensitive.’
‘Safety from attack by hedgehog. That’s worth three thousand pounds of anyone’s money, isn’t it?’
‘Three grand, eh?’ Jef tuts and raps his clipboard with his pen.
‘Well, I suppose you’d better get a move on anyway, hadn’t you?’
‘That’s what I’m trying to do here, but we can’t make our mind up.’ He turns to me. ‘Scrambled eggs? Toast? I’ll do you some porridge, if you want it. Whatever you want. Try me.’
I don’t want anything. I shake my head.
‘No?’
‘I tell you what,’ says Sheila to me, ‘how about if we get you something simple, and you can see how you feel when it gets here? I’d like you to eat something this morning, even if it’s only a couple of bites. How about something soft and easy, like scrambled egg?’
I can’t answer. I don’t want anything.
‘Yeah? Scrambled egg?’ Jef is looking at me, brightly.
‘How about that?’ says Sheila. ‘Or poached? Or fried?’
‘I don’t do fried,’ says Jef.
‘Oh no, course! Well, scrambled then? Or poached?’
I can’t answer this.
‘I’d like you to have something. It’ll get your strength up, and maybe everything won’t look so gloomy, will it?’
So.
They’re waiting.
‘Poached.’
‘Poached?’
I nod.
‘Right you are, poached.’ Jef notes it down. He stabs an over-zealous full stop on to his clipboard and sighs. ‘You have to choose the one that’s hardest to get right, don’t you?’ Not without humour. He disappears through my doorway, and his footsteps drop down the corridor, cut off by the suck of the big double doors.
He could so easily have said, ‘That wasn’t hard, was it?’ That would have made me angry.
Sheila stays behind, gazing thoughtfully at the space in the doorway Jef has just vacated. She half-blinks as she comes to, straightens the bedsheets, looking at me and squeezing out an eye-smile as she does so.
I like Sheila. Everyone does. She’s got that way about her – bright and sparky. But I like her hardness. She’s a bit brusque, not fluffy. Mischievous, I’d say, when she wants to be. And it’s as if she’s got twentysix hours in the day. Always unhurried in her conversations with me or Jef or Jackie the relief nurse. And I’ve seen it: people light up when they see her.
She checks my drinking water’s fresh, making contact with everything, fully and firmly – one palm now flat against the reeded side of the water-jug, the other patting the white plastic lid, her chunky gold rings rapping out her reassurance that it’s secure.
There’s something more deliberate about her as she carries out her ritual hardware-bothering this morning. I can sense it. She seems to want to stick around. Is she sizing me up? She thinks there’s something the matter.
I’m having none of it. I fix my eyes on the wall opposite. I could look out of the window. I could look at the magnolia tree; the robin has returned. But I’ll look at the wall. The wall that has seen it all. I’m staring it out. It’s staring me back.
It’s winning.
It pretty much always wins.
Sheila’s moved on to the towels, using the entire front of her body to assist in the folding of a new clean one, stroking it liberally with her hands, before dropping it in half and bringing it round into a quarter. She gives it a final stroke and pat for good measure as she slips it neatly into the space beneath my bedside cabinet.
I wonder when was this hospice opened. It looks like the 1990s, going by the precision brickwork with 45-degree corners, bricks looking less like stone, more like solidified Ready Brek, every course the exact same colour, laid as if by a computer, not a brickie. And green plasticky-looking metal girders with friendly curves.
So that’s a quarter of a century this wall has watched people on their deathbeds. A quarter of a century of hysteria and tears and pain and misery.
I shouldn’t be here.
I don’t want to be here.
I’ve been here almost a week and – nothing. No better, no worse. Are they disappointed or something? Such an effort to get here in the first place.
What was it – Dr Sood said they’d sort out my symptoms, and then maybe they’d let me home for a bit if things got better. But he could say that whenever, couldn’t he? Even if I found myself coffined up and rolling along the conveyor belt to the furnace, old Dr Sood could say, ‘We’ll let you out if you start to show signs of improvement.’
I’m not ill enough for this. I don’t feel like I should be waited on by these people, using up their time when they should be tending to properly dying patients. Mopping up all these charity donations by the old biddies and the shattered and bereaved.
‘Are you comfortable there?’ asks Sheila, finally bringing her fussing to a conclusion. I nod automatically. ‘Well, you let me know if there’s anything you need, OK? Or let Jackie know when she comes in.’
‘Mm.’
‘You all right?’
‘Mm.’
She weighs me up with a look, her jet-black eyes just as intent and penetrating as my mum’s used to be, but with many more smile lines sunnying them up at the edges. ‘Don’t you want the telly on?’
‘No. Thanks.’
‘You sure? You won’t get bored?’
I do a smile. ‘I’ll look at the wall.’
‘Oh yeah? Look you in the eye, does it?’
I nod. ‘It’s seen a lot of us.’
‘Oh, I dare say it’d have a tale or two to tell.’
‘Mm.’
‘But there’s a lot of wrong things people would presume about these walls. They’ve seen a lot of love and pleasure, you know.’ She gives me a gentle smile. ‘How are you doing upstairs?’ She taps her temple. ‘Staying sane? I’m still a bit worried about you, you know. I don’t want you going bananas on me, all right?’
‘I’m not going bananas.’
‘How’s your game going?’
‘What game?’
Of course I know what game she means. I just want to pretend I don’t know what she’s talking about. ‘You remember I told you about that game the other day? The A to Z? Keep the old brain cells ticking over a bit. So what you could do is try to think of a part of your body, all right? A part of your body for each letter of the alphabet—’
I nod – yes, yes – I want her to know I remember now.
‘—and what you do—’
Yes, yes.
‘—is tell a little story about each part.’
‘I’ve done one. I started doing it, actually. Today.’
‘Oh yeah? See, well, that’s trying, isn’t it? How far have you got?’
‘A.’
She laughs. ‘Well, it’s good to take your time over it.’
‘Adam’s apple.’
‘Oh, great, I’ve had a few people say Adam’s apple when I get them to have a go at this.’
‘Do women have Adam’s apples?’
‘Yeah! Yeah, I think so.’
‘I thought they didn’t.’
‘It’s the larynx, isn’t it? They don’t have the sticking-out bit so much, because they’re smaller than men’s. It’s why they have the high voices.’
‘Is it?’
‘Yeah.’ She lifts her chin thoughtfully, and circles her forefinger on her throat. ‘Larynx. Anyway, you’re not a woman, are you, so don’t be so picky.’
‘The vicar when I was little said it was the apple sticking in Adam’s throat. Adam out of Adam and Eve.’
‘D’you know, I’ve never once thought of it like that, but it makes sense, doesn’t it? How funny. Well, that means you’ve already got a story then, haven’t you? Sometimes I think we should collect everyone’s little stories about their Adam’s apples. We could put them up on the wall in the day room.’
‘What do you do when you get to X? Or Q?’
‘Well, that’s where you’ve got to get your thinking cap on, isn’t it? You’ve got to be a bit creative.’
What would I do for Q?
Oh, there it is. It’s my sister Laura, isn’t it, taking the mick out of me, just to look good in front of her new best friend Becca.
Doesn’t he know what a quim is? Aw, bless—
Becca’s tongue pushing between her pristine white teeth, hissing with laughter, leaning in to Laura and bonding against me.
We aren’t born with all the information we’re supposed to magically know.
Becca’s hissing laugh echoes down the years.
I’m Queen Quim!
Nope. Enough. Snuff it out.
I look up at Sheila.
‘You could end up with an alphabet of all the rude bits,’ I say.
‘Well, you have to have rules. You’ve got to use the right name for a body part, or near enough, like. No slang. No rude words.’
‘Yes, but “larynx” would never have turned up the story about “Adam’s apple”, would it?’
‘No, true,’ she says, thoughtfully. ‘But rules are there to be bent, aren’t they? It’s only a game.’
Anus
Anus, I write.
I straighten the photocopied handout on the school desk in front of me, and adjust my grip on my fountain pen. A potent blob of black ink spreads across my knuckle, working into the tiny lines and creases of my skin and cuticle. I wipe it on my trousers.
Black trousers, black ink, no worries.
There are two outlines of human bodies on the class handout, with straight lines pointing to various parts.
You’d be telling me that I have to try.
To try to try.
But I want to give up. I want to just lie here, in this bed, in this room, with nothing to look at but the wall and the window, the magnolia tree beyond.
A little robin’s flitting in and out of the branches. That’s enough for me. Away she goes. She’ll be back.
So now – familiar thoughts start to build up. They never leave me alone. What have I got to keep them down? You? If I could sit here and think of you, I would.
No, no. I can’t go there.
Sheila understands. She knows there’s a problem. But what answers does she have for me? The same old ideas. Stupid mental exercises like the A to Z game.
Maybe the older patients are content to keep themselves occupied with parlour games. But I don’t want any of it. I’m forty. My mind’s too active. I need it deadening.
I want to ease the mental churn. The foam. I want it all to stop.
You have to try. You have to keep going forward.
You never let me get away with anything.
You’re better than this.
Adam’s Apple
ADAM’S APPLE MEANS the Reverend Cecil Alexander.
Adam’s apple means me coming out of church, down the stone steps, trailing in the wake of my mum. We leave the chapel every Sunday, and take our turn in line to bid thankses and goodbyes and see-you-next-Sundays to the Reverend Alexander. I’m a kid. Short trousers, short legs. I’m actually scared by his enormous Adam’s Apple. It’s the biggest I’ve ever seen. It leaps and bounces around, like an angular elbow fighting to free itself from his throat. It makes me feel sick even looking at it. I just think, how doesn’t the man choke? What if he got punched right in it?
I know it might not be the right thing to do, to point it out. But you know me.
‘What’s that in your throat?’
The kind of questions a minister must have to deal with on the hoof.
If there’s a God, why must he allow the suffering of children?
Got your shirt on back-to-front then, eh?
So, what about the dinosaurs, then, mate? Explain that. See, you can’t, can you?
Frank says you said he could do the flowers next week, but you told me last week I could do them. Did you say that to Frank?
‘What’s that in your throat?’
He must have been asked this question a lot. Despite the embarrassed gasp and laughter of my mum, and a censorious hand swashed about my face, he is quick with his answer.
‘Oh, that’s a piece of apple.’
I frown at it very hard.
‘Why don’t you swallow it?’
He’s a great one for thinking on his feet. Part of the job description.
‘I can’t. Do you remember the story of the Garden of Eden? Well, it’s put there as a reminder of the moment that Adam was discovered eating the apple that Eve had given him. It stuck in his throat, see?’
‘My dad’s got one of them.’
‘Well, yes, of course. All men have them.’
‘I haven’t.’
‘Ah, no. No, no. Not yet.’
He smiles as he says this, with the air of a chess player goodnaturedly checkmating an opponent.
I’m very fond of Adam’s apples for that reason. I was totally satisfied with it as an explanation. And it didn’t put me off apples. But it was years before I understood all the repercussions that were echoing around his head as he said those words.
‘Ah, no. No, no. Not yet.’
You’ll fall, he was saying.
You’ll fall.
-----<>-----
‘Morning, Ivo!’
It’s Jef. Jef the chef.
‘Any ideas what you fancy for breakfast this morning?’
Jefrey with a single ‘f’. Since school he must have had one career in mind. Except in the end they called him a catering manager.
‘Can I get you some eggs? Scrambled eggs? A bit of toast?’
They make him wear the black-and-white-chequered trousers and everything. Is that health and safety? In case his trousers fall in the soup, so he can ladle them out more easily?
‘You didn’t have any of your porridge yesterday, so I’m guessing you don’t want porridge today?’
He’s hiding behind his clipboard a little bit, lingering respectfully in my doorway. Half in, half out. He should have a black leather notepad, like a proper waiter.
I have never been less hungry. Not full, just not—
‘Hallo, Jef.’ It’s Sheila.
‘All right, Sheila, you still here?’
‘Yeah, I’ve got another hour and a half yet. You just got in?’
‘I’ve been in about twenty minutes. I thought I’d get these breakfasts sorted before the workmen arrive. Do you know what they’re doing?’
‘It’s nothing major, is it?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘I thought it was only going to be looking at the security lights outside. They can only get to them from the inside or something. Are they still on?’
Jef ducks to look out of the window.
‘No,’ he says, ‘they’ve gone off.’
‘God, isn’t that always the way, that it fixes itself before the workmen arrive?’
‘Sod’s law.’
Sheila looks down at me. ‘How are you supposed to sleep with a big security light on the whole time?’
I shrug inside, but I don’t know if it reaches my limbs.
‘I reckon it’s the hedgehogs on the lawn,’ says Jef. ‘These sensors are really over-sensitive.’
‘Safety from attack by hedgehog. That’s worth three thousand pounds of anyone’s money, isn’t it?’
‘Three grand, eh?’ Jef tuts and raps his clipboard with his pen.
‘Well, I suppose you’d better get a move on anyway, hadn’t you?’
‘That’s what I’m trying to do here, but we can’t make our mind up.’ He turns to me. ‘Scrambled eggs? Toast? I’ll do you some porridge, if you want it. Whatever you want. Try me.’
I don’t want anything. I shake my head.
‘No?’
‘I tell you what,’ says Sheila to me, ‘how about if we get you something simple, and you can see how you feel when it gets here? I’d like you to eat something this morning, even if it’s only a couple of bites. How about something soft and easy, like scrambled egg?’
I can’t answer. I don’t want anything.
‘Yeah? Scrambled egg?’ Jef is looking at me, brightly.
‘How about that?’ says Sheila. ‘Or poached? Or fried?’
‘I don’t do fried,’ says Jef.
‘Oh no, course! Well, scrambled then? Or poached?’
I can’t answer this.
‘I’d like you to have something. It’ll get your strength up, and maybe everything won’t look so gloomy, will it?’
So.
They’re waiting.
‘Poached.’
‘Poached?’
I nod.
‘Right you are, poached.’ Jef notes it down. He stabs an over-zealous full stop on to his clipboard and sighs. ‘You have to choose the one that’s hardest to get right, don’t you?’ Not without humour. He disappears through my doorway, and his footsteps drop down the corridor, cut off by the suck of the big double doors.
He could so easily have said, ‘That wasn’t hard, was it?’ That would have made me angry.
Sheila stays behind, gazing thoughtfully at the space in the doorway Jef has just vacated. She half-blinks as she comes to, straightens the bedsheets, looking at me and squeezing out an eye-smile as she does so.
I like Sheila. Everyone does. She’s got that way about her – bright and sparky. But I like her hardness. She’s a bit brusque, not fluffy. Mischievous, I’d say, when she wants to be. And it’s as if she’s got twentysix hours in the day. Always unhurried in her conversations with me or Jef or Jackie the relief nurse. And I’ve seen it: people light up when they see her.
She checks my drinking water’s fresh, making contact with everything, fully and firmly – one palm now flat against the reeded side of the water-jug, the other patting the white plastic lid, her chunky gold rings rapping out her reassurance that it’s secure.
There’s something more deliberate about her as she carries out her ritual hardware-bothering this morning. I can sense it. She seems to want to stick around. Is she sizing me up? She thinks there’s something the matter.
I’m having none of it. I fix my eyes on the wall opposite. I could look out of the window. I could look at the magnolia tree; the robin has returned. But I’ll look at the wall. The wall that has seen it all. I’m staring it out. It’s staring me back.
It’s winning.
It pretty much always wins.
Sheila’s moved on to the towels, using the entire front of her body to assist in the folding of a new clean one, stroking it liberally with her hands, before dropping it in half and bringing it round into a quarter. She gives it a final stroke and pat for good measure as she slips it neatly into the space beneath my bedside cabinet.
I wonder when was this hospice opened. It looks like the 1990s, going by the precision brickwork with 45-degree corners, bricks looking less like stone, more like solidified Ready Brek, every course the exact same colour, laid as if by a computer, not a brickie. And green plasticky-looking metal girders with friendly curves.
So that’s a quarter of a century this wall has watched people on their deathbeds. A quarter of a century of hysteria and tears and pain and misery.
I shouldn’t be here.
I don’t want to be here.
I’ve been here almost a week and – nothing. No better, no worse. Are they disappointed or something? Such an effort to get here in the first place.
What was it – Dr Sood said they’d sort out my symptoms, and then maybe they’d let me home for a bit if things got better. But he could say that whenever, couldn’t he? Even if I found myself coffined up and rolling along the conveyor belt to the furnace, old Dr Sood could say, ‘We’ll let you out if you start to show signs of improvement.’
I’m not ill enough for this. I don’t feel like I should be waited on by these people, using up their time when they should be tending to properly dying patients. Mopping up all these charity donations by the old biddies and the shattered and bereaved.
‘Are you comfortable there?’ asks Sheila, finally bringing her fussing to a conclusion. I nod automatically. ‘Well, you let me know if there’s anything you need, OK? Or let Jackie know when she comes in.’
‘Mm.’
‘You all right?’
‘Mm.’
She weighs me up with a look, her jet-black eyes just as intent and penetrating as my mum’s used to be, but with many more smile lines sunnying them up at the edges. ‘Don’t you want the telly on?’
‘No. Thanks.’
‘You sure? You won’t get bored?’
I do a smile. ‘I’ll look at the wall.’
‘Oh yeah? Look you in the eye, does it?’
I nod. ‘It’s seen a lot of us.’
‘Oh, I dare say it’d have a tale or two to tell.’
‘Mm.’
‘But there’s a lot of wrong things people would presume about these walls. They’ve seen a lot of love and pleasure, you know.’ She gives me a gentle smile. ‘How are you doing upstairs?’ She taps her temple. ‘Staying sane? I’m still a bit worried about you, you know. I don’t want you going bananas on me, all right?’
‘I’m not going bananas.’
‘How’s your game going?’
‘What game?’
Of course I know what game she means. I just want to pretend I don’t know what she’s talking about. ‘You remember I told you about that game the other day? The A to Z? Keep the old brain cells ticking over a bit. So what you could do is try to think of a part of your body, all right? A part of your body for each letter of the alphabet—’
I nod – yes, yes – I want her to know I remember now.
‘—and what you do—’
Yes, yes.
‘—is tell a little story about each part.’
‘I’ve done one. I started doing it, actually. Today.’
‘Oh yeah? See, well, that’s trying, isn’t it? How far have you got?’
‘A.’
She laughs. ‘Well, it’s good to take your time over it.’
‘Adam’s apple.’
‘Oh, great, I’ve had a few people say Adam’s apple when I get them to have a go at this.’
‘Do women have Adam’s apples?’
‘Yeah! Yeah, I think so.’
‘I thought they didn’t.’
‘It’s the larynx, isn’t it? They don’t have the sticking-out bit so much, because they’re smaller than men’s. It’s why they have the high voices.’
‘Is it?’
‘Yeah.’ She lifts her chin thoughtfully, and circles her forefinger on her throat. ‘Larynx. Anyway, you’re not a woman, are you, so don’t be so picky.’
‘The vicar when I was little said it was the apple sticking in Adam’s throat. Adam out of Adam and Eve.’
‘D’you know, I’ve never once thought of it like that, but it makes sense, doesn’t it? How funny. Well, that means you’ve already got a story then, haven’t you? Sometimes I think we should collect everyone’s little stories about their Adam’s apples. We could put them up on the wall in the day room.’
‘What do you do when you get to X? Or Q?’
‘Well, that’s where you’ve got to get your thinking cap on, isn’t it? You’ve got to be a bit creative.’
What would I do for Q?
Oh, there it is. It’s my sister Laura, isn’t it, taking the mick out of me, just to look good in front of her new best friend Becca.
Doesn’t he know what a quim is? Aw, bless—
Becca’s tongue pushing between her pristine white teeth, hissing with laughter, leaning in to Laura and bonding against me.
We aren’t born with all the information we’re supposed to magically know.
Becca’s hissing laugh echoes down the years.
I’m Queen Quim!
Nope. Enough. Snuff it out.
I look up at Sheila.
‘You could end up with an alphabet of all the rude bits,’ I say.
‘Well, you have to have rules. You’ve got to use the right name for a body part, or near enough, like. No slang. No rude words.’
‘Yes, but “larynx” would never have turned up the story about “Adam’s apple”, would it?’
‘No, true,’ she says, thoughtfully. ‘But rules are there to be bent, aren’t they? It’s only a game.’
Anus
Anus, I write.
I straighten the photocopied handout on the school desk in front of me, and adjust my grip on my fountain pen. A potent blob of black ink spreads across my knuckle, working into the tiny lines and creases of my skin and cuticle. I wipe it on my trousers.
Black trousers, black ink, no worries.
There are two outlines of human bodies on the class handout, with straight lines pointing to various parts.
******
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