If Sonya had known her ex husband would survive a good deal longer than two months she would never have let him come back. If Sonya had known a pandemic would come along and trap him in isolation with her, two weeks after he moved in, she would never have let him over the front door step.
When he had phoned her early in March and told her he only had two months to live, she was shocked. Sonya hadn’t seen him for years, didn’t even know his second wife had booted him out and kept the house. It seemed a Christian, a human thing to do; she imagined the alternative, the father of her children found in two years time, mummified in his dreadful bedsit. To care for him in his last weeks would bring closure to both the good years and the bad. One of her daughters said she was insane and on no account must she let him anywhere near her home. The other daughter said of course she must help him, he was her father after all and she would soon be back from Thailand to help. The kindly daughter was still in Thailand and the sensible daughter still in New York.

At first he did a few DIY jobs, they Facetimed the girls together and he made a good job of settling his few possessions in the back bedroom and making it homely. He assured her various medical teams and charities were on his case and all she would have to do was a bit of cooking.
Then he got his letter from the Prime Minister telling him he was very vulnerable and must not leave his house. Her house Sonya pointed out to him. The letter reminded him how frail he was and he couldn’t even help wash the dishes. His medical support teams could not visit because of Covid 19 and he no longer qualified for help from the charities as he was no longer homeless.

A new routine was soon established, as if they had always been carer and invalid in the midst of a pandemic. Sonya was heartily grateful for her rescue dog, the perfect excuse to get out of the house for exercise and a chance to have socially distanced chats with neighbours and other dog walkers. Vivienne down the road she had hardly known before, but now she and the dog would pause by the front gate when Vivienne was in the garden and discuss on line shopping. The other woman would complain about her divorced son who had moved back in and Sonya would regale her with the latest domestic dramas.
Her ex husband had his good points, well she vaguely recalled he did in the early years of their marriage, sense of humour, carefree attitude to life. That young man was long gone and his most irritating features were enhanced by illness. The husband who had once been glued to the television with football, war movies and endless crime dramas involving noisy car chases and shootings, now complained about the noise if she listened to Jeremy Vine on the radio and griped that the television was doing his head in if she tried to watch Celebrity Chef.

When he received another letter from the Prime Minister saying he could go out and about on the first of August, he showed a rare spark of life and decided it would be good for him to come out with Sonya and the dog. This was how she found herself today, plodding wearily back down their road, trying to hang on to the dog’s lead and being told to mind the bumps as she pushed his wheelchair. She had not seen Vivienne lately, only to be expected as Vivienne’s daughter and family were staying. A large camper van was parked outside her friend’s house and the door suddenly swung open as they passed, just missing the wheelchair. Two children tumbled down the steps and flew through the garden gate to the front door, yelling to be let in.
‘Bloody children, bloody camper vans’ said Sonya’s ex husband in a loud voice, just as Vivienne opened her front door and waved to her friend.
Poor Sonya!
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Sonya needs to get creative. There are so many household products that can ‘unwittingly’ compromise the health of such an invalid. Or she should could ‘test positive’ from her contact with the children, in which case he’d be gone like a shot from a gun. Speaking of guns … 😉
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Yes Doug, it is easy to make a ‘mistake’ when giving medications…
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No good deed goes unpunished. I can sooo think of a next paragraph. A short one. hee hee hee
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Let’s see your next paragraph!
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If Sonya had known her day would end badly, she would never have gotten out of bed. She maneuvered the wheelchair into the middle of the road thinking there would be fewer bumps to avoid. Anything for a little peace. As she took one more step she turned to acknowledge Vivienne’s frantic waving and then . . . The Prime Minister sent his condolences and a sizeable cheque for the loss of his carer and Sonya’s ex-husband made a miraculous recovery. Now he walks the dog every day and stops each morning to gaze fondly at the man-hole-cover that now covers the hole that Sonya stepped through. It is the Christian thing to do.
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Brilliant! Poor Sonya now another indirect victim of Covid. I love the touch of the Prime Minister getting in touch…
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Wonderful tale !
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Thanks Anil, glad you enjoyed it.
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Oh, he is SO going down!
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