Today was election result day. This is an observation made of a woman sitting in front of me tonight in the waiting room of Accident and Emergency in the Royal London, while I nursed, what I later found out to be, a broken arm.
A&E On a Friday night The news At ten In Whitechapel Jack the Ripper Can't make claim To the casualties of the night Taken hostage and tortured by Accidents and emergencies Of their own making or Of natural or unnatural means And one such victim Perched On a waiting room seat Ready to take flight Brave fear In her bones And on her back A rucksack ruffle And black sweater With white spots Casually over a shoulder Which is tense Having seen Her blood betray her And a lump Move from her arm To her leg A rebel clot No doubt She checks her arms In navy and white striped Three quarter length sleeves She cannot see under The grey trousers And brown brogues Showing just enough of the Matching stripey socks To ensure they were not Pointless What's the point of matching apparel If you cant see it? She wondered When the sales woman Tried to sell her Matching lingerie No point when You're dead either She remembered when She was young And vain enough For clothes emergencies In A & E Trauma Is not Clothes-deep Any clothes are removed To see underneath Their ornamental value Has decreased Like her hair When it turned Prematurely grey And she refused To turn to 'honey blonde' To turn back time But she cut it monthly In a bob around her face Framing What used be called NHS glasses Now back in vogue If she stayed still Long enough Fashion caught up She was still now Just one foot tapping At least she was in the right place If anything happened If the lump Was a clot And went to her brain She'd found a place to sit Directly in front Of the sign Reading 'Ugent Care Centre' Because She needed urgent care And So they could easily find her And so She has no other casualties In her sights Who might tempt her to play Guess-the-ailment She holds her black cardie Like a security blanket Or broken wing Keeping her arms uncovered In case the swelling comes back So she will see it again And not have imagined it The only time She wished her phone Had a camera For evidence For now She was her only witness And there wasn't even pain A phantom In her body Which had years ago already rebelled As women's bodies do Not just every month But when they get to an age When monthly Clockwork Changes time To the biological clock Another timezone Tick tick She feels her pulse And calms herself And the rising tide She is afraid will engulf her And she doesn't see the boy with suspected appendicitis And the older man with chest pain Or the guy the blue gloved police have brought in Swaying in and out of lucidity Some substance Still abusing him And the blue gloved police Telling him 'You're in the Royal London hospital.' As if an arrivals announcement In a major airport Where Departures are not announced The man is on a wave His wheelchair, his surfboard Controlled by the police Perhaps he is having A silent revolution Against a disappointing Election Vaccinating himself Against the epidemic of Conservatism infecting the country We are all in A&E In need Of urgent care Mourning our losses With the NHS on death's door And the country's humanity not far behind What is chest pain or appendicitis or clots or unconsciousness When no one cares? Just symptoms of a deeper Hurt A more painful truth What does death matter If you don't care? Her name is called She takes flight And like that Someone tends to her pain And not a filthy coin or note Has exchanged hands Because we care We look after each other With our taxes We pay the ferryman Or else we go to hell
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