Kara-Sue, You Deserve Better Things
We bonded over broken bones,
displayed our wounds
at check out number seven.
Her namebadge said Kara-Sue
and I thought it unfair
only she had one,
but I didn't say my name.
There wasn't really time.
An old man scowled
behind us
stinking of rank flannel
sending out his bitterness.
I saw Kara-Sue
unloading tins of sweetcorn
with the delicate hand
that hadn't recently been stood on
by a horse.
I grinned and she waved,
showed me her braces
and enthusiasm.
On Monday she was on the deli,
a plastic glove on her good hand.
She told me about her allergies
and I winced,
Red meat, chicken and vegetables
and you work in here?
I apologised for the pâté
she was that moment
spatuling from its trough.
An old lady bristled
at our chatter
and I hurried it along,
thinking
Kara-Sue, you deserve better things.
I picked up my
brown bread and skimmed milk,
paid for it quietly.
Kara-Sue sitting at the check out
wearing her name badge
Calmly.
I want to rip it off.
I'm terrified I will watch her get old
like I watched Sally get old
on Home and Away,
gradually,
day by day
I want to tell her to get up.
To go! Quick! While she can
but I suspect I'm being irrational
(where irrational
means the truth
too loudly.)
so I smile instead
and ask her boring questions.
I play along.
I buy my brown bread
and skimmed milk
quietly.
Don't take up too much time
or scream at staff to leave.
I wave goodbye to Kara-Sue.
• Chelsey Flood lives in Cornwall, England. Her short story The Grief Benches will appear in the Born in the 1980s anthology from Route Publishing later this year.
Loved this, Chelsey, for the lack of sentiment that made the emotional punch that much better. Great work.
Hi Chelsey – this is great – I particularly like “the delicate hand / that hadn't recently been stood on / by a horse.”
Frances