In Isolation

written By

The wind began to moan, leaves rushing in circles then scattering against the surface like open palms, fingers curled. Easy to image human attributes in this unpeople world. His stomach pinches. A memory forming like waves breaking against the shore, methodical and without rest. Jim placed fingers against temples and make the shape of circles.

Unsettled he picked a path through tufted grass and meandered around the base of a Ferris wheel, its yellow canopies like decrepit Pac-Men pell-melling a circle in the sky. Only now they are they still, with the occasional hinge creaking. The only other sounds are birds and trees and whistle of wind through trees. He dared not stop, timers are on how long he could spend outside, those police, he’d last seen them talking to the girl he followed, no doubt checking out her reason for being outside. Perhaps assessing his degree of threat, was the young lady comfortable with noises being made?

The farewell, like all our family occasions, was drawn out. As if such exchanges might never occur again. He’d already seen my grandparents the day before. We’d lunched at a Chinese restaurant we’d been going as long as he could remember. We never went anywhere else, something to do with the smile the owners would give when my grandfather pulled out his own thermos of coffee from the canvas bag at his feet and whatever cakes or biscuits my grandmother cooked that week.

“Proper sweets,” Grand-dad would say, sweeping aside options of banana fritters, mango pudding or fried ice cream. They would always order the same things; my grandfather loved the Mongolian Lamb and my grandmother the Chicken Chow Mein. Jim was the only one who ordered anything different, and he never felt entirely comfortable with the thermos.

Once the spicy fish dish arrived, dripping with a soy-garlic-chillies sauce, both his grandparents screwed up their faces. Jim liked to say, made cat’s bottom expressions. He already felt as if this was to be his last meal, delights like sitting close, even if only to family, about to cease, why not try something new. And those business men towards the rear, must be subjected to some serious vaccination, and check-in codes. Inside his head Jim heard a voice say, but can you protect yourself from future variations. What if this virus gets friendly with Ebola, of Chlamydia?

Those five men in threadbare suits and gaudy ties howled at their own jokes and scored the waitresses out of ten. They were shaking hands, displayed stained teeth, and greasy comb-overs lacquered with gel. Jim began to wonder if another strain of virus might attack teeth and thin hair. The centre of mass was a stern man ladled into his suit, a jumble of veins on his temple. Jim didn’t like the look of him.

Two newlyweds sat beside a window, huddled over uneaten meals. The woman talked and her tattooed husband stroked her hand tenderly. He was left-handed, muscular, his knuckles scarred and his skin tanned. His right leg shook as he tapped the heel of his work boot on the floor over and over again.

There was a birthday party in the corner. Guests chirped to each other and cooed at the birthday girl perched at the head of the table while taking photographs with their phones. Tokens of affection were placed before her and impatiently shredded in a shower of ribbon and wrapping paper. Innocent but tedious to witness. What were they thinking, was this place soon to be a super-spreader location?

Where are they now? Those innocent gatherings, now many restaurants simply closed their doors, chairs stacked up on tables inside, random mail waiting never to be collected. Dust collecting just inside the doors, bearing new signage about vaccinations certificates and check in codes. Now the only chance to gather was drive-throughs and on line celebrations, and only a few of them made a transition.

There was no food, Jim had to boil bread crumbs, swept out of the storage areas, to make soup. Constant stomach growling as a reminder he was alive even if slowly starving.

Outside, he can look out of windows, but not go into those fetid airs. Too risky, apparently. Too much dangerous, to both Jim and others.

A heavy handed knock on the door broke his revelry. He opened the door, but kept the chain across, not really sure who would knock rather than ring the bell, or announce their visit by using the down stairs bell. Two uniformed police stood in the foyer. But also wearing full personal protection garb, as if he was a hospital case, fully contagious.

Jim endured their inspection, yes, they conceded, there were plenty of critters featured.

“But you cannot just wander about outside.”

If Jim was able to see their faces, he was sure stone features would be on display. So he had endure a dreadful smoke bomb, which filtered through his nasal passages worse than any virus.

“That will get rid of fleas, cockroaches and possibly mice.”

Nothing further was said about food deliveries.

This building is an ancient fire trap, overheated but still subjected to drafts, with creaking floors and a lot of worn out but stolid wood. Massive banisters, heavy window frames, thickly panelled doors. Smells like a damp pantry suffering from dry rot, with sprouting potatoes, long forgotten. But if I was to look for anything which resembles food between allocated meal deliveries there would be nothing I might find.

Maybe due to empty containers there is a lingering, queasy odour filtering up from unemptied rubbish bins. Lukewarm cabbage, left over scrambled eggs, burnt toast, scraped off and still delivered.

He longed for contraband the family might deliver, fresh apples, and fruit in general. Even mum’s parsley, I can plant this, without fear of having more children now. Sowing parsley seeds a sure-fire way to ensure an unwanted pregnancy during her fertile times.

On the few occasions quarantine cases might be given permission to walk empty streets. Recession is deepening. More buildings for sale. Closed down boutiques. Sometimes a saleswoman lurks in doorways of those still open, aiming defeated, pleasing stares at rare passers-by. Despite most of their faces being covered. Jim thought about how this encouraged break-ins, everyone now covered their faces, how to identify someone? Eyes filed with baffled rage. Prices Slashed signs dominate, well outside end of financial year and months before Christmas. Blank faced or headless mannequins wear fashions emblazoned with Easter motifs now collecting shoulder layers of dust even in newer looking shops. He can’t help wondering if a new growth in retail will involve crews of staff whose sole purpose is to clean displays, launder stock and remove debris of inactivity before business can commence to function. Maybe he should apply.

Police again! This time they poured out of a shiny new traffic car. Jim shuttered, imagined these authority figures tasting his aura. Or fingering his essence, penetrating whatever kind of chakra he was activating at that exact moment.

“We’ve seen you before. What are you doing?”

“Isn’t it my time to walk? Others were escorting us.”

“You have been told. No outside exercise. What don’t you understand?”

“Yes, but I need to get out. There isn’t any food, I need to buy something.”

“Your food is delivered.”

‘“Doesn’t seem to be. I thought food shopping was essential.”

“We are going to write you an official warning. The next time it will be a $5,000 fine.”

Crumpled paper and rubble left by long gone crowds or looters flutters about on dirty air. Should Jim also toss away the piece of paper he’d been given? Pretend it didn’t exist?

Those left behind were a tribe of their own, fated to walk the earth with different baggage, knowledge that the rest of us fear and do not aspire join this group. He called them The Sadlings. No disrespect intended — it was a private naming and he would never say it aloud. Targeted by police in order to intimidate.

The streets were still gloriously empty. Silence a thing to marvel. And the way that the darkness seemed to exist in greater quantities in this street excited him. It rolled through emptiness, its shadowy arms caressing, cracked paving stones and fire hydrants as it intensified, and growing even blacker. It rapped knuckles on window panes of sleeping residents, eager to smother them, to bring terror into their night.

Fewer lights even though apartments were occupied. As if they didn’t want to signal anyone was inside. Fear a major motivator. What if someone came knocking, what if police were on the door step? Just the mere thought of this brought tears to Jim’s eyes.

  • Karen Lethlean is a retired English teacher. Her fiction has appeared in Barbaric Yawp, Ken*Again, Pendulum Papers and has won a few awards through Australian and UK competitions; “Almond Tree” received a commendation from Lorian Hemingway Short Fiction Competition and was published in Pretty Owl Poetry Journal. “A Dog for Company” is forthcoming in Meniscus Journal, and “Brad and Janet” was recently long-listed for The Sydney Hammond Short Story Competition. Karen is currently working on a memoir titled Army Girl, about military service 1972-76. In her other life, Karen is a triathlete who has done the Hawaii Ironman championships twice.

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