Strange Hands
On the kitchen table sat a pill organiser, its coloured boxes marked for each day, laid out like a school timetable. She turned the lid to Wednesday, shook out two white pills and one pink onto a saucer, double-checked against the sheet from the surgery, and only then called out,
Mum, come on.
A dry voice answered from the other room, I know when to take them, you know.
She took a glass of water, placed it next to the saucer, and headed through to the living room. Her mother was perched on the edge of the sofa in her nightdress, hair tied in a thinning bun. Glasses and the TV remote sat on the side table; her slippers were neatly lined up underfoot, as if a stranger might pop in to assess the orderliness.
Have you done your blood pressure yet? she asked, trying to keep her voice neutral.
I have. Its fine. Dont look at me like Im ill.
She offered the saucer. Her mother took the tablets with two fingers, as though handling something suspect, swallowed them, and placed the glass back so precisely there wasnt a single drop left to mark the table.
And we need to get you washed, she said, bracing herself for the response.
I can walk to the bathroom myself.
Ill just stay nearby. Just in case.
Her mother looked up. In those eyes, once full of steel, now there was a note that had turned into a weapon.
If youve nothing better to do, go find something. Im not a child.
She bit back the reply that threatened to tumble out. Inside she was stretched tight, like an old rope ready to snap, and any word could be the yank that finally broke it. Instead, she grabbed a towel, warmed it on the radiator, smoothed out the bath mat, and followed her mother towards the bathroom.
There was a routine now: run the water, position the chair so her mother could sit, pass the sponge, turn away at the crucial moment, but still hear the heaving effort in every breath. At times like this a sudden surge of anger would rise in her chest, chased, as always, by guilt. Anger that she was here, living someone elses life, while her own played out somewhere else, in another flat where no one shouted for her in the middle of the night. Guilt for even thinking that at all.
Dont splash the floor, her mother muttered as water hit the tiles.
Ill mop it.
You always say you will, but its still slippery.
She wiped it up in silence, then helped her mother out, offered her dressing gown so she could cover up. Her mother gripped the edge of the sink, knuckles white.
Dont grab me, she snapped.
Im not. Im just making sure youre steady.
Make sure yourself, then. Im not helpless.
That wordhelplessstung, spat straight at the reality of things. She nodded, even as inside, the question screamed: Then what am I?
The afternoon meant the doctors. She packed the paperwork ahead: her mothers passport, NHS card, referral letter, printouts of tests. Wet wipes, a spare face mask, a bottle of water into the bag. Her mother put on her coat, buttoned it herself, only faltering at the third button.
Give it here, she said.
Let me do it, her mother corrected.
Button secured, and there was a small ache inside herher mother kept her dignity even in asking for help.
The reception queue shuffled along. Her mother sat bolt upright, prim and proper as if she were at a PTA meeting. She stood beside her, clutching the numbered ticket, eavesdropping on others moaning about useless prescriptions, mentally clock-watching: not because home was easier, but at least home meant control. Here, strangers in white coats held all the cardsand the system didnt care that her hands were shaking from exhaustion.
Inside the doctors office, the man spoke quickly, barely glancing at her mother.
Blood pressures all over, getting up at night, dizzy spells. She needs monitoring and care.
Ive got care, her mother retorted, eyes fixed ahead.
The doctor looked from one to the other. Are you on your own?
She wanted to protestnobut then pictured the family chat: her brother writing, Just hire a carer, its simple, her sister throwing in heart emojis and excuses about the kids. In truth, she was alone. Even when they visited it was like a museum tripobserve, sympathise, advise, then leave.
For now, yes, she muttered.
He nodded. Do think about getting someone in. Not all dayeven a few hours. Or youll be the one needing the hospital bed.
That hospital bed didnt sound like a threat, just a fact. Walking her mother out, arm hooked through hers, she could only think: Im already half-dead and no one sees it.
Back home, her mother went for a nap, and she opened her phone, trembling, not from their likely replies, but at her own bluntness.
Doctor says we need help. I cant do this solo. We need to get a carer or a rota. Something real, not just chat.
Replies came fast. Brother: Carer, obviously. Whats the debate? Ill chip in. Sister: Fine by me, but you know how Mum is. Can you convince her? You’re the one there. A cousin: Plenty of good ones out there now, dont worry. Not one said, Ill be round tomorrow. She stared at the screen, a rush of heat in her chest, wanting nothing more than to lob her phone into the sink so it would finally shut up.
Her mother emerged, leaning on her stick.
Who are you texting? she demanded.
The others. About you.
No talking about me behind my back.
She drew breath.
Mum, doctor says I cant manage alone. We need help.
We dont. You do, because you cant cope.
Bullseye. For a second, the room swam.
I can cope, she muttered, but I am tired.
Tired? her mother snorted. What about me? I worked all my life, raised you all. Now you want a stranger in my house? Someone watching over me? Watching how I live?
She understood that fearnot pain, but losing charge of your routines, your space, even how your room smells. It wasnt the carer that frightened her mumit was the gaze.
We can choose together. Someone to help, not a stranger.
Help? I dont need bathing. I can do for myself.
She wanted to say, You keep falling, but didnt. That would be surrendering her mothers pride.
Next day, her brother arrived for an hour, with a bag of apples and an attitude like hed just bought the house.
Well, hows it all going? he asked, pecking their mother on the cheek.
Fine, her mother answered, her voice warm for a change.
He poked around the kitchen, opened the fridge as if it were his own.
He waited until their mum left the room, then said, This cant go on. Youre wrecking yourself. Ring an agencylet them send someone round.
Shes not on board.
She never is. Dont askmake the call. Its for her own good.
She felt herself bristlingnot from the suggestion of a carer, but the whole dont ask bit.
Its her house, her body.
Her brother sighed, the long-suffering martyr.
You always make things harder. You just hate a row.
She looked at himclean jacket, city cologne, smelling of open air and his own plans. He could say “dont complicate it,” because in an hour, hed be gone.
Im not scared, she said quietly. Rows are my daily life.
He was silent, as if really hearing her for the first time. Then, awkwardly, Fine. I can chip in, and come by at weekends.
I need my weekends too, she shot back, and instantly regretted her sharpness.
He threw up his hands. Im not your enemy. It’s up to you. Youre here.
“Youre here.” A sentence like a brand.
Her mother, after, was in a bright mood as if their golden boys visit had washed all worries away.
You see, she said, hes got a proper head on. Not like you and your worries.
She retreated to the bathroom, and she was left gripping the kitchen table, feeling empty and noisy all at once.
That night, once her mother was asleep, she called the agency her brother had suggested. The voice was polite, already distant.
Yes, weve carers with plenty of experience. Yes, they can do a few hours. Yes, we match personalities where we can.
Personalities? she echoed, and suddenly wanted to laugh and cry at once.
Of course. We always take the familys wishes into account.
What about the person being cared for?
A brief pause.
Its best if theyre happy to have help. But families usually make the decision.
She ended the call and sat in darkness, staring at the blank screen. The word cared forit sounded like a label. Her mum wasnt a label. She was someone who had made the decisions all her life and clung to that last power.
She woke in the night to the sound of movement. Her mum was in the hall, hands sliding along the wall.
Toilet, she whispered.
She leapt up, switched on the lamp, hurried over. Give me your hand.
No, her mother insisted, trying a step by herself.
That was when her foot slipped on the slightly moved mat. It all seemed to happen in slow motion: her mother lost balance, flailed at thin air, struck her shoulder against the doorframe, and landed heavily.
Mum! She dropped down beside her, heartbeat like thunder. Are you hurt?
Dont touch me, her mother hissed, shoving her hand away. Im fine.
Youve fallen.
I havent she stopped, words choking off.
Carefully, she checked her mothers shoulder. No blood, nothing bent oddly. Still, her mother was panting, eyes burning.
Let me help you up, she said, rising, offering a hand.
Im not a bag of potatoes for you to haul about.
So what then? Her voice cracked. Mum, Im not made of stone.
A look passed between themfear, anger, and shame all muddled.
Dont shout, her mother said. The neighboursll hear.
Tears ran down her cheeks, not out of pity, but because shed been keeping it in too long. She crouched by the cold wall, lowered her forehead to it, and spoke barely above a whisper, yet certain it was heard, I cant do this all on my own anymore. Im scared youll fall and I wont get there. Im scared Ill lose my temper at you. I need help.
Silence, then almost a whisper from her mother, So Im in your way.
Youre not in my way. Youre my mum. She forced herself to look up. But I cant be everything, not alone. Its not about love. Its about strength.
Her mother turned aside, a little-girl motion.
Has anyone asked about my strength? she muttered.
Helping her up was painfully slowfirst to her knees, then onto a chair, finally her feet. Her mother was shaking, but determined. She saw her to the toilet, waited outside, listening to the laboured breathing, and felt something quietly shift inside her. Not love, not dutyjust a boundary. A thin line that she should have drawn sooner.
By morning, her mother wouldnt speak. She sat at the kitchen table, tea in hand, staring out as if waiting for a solution to drift by.
Sore shoulder? she asked.
Itll pass.
She fetched the ointment, set it on the table.
We need to talk, she said at last.
Go on, talk, her mother replied, eyes averted.
She sat opposite, hands pressed to the tabletop, keeping herself steady.
I dont want you to feel helpless. I want you to live at homeas you want. But I need to breathe too. And you need to be safe.
Her mother snorted. Safelisten to yourself!
Im done saying it nicely, she said, after a pause. Heres my ideanot a full-time carer, just someone around for three hours a day. They can tidy, cook, pop to the shops. Anything personalonly if you ask. And we choose together. Ill stay in for the first few days. Therell be rules: they dont enter your room without asking, touch nothing of yours. And if you cant stand them, we get someone else.
A long silence. Her mother stared at her own hands, the paper-thin skin, the carefully filed nails.
And you? she mumbled at last.
Ill sleep. Or walk round the block. Or sit in the quiet for once. She swallowed. I don’t want you to see me angry anymore.
Her mother looked up.
Ive already seen it.
Yes. She didnt try to excuse herself. Im ashamed. But shame doesnt cure tiredness.
Her mother faced the window.
A stranger in my home she said, her tone softening, though there was still a crust to it. I dont want pity.
No one will pity you. She touched her mothers hand. Her mother didnt move it away, but nor did she return the pressure. This isnt about pity. Its about you calling the shots over your help.
Her mother gave a tiny, wry smile.
You make it sound like my choices matter.
They do. Lets decide together.
After lunch she messaged the family. Not a pleaa firm negotiation.
Weve agreed: a helper three hours a day. I need a rotasomeone has to pop round once a week in the evening, so I can get away. No debates, just pick your days. I cant be here alone forever.
Replies took their time. Her brother: Fine, Wednesdays after work, but not every week. Her sister: I can do Sundays for an hour or two. It wasnt muchbut it was more than just talk.
She rang another agency, got a number from a neighbour in her mother’s block. They didnt say cared forthey asked:
What should we call her? What does she like? What mustnt we do?
She realised, to her surprise, how relieved she was to answer.
The helper arrived a few days later, a kind-faced woman in her mid-50s, neat shoes, sensible bag. She introduced herself to her mother.
How would you like me to help? Im happy to keep the place tidy, do some cooking, nip out for your bits and bobs.
Her mother, stick in hand like a sceptre, eyed her up and down.
Just house stuff. And dont patronise me. Im not some poor thing.
Fair enough, said the woman calmly. Understood.
She felt her own shoulders relaxa little. Not gone completely, but manageable.
Ill be in my room, she told her mother, if you need anything.
Im not a child, her mother intoned, but there wasnt the usual sting.
She retreated, shut her bedroom door and lay down in daylightsomething she hadnt allowed herself in ages. Not resting, but letting her body switch off. She set an alarm for forty minutes, but was asleep before it was done.
She woke to a soft knock. Theres tea ready, the helper called from the other side. Ive warmed some soup. Your mum said shell eat herself.
In the kitchen, her mother sat at the table: soup, spoon lined up like a ruler.
Well? her mother asked, still not looking up.
Its fine, she replied.
She doesnt fuss, her mother noted, as if that was the main test.
Told you so, she answered.
Her mother hesitated. But if she starts bossing me, shes out.
Deal.
When the helper left that evening, she locked the door and tucked the key away where she always had. The only signs of her presence were a gleaming sink, a pot of soup, a note reading bought you bread and milk. Her mother watched TV in her room, volume low.
That night, her mother only needed her help once. She got up, led her gently to the loo. The mat was fixed more securely now; her mother didnt slip. When she helped her back to bed, her mother saidwithout looking at her,
Dont think you were right, just because I gave in.
She smiled in the darkness.
You gave in because youre tired too.
Her mother gave a little grunt, but didnt argue.
She went back to her own room, lay down, turned off the light. It took a while, but eventually sleep came. In the morning, she woke to a sense of there being space inside her. Not freedom, not triumph, but a little gap to breathe. In the kitchen, her mother banged a spoon about, grumbling (as always)but she did it herself. And that mattered.






