Friday 16 November 2012

Caught in the Web - Chapter 24


So, back to Karen's world again.  Hope you are enjoying reading these chapters.  If you like what you read, please buy the book.  It's on Kindle at www.amazon.com; www.amazon.co.uk.  Also in paper back form from Amazon.  You can buy it directly from www.completelynovel.com as well as in Waterstones and all good bookstores included The Book Shop, Lee-on-the-Solent, The Hayling Island Bookshop, The One Tree Bookshop in Petersfield and Earl's Coffee Shop in Titchfield. Even if you can't afford to buy the book, it would be great if you could write a review on Amazon for me.  Every one helps!

I am trying hard at the moment to get some more bookings for signings.  My last one was in Fareham Waterstones and it was a great success.  Trying to get into Southampton now....


Chapter Twenty-four

The house was quiet when Karen let herself in and wandered into the kitchen to put the kettle on. She heard Peter's key in the front door as she reached for the coffee jar and glanced at herself in the small mirror above the kitchen sink. Her face was bruised, her left eye swollen like puff pastry. Her heart was in her throat.
Peter called from the hall to her as he came in. 'Is that you Karen? I wasn't expecting you to be home yet.'
'I'm in the kitchen. Do you want coffee?' She took up the kettle.
'Please.' He sounded happy. 'How did you get on at the doctor's this morning? Did he sign you off?'
Karen heard the hall door slam shut and waited for his reaction with gritted teeth. He'd reached the kitchen door.
'What the hell have you done to yourself now?' He glared at her.
Karen felt tears filling her eyes. She shook them away as she replied. 'I got hit at work,' she said. 'I'm alright. It looks worse than it is.'
'You got hit?' Peter's face was white. 'I told you that place was bad for you. I don't know why you went back there after this morning.'
'What do you mean by that?' Karen asked. 'What were you expecting the doctor to say?'
'I just thought he'd sign you off for a rest, that's all.'
'Why the hell should the doctor think I need a rest?' Karen snapped. 'You've been telling him lies about me.'
'Don't be ridiculous. Why would I want to do that?' He was shouting now. He snatched the kettle from Karen. 'Are you putting this on or not?
He filled the kettle, plugged it in and turned to face her. 'Just look at yourself. Are you sure one of your patients did this? It looks like you did it to yourself.'
'Why would I want to hurt myself?' Karen was indignant. 'If you don't believe me you can ask the Charge Nurse.'
'Oh, yes, you lot all stick together don't you?' he returned. 'Anyway, did he see what happened?'
'No,' Karen hesitated. 'I don't think any of the staff saw what happened, but they pulled Kathy off me. She was sitting on me.'
'So you probably goaded her into it. You're just not cut out for that work you know. You're too soft.'
'It's the first time anything like this has happened to me. Everyone says that Kathy's unpredictable. It could have happened to anyone, I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.' She walked through to the sitting room and sat at the small dining table, looking out of the window. 'Why can't he just try to understand,' she thought. She could hear Peter clattering in the kitchen and soon he had entered the room carrying his coffee. Karen glanced at him.
'What are you glaring at me for?' he shouted across the room, then went and sat on the sofa, kicked his shoes off and stretched his legs out on the cushions. He leaned back and closed his eyes, shutting her out.
'Sorry,' Karen whispered as she got up and went back into the kitchen to make her own coffee.
'For God's sake! I didn't know you wanted a cup,' he shouted. 'I'd have made you one if you'd asked.'
'Forget it.' Karen was sick of the shouting and just wanted things to calm down between them. She sat at the window again and placed her cup on the table. A robin and two blackbirds were hopping in the garden. She watched them fight over their territory, as she leaned her head against the cool glass. A few minutes passed before Peter started talking again.
'Anyway,' he said. 'You haven't told me what the doctor said this morning.'
'You've been telling him that I was crying all the time, staying up all night, and saying weird things. What were you thinking?' Karen spoke quietly, trying to stay calm.
Peter looked uncomfortable for a split second. 'I only told him the truth. You don't know your own mind these days.'
'Well, I told him I was fine.' She sipped her coffee. 'In fact, I feel better than I have in ages. I'm just annoyed that you even spoke to my doctor about me. What exactly are you trying to do?'
'I'm not trying to do anything. Just listen to yourself. You sound paranoid. I only told the doctor the truth.'
'I have not been crying all the time, or any of those other things you said.' She was adamant that he would not have the last word on this.
'What about that patient you think you're related to?' he sneered.
'It could be true,' Karen said. 'You don't know anything about her, and I don't know who my real mother is, so anything is possible. It was only a thought. I am not obsessed by it.'
'I think you are,' he insisted. 'You've no idea how stupid you sound, talking about her, and then going on about having a career in a job that's so poorly paid, working with a load of nutters!'
'It's a waste of time talking about this to you.' Karen stared at her coffee.
'Why can't you listen to what I'm telling you?' Peter said. 'I just want you to be how you used to be, before you had that operation.'
Karen looked at him aghast. 'You want me to be like that again? I was really ill then. I couldn't do anything for myself. I just slept a lot of the time. If anything, that's when I didn't know my own mind.'
'You were good to me then.' Peter was quieter now.
'I was only half a woman then, Peter,' she said. 'After the operation I felt like I had a new lease in life. I just want a chance to do something more important.'
'We had a good life before,' he insisted.
'You had a good life,' Karen corrected him. 'Oh, I know it was alright, what we had at the time. But I was frustrated, and didn't have the energy to do anything for myself. When I had that operation, I nearly died. They told me when I came round that it was touch and go - I’d lost a lot of blood. Something happened to me then, like I was waking from a deep sleep. It was as though I was being given another chance to make my life better.'
'Who told you that you nearly died? No-one said anything to me.'
'The surgeon told me,' Karen said. 'There was no need for you to know because I was alright by the time you came to see me. It was just a passing remark from the surgeon, but I think I knew anyway, deep down.'
'You're off your head!' he snorted. 'You're living in a complete fantasy world.'
'Peter, stop this, please.'
'Stop what?' His lip curled in a sneer.
'Please, can't we start again,' Karen pleaded. 'I don't like this arguing all the time.'
'That's up to you. You know what you need to do.' He finished his coffee, placed his mug on the floor and got up from the sofa. He turned to face her. 'When you're ready to start being a proper wife again, maybe we'll have something to talk about.'
'I'm never going back to how I was. I'm not that person any more. I've grown up.'
Peter walked across the room and stood over her. 'We'll see about that.' He took hold of her arm, gripping her wrists tightly.
'You're hurting me.' Karen looked into his eyes.
'You don't know what hurt means,' he spat into her face.
'Let me go, please,' Karen whimpered.
Peter twisted her arm cruelly then flicked her wrist away. He touched the bruise on her cheek, his fingers gently stroking down towards her neck. He tilted her chin and brushed her lips with his before Karen could take a breath, then he turned and left the room. She swallowed and looked down at her wrist. The skin was broken where he'd dug in his nails, a thin line of bright red blood trickled across the back of her hand. She tried to blink back the tears, but it was too late. A tear dropped from her eye and mingled with the blood.
Karen watched the tiny river as it dripped onto the table.






Sails of Portsmouth

You stand tall
Waving at passers-by
'All who enter here...'
Glowering over the Municipal Tip
Which spouts forth gases
From the masses
Of left-over
Squashed down
Unwanted dinners,
Smelly nappies
and poop-scooped dollops
That grow into an ever-increasing
'Green' mountain.
I wonder as I pass
Will they build a fountain
And will I one day
Lay upon that grass,
Picnicking
With my grandchildren?
And will they ask me
What that smell is
Long after
The "Sails" have rotted and gone?

Tuesday 30 October 2012

Caught in the Web Chapter 23 and News

Having been privileged to be a part of the 20x12 bookFest in Portsmouth, and meeting such amazing local authors, I am sorry that I haven't been able to go along and support many of the others.  It's been a busy week or so and doesn't seem likely to let up yet.


Today I'm going into the studio to record my novel, Caught in the Web as an audio-book.  I confess I am a little nervous.

And this Saturday, 3rd November, I will be in Waterstones in Fareham signing copies of the book so I hope lots of people come along and support me.  This is important - not just for myself - but hopefully to help other independent authors to be noticed by big companies such as Waterstones.

Below is a sample of the novel for those who are following it on my blog:


Chapter Twenty-three

It was early afternoon on the ward, a quiet time amongst the chaos of the day with just a few patients either pacing the ward, or wandering about from dining room to lounge in an aimless fashion.
Karen was still reeling from her visit to the doctor that morning, her mind on what she'd say to Peter when she saw him that evening. It was unbelievable that he could have told such lies about her and she was in a turmoil as to how she would be able to deal with it. A certain fear was festering deep inside her. She tried to push thoughts of him from her mind as she drew herself back to the present.
'Come and sit down Kathy,' Karen called across the room.
The dining tables were all clear apart from two which had been pushed together. Karen sat at one, overseeing a small group of the ladies who were gluing coloured shapes of paper onto cardboard sheets which were folded into greetings cards.
Kathy constantly paced the room - a large woman dressed in a too-short, too-tight crimplene dress, with greasy jet-black hair which not only covered her head, but also sprouted from various parts of her face. Her sleeves were rolled up revealing a lattice-work of scars on her arms, her bare feet thundered on the floor as she passed to and fro.
At the tables, Rosie, Annie and Millie sat together, and were working quietly at their tasks, whilst Karen was cutting out shapes for them to glue.
'Steady on with that glue, Rosie,' Karen noticed the porridge-like glue, dropping in great blobs onto the table.
'Sorry nurse,' Rosie said, but carried on as before.
'Kathy, will you come and join us?' Karen called as she stood up and walked towards Kathy. 'Come on, you love making cards.'
'Bugger off, bitch!' Kathy glared at Karen.
'Don't be like that,' Karen said. 'Just come and sit down for a while.'
'I said bugger off!' Kathy's arm swung back. Karen felt the sweep of her arm as a gust of air before Kathy's fist hit her in the face with a thud, lifting Karen from her feet. Time seemed to stand still as Karen flew backwards across the gallery and landed against the opposite wall. She felt herself slide to the floor.
The world was silent for what seemed like an age, Karen lying in a vacuum before all hell was let loose. She felt the sudden weight of Kathy who had leapt across to land on her chest, forcing the air from her lungs. Kathy took hold of Karen's hair and smashed her head backwards onto the floor. Her face was inches from Karen's, spittle spraying from her mouth. She laughed as her arms were gripped from behind by Mike and Andy who hauled her off and threw her to the floor. Mike held her in a headlock - Andy held her legs.
'Oh, my God, Karen, are you alright?' Linda held Karen's head on her lap whilst Dorothy knelt beside her, gripping her hand.
Karen tried to assure them that she was alright, but just a garbled noise came from her throat.
'Get her some water,' Linda shouted to Marion who was standing in the doorway to the kitchen, watching from a distance. Marion turned and ambled back into the kitchen.
'For God's sake, Marion!' Linda shouted after her. 'Bloody woman,' she said, under her breath.
'I'm alright,' Karen managed to whisper. 'Just help me up.' She tried to struggle to her feet, leaning on Linda and Dorothy. Her legs gave way under her as she stood and they helped her to a nearby chair.
'Dorothy, get over here and give us a hand,' Mike called, as he and Andy still struggled on the floor with Kathy, her legs kicking out at them. Dorothy sat on the floor next to Kathy and took hold of her arms from behind.
'Wait there,' Mike said. 'I'll get some Largactil and give her a jab.' He ran down the wide corridor to the clinic room. Soon he returned with a syringe filled with the tranquilliser. He thrust the needle into Kathy's thigh and administered the drug without further ceremony.
'Now we need to get her to her room,' Mike said. 'Take this.' He handed the syringe to Dorothy, and the two men pulled Kathy up to a standing position and marched her between them along the corridor. They pushed her through the open door and hastily closed it behind her, turning the key in the lock.
'Now Karen,' Mike called as he marched back towards the dining area. 'Let's have a look at your face.' Karen held onto Linda as they walked to the clinic room, Karen stumbling, feeling dizzy with shock and stupidity. Mike pulled a chair into the middle of the room and Karen sat down gratefully. She felt sick to the core.
'You're going to have a nice shiner there,' Mike said. 'We need to put something cool on it to stop the swelling.' He busied himself with a dressing pack, soaking the lint under the cold water tap. 'Here, put this on it.'
Karen took the wet pad and placed it over her cheek.
'Luckily the skin wasn't broken,' Mike added. He probed the back of her skull gently with his fingertips.
'Ouch, that's sore,' Karen complained as he reached the tender spot where her head had made contact with the floor.
'Sorry, but I have to make sure there's no cuts. How's your chest? Any broken ribs?'
'I just feel bruised,' Karen grimaced. 'And totally stupid, letting it happen.'
'You never know with Kathy,' Mike said. 'She can be fine for weeks, and then suddenly she'll just snap, for no real reason. It's not your fault. Just remember that you always have to be on your toes in this place.'
'I'll remember that in future,' Karen smiled. 'Don't worry.'
'Well, it looks like you'll live, but you'd better be careful over the next few hours. You should go home.'
'I don't think I can,' Karen said, wondering how she was going to manage the two buses home on her own.
'What about your husband?' Mike asked. 'Could you phone him and get him to pick you up?'
'No! It’s nothing,' said Karen. Disturbing Peter was the last thing she needed. It would only give him more fuel to the argument of her giving up the job. 'I'll be alright in a while,' she went on. 'Just let me sit quietly for a bit.'
'Well you'd better stay in the office then,' Mike agreed. 'Put your feet up on the coffee table and rest until you feel well enough to go home.
'I'll get you a cup of tea,' suggested Dorothy, always ready with the answer to all ills.
'Thanks Dorothy.' Karen smiled.
Karen sat and pondered on the morning's events. Her heart was racing and she felt an excitement bubbling. 'It must be the adrenaline rush,' she thought, realising that she liked the feeling. Not knowing what each day would bring, living on the edge, in constant danger. She knew she could never give it up.

Karen was still in the office an hour later when the door opened and John pushed his way into the room.
'Hello, Karen,' he began. 'Oh my God, are you alright?' He sat on the chair beside her and took her hand. 'You look awful.'
'I'm alright,' Karen insisted.
'That bloody Kathy! She's so unpredictable - they should sort out her medication.’
'She had some Largactil. She's sleeping it off now.' Karen looked at the floor.
'I mean, something to stop her kicking off in the first place.' He stood up.
'I should have been ready for her.' Karen was embarrassed. 'Everyone kept warning me about her.'
'But she's been alright for the past couple of months.' He was looking through the glass window into the ward. 'You just don't expect it when it happens. It's not your fault.' He turned and smiled at Karen.
'What are you doing here, anyway?' Karen changed the subject.
'Mike rang and asked me to work - so you could go home.'
'Thanks. But I'll be alright.'
'Yeah, but you might as well get home,' he said. 'No point in staying here if you don't have to.'
'What exactly is wrong with her?' Karen asked.
'Kathy? Haven't you read her notes?' John asked. 'She's a schizophrenic. When she came in she was violently mad. She tried to throttle her husband and she used to cut herself all the time.'
Karen remembered the scars criss-crossing Kathy's arms. 'I don't understand really. What makes people like that?'
'It's an illness,' John said. 'Not much you can do about it, apart from taking strong sedatives. You know, like Largactil, or Melleril. And now there’s depot drugs like Modicate. They're supposed to stop the voices,' he added.
Karen shuddered.
'Does Kathy hear voices?'
'Haven't you heard her talking to them?'
'I've seen her talking to herself,' Karen said. 'Doesn't everyone?'
'She's not talking to herself,' he replied. 'Just listen next time.'
'Is it like being depressed?' Karen asked.
'Nothing like it,' John said. 'Mostly you can cure depression, but you can't cure schizophrenia. You just damp it down.' He laughed.
'What's so funny?' Karen asked.
'Nothing. Sorry.' John paused. 'They used to do leucotomies on patients to try and cure them when they were really mad in the old days. Some of our worst patients are ones where it went wrong.'
'What the hell is a leucotomy?' Karen had heard the word before, but had no idea what it meant.
'They cut into the brain, hoping to stop violent behaviour and to make them normal again. It’s a bit hit and miss and when it goes wrong you end up with people like Gloria who have nothing left. They're just like animals.' He sighed. 'Then we have to teach them how to do everything, like washing, dressing, using knives and forks. They're totally brain-damaged. You’ll learn all about it in training.'
'I'm glad they don't do that anymore,' Karen said. 'ECT was bad enough.'
'Oh, they do still use it at times,' John said. 'This bloke on Spencer Ward, he'd stuck an axe through his own head. Had loads of ECT after he recovered from the axe. Nothing worked, so they carted him off to do the leucotomy.'
'That’s awful.'
'But he got better,' John added. 'The last time I saw him, he was smiling and laughing. So it was a great success, apparently. Of course you have to remember that most of the women on this ward have been here for years, and surgery was much more hit and miss even only ten years ago.'
'I wouldn't want to have that done to me, even now,' Karen said.
'That won't happen to you.' He smiled. 'Are you feeling better now?'
'Much better, thanks.' She returned his smile. 'I haven't seen you for a while. How's things?'
'Great,' he answered. 'We should get together again sometime.'
'I'd like that,' Karen hesitated. 'Could we meet up tomorrow after the shift?'
'Sorry, can't do tomorrow. I'm off home for a few days.'
'Home?' Karen wondered. 'Where's that?'
'My parents live in Southampton. I'm meeting up with some of my old mates. It's a twenty-first birthday party. Sorry.'
'Don't worry.' Karen felt the smile fix on her face whilst her heart sank a little.
'Yeah, well, I'd better get on with some work.' John opened the door. 'Take care of yourself.'
He was half way down the ward before Karen's heart stopped its loud thumping. She had a slightly hollow feeing inside as she realised that John had just let her down gently. 'What an idiot,' she told herself. What to her had been a special moment was probably just another fling to him. Linda had warned her not to take anything too seriously but she'd thought she knew better. Her head was spinning with a muddle of thoughts as she walked to the staff locker room and gathered her bag.
'You off then?' Mike popped his head around the open door.
'I think I need to get home if that's alright.' She swallowed down her disappointment and glanced up at him. 'I'm feeling better now.'
'Take time off tomorrow,' said Mike. 'Those bruises will be coming out by then.'
'Thanks.' She pulled on her jacket, took up her bag and walked to the ward door. Linda came out of the kitchen wheeling a trolley just as she reached the door.
'You alright now?' Linda stopped to talk to Karen.
'I'm fine,' Karen assured her. 'Thanks for taking care of me earlier. You're a good friend.'
'As long as you're alright. Have you spoken to John?' Linda asked. 'I saw him coming out of the office.'
'We had a bit of a chat,' Karen blushed. 'I don't think anything will come of that.'
'It's probably just as well. He's lovely, but doesn't take anything seriously.'
'Anyway, I'm married,' said Karen. 'I've just got to get on with it, haven't I?'
She unlocked the door and turned back to Linda. 'See you in a couple of days. Mike's given me tomorrow off.'
'Take care,' said Linda.
'I always do. See you later.' The door slammed behind Karen and she limped down the stairs, flinching with pain as each step jolted her still sore ribs.








Monday 22 October 2012

Reading at the 20x12 Portsmouth BookFest


I was 'lucky' enough to be the first author in the 20x12 group to perform in Southsea Library on Saturday 20th October.  I thought you might like to have a look at some of the pictures taken on the day:

Using the Audience - thanks Matt!

My pink web blended well with the Halloween decorations.

Selling copies of Caught in the Web

Below is a copy of my script for the day.....


Karen - 1973

Imagine a world with no Care in the Community - a world where despite Womens Lib, Men ruled the home -  it was the norm to smoke and nurses were nearly always female.  Imagine being 23 in a mental hospital where women had been locked away for most of their adult lives.....

Karen, struggling in her relationship, throws herself into her work and becomes obsessed with the life of Evelyn, locked away in 1950 after giving birth to an illegitimate child.  Then Karen becomes pregnant herself and she finds herself in more danger than she could ever have imagined....

Monday morning, nine a.m.

Karen trembled as she passed under the shadow of the clock tower at the main gates of Highclere Mental Hospital.

Walking through the long cold corridors, a pungent smell clung to the inside of her nostrils - tangible - almost solid.  She felt it embedding itself into her being where it would linger for the rest of her life.

At the end of the corridor she reached a dark stair-well.  Gripping the metal rail as she climbed, the walls began to close in on her.  Her footsteps tapped out a rhythm on the concrete stairs until she reached a windowless landing.  One naked bulb struggled to cast a sickly halo on the far off ceiling and barely illuminate the sign on the door which announced her arrival at Camberley Ward.
She hesitated as she placed her finger on the bell then closed her eyes and pushed.  She froze to the coconut matting outside the door and resisted the urge to flee.

The door opened.  A blast of warm air and noise gushed towards her, caught her up and sucked her in.  A large woman who had been stuffed untidily into a brown checked uniform dress was glaring at her.

‘It’s my first day.’

‘Well, you’d better come in then,’ the woman looked down her nose at Karen’s open face.  ‘You should be in uniform.’

‘I’m sorry.  I wasn’t told.  I haven’t got one yet.  Sorry.’

Keys jangling, the woman slammed the door behind them with a flourish and marched off down a long wide corridor.  Hesitating for just the moment that it took to realise that she really didn’t want to be left alone, Karen scurried after the nurse.

Wild looking women were pacing the floor between tables still laden with the remnants of breakfast - metal teapots and marmalade-smeared Pyrex crockery.

A face loomed into Karen’s.

‘Give us a fag my lover.’  The woman’s toothless smile beamed inches before Karen’s eyes.  Her breath reeked of second-hand cigarette smoke and kippers.

Karen smiled back uncertainly.  ‘Sorry.’ 
‘Well F. off then!’  The woman spat back at her and pushed her away, storming off once more.

The nurse spun round.  ‘Effie!  Behave, or you’ll feel the back of my hand.’  She glared at Karen.  ‘Don’t give them an inch.’

Karen hurried after her rapidly retreating bulk, darting out of the paths of more women in faded cotton dresses and old ladies slippers, each one wrapped in her own private insanity.


Evelyn - 1950

Imagine a world of swings and roundabouts - post-war rationing and lodgers - shopping in the High Street, chenille tablecloths and toilets down the bottom of the garden.

Imagine finding yourself pregnant with no one in your life that you can tell who the father was.

Imagine the pain of having your child torn from your arms, being forced away from your family with no way to return....
Evelyn couldn’t tell you how many years she’d been lying in this bed with the changing seasons showing through the same old window frame.  The ache somewhere in her chest was still there although the memories of where and when were muddled in her mind.  Evelyn didn’t talk much any more.  Dumfounded, they’d called her at first, then Idiot - but none of them knew her really.

Her mother had visited her in the early days.  Awkward Sunday afternoons filled with pain whilst her mother had prattled on about the neighbours or the weather.  Then gradually the periods between each visit grew longer until they’d either stopped or Evelyn could no longer remember.

They’d tried to get her moving out of the ward once.
‘You need to be rehabilitated.  You’ve been here too long.  You’re institutionalised.’
Evelyn wondered what that meant.

In the small room at the top of a flight of stairs women from the ward were sitting around a table knitting brightly coloured wools into ill-shaped squares.  She’d sat watching them whilst the nurse cast on the stitches and then handed the knitting to her.

‘There you are, Evelyn.  Nice pink wool.  You can knit can’t you?’

Evelyn said nothing.

‘It’s just squares.  Garter stitch.  You know - just plain knitting.’

Perhaps it was the colour of the wool, or maybe the sound of the clicking of the needles as the other women worked.  Evelyn couldn’t really remember what happened.  She only felt a raging anger erupting from somewhere deep inside her head which clashed with the pain in her chest, before she heard a loud screaming and felt herself being forced down into a black pit by the three nurses who had jumped on her.

They didn’t take her back to Occupation Therapy the next day.

She stayed on her bed chasing the memories out of her dreams, staring at the clouds, wondering where they were going and trying not to think.  When she closed her eyes she could see the pink wool winding round her body like a giant spider’s web, encasing her in a trap she could never escape from.  So she kept her eyes open, staring at the sky and hoping that it would all go away again.

Evelyn was silent after that - the only thing in her head - pink wool and babies booties.

Then Evelyn met Karen and their lives began to change.

Tuesday 16 October 2012

Lee-on-the-Solent Book Shop, Radio show and Chapter 23


First of all I want to say a big thank you to Rick and his team at The Book Shop Lee-on-the-Solent for allowing me to do the book signing in the shop on Saturday.  It was a great experience and is a lovely little book shop, crammed full of a vast range of books, cards, stationery items, calendars and loads of other stuff.  The signing was a success - I enjoy chatting to new people about my novel, I sold 5 in the time I was there and Rick bought another 5 from me to keep in stock, so if you are in the area, drop in and have a look.  I guarantee you will love the shop and the people working there. You may even get a choccy biscuit.  Oh, and this Saturday Zella Compton is going to be there signing her new novel for young people, The Ten Rules of Skimming so get along there and support another great author - this novel will make a great Christmas gift.

Yesterday I was in the studio recording with Terry Powell for his radio show which is on this evening at 7.00pm.  I was interviewed about my life in psychiatric nursing and how I came to reach the point of writing a novel.  We talked about many things and, of course, I was able to talk about the book and where people can purchase a copy locally.  What I forgot to say on air was that you can also buy it from Amazon, both as a paperback and a Kindle version.  It is also available on several other book websites including Completelynovel.com which is the site that I published through.  So, if you still haven't got your own copy, now you know where you can get one from.

You can also buy a copy from Waterstones in Commercial Road, Portsmouth, Earl's Coffee Shop in Titchfield, The One Tree Bookshop in Petersfield, The Hayling Island Bookshop, Cafe Flo in Castle Road, Southsea, The Golden Lion, Southwick, Arty's Pizza Bar in Knowle Village and Southwick Village Post Office.  Waterstones in Fareham have now booked me to do a signing there on 3rd November, so they will shortly have some in stock too.

In the meantime - here is chapter 23.

Chapter Twenty-three

It was early afternoon on the ward, a quiet time amongst the chaos of the day with just a few patients either pacing the ward, or wandering about from dining room to lounge in an aimless fashion.
Karen was still reeling from her visit to the doctor that morning, her mind on what she'd say to Peter when she saw him that evening. It was unbelievable that he could have told such lies about her and she was in a turmoil as to how she would be able to deal with it. A certain fear was festering deep inside her. She tried to push thoughts of him from her mind as she drew herself back to the present.
'Come and sit down Kathy,' Karen called across the room.
The dining tables were all clear apart from two which had been pushed together. Karen sat at one, overseeing a small group of the ladies who were gluing coloured shapes of paper onto cardboard sheets which were folded into greetings cards.
Kathy constantly paced the room - a large woman dressed in a too-short, too-tight crimplene dress, with greasy jet-black hair which not only covered her head, but also sprouted from various parts of her face. Her sleeves were rolled up revealing a lattice-work of scars on her arms, her bare feet thundered on the floor as she passed to and fro.
At the tables, Rosie, Annie and Millie sat together, and were working quietly at their tasks, whilst Karen was cutting out shapes for them to glue.
'Steady on with that glue, Rosie,' Karen noticed the porridge-like glue, dropping in great blobs onto the table.
'Sorry nurse,' Rosie said, but carried on as before.
'Kathy, will you come and join us?' Karen called as she stood up and walked towards Kathy. 'Come on, you love making cards.'
'Bugger off, bitch!' Kathy glared at Karen.
'Don't be like that,' Karen said. 'Just come and sit down for a while.'
'I said bugger off!' Kathy's arm swung back. Karen felt the sweep of her arm as a gust of air before Kathy's fist hit her in the face with a thud, lifting Karen from her feet. Time seemed to stand still as Karen flew backwards across the gallery and landed against the opposite wall. She felt herself slide to the floor.
The world was silent for what seemed like an age, Karen lying in a vacuum before all hell was let loose. She felt the sudden weight of Kathy who had leapt across to land on her chest, forcing the air from her lungs. Kathy took hold of Karen's hair and smashed her head backwards onto the floor. Her face was inches from Karen's, spittle spraying from her mouth. She laughed as her arms were gripped from behind by Mike and Andy who hauled her off and threw her to the floor. Mike held her in a headlock - Andy held her legs.
'Oh, my God, Karen, are you alright?' Linda held Karen's head on her lap whilst Dorothy knelt beside her, gripping her hand.
Karen tried to assure them that she was alright, but just a garbled noise came from her throat.
'Get her some water,' Linda shouted to Marion who was standing in the doorway to the kitchen, watching from a distance. Marion turned and ambled back into the kitchen.
'For God's sake, Marion!' Linda shouted after her. 'Bloody woman,' she said, under her breath.
'I'm alright,' Karen managed to whisper. 'Just help me up.' She tried to struggle to her feet, leaning on Linda and Dorothy. Her legs gave way under her as she stood and they helped her to a nearby chair.
'Dorothy, get over here and give us a hand,' Mike called, as he and Andy still struggled on the floor with Kathy, her legs kicking out at them. Dorothy sat on the floor next to Kathy and took hold of her arms from behind.
'Wait there,' Mike said. 'I'll get some Largactil and give her a jab.' He ran down the wide corridor to the clinic room. Soon he returned with a syringe filled with the tranquilliser. He thrust the needle into Kathy's thigh and administered the drug without further ceremony.
'Now we need to get her to her room,' Mike said. 'Take this.' He handed the syringe to Dorothy, and the two men pulled Kathy up to a standing position and marched her between them along the corridor. They pushed her through the open door and hastily closed it behind her, turning the key in the lock.
'Now Karen,' Mike called as he marched back towards the dining area. 'Let's have a look at your face.' Karen held onto Linda as they walked to the clinic room, Karen stumbling, feeling dizzy with shock and stupidity. Mike pulled a chair into the middle of the room and Karen sat down gratefully. She felt sick to the core.
'You're going to have a nice shiner there,' Mike said. 'We need to put something cool on it to stop the swelling.' He busied himself with a dressing pack, soaking the lint under the cold water tap. 'Here, put this on it.'
Karen took the wet pad and placed it over her cheek.
'Luckily the skin wasn't broken,' Mike added. He probed the back of her skull gently with his fingertips.
'Ouch, that's sore,' Karen complained as he reached the tender spot where her head had made contact with the floor.
'Sorry, but I have to make sure there's no cuts. How's your chest? Any broken ribs?'
'I just feel bruised,' Karen grimaced. 'And totally stupid, letting it happen.'
'You never know with Kathy,' Mike said. 'She can be fine for weeks, and then suddenly she'll just snap, for no real reason. It's not your fault. Just remember that you always have to be on your toes in this place.'
'I'll remember that in future,' Karen smiled. 'Don't worry.'
'Well, it looks like you'll live, but you'd better be careful over the next few hours. You should go home.'
'I don't think I can,' Karen said, wondering how she was going to manage the two buses home on her own.
'What about your husband?' Mike asked. 'Could you phone him and get him to pick you up?'
'No! It’s nothing,' said Karen. Disturbing Peter was the last thing she needed. It would only give him more fuel to the argument of her giving up the job. 'I'll be alright in a while,' she went on. 'Just let me sit quietly for a bit.'
'Well you'd better stay in the office then,' Mike agreed. 'Put your feet up on the coffee table and rest until you feel well enough to go home.
'I'll get you a cup of tea,' suggested Dorothy, always ready with the answer to all ills.
'Thanks Dorothy.' Karen smiled.
Karen sat and pondered on the morning's events. Her heart was racing and she felt an excitement bubbling. 'It must be the adrenaline rush,' she thought, realising that she liked the feeling. Not knowing what each day would bring, living on the edge, in constant danger. She knew she could never give it up.

Karen was still in the office an hour later when the door opened and John pushed his way into the room.
'Hello, Karen,' he began. 'Oh my God, are you alright?' He sat on the chair beside her and took her hand. 'You look awful.'
'I'm alright,' Karen insisted.
'That bloody Kathy! She's so unpredictable - they should sort out her medication.’
'She had some Largactil. She's sleeping it off now.' Karen looked at the floor.
'I mean, something to stop her kicking off in the first place.' He stood up.
'I should have been ready for her.' Karen was embarrassed. 'Everyone kept warning me about her.'
'But she's been alright for the past couple of months.' He was looking through the glass window into the ward. 'You just don't expect it when it happens. It's not your fault.' He turned and smiled at Karen.
'What are you doing here, anyway?' Karen changed the subject.
'Mike rang and asked me to work - so you could go home.'
'Thanks. But I'll be alright.'
'Yeah, but you might as well get home,' he said. 'No point in staying here if you don't have to.'
'What exactly is wrong with her?' Karen asked.
'Kathy? Haven't you read her notes?' John asked. 'She's a schizophrenic. When she came in she was violently mad. She tried to throttle her husband and she used to cut herself all the time.'
Karen remembered the scars criss-crossing Kathy's arms. 'I don't understand really. What makes people like that?'
'It's an illness,' John said. 'Not much you can do about it, apart from taking strong sedatives. You know, like Largactil, or Melleril. And now there’s depot drugs like Modicate. They're supposed to stop the voices,' he added.
Karen shuddered.
'Does Kathy hear voices?'
'Haven't you heard her talking to them?'
'I've seen her talking to herself,' Karen said. 'Doesn't everyone?'
'She's not talking to herself,' he replied. 'Just listen next time.'
'Is it like being depressed?' Karen asked.
'Nothing like it,' John said. 'Mostly you can cure depression, but you can't cure schizophrenia. You just damp it down.' He laughed.
'What's so funny?' Karen asked.
'Nothing. Sorry.' John paused. 'They used to do leucotomies on patients to try and cure them when they were really mad in the old days. Some of our worst patients are ones where it went wrong.'
'What the hell is a leucotomy?' Karen had heard the word before, but had no idea what it meant.
'They cut into the brain, hoping to stop violent behaviour and to make them normal again. It’s a bit hit and miss and when it goes wrong you end up with people like Gloria who have nothing left. They're just like animals.' He sighed. 'Then we have to teach them how to do everything, like washing, dressing, using knives and forks. They're totally brain-damaged. You’ll learn all about it in training.'
'I'm glad they don't do that anymore,' Karen said. 'ECT was bad enough.'
'Oh, they do still use it at times,' John said. 'This bloke on Spencer Ward, he'd stuck an axe through his own head. Had loads of ECT after he recovered from the axe. Nothing worked, so they carted him off to do the leucotomy.'
'That’s awful.'
'But he got better,' John added. 'The last time I saw him, he was smiling and laughing. So it was a great success, apparently. Of course you have to remember that most of the women on this ward have been here for years, and surgery was much more hit and miss even only ten years ago.'
'I wouldn't want to have that done to me, even now,' Karen said.
'That won't happen to you.' He smiled. 'Are you feeling better now?'
'Much better, thanks.' She returned his smile. 'I haven't seen you for a while. How's things?'
'Great,' he answered. 'We should get together again sometime.'
'I'd like that,' Karen hesitated. 'Could we meet up tomorrow after the shift?'
'Sorry, can't do tomorrow. I'm off home for a few days.'
'Home?' Karen wondered. 'Where's that?'
'My parents live in Southampton. I'm meeting up with some of my old mates. It's a twenty-first birthday party. Sorry.'
'Don't worry.' Karen felt the smile fix on her face whilst her heart sank a little.
'Yeah, well, I'd better get on with some work.' John opened the door. 'Take care of yourself.'
He was half way down the ward before Karen's heart stopped its loud thumping. She had a slightly hollow feeing inside as she realised that John had just let her down gently. 'What an idiot,' she told herself. What to her had been a special moment was probably just another fling to him. Linda had warned her not to take anything too seriously but she'd thought she knew better. Her head was spinning with a muddle of thoughts as she walked to the staff locker room and gathered her bag.
'You off then?' Mike popped his head around the open door.
'I think I need to get home if that's alright.' She swallowed down her disappointment and glanced up at him. 'I'm feeling better now.'
'Take time off tomorrow,' said Mike. 'Those bruises will be coming out by then.'
'Thanks.' She pulled on her jacket, took up her bag and walked to the ward door. Linda came out of the kitchen wheeling a trolley just as she reached the door.
'You alright now?' Linda stopped to talk to Karen.
'I'm fine,' Karen assured her. 'Thanks for taking care of me earlier. You're a good friend.'
'As long as you're alright. Have you spoken to John?' Linda asked. 'I saw him coming out of the office.'
'We had a bit of a chat,' Karen blushed. 'I don't think anything will come of that.'
'It's probably just as well. He's lovely, but doesn't take anything seriously.'
'Anyway, I'm married,' said Karen. 'I've just got to get on with it, haven't I?'
She unlocked the door and turned back to Linda. 'See you in a couple of days. Mike's given me tomorrow off.'
'Take care,' said Linda.
'I always do. See you later.' The door slammed behind Karen and she limped down the stairs, flinching with pain as each step jolted her still sore ribs.







yet.'