The Face in the Window
“Good morning Edith” I said trying to be as cheerful
as I could be in a place like this. “Morning Derek, Dr Edwards
will be with you shortly.” I sat down and wondered what was
going on behind those closed doors, how many secrets does she know? I
feel like she holds tiny pieces of peoples souls and I don’t
know if I am comfortable with that. I breathe a sigh of relief as I
remember that this could potentially be my last session here, after
this I will be free to contain my inner thoughts if I so wished.
“Derek, morning! Come on through”.
I sit down in a chair that I have come to know so well over the
past couple of weeks, I have memorised every detail of every painting
on the walls and I know where every knickknack belongs on each shelf.
Some days it is easier to talk into the painting then to look into
her eyes and explain what happened. With a comforting smile she
begins “I know that you are aware that today is our last
prescribed session together, I do feel that there is a lot that we
still need to deal with. So today I would like you to take me back to
the beginning. I want you to work through every event on that day.
Let’s work through it slowly, try recall your feelings
throughout.”
Before I said a word I stood up and closed the blinds on the
window next to me and slowly sat down again. On the opposite wall
there is a painting that I don’t understand, it’s just
brush work and different colours splashed everywhere. It creates a
mesh of expensive lines. I look longingly at the painting and
strangely I know how the painting feels, the day I was about to
relive was a day full of Gods brush strokes of chaotic colours,
mainly red.
“It started as a normal day Doctor, I went through to work
as usual. As a fire fighter you always know that you may be faced
with extremely difficult and dangerous situations. I have been in
this job for years and that awareness of potential tragedy is always
there, but we must still approach every day with a sense of hope, a
sense of ‘this is just another day at the office and if I do
what I was trained to do, then I can help avoid tragedy’”
“Do you still believe that, Derek?”
Belief, what a concept, I brushed her question off. “The
department was particularly happy that day, we had our annual
fundraiser coming up and everyone was very excited. It’s our
chance to show off a bit and bring our family and friends in to
witness the good work we do. I remember sitting having my morning
coffee and thinking that my life feels balanced. I remember thinking
that work is hard but my colleagues are my family and this unit was
working well; my family life was strong and I felt stable. It’s
amazing how you can feel so balanced and stable until something
pushes you, pulls you, rocks your world and tears you apart.”
“At about 11h00 that morning a call came through, when I
heard the address I experienced the first crack in my world. It was
my block of flats, I went numb. My brain raced through everything,
what day was it? Where was my wife? Where were my children? Through
my panic I realised that it was Thursday, my wife was at work and my
children were at school but there was no time to phone them and warn
them, I had to just get there. In the organised chaos as we were
preparing to go, my chief instructed me that I need to stay at the
station, my emotional involvement would be dangerous for everyone.”
My focus shifted to the bookshelf, I couldn’t continue the
story. My eyes scanned the shelf, looking for a title that I
recognised, maybe if I find it I can change the topic. That wasn’t
going to work, the doctor quickly noticed my hesitation and asked
“How did you react to this instruction?”
“At first I was so angry, how dare he?! This was the one
fire that I should be at. This was my home, I needed to save it. I
was then overcome by a wave of panic and anxiousness. I felt like the
squad just had go quickly then, they needed to go and save my life. I
wanted to just shut my eyes and only open them when it was all over.
I made my way to the communications room and sat behind the radio
controller. If I couldn’t be there, I was still going to be
involved. I needed to know what was happening.”
“When the squad arrived at my block of flats the initial
report wasn’t promising. The fire had spread to the second
floor and access was not easy or safe for the team. Panic once again
gripped me, it took hold of every cell in my body. I was in over
drive, I was shaking and scared. My mind kept seeing my families’
faces, were they ok? Was I sure that they were not there? I paced
behind the radio controller, waiting for some news on civilians in
the building. The first report came through saying that 4 residents
had been safely evacuated from the first floor and the second was
busy being searched. I think I was holding my breath. The next report
sent a second crack through my core, the squad believed that there
were civilians on the second floor but the fire was too strong and it
was blocking all access points. A tear rolled down my face. For a
split second I was frozen. Then instinct kicked in and I grabbed my
gear and headed home. I had to be sure.”
I didn’t want to continue with the story, was it not enough
that I had to go through this in real life, why did I have to relive
it? So I stopped talking, I leant forward and faced the therapist.
For a moment we just looked at each other, I think she understood.
She pitied me. She changed the topic ever so slightly. It’s
like the break between rounds in a boxing match, a minute to breathe
before the next round of punches hits you in the face. She continued:
“Tell me why you became a fire fighter, is it something you can
do again?”
I relaxed in my chair, could I still do this? “I joined the
department for a few reasons, I had seen fire fighters in action
before and the adrenalin followed by the knowledge that people need
you and that you have the ability to help the community were two of
the main driving forces. At the end of the day I can go home and know
that I was visibly making a difference in the lives of people around
me, that’s why I did it. Is it something I can do again? Yes,
but now my reasons are different, now I just want to make sure that
no one else’s universes collapses around them like mine did.”
The doctor shifted in her chair and said: “then help me,
help you to do that again for people. Finish your story, you gathered
your gear and you were on your way home…” I interrupted
her and mustered my strength to finish what we had started. “Yes,
I was on my way home, I drove on automatic as I knew that route so
well. I have never driven so fast in my life but at the same time so
carefully. I only had one thing to do that day, my goal was to make
sure that my family was safe. As I arrived on the scene, I pulled my
safety gear on and ran towards the fire. I was stopped by my chief.
He wasn’t letting me near it. As tears rolled down my face I
asked him to fill me in then, were there in fact civilians on the
second floor? My floor, did he not understand, my home, my family. He
grabbed my shoulders and told me that yes, there were civilians on
the second floor. I shoved him to the ground, I had to get up there
and I had to see.”
My heart was racing now, my hands clenched tight and for the first
time in the weeks that I have been here I felt the tears roll down my
face. I had to tell her.
“I started running towards the building, I looked up at the
second floor and there it was, there was a face in the window.”
I broke down. My therapist knelt beside me, she took my hand and we
sat in a silence that was only interrupted by my sobbing.
I had my moment and once I had
stopped crying she moved back to her chair. I had to finish this…
“There was a face in the window, my heart stopped but my body
kept moving. I needed to get inside. I went through the door and into
a wall of smoke, into a warzone filled with flames and the screaming
of the building. As I approached the stairs another fire fighter
grabbed me and screamed “We have to go, we have to get out of
here!”; he pulled me back through that wall of smoke and out
the door and as we moved through the door, the bottom of the second
floor caved in.”
Our time
had run its course, she handed me a tissue and gently told me that
she is going to request more sessions. I stood to leave and said “the
face in the window is a face I will never forget. It was the face of
my son. He had come home early from school. I will always see that
face, in every window, in every flame and in every dream. I lost my
home, I lost my son, my will to live and my world. Being haunted has
nothing to do with spirits but with memories. His face, that
beautiful face in the window, will always haunt me”. As I
started walking out, I opened the blinds and I saw my son staring
back at me, I looked at him and I looked at my therapist and wished
them both farewell.
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