Next day she turned over what then happened: the men who'd been at the end of the hall
crouching over her, concerned by the mess of blood and glass that was her hand. It riveted her
too: the perpendicular embedded shards and the dark-red ribbons beginning to ooze. The way
they helped her to her feet; she remembers the prodding sensation of their fingers in her
armpits, the idiocy of her legs akimbo and exposing her pants as she tried to stand. It was her
hand that was the dramatic thing, and it wasn't until next morning that she understood that
she'd hit the base of the doorpost with her head.
She was brushing her hair in her own hallway mirror: it wasn't easy because as well as
damaging her hand and right knee she'd badly bruised her right shoulder. As the brush
touched the side of her head she realized that even though she had slept without noticing it,
her right ear was sore. She brought her hand up to feel her skull around it, and winced with
pain.
In the mirror her boyfriend floated up behind her, pale, the way mirrors can make you, the
slight asymmetry of his features reversed and exaggerated, the effect you get when you see
others reflected. A man whom women found attractive, whom some woman last night had
indeed found attractive, pulling him off to dance, which was where he'd been when she'd had
her fall. And she voiced her thoughts to his reflection in the mirror: that an inch to the right
and she'd have hit her head harder. She could have died.
And she turned to him, his real-life face, its asymmetry hardly visible, and it was obvious
that he thought she was being melodramatic well, he hadn't been there had he, he was
removed from the vivid, concrete experience but she didn't mind, because all that
concerned her was how lucky she was to have had that one inch, to be in life now when she
could be in death, and to make the most of it, not to fret about her boyfriend, not to let those
trivial, personal worries so distract her she could go spinning off into a fall. And, since really
it was the fault of the shoes she was wearing, never again to wear high heels.
looking back once to ask again Are you sure you're all right? before she disappeared around
the truck.
She stood up. She walked a little way and turned. The driver shot out of the betting shop
hardly any time to place a bet, she'd have thought and back into the cab.
Abandoning high heels had not saved her from falling. Losing her hesitancy hadn't saved her
from falling. Indeed, it was her determination that had sent her plummeting, and maybe even
the slippy soles of her trainers had made a contribution. What she needed after all was more
care.
When it happened the next time she was wearing small heels again, pink ones to go with her
dusky pink jacket, but she was being careful. It was a summer evening this time; she was
crossing the newly-paved square and looking to check that a tram wasn't coming. In the
direction she was looking the tram lines gleamed on a flat white plane of paving stones; she
didn't see that just where she was treading a kerb rose at an angle out of the flatness, and she
tripped.
Again this time she had no experience of the actual fall, but this time she seemed to hit the
ground softly, there was something easy about it, something she was now used to doing,
knew how to, she seemed to fall like an acrobat on her hands, and she felt nothing, not the
hardness of the paving, no pain, not until later when people rushed to help her, a young
woman and a young man with a rucksack on one shoulder and a half-eaten kebab in his
hand. Are you all right? they asked her, and the words echoed, a repetition, and then once
again as before pain pierced the curtain of consciousness and her ankle racked her. And the
thought came to her then that will never leave her now: that she was dreaming, is dreaming
those falls, dreaming a life out of which she keeps falling.
That maybe, after that first time, she lies on a hospital bed, unconscious and dreaming.
Or that maybe this happened: she fell in a wooden hallway, and by the time the men with
the canaps had reached her she had stopped breathing. And the party ended in disaster, blue
lights revolving, slicing and scattering the discreet glamour.
Or: the truck driver, abandoning his bet in the worry about parking, dashed out of the
betting shop, started up the engine and reversed to clear the low wall, right over the woman
prone on the pavement behind
Or maybe: the young man with the kebab watched as others tried to revive the woman in
the pink jacket lying on the square. They pumped her chest and gave her the kiss of life, but
though her eyes were wide open she wasn't breathing. She must have had a heart attack,
somebody may have been saying. And now her face was turning blue. The young man
dropped his kebab in horror. He had never seen a person die, and he didn't want to, he didn't
know if this was what he was seeing. He wondered if he was dreaming.