Lying inside a 60ft narrowboat, trying to get comfortable on the sofa which transitions to something which looks, vaguely, with a good imagination, like a bed, but feels like a heap of lumpy bricks where you can fall down the gap between the 2 sofa cushions, I was trying to get to sleep. I'd more or less dozed off. My daughter, Robin was next to me as my other half had 'given up trying to sleep on the bloody thing' after the first night where he kept rolling downhill into me, giving me about a foot of space and various bits of his body parts warming my back during the night and Robin, being the kind soul she is, offered him her bed. She'd also picked up on my edginess after the last rites text of 2 days before.
1.48am, my phone rang.
Shit!
The darkness of the boat lit up with the Ski Sunday theme tune ring tone ringing loud and proud.
I knew!
It was the call everyone dreads and the call I'd been anticipation for over a year - when will it be? What will it say? Who will it come from? I was about to get those questions answered. 'HOSPITAL' my phone said - I'd programmed the number a year back as all calls from the whole hospital come from the same number.
I knew!
'Hello, I this Izabelle?' said a young, gentle, female voice.
'Yes' I said, scrambling to my knees on the bed to hear her better. Shit, shit, shit. Robin leaped up from her sleep to hug me. In the quiet of the boat she could hear everything. We hugged, we listened.
'It's the staff nurse from ward C7, I'm so sorry but Dad has just passed away!' She told me she was at the desk outside his solo ward, where he'd been for the past 3 days and she'd noticed his breathing had changed so she went in to see and 'he'd gone'.
Just like that, there he was - gone.
Shit!
What now? What're you supposed to do when you're 4 days from your car by boat and about 40 miles away by road, its 1.48am. Even if you were to get a taxi at that time I didn't know where to look for one or where to send it, or even if the marina where my car was would be open. Not only that but there was also a 3 hour drive home on top.
And he was already dead.
Robin and I went outside for some air - it seemed the right thing to do - we grabbed our quilts and sat on the front of the boat, in the pitch blackness of the English countryside night, with a million stars reflecting off the inky water. We sat, we hugged, we cried.
After just over two hours we went back inside and watched the dawn rise over the water through the window. It was a sunrise my dad wouldn't see. He'd never see any dawn ever again.
And there was nothing I could do.
And no-one I could tell. Ant had to be the first one I told. News as such travels fast so I couldn't risk telling anyone until Ant knew and he had told me many times he didn't want to be told in the middle of the night as he has difficulty sleeping.
I rang him at 7.30am. 'Hi Ant, How're you?'
'OK at the moment, until you've rung.' he said. He knew from the time I called.
'So sorry Ant, dad's gone.' my voice crumbled.
'Ah!' he said 'OK'. There was a short silence. 'I've finished cleaning the freezer now.'
And we moved on.
At 2.30 in the afternoon I developed a bit of a stomach ache, mild at first, but it wouldn't go away. Fifteen minutes later I was sending my daughter to get the bloke out of the bathroom as I need to use it FAST. I'm sure you don't want the details but I was firing on both cylinders D&V city. It was awful. I even lay on the boat bathroom floor which usually I avoid at all costs while my stomach decided which route it wanted to rid its contents. It chose both. The sweat was pouring off me and I felt bad.
I staggered out of the bathroom and collapsed on the bed. Robin found me and I said I thought I may need to see someone. I though at one point I was going to follow dad out of there. The thought that someone may have decided it was a good idea to have a joint funeral gave me the will to fight.
Robin called 111 and they decided to send an ambulance. This meant pulling the boat to somewhere identifiable so it knew where to go.
Meanwhile, I was sat on the loo. Boat toilets are vile at the very best, all the waste gets stored in the bottom of the boat in a tank, which usually needs draining every week or two depending on usage. The smell is vomit inducing and this one right then was worse than most. As I flushed again in an attempt to leave the room to lie down, it chose that moment to decide it was full and backed right up to the rim with a mixture of all the contents from the tank. Vile vile vile. Then as a gastro bug goes, I had to go again. Not having the strength to hover, and having no other option... I will not distress your imagination any more.
The Marina was amazing and let us moor up by the entrance, they sent word to the reception for when the ambo arrived and let us use the pump out device even though they were officially closed. Boat pump outs cost about £15 for a token for 8 minutes. Five minutes is usually enough to empty a tank but they give 8 to be sure.
The guy doing the pump was shocked how much flowed out. He said there was no way the boat had been emptied from the previous hirers. It was still emptying when the timer ran out at 8 minutes. That was OK though, current crisis averted and we only had a few days left anyway.
The ambulance came about an hour later - by now I had no idea of time. They took my stats and declared me 'in all probabilities not about to die', despite my fears. They said they wanted to take me in ideally, but it was probably not in the best interest of the seriously ill patients at the hospital as I was probably contagious. They left, telling me to drink flat Lucozade and lots of water. I stayed in bed. The family confined me to the one room and spoke to me from the other side of the door for 24 hours. They thought I had somehow ingested some food poisoning bug or maybe some canal water.
I felt like I'd lost an argument with a horse.
Great! Happy holidays all.
The day was somewhat subdued with my family giving me a wide berth, but all considered, it was a fairly normal day










