THE FIRST IS THE WORST
When Tim Thorn first entered Bragg Crater
Hospital 's
antiseptic-smelling room it had appeared to be quite spacious. Yet now, after he had paced from bulkhead to
bulkhead for what seemed like an age, it felt unbearably close, almost
claustrophobic. The sealed windows that
offered panoramic views of the moonscape palled very quickly and were of little
help.
He crushed
his twentieth cigarette into the ashtray provided alongside the long low
polyglass bench.
Anderson,
the only other occupant, eyed the dispenser. He seemed to be continually
chewing something. 'Thoughtful of them, don't you think, providing cigarettes?'
Tim grunted
affirmatively and resumed his pacing. His fingers fumbled with his jacket's
Velcro fastening; finally, it peeled crisply away from his throat. He wiped his
moist neck with a dispenser-issued paper handkerchief, then thrust the soiled
thing in the disposal chute. The orifice emitted an asthmatic sigh.
'I guess
this is your first, eh?' Anderson
sallied, chuckling as he leaned back on the bench. Like the rest of him, his cheeks were
bloated; the incessant munching sound carried to Tim's ears and grew more and
more irritating.
'Yes, our
first. It takes two to make a baby, so
it's not only mine, but hers - Karen's - ours - '
'No need to
get so edgy, feller, I've been through the same waiting game before.'
'What's
keeping them, anyway?' He sullenly eyed the airlock door. MATERNITY THEATRE
said the large red stencils: they glowed, indicating occupation. The theatre
door stayed shut.
'But the
Edict - one child per family, how'd - ?'
'Early
settlers, lad,' Anderson
explained, patting Tim's thigh. 'The Edict was introduced only after Phase
Three Settlement was established. You're Phase Six, aren't you?'
'Yes...'
Tim looked puzzled, head to one side.
'Earlier, did you say your wife was in labour ten hours?' He stood up,
paced the floor yet again. He absently registered Anderson 's nod. He held the image of Karen
lying there, the mound of belly they had both created. 'But the doctors had
said it would be painless, they assured me - us, I mean. But she's been gone -
been in there - three hours already!' He balled his fists, impotently thumped
the utilitarian magazine table. 'Why did they insist on me staying outside?'
'Moon-base
regulations,' Anderson
shrugged. 'Mind you, I've never particularly fancied being there, actually
there when it happens... 's enough to put you off for life, eh?'
'They never
mentioned this at the colony recruitment centre. Back on Earth - I - I'd be
with her now, holding her hand, giving her support, sharing the experience...'
'Don't
worry none, it's a damned sight easier having a kid up here. Something to do
with the one-sixth gravity, they reckon.'
Tim
withdrew another cigarette from the dispenser.
Anderson
seemed to go on and on, damn him!
Wouldn't he ever stop? He rasped
a match on the box, a memento from an Olde English nite-club in Apollo Crater:
it snapped. He struck a second, sucked in the calming smoke, and resumed his
metronomic tread.
He couldn't
help but answer: 'In what way?'
Tim turned
away, but Anderson
was insensitive to any cold shoulder treatment. 'Sometimes,' Anderson went on,
'I wonder if any space radiation we don't know of might get at us, even get
through the shields, through to our genes. My wife gets nasty when I think up
these silly ideas. Well, I mean, I suppose they are silly, really...'
Tim, as
though sleepwalking, nodded.
'What do
you want - a boy or a girl?'
What a
bloody cliché! Face suffused now, Tim
swerved round. He could sense his temple's prominent vein throbbing
insistently. 'I don't care what it is - as long as it's healthy!' he answered,
somewhat vehemently.
At that
moment the airlock hissed and the theatre door slid up into the roof.
Wearing a
shiny white trouser-suit, an attractive blonde nurse entered, her face drained,
ashen. She seemed to be in shock, falteringly seeking support against the
airlock frame.
'My
missus!' Anderson
cried, jumping up, his feet unsteady. 'Is she - ?'
The nurse
seemed to collect herself, shook her head, swallowed. 'No, it's Mr. Thorn...'
Tim's heart
pounded, gave a foreboding lurch. He
wanted to ask, but his throat and chest seemed dry, constricted. He paled.
'Your
wife's all right, Mr. Thorn,' she barely croaked.
Relief
surged, strengthened his legs and filled his face; then, jarringly, panic twisted
his mouth, clouded his eyes: 'The baby?'
'It - it
isn't a baby... I - I don't know what it is... but it's healthy...'
***
Previously published in Death
Rays magazine, 1981; a rewrite was also published as ‘Pregnant Pause’ in Costa TV Times, 2010. Copyright Nik Morton, 2014.
As you can see, the cliché about an expectant father smoking to ease his nerves is no longer viable in drama. Who could have envisaged in 1981 that smoking would be banned from all hospitals and offices? The later version has all mention of cigarettes expunged!
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