| illustration by Carole Declerck |
The old man entered the metro carriage with his cane. It was not very crowded at the moment, so he easily found a seat. Gilbert was now 81 years old. He had been lucky that all the escalators and lifts had worked as he made his way to the platform at the Gribaumont stop in Brussels. Sometimes they did not work, and then it was hard to get from point A to point B in the labyrinth of the Brussels metro’s underground network.
He always carried his cane when he decided to take public transport these days. Sometimes even the sidewalks were hard work. Now he found himself wondering whether he had switched off the gas in his apartment. He snapped out of that thought, knowing it would lead to other hypothetical worries. That would be a waste of time, he decided. So he brought his attention back to the people around him in the carriage.
It was funny, he thought as he looked around, no one looked at anyone anymore. Everyone was riveted to their telephones. During his youth, public transport had been full of people talking as they travelled. Now, the only people who spoke were the beggars who always seemed to be present whenever he travelled.
As he sat contemplating and looking around, the Indian woman in her forties sitting opposite him was watching him. She thought how admirable it was that this older gentleman was still moving about on public transport. She wondered if he lived alone, how he managed, and how in her home country older people usually had help to get things done. She looked at Gilbert again and was about to drift into thoughts about how sad and lonely his life might be when she suddenly saw him get up from his seat with surprising agility and move to his right, using his cane.
No one else had noticed, but a young boy with a school bag seemed to be choking. He had begun making strange sounds, and most people remained unaware. Nearly everyone on the metro had their earphones plugged in and were engrossed in their music or videos.
As the Indian woman began to panic on seeing the boy grow paler, she also noticed the older gentleman position himself behind the boy. He had actually registered the danger the moment the lollipop slipped off its stick and the boy swallowed it inadvertently. She had no idea that the man she had quietly pitied would be trained in first aid. He wrapped his arms around the boy’s waist, tipped him forward slightly, and performed the Heimlich maneuver, making a fist and using both arms to dislodge the piece of candy. It fell onto the floor near the feet of other passengers. That was when most people noticed that something had happened.
The boy, shaken, turned to look at his saviour. Just as the Indian woman, the boy, and a few others were about to speak to him, the old man picked up his cane from the floor and moved toward the door as the train pulled into the next station. He kept glancing back to make sure the boy was all right. There was a silent acknowledgment between them as he nodded gently and stepped out.
You can hear me hear this story on my podcast channel 'Lekha writes, then reads' on Apple or Spotify.
https://open.spotify.com/episode/5TRLuPjYIPpQZ9FTEq1IqT?si=_nLn-SrQSIaXceINTLUBXA
#fiction #shortstories #antiageism #ageism
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