The first thing I remembered was not my name.
It was dust. For My Ashes While I Was Still Alive”,
“WEB_ARTICLE”: “The first thing I remembered was not my name.
It was dust.

Concrete dust sat thick onn
Concrete dust sat thick on my tongue, bitter and dry my tongue, bitter and dry, while something plastic pressed down my throat and, while something plastic pressed down my throat and a machine kept counting my a machine kept counting my life in small, stubborn beeps.
I could not open my eyes properly life in small, stubborn beeps.
I could not open my eyes properly.
I could not move my head.
Every part of me.
I could not move my head.
Every part of me seemed to belong to someone else, someone broken and pinned beneath seemed to belong to someone else, someone broken and pinned beneath a body I only half a body I only half recognised.
Voices moved around me in fragments recognised.
Voices moved around me in fragments.
“Pressure’s falling.”
“Stay with us, Ms Parker.”
“Blood now.”.
“Pressure’s falling.”
“Stay with us, Ms Parker.”
“Blood now.”
Then the blackness dragged me under again.
Later, a surgeonn
Then the blackness dragged me under again.
Later, a surgeon told me my heart had stopped twice.
He said it kindly, as if kindness told me my heart had stopped twice.
He said it kindly, as if kindness could soften a sentence like that.
The steel had come down during an inspection, folding in on could soften a sentence like that.
The steel had come down during an inspection, folding in on itself with a sound that no human body should be close enough to hear. itself with a sound that no human body should be close enough to hear.
I remembered a scream of metal.
I remembered falling.
I remembered a flashn
I remembered a scream of metal.
I remembered falling.
I remembered a flash so white it did not feel like pain until so white it did not feel like pain until afterwards.
Then nothing.
My name was Nora afterwards.
Then nothing.
My name was Nora Parker.
I was thirty-two years old, and for six Parker.
I was thirty-two years old, and for six years I had been the responsible daughter in a family that treated responsibility like a weakness they years I had been the responsible daughter in a family that treated responsibility like a weakness they could keep spending.
I paid my own rent.
I answered Mum’s calls could keep spending.
I paid my own rent.
I answered Mum’s calls when she rang at nearly midnight because Lily had upset when she rang at nearly midnight because Lily had upset her again.
I helped Dad when his car failed.
I lent money her again.
I helped Dad when his car failed.
I lent money I could not spare and accepted apologies I could not spare and accepted apologies that were never really apologies.
My sister Lily had always been the one everyone protected. that were never really apologies.
My sister Lily had always been the one everyone protected.
If she cried, the room rearrn
If she cried, the room rearranged itself around her.
If she lied, people calledanged itself around her.
If she lied, people called it stress.
If she hurt me, Mum said, “You know it stress.
If she hurt me, Mum said, “You know what she’s like,” as though that what she’s like,” as though that was not a warning but a family rule.
I had one was not a warning but a family rule.
I had one private place in the world, and it was my flat.
Small private place in the world, and it was my flat.
Small hallway, bad water pressure, a kettle that ratt hallway, bad water pressure, a kettle that rattled when it boiled, and a bedroom wardrobe where I kept my grandmother’s cedar jewelleryled when it boiled, and a bedroom wardrobe where I kept my grandmother’s cedar jewellery box on the top shelf.
My grandmother had given it to me before she box on the top shelf.
My grandmother had given it to me before she died.
She had put both hands over mine and said, “You do died.
She had put both hands over mine and said, “You do not have to keep giving pieces of yourself away to be not have to keep giving pieces of yourself away to be loved.”
That box was not worth much to loved.”
That box was not worth much to anyone who measured things properly.
To me, it anyone who measured things properly.
To me, it was proof that at was proof that at least one person in my family had seen me clearly.
So I kept it safe least one person in my family had seen me clearly.
So I kept it safe.
Or I thought I had.
When I finally woke.
Or I thought I had.
When I finally woke for longer than a few seconds, the room was too for longer than a few seconds, the room was too bright.
The light felt flat and hard, the sort bright.
The light felt flat and hard, the sort that shows every mark on the that shows every mark on the wall and every bruise on your skin.
The air smelt of disinfectant, warm plastic and coffee that wall and every bruise on your skin.
The air smelt of disinfectant, warm plastic and coffee that had sat too long in a paper cup.
A nurse sat beside me, writing on a clipboard.
Her badge had sat too long in a paper cup.
A nurse sat beside me, writing on a clipboard.
Her badge said Maria.
“You gave everyone a fright said Maria.
“You gave everyone a fright,” she said softly.
My throat scraped when I tried to speak.
“My,” she said softly.
My throat scraped when I tried to speak.
“My phone.”
She looked at me for a moment before answering.
“Tell me your name first.”
“Nora Parker phone.”
She looked at me for a moment before answering.
“Tell me your name first.”
“Nora Parker.”
“Where are you?”
“Hospital.”
She nodded, but the smile she gave me did.”
“Where are you?”
“Hospital.”
She nodded, but the smile she gave me did not reach her eyes.
I looked past her towards the door.
No Mum.
No Dad.
No Lily.
not reach her eyes.
I looked past her towards the door.
No Mum.
No Dad.
No Lily.
There was only a peace lily on the windowsill in a plastic pot, the cheap bow around itThere was only a peace lily on the windowsill in a plastic pot, the cheap bow around it twisted sideways.
“Who came?” I asked.
Maria’s pen stopped moving twisted sideways.
“Who came?” I asked.
Maria’s pen stopped moving.
“Your downstairs neighbour,” she said. “Frank. He brought the plant. He has been checking in every day.”
Frank from downstairs.
“Your downstairs neighbour,” she said. “Frank. He brought the plant. He has been checking in every day.”
Frank from downstairs had once helped me carry bottled water up the stairs when the lift stopped working.
He had held the had once helped me carry bottled water up the stairs when the lift stopped working.
He had held the front door for me when my arms were full.
He had taken front door for me when my arms were full.
He had taken in one parcel and returned it unopened in one parcel and returned it unopened.
He was not family.
He was simply decent.
That distinction sounds small until your life depends on it.
“Anyone else?” I asked.
Maria looked.
He was not family.
He was simply decent.
That distinction sounds small until your life depends on it.
“Anyone else?” I asked.
Maria looked at the monitor before she looked back at me.
“We called your emergency contact.” at the monitor before she looked back at me.
“We called your emergency contact.”
“Lily.”
“Yes.”
“What did she say?”
Marian
“Lily.”
“Yes.”
“What did she say?”
Maria’s face changed in the careful way people use when they are deciding how much truth an’s face changed in the careful way people use when they are deciding how much truth an injured person can carry.
“She said, ‘She’s not our problem anymore. Don’t call back.’”
For a few injured person can carry.
“She said, ‘She’s not our problem anymore. Don’t call back.’”
For a few seconds, I did not feel anything.
Then I felt something worse than shock.
Recognition seconds, I did not feel anything.
Then I felt something worse than shock.
Recognition.
There is a special cruelty in being useful to people who resent the fact that you survived needing.
There is a special cruelty in being useful to people who resent the fact that you survived needing them.
They do not hate you because you failed them.
They hate you because you kept standing without them.
They do not hate you because you failed them.
They hate you because you kept standing without asking their permission.
Maria put her hand lightly over mine.
“The trauma team asking their permission.
Maria put her hand lightly over mine.
“The trauma team did not wait for family permission,” she said. “That is why you are here.”
I turned my face towards did not wait for family permission,” she said. “That is why you are here.”
I turned my face towards the window and cried without sound because my ribs could not cope with anything the window and cried without sound because my ribs could not cope with anything louder.
The sky outside was grey and low.
Rain blurred louder.
The sky outside was grey and low.
Rain blurred the glass in thin lines, and somewhere beyond the door the glass in thin lines, and somewhere beyond the door a trolley squeaked along the corridor.
For two days, my family had not come a trolley squeaked along the corridor.
For two days, my family had not come.
For two days, Frank had.
That should have.
For two days, Frank had.
That should have told me enough.
It did not tell me told me enough.
It did not tell me everything.
Three days later, Maria brought my phone in a clear plastic hospital bag.
The screen had cracked across one corner.
Concrete dust still everything.
Three days later, Maria brought my phone in a clear plastic hospital bag.
The screen had cracked across one corner.
Concrete dust still sat in the seam of the case.
I had to hold it with both hands because my fingers trembled so sat in the seam of the case.
I had to hold it with both hands because my fingers trembled so badly.
The first thing that loaded was not a missed call from badly.
The first thing that loaded was not a missed call from my mother.
It was not a message from Dad.
It was not Lily pretending to care now that she had calmed down.
It was a fundraiser.
My face my mother.
It was not a message from Dad.
It was not Lily pretending to care now that she had calmed down.
It was a fundraiser.
My face stared back at me from a Christmas photo taken two years earlier.
A black ribbon sat beside my stared back at me from a Christmas photo taken two years earlier.
A black ribbon sat beside my name.
The headline said they were raising money to bring me home with dignity.
Raised so far: £8,740.
For name.
The headline said they were raising money to bring me home with dignity.
Raised so far: £8,740.
For a moment, my brain refused to make sense of the number.
Then I read the caption. a moment, my brain refused to make sense of the number.
Then I read the caption.
Mum had written that my remains were expected to be released soon.
Dad had written that no parent should have to bury an
Mum had written that my remains were expected to be released soon.
Dad had written that no parent should have to bury a child.
Lily had commented that I had always been private, so the family were handling arrangements quietly.
Quietly.
That child.
Lily had commented that I had always been private, so the family were handling arrangements quietly.
Quietly.
That word opened something cold inside word opened something cold inside me.
Quietly, while I was alive.
Quietly, while a machine me.
Quietly, while I was alive.
Quietly, while a machine helped me breathe.
Quietly, while strangers gave money for ashes helped me breathe.
Quietly, while strangers gave money for ashes that did not exist.
I tried to sit up and that did not exist.
I tried to sit up and pain tore across my ribs so sharply pain tore across my ribs so sharply Maria had to press Maria had to press a hand to my shoulder.
“Easy,” she said.
But there a hand to my shoulder.
“Easy,” she said.
But there was no easy left.
Then a message appeared from Frank.
Nora, I am was no easy left.
Then a message appeared from Frank.
Nora, I am so sorry.
Your parents were in your flat yesterday.
They said the building manager let them in because you were gone.
They carried boxes so sorry.
Your parents were in your flat yesterday.
They said the building manager let them in because you were gone.
They carried boxes out.
The photos came through one by one.
My front out.
The photos came through one by one.
My front door open.
My narrow hallway with the coats still door open.
My narrow hallway with the coats still hanging where I had left them.
Mum holding my blue storage tote.
Dad walking out with my grandmother’s cedar jewellery box tucked under his hanging where I had left them.
Mum holding my blue storage tote.
Dad walking out with my grandmother’s cedar jewellery box tucked under his arm.
Lily standing in my kitchen with my laptop bag.
The kettle was visible behind arm.
Lily standing in my kitchen with my laptop bag.
The kettle was visible behind her on the counter.
My tea mug was still beside her on the counter.
My tea mug was still beside the sink.
Everything looked ordinary, and that the sink.
Everything looked ordinary, and that made it worse.
Not smashed glass.
Not chaos.
A tidy little theft wearing the clothes of mourning made it worse.
Not smashed glass.
Not chaos.
A tidy little theft wearing the clothes of mourning.
I stared at Dad carrying that jewellery box until my eyes.
I stared at Dad carrying that jewellery box until my eyes blurred.
They had not believed I was dead in the way grief believes. blurred.
They had not believed I was dead in the way grief believes.
They had treated my death like access.
An emptyn
They had treated my death like access.
An empty flat.
A useful story.
A window before anyone could ask flat.
A useful story.
A window before anyone could ask questions.
I asked Maria for a pen.
She hesitated, then gave me questions.
I asked Maria for a pen.
She hesitated, then gave me one.
My hand shook too much to write at first, so she held the clipboard steady while one.
My hand shook too much to write at first, so she held the clipboard steady while I forced the words down.
Hospital chart number.
Fundraiser link.
Unit 5D.
Then I asked her I forced the words down.
Hospital chart number.
Fundraiser link.
Unit 5D.
Then I asked her to help me ring Frank.
When he answered, I could hear traffic to help me ring Frank.
When he answered, I could hear traffic behind him and the hollow echo of the stairwell.
“Nora?” he said.
“I’m alive,” I whispered.
The silence that followed was not empty.
It was behind him and the hollow echo of the stairwell.
“Nora?” he said.
“I’m alive,” I whispered.
The silence that followed was not empty.
It was full of the shock my own family had refused to feel.
Then Frank said, “Thank God.”
He told me everything carefully.
full of the shock my own family had refused to feel.
Then Frank said, “Thank God.”
He told me everything carefully.
My parents had arrived with Lily.
They had told the building manager they needed to collect belongings for cremation arrangements.
They had carried out boxes, opened drawers, emptied part
My parents had arrived with Lily.
They had told the building manager they needed to collect belongings for cremation arrangements.
They had carried out boxes, opened drawers, emptied part of the wardrobe and unplugged my work laptop.
Frank said his wife had watched from of the wardrobe and unplugged my work laptop.
Frank said his wife had watched from their doorway and said it did not look right.
“She their doorway and said it did not look right.
“She said your mum wasn’t crying,” he told me. “None of them were.”
I closed my eyes.
The beeping monitor did not care about betrayal.
The IV pump clicked on.
A nurse laughed softly somewhere down the corridor, then stopped as a door opened.
The world kept moving because that is what the world does, even when yours has split down the middle.
I asked Frank why he had taken photos.
He sounded embarrassed.
“Your grandmother’s box,” said your mum wasn’t crying,” he told me. “None of them were.”
I closed my eyes.
The beeping monitor did not care about betrayal.
The IV pump clicked on.
A nurse laughed softly somewhere down the corridor, then stopped as a door opened.
The world kept moving because that is what the world does, even when yours has split down the middle.
I asked Frank why he had taken photos.
He sounded embarrassed.
“Your grandmother’s box,” he said. “I remembered you carrying it in when you moved. You were careful with it. When I saw your dad with he said. “I remembered you carrying it in when you moved. You were careful with it. When I saw your dad with it, I thought, no, that is not right.”
That nearly broke me more than the it, I thought, no, that is not right.”
That nearly broke me more than the theft.
A neighbour had noticed what theft.
A neighbour had noticed what my family had never valued.
A stranger my family had never valued.
A stranger by blood had protected the one thing they by blood had protected the one thing they thought they could quietly take.
I thanked him, but the word came out too thought they could quietly take.
I thanked him, but the word came out too small.
He cleared his throat.
“There is something else.”
The room seemed to narrow small.
He cleared his throat.
“There is something else.”
The room seemed to narrow.
“What?”
“Before they left, Lily.
“What?”
“Before they left, Lily made a phone call in the hallway. I only caught part of it.”
Maria looked up from made a phone call in the hallway. I only caught part of it.”
Maria looked up from the clipboard.
My fingers tightened round the phone.
“What did she say?”
Frank lowered his voice.
“She said, ‘Don’t worry. If Nora wakes up, she’ll never know who signed it.’”
The words seemed to remove the air from the room.
For one wild second, I thought he must have mis the clipboard.
My fingers tightened round the phone.
“What did she say?”
Frank lowered his voice.
“She said, ‘Don’t worry. If Nora wakes up, she’ll never know who signed it.’”
The words seemed to remove the air from the room.
For one wild second, I thought he must have misheard.
Then the fear found its shape.
There was only one document in my life important enough for Lily to talkheard.
Then the fear found its shape.
There was only one document in my life important enough for Lily to talk about like that.
It was not the fundraiser.
It was not the flat.
It was something private, something I about like that.
It was not the fundraiser.
It was not the flat.
It was something private, something I had arranged precisely because I did not trust my family to behave like had arranged precisely because I did not trust my family to behave like family in a crisis.
I had made arrangements years family in a crisis.
I had made arrangements years earlier, after one of Mum’s screaming rows earlier, after one of Mum’s screaming rows and one of Lily’s financial emergencies.
I had paid a solicitor and one of Lily’s financial emergencies.
I had paid a solicitor to draw up instructions.
I had named who could to draw up instructions.
I had named who could speak for me if I could not speak.
I had decided where speak for me if I could not speak.
I had decided where certain belongings went.
I had been certain belongings went.
I had been careful.
I had been so careful.
I had been so careful.
Now Lily had used the word signed.
Maria must have seen careful.
Now Lily had used the word signed.
Maria must have seen something in my face, because she sat forward.
“Nora, what is it?”
“My something in my face, because she sat forward.
“Nora, what is it?”
“My file,” I said.
“What file?”
I could barely get file,” I said.
“What file?”
I could barely get the words out.
“The one they should never have been the words out.
“The one they should never have been able to touch.”
The hospital room seemed suddenly too ordinary for what was able to touch.”
The hospital room seemed suddenly too ordinary for what was happening.
There was a tea mug gone cold on the side table, hospital papers slipping happening.
There was a tea mug gone cold on the side table, hospital papers slipping from the clipboard, rain from the clipboard, rain tapping the window and my own pulse making the monitor hurry tapping the window and my own pulse making the monitor hurry.
I had fallen under steel and woken to.
I had fallen under steel and woken to find my family building a find my family building a second collapse around me. second collapse around me.
Only this time, I was awake.
I asked Maria to help me maken
Only this time, I was awake.
I asked Maria to help me make another call.
She did not ask whether I was sure.
She simply another call.
She did not ask whether I was sure.
She simply held the phone where I could reach it and steadied the clipboard under my hand.
The line rang once.
Then twice.
A woman answered in a professional voice, the kind that usually held the phone where I could reach it and steadied the clipboard under my hand.
The line rang once.
Then twice.
A woman answered in a professional voice, the kind that usually makes everything sound manageable.
I gave my name.
I makes everything sound manageable.
I gave my name.
I gave my date of birth.
I gave the reference I still remembered because gave my date of birth.
I gave the reference I still remembered because I had written it in the back of an I had written it in the back of an old diary and in old diary and in the notes app of my phone.
There was typing.
Then silence.
the notes app of my phone.
There was typing.
Then silence.
Not the normal pause of someone searching.
The other kind.
Not the normal pause of someone searching.
The other kind.
The pause that tells you the person on
The pause that tells you the person on the line has found exactly what you were the line has found exactly what you were afraid of.
“Ms Parker,” she said at last afraid of.
“Ms Parker,” she said at last, very carefully, “are you currently able, very carefully, “are you currently able to speak privately?”
Maria to speak privately?”
Maria’s eyes met mine.
I swallowed, and the rawness in my throat made my vision flicker.
“Yes’s eyes met mine.
I swallowed, and the rawness in my throat made my vision flicker.
“Yes,” I whispered.
The woman on the line breathed in.,” I whispered.
The woman on the line breathed in.
“Before I say anything further, I need you to understand that ann
“Before I say anything further, I need you to understand that an instruction was submitted yesterday morning.”
Submitted.
Yesterday.
While I was in ICU.
My family had been instruction was submitted yesterday morning.”
Submitted.
Yesterday.
While I was in ICU.
My family had been in my flat, raising money for my ashes, carrying out my grandmother’s jewellery box, and someone had also sent in paperwork.
My paperwork in my flat, raising money for my ashes, carrying out my grandmother’s jewellery box, and.
“Who submitted it?” I asked.
“I cannot someone had also sent in paperwork.
My paperwork.
“Who submitted it?” I asked.
“I cannot confirm that until we verify a few more details,” she said, confirm that until we verify a few more details,” she said, but her voice had gone thin.
That was answer enough.
I looked down but her voice had gone thin.
That was answer enough.
I looked down at my hands.
One had bruises across at my hands.
One had bruises across the knuckles.
The other was taped to a the knuckles.
The other was taped to a line keeping fluid moving into my body.
I was weak enough that I could not reach the water jug without help.
Yet beneath line keeping fluid moving into my body.
I was weak enough that I could not reach the water jug without help.
Yet beneath the weakness, something had begun to stand up.
Not rage the weakness, something had begun to stand up.
Not rage exactly.
Rage was too loud, too wasteful.
This was colder exactly.
Rage was too loud, too wasteful.
This was colder.
This was the part of me my grandmother had tried.
This was the part of me my grandmother had tried to save before my family trained me to call it selfish.
The woman asked to save before my family trained me to call it selfish.
The woman asked me security questions.
I answered them slowly.
Date me security questions.
I answered them slowly.
Date of birth.
Address.
A payment detail.
The name of the person I had originally authorised.
Every correct answer of birth.
Address.
A payment detail.
The name of the person I had originally authorised.
Every correct answer changed her tone.
By the time she finished changed her tone.
By the time she finished, she was no longer speaking to me like a patient.
She was speaking to me like someone who had just, she was no longer speaking to me like a patient.
She was speaking to me like someone who had just found evidence.
“Ms Parker,” she said, “I need to advise you found evidence.
“Ms Parker,” she said, “I need to advise you not to discuss this with any relative until we have taken not to discuss this with any relative until we have taken further steps.”
A sound came out of me that further steps.”
A sound came out of me that might have been a laugh if my ribs had allowed it.
“My relatives might have been a laugh if my ribs had allowed it.
“My relatives think I’m dead.”
Maria looked away think I’m dead.”
Maria looked away for a second.
Frank, still connected on the other line, whispered, “Nora?”
I had forgotten he for a second.
Frank, still connected on the other line, whispered, “Nora?”
I had forgotten he was there.
Then came a was there.
Then came a knock at the ICU door.
Three taps.
Soft.
Polite.
Almost knock at the ICU door.
Three taps.
Soft.
Polite.
Almost apologetic.
Maria turned first.
Through the narrow window apologetic.
Maria turned first.
Through the narrow window in the door, I saw my mother standing in the corridor.
Her hair was damp from in the door, I saw my mother standing in the corridor.
Her hair was damp from the rain, and she had a handbag pressed tight against her coat.
She did the rain, and she had a handbag pressed tight against her coat.
She did not look like a woman grieving.
She looked like a woman who not look like a woman grieving.
She looked like a woman who had arrived to manage a problem.
Behind her stood Dad, pale and stiff had arrived to manage a problem.
Behind her stood Dad, pale and stiff, his mouth set in the same hard, his mouth set in the same hard line he used whenever he wanted everyone else line he used whenever he wanted everyone else to feel to feel unreasonable.
And then Lily stepped into view.
She was holding my grandmother’s cedar jewellery box.
Not unreasonable.
And then Lily stepped into view.
She was holding my grandmother’s cedar jewellery box.
Not hidden now.
Not tucked away.
Held against hidden now.
Not tucked away.
Held against her chest as if it already belonged to her.
The woman on the phone was her chest as if it already belonged to her.
The woman on the phone was still speaking, but her words blurred beneath the sudden pounding still speaking, but her words blurred beneath the sudden pounding of my heart monitor.
Maria moved towards of my heart monitor.
Maria moved towards the door and stopped before opening it.
“Nora,” she said quietly, “do the door and stopped before opening it.
“Nora,” she said quietly, “do you want them in?”
For the first time in my life, that question did not feel like a request. you want them in?”
For the first time in my life, that question did not feel like a request.
It felt like a key.
Mum saw me through the glassn
It felt like a key.
Mum saw me through the glass.
Her face changed.
Not with joy.
Her face changed.
Not with joy.
Not even relief.
Fear.
Pure, startled.
Not even relief.
Fear.
Pure, startled fear.
Because dead daughters do not answer fear.
Because dead daughters do not answer phones.
Dead daughters do not collect screenshots phones.
Dead daughters do not collect screenshots.
Dead daughters do not ask who signed the document.
Lily’s hand tightened on the cedar.
Dead daughters do not ask who signed the document.
Lily’s hand tightened on the cedar box.
The lid shifted slightly, and something box.
The lid shifted slightly, and something pale slipped between the gap, a folded paper edge pale slipped between the gap, a folded paper edge I had not placed there.
Maria saw it too I had not placed there.
Maria saw it too.
So did Frank through the phone, when I whispered what was.
So did Frank through the phone, when I whispered what was happening.
The corridor held its breath.
My happening.
The corridor held its breath.
My mother lifted one hand and mouthed something through the glass.
Sorry, maybe.
Or open.
For mother lifted one hand and mouthed something through the glass.
Sorry, maybe.
Or open.
For once, it did not matter.
I looked at Maria.
Then I looked at once, it did not matter.
I looked at Maria.
Then I looked at Lily, at the box in her arms, and at the paper caught beneath the lid.
And Lily, at the box in her arms, and at the paper caught beneath the lid.
And I said the first word that was truly mine since the steel came down.