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A deafening hammering. A piercing drilling. Incessant,
irregular, and irritating, to say the least. It stopped and started, continued
for several minutes, and then, unexpectedly, there was a lull until it started
up again. It seemed like it would never end. And it was all coming from the
floor above her head.
She couldn’t begin to imagine what was happening up
there. Were they tearing down walls, or building new ones? Were they tiling or wiring
or installing or cementing or plastering or who knows what? What she did know
was that the work was loud, so very loud, and there was dust everywhere.
“Imma, you need to move out,” Shelly insisted. “There’s
no way you can stay in your house with all that construction work going on
overhead.
“I’m fine,” she insisted. “It won’t go on forever.”
“Are you wearing those earphones I gave you?” Benny
asked her. “Imma, you'll lose your hearing if you don’t take precautions!”
“I can hear just fine,” she replied, although there
were times when she could literally not hear herself think.
“Live somewhere else for the duration,” Shelly said.
“You can stay with me,” Benny said, although she wasn’t
sure he was sincere with his invitation.
“I’m not leaving my home. I refuse, even for this! I’ll
manage, Benny. I’ll survive, Shelly. After all, it’s an annoyance only part of
the day.”
Part of the day? It started at seven in the morning and
lasted until four in the afternoon. It didn’t help if she turned the radio up
to full volume. Occasionally she went outside, walked down the street, visited Esther
next door, but no matter where she went, the noise followed her, ringing in her
ears. Even at night, when the workers were long gone and their drills and
hammers were silent, she could still hear the pounding and the banging in her
head.
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“I’ll manage,” she tried to convince herself as she lay
in her bed. She knew Shelly and Benny had her best interests in mind when they
said she should be move out for the duration of the building, but she was
stubborn and insisted on staying. Maybe not moving out was a mistake, but she
would never admit it. They may be right, but she refused to be wrong. Still, thoughts
of how the mess of construction was interfering with her daily routine, along
with the constant ringing in her ears, kept her awake for long hours.
Read the rest of the story on New English Review.
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