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Death in Bettws

  Wed 19th November 2025

Transport that Fails -- incompetent to the last.

It was the funeral of my 22-year-old work colleague. She put her headphones on, then walked into a tunnel at night when she knew a train was coming.

I arrived at the church to find three people I used to work with, and a couple of other strangers; all of us wondering why no-one else was there. Guessing, D-- , my glamorous and curvy former roster clerk, took us to the other St Mark's church, but by the time we'd driven there we were only going to catch the last ten minutes; she made the welcome and sensible suggestion that we stop for a pint then go straight to the crem. We joked about how hilarious it would be if they'd given us details of the wrong crem as well as the wrong church.

It was the wrong crem.

We got back in the car and D-- drove us to the next nearest dispatch hub, where we caught the last ten minutes of the service, stood in the annexe as there were so many people there.

Then it was on to the kind of industrial estate where the gangsters of Gwent could arrange unfortunate accidents, at the back of which was the big flat-roofed social club where the wake was being held.

I felt a bit casually dressed in grey trousers and a rather corporate shirt with thin purple and white stripes. It was a solidly working-class Welsh funeral, most people in black; some men forcing themselves into suits and shirts they hadn't worn since they were leaner, but doing it defiantly, respectfully. In the foyer there were posters advertising the forthcoming turns.

It was packed; must have been over a hundred people. All that love for her, unable to beat down the locked door of her suicide-wish. We all went outside to watch her girlfriends let off dozens of pink helium balloons, many of which got amusingly tangled in the trees.

After about three hours my colleague suggested we leave. It was time to leave the people who were closer to her to have their own conversations. To my regret, I didn't say anything to the girl's mother, out of a possibly misplaced sense of thinking she might be a bit overwhelmed with people coming up to her with unsolicited remembrances. But seeing as I was working with her daughter, spending eight hours a day with just a few weeks ago, and have nothing but fond memories of her, I wish now I'd said something.

6 comments »

6 comments

Comment from: 63mago [Visitor]

22. Ach Herrgott …
Leaves one behind with nothing to say. What do you say to a mother who just buried her daughter, especially when the daughter took her own life ?

Mon 24th November 2025 @ 10:51 Reply to this comment
Comment from: looby [Visitor]

I could have just introduced myself and told her how much I enjoyed working with a loveable and interesting young woman. I *curse* myself for not having been able to produce a gentlemanly and considerate comment to the mother at the time.

Mon 24th November 2025 @ 11:35 Reply to this comment
Comment from: Sally G [Visitor]

It’s always difficult. It’s a terribly sad situation. Not too late to send her a card and let her know you remember her dear daughter with fondness.

Mon 24th November 2025 @ 19:09 Reply to this comment
Comment from: looby [Visitor]

That’d be nice but I don’t know her address. I have thought about doing some digging on it though, seeing as there’s a lot of info on farce book.

Mon 24th November 2025 @ 21:00 Reply to this comment
Comment from: 63mago [Visitor]

I am sure that everyone carries a list of missed chances nicely tucked away in a dark corner of the memory. I have such a list, and in bad sleepless nights it is opened, by whom or what I do not know. I usually use an image of a crate in a kind of bunker where I bury that goddamn list again, sometimes it works fast, sometimes not so.
If you are seriously interested in expressing your condolences / feelings - you know the name of the girl. There should be a “Traueranzeige", a notice in a local paper. Here even the stingiest papers have the obits free for all. There should be an address.
If you can not reach out, it simply is so ; accept the inevitable, another little scratch.

(Still today, after soon twenty years, I could rip my arse off that I did not speak at the grave of one of my eldest friends, who died in his forties.
I simply could not, the fucking speech is stored for ever in my head. Maybe I’ll visit his grave some day, and then.)

Fri 28th November 2025 @ 15:23 Reply to this comment
Comment from: looby [Visitor]

Yes, those kind of acts almost of cowardice, stay in, and prey on, your mind.

I think the moment for contacting the girl’s family is passed now; I’ll just have to try to be less of a wimp next time.

Mon 1st December 2025 @ 13:34 You are currently replying to this comment


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