In Brunswick during the 1950s, nobody ever locked their doors. Initially when I moved into my apartment, I always threw the latch. Until the woman who cleaned the place left me a note saying that I didn't need to maintain this security-conscious habit – as the last house robbery in town was around four years ago . . . and the guy was drunk at the time.
I hadn't locked my front door since then. Without question the fact that my door was left open that Saturday afternoon saved my life. Because, around three p.m., Jim showed up at my apartment and knocked on the door for five minutes. I didn't hear his persistent knocking, as I was unconscious at the time. Knowing I was unwell, he decided to enter the apartment. He kept calling out my name. He got no response. Then he entered my bedroom. As he later told me:
'I thought you were dead.'
Because he found me in a pool of blood.
The sheets were crimson, sodden. I was insensible. Jim couldn't get a word out of me. He dashed to the phone. He called an ambulance.
I briefly came round in the hospital. I was on a gurney, surrounded by doctors and nurses. I heard one of the doctors speaking to Jim.
'How long has your wife been pregnant?' he asked.
'She's pregnant?'
'Yes. Didn't you know . . . ?'
'She's not my wife.'
'What's her first name?'
'Sara.'
The doctor began to snap his fingers in front of my face. 'Sara, Sara . . . are you there? Can you hear me?' I managed to mutter three words: 'The baby is . . .' Then the world went dark again.
When it came back into focus, it was the middle of the night. I was alone in a small empty ward. I had drips and tubes in my arms. My vision was blurred. My head had been cleaved by an ax. But it was nothing compared to the pain in my abdomen. I felt splayed, eviscerated. My flesh was raw, on fire. I wanted to scream. I couldn't scream. My vocal cords appeared frozen. I fumbled for the call button dangling by my side. I held it down for a very long time. I heard brisk footsteps down the corridor. A nurse approached my bedside. She looked down at me. Again I tried to speak. Again I failed. But my face told her everything.
'The pain . . . ?' she asked.
I nodded my head wildly. She put a small plunger in my hand.
'You're on a morphine drip,' she said.
Morphine? Oh God . . .
'So every time the pain gets too much, just press down on this plunger. And . . .'
She demonstrated it for me. Immediately a surge of narcotic warmth spread across my body. And I vanished from consciousness.
Then it was light again. Another nurse was standing over me. The bedclothes had been pulled down. My hospital nightgown was over my belly. A bloody bandage was being yanked off my skin. I shuddered in pain.
'I wouldn't look at that, if I was you,' the nurse said to me.
But I did look – and shuddered again when I saw the horrendous railroad track of stitches across my abdomen. I managed a word:
'What . . . ?'
The pain kicked in again. I fumbled for the plunger. The nurse put it in my hand. I pressed down on it. Darkness.
Light again. Now I saw a familiar face above me: Dr Bolduck. He had a stethoscope on my chest. His finger was on my left wrist, checking my pulse.
'Hi there,' he said. His voice was quiet, subdued. I knew immediately what had happened. 'How's the pain?'
'Bad.'
'I bet. But this is the worst you should experience.'
'I lost it, didn't I?'
'Yes. You did. I am so sorry.'
'What happened?'
'You were suffering from a clinical condition known as an "incompetent cervix"; a condition which is virtually impossible to diagnose until it's too late. Essentially, your cervix couldn't handle the weight of the baby once it passed the five-month mark. So, when the cervix failed, you hemorrhaged. You're lucky your friend Jim found you. You would have died.'
'You operated?'
'We had no choice. Your womb was ruptured. Irreparably. If we hadn't operated . . .'
'I've had a hysterectomy?'
Silence. Then, 'Yes, Sara. A hysterectomy.'
I fumbled for the plunger. I pushed it down. I went under.
Then it was night. The overhead lights were off. It was raining outside. A major thunderstorm. Howling winds. Rattling glass. Celestial tympani. The occasional flash of lightning. It took a few minutes for the morphine fog to lift. The pain was still there, but it was no longer acute. It had become a dull, persistent ache. I stared out the window. I thought back to five years ago in Greenwich. How I buried my head in Eric's arms and fell apart. How – at the time – it seemed like the world had ended. Six months ago in New York – staring at the bloodstains in my brother's apartment – I too thought that life could not go on.
And then Jack. And now this.
I swallowed hard. I resisted the temptations of the morphine plunger. The rain was now splattering across the window, like liquid buckshot. I wanted to cry. I could not. All I could do was look out into the dark, blank night. And think: so this is what happened. Maybe it was the residue of the narcotics. Maybe it was post-operative shock. Or maybe there comes a point when you simply can no longer grieve for everything that life throws at you. It's not that you suddenly accept your fate. Rather, that you now understand a central truth: there is a thing called tragedy, and it shadows us all. We live in fear of it. We try to keep it at bay. But, like death, it is omnipresent. It permeates everything we do. We spend a lifetime building a fortress against its onslaught. But it still triumphs. Because tragedy is so casual, aimless, indiscriminate. When it does hit us, we look for reasons, justifications, messages from on high. I get pregnant. I lose the baby. I am told I will never have another. I get pregnant again. I lose the baby again. What does this mean? Is somebody trying to tell me something? Or is this just how things are?
Later that day, Jim showed up. He was looking uneasy. He carried a small bouquet of flowers. They were already half-wilted.
'I brought you these,' he said, putting them on the little table by my bed. As soon as he set them down, he immediately backed away to the other side of the room. Either he didn't want to crowd me, or he was uneasy about being within my close proximity.
'Thank you,' I said.
He positioned himself against the wall near the door. 'How are you feeling now?' he asked.
'I really recommend morphine.'
'You must have been in agony.'
'Nothing a hysterectomy can't cure.'
The color was bleached from his face.
'I didn't know. I'm so . . .'
'I am the one who should apologize. I should have told you about this from the start. But I was a coward . . .'
He held his hand up. 'No need to explain,' he said.
'The doctor said that if you hadn't found me . . .'
There was an awkward pause.
'I'd better go,' he said.
'Thank you for the visit. Thank you for . . .'
'May I ask you something?' he said, cutting me off.
I nodded.
'The guy who got you pregnant . . . are you in love with him?'
'Was. Very deeply.'
'It's over?'
'Completely.'
'No,' he said, 'it's not.'
I had no answer to that. Except something lame like: 'Let's talk when I finally get out of here.'
'Uh, sure,' he said.
'I am sorry, Jim. Very sorry.'
'That's okay.'
But I knew that it wasn't okay. Just as I also realized that news of my hospitalization would disseminate quickly through Brunswick. Certainly, Duncan Howell knew that I had been rushed to the Brunswick Hospital – as a big floral arrangement arrived that same afternoon. It was accompanied by a card:
Get well soon . . . From the staff of the Maine Gazette.
I didn't expect an effusive note. But the generic quality of the message made me wonder whether Mr Howell had discovered the real reason behind my medical emergency.
&nb
sp; Dr Bolduck informed me that – due to my surgical wounds and the amount of blood I had lost – I could expect to spend ten more days in the care of Brunswick Hospital. I was anxious about missing my forthcoming deadlines for the column – and put a call through to the editor's office. For the first time since I started writing for the Maine Gazette, Mr Howell didn't take my call. Instead his secretary got on the line – and informed me that the editor was 'in a meeting', but that he wanted me to have the next two weeks off, 'at full pay'.
'That's very generous of Mr Howell,' I said. 'Please thank him for me.'
I spent much of the next ten days in a post-operative blur. Even though the worst of the pain had dissipated, I let it be known that I was in serious physical discomfort. I must have sounded convincing to Dr Bolduck and the nursing staff, as they kept my morphine bag topped up. There are moments in life when certain things shouldn't be confronted; when you don't want clarity, forthrightness, the truth. This was one of them. Every time I felt myself veering towards terrible lucidity, I reached for the morphine plunger. I knew that, at the end of ten days, I would have to get out of this bed, and continue my life. Until then, however, I craved chemical denial.
Ruth dropped in every other day. She brought home-made oatmeal cookies, and magazines, and a bottle of Christian Brothers brandy.
'Who needs brandy when you've got this?' I said, brandishing the morphine plunger.
'Whatever works,' she said with a worried smile.
She offered to collect my mail for me. 'No mail, no newspapers, nothing tangible. I'm on a vacation from everything.'
I could see her eyeing the plunger in my hand. 'Is that stuff helping things?' she asked.
'You bet,' I said. 'In fact, I might get it installed on tap in my apartment.'
'What a wonderful idea,' she said. Her tone was so pleasant that I knew she was humoring me. 'You sure you don't need anything?'
'I do need something.'
'Tell me.'
'A complete memory loss.'
Two days before I was discharged, one of the nurses rolled away the morphine drip.
'Hey! I need that,' I said.
'Not anymore,' she said.
'Says who?'
'Dr Bolduck.'
'But what about the pain?'
'We'll be giving you some pills . . .'
'Pills aren't the same.'
'They do the job.'
'Not as well as the morphine.'
'You don't need the morphine.'
'Oh yes I do.'
'Then take it up with the doctor.'
The pills diminished the pain, but they certainly didn't dispatch me to Never-Never Land like the morphine. I couldn't sleep. I spent the night watching the hospital ward ceiling. Somewhere near dawn, I decided that I hated this life. It was too agonizing, too appallingly fragile. Everything hurt too much. It was best to make an exit now. Because I knew full well that once the morphine had drained out of my system, I would enter a realm beyond endurance. All reserves of strength, stoicism, resilience had been depleted. I didn't want to grapple anymore with such ruthless sorrow. I couldn't face the idea of living in a state of permanent anguish. So the alternative was a simple one: permanent escape.
The nurse had left two painkillers by my bedside if I needed them during the night. I would ask Dr Bolduck for an extra-large prescription to take with me when I checked out of here. I would go home. I would open a bottle of decent whiskey. I would chase all the pills with copious amounts of J&B. Then I would tie a bag round my head, sealing all potential air leaks with tape. I'd get into bed. The pill-and-Scotch cocktail would knock me out. I'd quietly smother to death in my sleep.
I reached for the two pills. I swallowed them. I continued to stare at the ceiling. I suddenly felt rather wonderful, knowing that I would only have to cope with forty-eight hours more of life. I began to organize to-do lists in my mind. I would have to make certain my will was up-to-date. No doubt, there would be a local lawyer in town who could offer me express service . . . as long as I didn't let on that the new will would be in probate only a day after I signed it. I would have to decide on funeral arrangements. No religious send-off. No memorials. Maybe a listing in the New York Times obituary, so a few people back in Manhattan would be informed of my demise. But definitely no organized memorial service. Just a local cremation here in Maine, and the local undertakers could do what the hell they wanted with my ashes. And my money? My so-called estate? Leave it all to . . .
Who?
There was no one. No husband. No family. No child. No loved ones.
Loved ones. What a facile expression to describe the most central need in life. But who were my loved ones? To whom would I bequeath my estate? I was flying solo. My death would mean nothing. It would hurt no one . . . so my suicide would not be a selfish or vengeful act. It would simply be a drastic, but necessary form of pain relief.
The painkillers kicked in. I fell into a deep sleep. I woke sometime during mid-morning. I felt curiously calm, almost elated. I had a plan, a future, a destination.
Dr Bolduck came around that afternoon. He checked my war wounds. He seemed pleased with the healing process. He asked me about the pain. I complained of a constant nasty ache.
'How are those pills working?' he asked.
'I miss the morphine.'
'I bet you do. Which is why there's no way I'm letting you near it again. I don't want you leaving here thinking you're Thomas de Quincey.'
'I think opium was his substance of choice.'
'Hey, I'm a doctor, not a literary critic. But I do know morphine is addictive.'
'You will give me something for the pain.'
'Sure. I'll give you a week's supply of those pills. Within three or four days, the pain should finally vanish, so I doubt you'll need them all.'
'That's good to know.'
'How are you faring otherwise?'
'Surprisingly all right.'
'Really?'
'It's a difficult time, but I'm coping.'
'Don't be surprised if you feel depressed. It's a common reaction.'
'I'll be vigilant,' I said.
He then said that I could go home tomorrow. I called Ruth and asked if she could pick me up in the morning. She was there at nine. She helped me into her car. She brought me back to my apartment. It had been cleaned the day before. There were fresh sheets on the bed. Ruth had gone shopping, and the larder was stocked with basic provisions. A small pile of mail was on my kitchen table. I decided it could all remain unopened.
Ruth asked me if there was anything else she could do for me.
'There's a prescription from Dr Bolduck . . .'
'No problem,' she said, taking the scrawled form from my hand. 'I'll just pop down to the druggist on Maine Street and get it filled right away. Don't want you in pain, after all.'
The Pursuit Of Happiness Page 62