Now his left hand came to life and began hammering the keyboard at the same time his right clicked the mouse.
“Why are you doing that?” Nicola asked.
“What?”
“Hitting that key over and over?”
“It’s an Extraterrestrial Bombardment! I’m deleting them. See them? See them swarming in? Die!” Jared yelled, blasting away. “Die!”
Mina poked her head in the door. “What is it, Nicola?”
Just then Nicola got an idea. She swung around.
“Lindsay can’t go with me to Shady Oaks tomorrow. Can Jared take me instead?”
* * *
Jared wasn’t happy. Not at all. But Mina and Terence said there would be consequences if he didn’t take his little sister to the retirement home. The consequences were unbearable: no computer for the rest of the holidays.
“It’s not like I really want to go, either,” Nicola told him on the march over in the cold. “It’s the awfullest sad place I’ve ever been. But that’s the point, right? For June Bug to make it better.”
Jared pulled his iPod from his pocket and thumbed the volume louder.
Once Jorie had let them in, Jared threw himself in a plastic chair by the nursing station and pulled his toque low over his eyes. Tinny rap music seeped out through the wool.
Jorie in yellow, and Glenda in pink, were getting the day’s meals organized, receiving a shipment of boxes at the back door, loading them onto a trolley. Nicola took June Bug around to the patients in the lounge and got her to Wave and Shake a Paw, without much response. Mr. Milton was nowhere to be seen.
Afterward, she stopped Jorie in the hall and asked about putting on a proper show for everyone.
“This isn’t the best time, sweetie.”
“Can we visit Mr. Fitzpatrick then? We’ve never met him.”
“Look in on Mr. Milton,” Jorie told her.
Nervously, Nicola went to his room. She tapped on his door.
“Go on in,” Jorie called. “He’s having a quiet day.”
Mr. Milton’s room didn’t smell of flowers like the hallway, but of something old and abandoned. That something was Mr. Milton in the bed. Loud and menacing the day before, he was dozing now, though his eyes opened briefly when Nicola and June Bug came in.
“Hello, Mr. Milton. It’s us. Nicola and June Bug.”
Here, too, there were no pictures or knickknacks. The hospital bed and a small wheeled table were the only furniture.
June Bug leapt up on the bed and wagged. Mr. Milton’s eyelids fluttered.
Then Glenda came in, her ponytail swinging. She carried a small cardboard box, a glass of water and pills in a tiny paper cup, all of which she set on the wheeled table.
“Lunch time! Wakey, wakey.”
She opened the cardboard box. Two circles of bun enclosed a dry puck of meat. Celery wilted on the side. Nicola hated celery. Still, she had to hold June Bug’s leash tight because the dog was already straining for the hamburger. Disgusting as it was, it was still People Food.
“Sorry, Mr. Milton,” Glenda said. “It’s the same as yesterday.”
“They have the same lunch every day?” Nicola asked.
“Practically. Now and then a cheese sandwich shows up. And get this. They fly it in from Colorado. Jorie said they used to have a kitchen here, but supposedly this is cheaper. Some of them just won’t eat.”
Mr. Milton’s groggy eyes opened and shifted to the cardboard lunch box. He closed them again as if he’d seen something too awful to contemplate. Glenda helped him swallow the four pills.
“That’s the way, Mr. Milton,” she told him. “Good job.”
“What are the pills for?” Nicola asked.
“Don’t ask me. I’m not a doctor.” Glenda pushed the table so that the hamburger box was in front of him, then left.
As soon as she was gone, Mr. Milton’s blue eyes opened and stared straight into Nicola’s. She could tell he was trying very hard to keep them open. His mouth drooped lower.
“Mr. Milton?” Nicola asked, pushing aside the table so she could sit on the edge of the bed beside June Bug. “Would you like something different to eat?”
She opened June Bug’s treat container and shook some treats into her hand.
“I know people don’t usually eat dog treats, but really? Organic dog pepperoni is actually better than people pepperoni. It’s the same thing, but not so spicy. I love it. Look.”
Nicola ate a piece. Mr. Milton watched her chew. So did June Bug, who whimpered for her to share.
“Yum,” Nicola said. “But if you don’t want to eat it, I understand. You still have your own lunch.”
A tear rolled down one of his rough cheeks.
“Don’t cry, Mr. Milton. I’m sorry. I won’t make you eat dog treats. I probably insulted you. I didn’t mean to.”
There wasn’t even a box of tissues in the room. Nicola had to brush away his tears with the end of her braid. His head moved slightly. It could have been a tremor, except that his mouth opened crookedly.
“You want one?”
She took a piece and slipped it between his dry lips. He chewed in slow motion, swallowed, opened his mouth again.
“See? It’s really good!”
Nicola fed him another piece. Then she fed one to June Bug, who was Waving her paw like she was conducting an orchestra. Mr. Milton swallowed and his lips seemed to form a word. She leaned in closer.
“Entertain,” it sounded like.
When he’d eaten all the treats in the container, he closed his eyes and fell asleep. Nicola picked up June Bug and tiptoed out of the room.
At the nursing station, Jared sprang up from his chair. “Finally!”
Jorie was in the lounge, helping the patients eat their lunch. She came and buzzed Nicola and Jared out.
Jared bolted ahead, but Nicola stopped to ask, “Could we put on a show tomorrow?”
Jorie said, “I’m not working tomorrow. Pierre is.”
“Okay. I’ll ask him.”
By the time Nicola and June Bug stepped outside, Jared was already at the end of the walk.
“Wait!” she called, but he couldn’t hear her with his earbuds in.
She and June Bug caught up and Nicola yanked out one of his wires, which made him even more furious.
“Are you coming back with me tomorrow?”
“Are you nuts? That place stinks. I’m going home to take a shower. Ten showers.”
“You need ten showers,” she said.
In the next block, he slowed enough to shout over his shoulder. “If I missed a phone call because I had to sit for an hour in that stinking place, I’m going to kill you and that dog!”
Nicola felt sorry for him then. Julie Walters-Chen was never going to call him. Even Jared must have known that. And Nicola remembered what her mother had said during the Embarrassing Talk about What Your Older Brother Is Going Through and Why He Is So Mean. She’d said to try — please, please try — not to be mean back.
“Thank you for coming,” Nicola called. “It makes me really sad to go there, too. But I have to.”
Jared grunted and walked on, all hunched and pimply, with the toque pulled low. The one earbud swung freely behind his back. Nicola fell in step beside him with June Bug trotting along in front.
“I hope Grammy and Grampy don’t end up in a place like that. I hope they’ll come and live with us instead.”
“They will,” Jared said.
“What?” Nicola said.
“End up in a place like that. And so will Mom and Dad. And so will you. We’ll all end up like that. We’ll all end up in hell.”
When Jared said that, even though she knew he didn’t mean it, Nicola shuddered. Hormones made him say it. That’s what Mina had told her during the Talk.
Nic
ola didn’t plan on ever having Hormones.
* * *
While Nicola was making herself a sandwich for lunch, Lindsay dropped by.
“Too late,” Nicola told her when she answered the door. “My brother came with me.”
Behind her glasses, Lindsay’s eyes showed relief, then hope. Hope that Nicola would invite her in, which Nicola pretty much had to since Lindsay wasn’t budging from the porch.
They went to the kitchen.
“Are you going to Shady Oaks every single day?” Lindsay asked.
Nicola nodded. “Until the holidays are over.”
She brought her sandwich to the table. The second the two girls sat, June Bug dashed over and sprang up on a chair, too. She made a cat noise.
“Do you want lunch, June Bug?”
Nicola stood up. June Bug placed her front paws on the table and leaned closer to the unguarded sandwich. Nicola caught her just in time, scolding June Bug until she laid back her ears and sat properly on the chair again.
Lindsay watched all this, then said, “I have a very sensitive nose.” She pointed to her nose, the perch for her pink glasses. “I gag when I smell bad things. Even when I see things that look like they might smell bad. I could never get a dog because there’s no way I could pick up the poo.”
At the counter, Nicola thickly buttered a piece of bread. She shook some kibble from June Bug’s bowl onto the bread. The butter made the kibbles stick.
“You get used to poop. And when it’s your dog, it’s not so bad. June Bug’s poops are cute. Here, June Bug.”
Nicola set the sandwich in front of her dog. June Bug lunged for it.
“It’s because my mom’s a florist,” Lindsay said. “I’m used to nice-smelling things. Also? People suffering? I can’t stand it. Or mean things, like what Glenda did to my bouquet. Yesterday, I had to sleep in my Feel Better Box.”
“What’s a Feel Better Box?” Nicola asked.
“Come to my place and I’ll show you.”
Nicola wasn’t visiting a bride-and-flowers girl’s house if she wasn’t going to help save June Bug.
“I have homework,” she said.
“We could do it together.”
Lindsay sat there twisting her hands until June Bug burped and leapt off the chair. Lindsay couldn’t help but laugh.
“Okay,” she said. “I’ll try one more time.”
11
—
“We’re set to break some records this month,” the meteorologist announced on the radio the next morning. “Coldest continuous temperature. Greatest snowfall.”
“She sounds so cheerful,” Mina grumbled at breakfast.
“It’s as cold as a dog’s nose,” Terence said, reaching down to pat June Bug, who was sitting under the table, hoping for crumbs.
“As cold as the devil’s heart,” Mina said, getting up to pour more coffee.
“A cold day in hell,” Jared said.
“Hell?” Jackson piped up, his mouth full of cereal.
“There’s that word again,” Terence warned.
“You started it,” Jared said.
“And no computer until you shovel, young man.”
After breakfast, Nicola pulled ski pants over her jeans where the long window beside the door was coated with frost. She and June Bug braced themselves before setting out to meet Lindsay at Shady Oaks. They trotted all the way just to keep from freezing.
Pierre was at the nursing station, a huge man with earrings and hair in cornrows. He came out from behind the desk and fussed over June Bug, scratching behind her ears and up and down her back.
Glenda was working, too.
“Guess what?” she told Lindsay and Nicola. “It’s Bath Day. Once a month whether they need it or not.”
When Pierre straightened, June Bug leapt against his legs.
“Can she ever jump!”
Nicola said, “She can do tricks, too. Can we put on a show for everyone? I think it would really cheer them up.”
Glenda said to Pierre, “I bet he says no.”
He, Nicola guessed, was Mr. Devon.
“I have to get them out of bed for their baths anyway,” Pierre said. “Mrs. Michaels and Mr. Fitzpatrick are already in their chairs. Is he here?”
Glenda went over to the phone and pressed a button. “Probably not, but you can never tell. He keeps that office door shut.” After a minute, she hung up and said, “If he’s not here and there’s no rule against putting on a dog show —”
“Let’s see,” Pierre said, counting on his fingers. “No music. No singing.”
“No laughing,” Glenda said.
“No laughing. Nope, no rule about dog shows.”
Glenda stepped into the lounge to fetch the woman with the bib who was sleeping in front of the blaring TV.
“Come on, Miss Higgins. Let’s have some fun for a change.” She wheeled the chair down the hall, waving the girls along.
They went to the room Glenda said was for physiotherapy, which was completely bare and brightly lit with fluorescent lights. Glenda parked Miss Higgins and left to get another patient. June Bug sniffed all around where the glaring white walls met the shiny floor. There was nothing else to sniff or even look at. The windows were too high to see out.
Pierre came in holding Mrs. Cream’s — the Decimand woman’s — arm. He took some folding chairs from the closet, set them up on either side of Miss Higgins’ wheelchair and helped Mrs. Cream sit. She looked around brightly, chirping her word.
Meanwhile, June Bug raced over and jumped against Pierre’s legs, beating her tail, as though she hadn’t seen him for a year. She sproinged and sproinged, each time licking his face, until —
“Ouch!” He straightened, cupping his nose.
“June Bug! No!” Nicola cried. “It means she likes you.”
“She won’t bite the patients, will she?” Pierre asked. “These folks we’re bringing in, they’re frail.”
Through the propped-open door one came now, in a wheelchair steered by a smiling Glenda.
Nicola had never seen Glenda smile.
“Here’s Mrs. Michaels,” she said.
Mrs. Michaels was dressed in a thick pink bathrobe many sizes too large, the fabric humped up on her back, pushing her forward in the chair so only the silvery crown of her head showed. Glenda wheeled her into the row and put on the brake.
“Mrs. Michaels?” She patted one of the tiny hands, limp in the lap of the pink robe. “Wakey, wakey.”
Gently, she lifted the old woman’s chin.
“Oh!” Lindsay cried. “She’s beautiful!”
“Isn’t she?” Glenda said.
Nicola thought so, too. Mrs. Michaels had the face of a china doll. Her eyes were closed, her lashes white fringes on her smooth cheeks.
June Bug raised her snout, sniffing the sweetening air. She began creeping forward on her leash, ears back, her tail between her legs.
Though June Bug had failed obedience class, Nicola had learned a lot. She’d learned, for example, how dogs ordered themselves according to importance. When two dogs met, the more important dog, the “dominant” one, stayed standing, while the lesser one, the “submissive” dog, sat. It looked almost like a curtsy.
This was exactly what June Bug did now. She crept closer to Mrs. Michaels and when she reached the footplate of the wheelchair where a pair of much-too-large plush slippers roosted, she sat.
Nicola was astonished, because normally, if anyone wore slippers, June Bug would attack them. The Breams wore woolen socks instead of slippers so they could move freely through the house.
June Bug sat on the floor in front of Mrs. Michaels. She kept her gaze lowered. Her black ear and her white ear flattened against her head. Then she fell onto her side and rolled over, showing Mrs. Michaels her bare pink stomach.
/> Lindsay asked, “Is she sick?”
June Bug seemed to be waiting for Mrs. Michaels’ permission to get up. She might have lain there a long time had another patient not been wheeled through the door.
It was a man this time, in a blue robe, with hair as silvery as Mrs. Michaels’ and, like her, he was humped and asleep. June Bug sprang to her four feet and started creeping toward the newcomer, ears back, tail tucked in again. She didn’t bother sitting. This time, she just flung herself onto her back.
“This is Mr. Fitzpatrick,” Pierre said. “He’s a fine old gentleman. Doesn’t say much. Sleeps a lot. But I feel so good whenever I’m around him. Don’t I, sir? Aren’t I always telling you that?”
Nicola looked over at Lindsay. Lindsay felt it, too, Nicola could tell. Lindsay was smiling her head off.
Glenda wheeled in another patient, an old woman judging by the pink of the robe. She was tinier than the other two, with a sweet Japanese face.
“Mrs. Tanaka,” Glenda said.
Glenda did an amazing thing then. She bent down and kissed the silky top of Mrs. Tanaka’s head.
“She is the sweetest person ever. Isn’t she, Pierre?”
“I love her,” said Pierre.
Again, June Bug crept over and threw herself down.
Now Nicola knew for sure the flowery smell was coming from the patients. It grew stronger with each arrival. Also, the fluorescent lights seemed to be ringing in a way she hadn’t noticed before, like a wet finger circling the rim of a wine glass. A faint, singing note.
With the quiet, persistent ringing and the sweet perfume, Nicola felt a little dizzy, like her head was filled with birds. Swooping birds writing in the air. Writing something joyful.
She looked at her little dog, so well behaved, and was filled with love for her, though she loved June Bug just as much when she was bad. Nicola felt such a great gush of love that it was more than any little dog would need, so when she looked at Lindsay and Glenda, and all the patients, she had enough love left over for them. Nicola loved poor Mr. Eagleton and Mr. Milton, too, whom Pierre brought in now, Mr. Eagleton shuffling beside Mr. Milton in a wheelchair.
As soon as June Bug saw Mr. Eagleton and Mr. Milton, she ran to them, wagging her usual greeting. Nicola grabbed the leash just in time.
A Simple Case of Angels Page 5