by Mira Jacob
“How are you doing?” she asked.
“I’m nervous,” he said, and then looked as startled as she felt that he’d said it out loud. He walked a few paces from the bed, stopping short at the sight of things on the desk. “I always tell my patients, it’s unwise to believe you’ll be the anomaly. Part of a small percentage for whom certain treatments work, maybe, but the anomaly? Not likely.”
“Yeah, but it’s not like you just think you’re getting better. Dr. George said—”
“The tests could be wrong,” he snapped, and she understood suddenly that the look on Anyan George’s face that morning had been fear masquerading as impatience, much as it was on Thomas’s now. “Anyway, I should get going. Monica is waiting.”
“Now?”
“Yes.”
“That was fast,” Amina said, with a twinge of sympathy for her mother.
“Getting the business back up to speed will take a while.”
“Uh-huh.”
“It’s not like the money makes itself in this house!”
“I didn’t say anything. Did I say anything?”
Thomas opened his mouth as if to say something but then checked himself. “I’ll be back in an hour.”
“Okay.”
He nodded once, dismissing himself, and walked toward the bedroom door.
“I thought I saw Akhil last night.”
She had not known that she was going to tell him until she had told him. Thomas stopped at the door, his back squared toward her for several long seconds. He turned around to face her, cheeks pale.
“You what?”
She cleared her throat. “I mean, I didn’t, obviously. I just, you know … I guess I just wanted to tell you that I get it. Why it was hard for you.”
“You saw him here?”
“No. I mean, I thought I did, but—”
“In our yard?”
“No. At Mesa.”
“Which mesa?”
“No, Dad, my old school. Mesa Prep.”
Her father nodded at this, his features held tightly in place, and Amina knew then how wrong she had been to think they’d had something in common, much less felt the same way about it. Thomas did not look like a man reconciling with hallucinations. He looked like someone hearing a phone ring in the next room and willing himself to stay put.
“Did he say anything to you?” her father asked.
Amina stared at him. “He wasn’t real, Dad.”
He nodded, looking away.
“Oh God, I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have told you. It’s not the same thing. I just thought—”
But he was already squeezing her shoulder, walking toward her bedroom door.
“Don’t worry about it,” he said, and let himself out.
CHAPTER 2
They fell into a state of hope. As the last long weeks of summer sighed out across the mesas, as the mornings grew slightly cooler with the promise of September, good and then better news came to the Eapens. The follow-up scan confirmed what the first had hinted: The tumor was indeed shrinking. Thomas took the news with a bowed head and little emotion, but it was obvious in the days that followed that he had turned a corner, suddenly filled with a frantic, zealous energy. He was going to go back to work. To retrieve his patients from the competition. To show them all what was possible. Even as the second round of chemo took its toll, lining his mouth with cold sores that made it impossible to eat and leaving him eight pounds lighter in five days, he rose to meet with Monica, who clutched Amina like a long-lost relative, whispering “It’s a miracle” with such grateful intensity that it seemed she’d gone the way of Kamala.
As for Kamala, she was also getting back to normal, handling her newly free time by pickling a deluge of cucumbers, making Chowpatty corn on the cob, and demanding, along with Mort Hinley, whose radio harangues once again blasted through the kitchen, the fiery repentance of all sinners. Two weeks in, she took the additional step of announcing that she would be perfectly happy to stay home if the rest of the family wanted to take over the chemo rounds. She did all of this so quickly and efficiently that it felt like a wardrobe change in a theater production, and would have been completely believable had Amina not seen the occasional longing look on her mother’s face when she glanced out to the porch.
Was it fair to leave Thomas to himself and his work so quickly? To somehow feel slighted in the wake of his recovery? As much as Amina saw the folly in this, she could not deny that as the weeks went on, the feeling of their being unnecessary to her father’s recovery was both relieving and damning. Monica was there now, sitting through more and more evenings with him, and the hospital staff was everywhere else, flocking around him from the minute Amina walked him into the hospital until they walked back out the doors.
Gone was the tight, needy family unity, the lulls and spaces in which their best conversations grew, supplanted by an optimism so vigorous that it seemed to scrub away all traces of the last months. Other than a few nights in which Thomas had staggered around the fields, insisting that there was a fire closing in around the house despite their protests, his grip on reality seemed strong enough to not need reinforcement.
And that was how Amina found herself sleeping over at Jamie’s house every night. It was a temporary situation, belied by the ticket she booked back to Seattle at the end of September for the show, and yet somehow they fell quickly into a routine that felt—if not permanent—then at least stable. Amina would show up every late afternoon, cut up some vegetables and meat according to Jamie’s specifications, and then head out the back door with her camera, wandering around Hidden Park in the cooling dusk as the lights of the houses popped on around her one by one. And though at first she had been lured by the familiar thrill of capturing unaware occupants, she soon found that what she craved most was finding a recently inhabited but empty room, a kitchen with a mug steaming on the counter, a television blaring away at a vacant armchair. Once, she turned the lens on Jamie’s kitchen, fixated by the way the vegetables waited on the chopping board, and was shocked when his shoulder cut into the frame, filling the space completely.
Their lives had become routine suddenly, the future just another thing that would unfold as it needed to. And while they had never talked again about what happened at Mesa, Amina found solace in the idea that some things could just fade gently away instead of being analyzed and rationalized and validated. Sometimes, things could just get better. So she was surprised one afternoon to hear Jamie answer the phone in the living room and then come and find her, his face dented with concern.
“It’s your aunt,” he said, and she wiped her hands on her jeans, grabbing the receiver.
“You have to come now!” Sanji shouted, and Amina heard yelling in the background.
“What? What’s happened?”
“Thomas has gone!”
“What do you mean? Is he okay?”
“He’s missing.”
“What?”
“Just come!”
She found him easily. Not that Sanji and Anyan George and the nurses who had been called into the hospital-wide hunt hadn’t tried hard enough, but for Amina, the circuitous path to the ICU lit up before her like a plane runway, the only obvious way forward, and when she stepped into that cool, dark room, one raised eyebrow from the familiar-looking nurse on duty told her she was right. Amina headed back to the bed that her father stood at, so still he could have been an IV pole.
“Dad.”
Her father looked over, a small smile spreading across his face. “What are you doing here?”
“Everyone’s looking for you.”
“I’m right here.”
“Yeah, apparently.”
The man in the bed was a sandy blond, the kind that made Amina think of California and beach campfires and athletic ability. Something had mangled his legs, leaving one wrapped in a cast and a bandage and the other missing below the knee.
“Jesus,” she said.
Her father confirmed this with a nod. �
��Doesn’t look good.”
“You knew him?”
“No.” Thomas took a short breath, like he was going to explain something, but they were interrupted by the approaching nurse.
“Hey, Doc,” she said when she reached them. “Just talked to Maggie in chemo. She said they could hold your spot for another twenty minutes if you want to run down.”
“Thanks, Shirley.”
“Sure thing.” She shot Amina a look as she walked away.
Thomas watched her go. “They’re a funny breed.”
“We should get going.”
“Different than other nurses, in some ways. Very anal, very focused. Very loyal to their patients. Detail-oriented. Sometimes they miss the big picture.”
“Huh.” Amina turned to leave the ICU. Thomas didn’t.
“I’m stopping chemo,” he said.
“What?”
“Just for a little while.” He nodded as he said this, as if agreeing with someone beside himself.
“What do you mean? What’s wrong?” Amina tried to catch his eye, but his focus was wholly on the man on the bed. “Are you feeling too sick today? They said that would happen, remember? Especially this round, they said you might feel especially depleted.”
“It’s not that.”
“Then what?”
“I just think I should hold off for a while.”
“A while? How long is that?”
“I don’t know. Maybe just a few days, weeks.”
“Weeks? You can’t! I mean, you—Dr. George said—we agreed you’d stay the course, right? We should just keep doing what we’ve been doing, right?”
Thomas shrugged, like these were shruggable questions.
“Do you think the tumor is already gone? Are you feeling what you felt before?”
“No.”
“Then what?”
He was staring at the patient’s hand, the fingers that twitched spasmodically.
“Dad!”
“Shh! Not so loud!”
“Why are you stopping the chemo?” Amina hissed.
Thomas blinked a few times, finally looking over at her. “I saw Akhil in the yard a few nights ago.”
The information fractured through Amina’s brain, offering several fleeting images—Akhil on the Stoop, Akhil in the driveway, Akhil behind the bleachers at Mesa.
“He was in the garden,” Thomas said.
“Dad.” Amina looked at him steadily. “He’s not real.”
“But you saw him, too.”
“No I didn’t.”
“You said!”
“No. I had a weird tired moment that was stupid and that I shouldn’t have told you about. It’s not the same thing.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I know.”
“Well, I don’t.” He looked at her defiantly, daring her to contradict him.
“Okay,” she said. “Fine. But why do you have to stop the treatment?”
“Because the chemo will keep him from coming.”
Amina shook her head, her words evaporating.
“It’s true. I told you before, I don’t see them as much with the chemo.”
“Dad.”
“I want to see my son.”
He said it like this was something not only possible but reasonable. I want to eat something. I want to take a quick shower. It made sense. It made sense. It did not make sense.
Thomas scratched the back of his hand, studying the loose skin and veins before saying, “Itty asked about you, by the way. That horrible nickname he had for you. What was it? Mittack! He was a funny kid, wasn’t he?”
No, Amina wanted to say, no, he really wasn’t funny at all, but she felt swimmy suddenly, her limbs untethered from gravity.
“And Sunil told me he should have been a dancer,” Thomas said.
She blinked. “What?”
“He said it was the one thing that made him really happy. That if I had come back to India like I was supposed to, if he wouldn’t have been left to take care of everything on his own, he would have been a dancer.”
A cold weight pressed into Amina’s chest. The memory of Sunil waltzing in the Salem living room fluttered into her mind, clear and sharp behind the gauzy curtain of time.
“Can you imagine what all might have changed with that one silly thing? Maybe they would all still be here. Maybe your mother would be happy. Maybe Akhil …” A grimace surfaced on Thomas’s face, and he fought it back. “And you know the funny thing? It was a relief to hear him say that it was my fault. A relief. All these years, imagining how he must have hated me, cursed me, and now finally it’s done, over, kaput. Now I move on, right?” Thomas smiled at her, but he did not look relieved. He looked exhausted.
“Dad, let’s go home.”
He looked at her warily.
“You’re just tired. It’s fine. We’ll skip it today.”
Thomas turned back to the man on the bed. “I’m tired every day.”
“I know.” She slid her hand down his arm, reaching for the fingers that clutched the guardrail of the patient’s bed, loosening them slowly.
He walked with her down the rows and rows of patients, saluting Shirley on his way out.
“Good to see you, Doc.”
Thomas winked. “I’ll be back.”
“So what did your mom say?” Jamie asked when she got back. He was doing something violent to the tomatoes in the saucepot. Steam fanned up and around his head in a garlicky cloud.
“Didn’t tell her yet.”
“No?” He glanced over his shoulder, surprised.
“I just wanted to come back here for a second. You know, catch my breath.”
Jamie reached for the bag of spaghetti, cracking the noodles in half and throwing them into boiling water. He stirred them slightly with a fork, put it down, and walked over to her. He tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “Set the table.”
There were people who couldn’t eat in the face of their stress. They picked at their food distractedly, too worried to do anything but worry. Amina indulged the opposite instinct. The mere whiff of things being unstable had made her ravenous, and that evening she plowed through an entire mop of spaghetti as if trying to prepare her body for a long and brutal winter. It was a good five minutes before she even noticed that Jamie was no longer eating but watching her, his fork suspended midair. She dabbed at her face.
“What’s wrong?”
“I’ve never seen you eat like that.”
“Like a hungry person?”
“Like a refugee.”
Out the window behind him, the park tripped into dusky blue. Amina sighed. “I don’t want to do this right now. Talk to his doctor. Talk to my mother. Talk to the family.”
“So don’t. Sleep on it.”
“I wish.” She stood up and took her plate to the sink. “Dr. George is calling tomorrow morning to discuss our options. I need to tell my mom before that.”
“Damn. So I guess I’ll see you guys tomorrow night.”
She looked at him blankly.
“I’m coming to your house for dinner?”
“Oh, shit. I forgot.”
Jamie raised his eyebrows. “Wow, you’re a regular charm school tonight.”
“I’m sorry. It’s great. Totally great.” Amina nodded enthusiastically. “It will be fun.”
“And now you’re scaring me.”
Amina walked back to the table, bent down, and kissed his cheek. “We’re going to eat you alive.”
She had to tell Kamala immediately. Amina realized this somewhere between the interstate and the descent into the valley, worry settling in. Hopefully Thomas hadn’t broken the news already. It would be worse, somehow, coming from him. Amina felt sure of this, though she was unsure exactly how. Would it be back to the old charge of devilry? On to something new? Would she yell? Stop speaking? Move to another room in the house? Anything seemed possible.
Anxious, Amina sped up. There was, of course, the extremely rare possibil
ity that her mother might have already fixed things. Maybe, if Thomas really had been dumb enough to say something, she had already beat him back into chemo. Amina barely noticed the odd glow at the end of the driveway until she rolled right into it.
The house was ablaze with light. Amina stared at it for a good few seconds before opening her door and standing up, the brightness heating her cheeks like actual sunlight. Every single light, inside and out, was on. Lights she had never even known about were on. Porch lights, lamplights, closet lights, lights in the china cabinet. All three sets of hallway lights. Amina walked by a pair of lanterns huddled together on the living room floor, while above them, a muted television threw color into the air. An extension cord snaked out the living room window and into the courtyard, where a halogen lamp made quick and smokey work of curious moths. On the kitchen stove, a lone pot of chicken curry hissed its last liquid into the desert air, the masala brackish. A cooking spoon lay on the floor.
“Mom?” Amina’s chest tightened.
Prince Philip whined from the laundry room, nose pressed to the screen. How long had he been sitting there? His tail thumped as she approached, and he darted onto the porch as she opened the door. Every light in the shop was on as well, even those that had not been on in so long that they were bearded with spiderwebs. Twinkling pools of Christmas lights lay around the empty porch chairs. The door to the backyard was open. Prince Philip raced through it, and she followed.
It was their shadows she found first, conjoined and stretching out across the lawn like an impossibly thin giant. They were sitting in lawn chairs. No. Amina blinked. They were sitting in one lawn chair. Kamala perched on the edge of Thomas’s knees, staring intently into the yard.
“Mom?”
Her father was holding on to her mother’s braid tightly. It was hard to make this out from far away, but as Amina walked closer, she saw the dark coil wrapped around her father’s hand like a leash, Kamala leaning forward like a cat tethered from chasing prey.
“What are you guys doing?”
Her parents turned to look at her, and Amina’s breath caught in her throat. They were luminous. Pieces of moon fallen from the sky, still reflecting every bit of light from the known universe. Smiling at her across the yard in a way she hadn’t seen in years, may have never seen. Amina walked forward, the ground uneven beneath her feet. Her mother waited until she was right next to them, and then found her hand, held it.