But that “oh” didn’t stop Eileen from telling everybody else. By the time I got to school the next day, I swear I was famous. The way people looked at me, eyes all snapped open like jack-in-the-boxes, maybe I had grown another head. Maybe my skull was expanding at an enormous rate so it became twice its normal size and was about to burst. God help all the bursting heads of the world. God who?
It’s a certain kind of fame, though, to suddenly be so different from everybody else that they can’t tear their toy-box eyes away.
So why doesn’t some clown hand me a microphone and call a school assembly so I can stand onstage to make an announcement. Yes, my dad is dying. He has contracted a rare blood disease called acute milofibrosis, which destroys his red and white blood cells. Since the cells are—toss in a little oxygen, please—what the blood actually consists of, without those cells, Ta da! That’s it, folks. Curtains.
With all those eyes veering sideways, as if they’re not really looking at me, I feel like I’m being followed. I’m being spied on. But it’s somebody else’s life.
I find myself in my stupid red gym uniform with some rubber ball between my hands and wonder how I got there, or I’m up in room 524 North at the hospital and suddenly all I see are my father’s blue feet as they slip from the covers because they always do these days. They were never blue before, or maybe they were. But at home he always wore the tan suede slippers I gave him for his birthday a couple of years ago.
Maybe I’m in the backyard, moving in slow motion with my dog. And the same old questions begin to spin through my head, erasing time, erasing me. Who hit my dog? And then I want to ask, what’s wrong with my dad? But that one’s been answered, even though I guess I don’t really believe the answer is true. It’s so unreal, it’s surreal. Even if he is turning blue. Where am I? I can’t even answer that. I don’t know where I am. Time is spinning. I am spinning. Yesterday was hell. Is today any better?
Can’t Stop Looking
Yesterday was hell. Or was it the day before? We piled into my dad’s hospital room like potatoes stuffed into a sack. The air was so stifling, I thought my eyelids might dissolve, which would be tragic. Because then I would have to see everything. It was bad enough that we discovered the windows in the hospital room were built so that they will not open. Ever. Germs, I suppose.
| | |
My mother had gone to the cafeteria. Edward’s ponytail swayed as he strained at the stubborn metal window frame before we realized we were doomed to the same suffocating air forever. When I leaned over to get a better look, I noticed his hair was tied back with more hair. So he had snipped off a clump of his own and twisted it up around like rope. Oh, that brother of mine, what a character. But as I watched him from the edge of my awful vinyl seat, something kicked behind my eyes.
My hand pulsed with a desire to reach up and touch that well-conditioned ponytail. What was happening to me? I actually gasped and looked at my hand—who did it belong to? Like I said, somebody else’s life in my body. The sound I made filled the room, it was so quiet in there.
Heavy sleep breathing had been the loudest sound in that room for days, except for the moments my dad would murmur stuff we couldn’t understand. But it was a relief to hear him mumbling, even if it was incomprehensible. The sounds convinced everyone, especially my mother, that he wasn’t in a coma. We whispered when we were in the room. Our whispers became normal, which, when the thought crossed my mind, was not at all normal. There was Dr. Sweeney, and then came a urologist, a neurologist, and packs of medical students, at different times of day. My mother would tell them all to keep their voices down.
| | |
“It won’t budge,” Edward said, hushed and low.
“Oh, well,” I answered, in the good-news tone of the true imbecile, as if what was in front of me wasn’t bad news. I could even feel an imbecilic grin on my face, the kind that spreads like a stain and has to be wiped away with a hand to get the face back to normal. A grin that landed tears in my eyes for no reason.
“You said it.” When I looked at him, he was grinning too.
It felt like we were kids again, but not in that way we used to have of wanting to kill each other, way back before Baby Teeth was born. Not in that way of convincing the other to play hide-and-seek in the basement and promising not to leave as we turned the lights off to play, and then one would very intentionally walk out of the house. That was so long ago. We had actually liked each other then, and making each other cry just seemed to be a way of expressing it.
As I grinned at my brother standing by the window, I wondered whether childhood had hurt us, or did life just start to turn people into strangers? I guess I stopped smiling because my brother’s face turned brooding and serious. He came over to my chair, laid his hand on my shoulder. I might have broken into tears. Was he bigger and stronger than me? I wished he was. As I looked up, I saw there was something different about him. His eyes were not bloodshot. They were unbelievably clear.
Then somebody laughed, and I turned around. Baby Teeth. She was seated on another vinyl monster behind me, her fingers sprawled in her mouth, searching out any wobbling incisors. She looked as if she were eating her hand, and Edward laughed. Baby Teeth removed her hand, wiped it ceremoniously across her sleeve, and said, “Like rocks.”
My mother returned with a steaming cup of coffee and sat on the room’s only upholstered chair, which Edward had dragged in from the lounge one day. It was flecked with brown and gray dots and had plastic arms and legs, but at least she could sink into it. “Did you see the doctor?” my brother asked.
She nodded. “The head of hematology is interested in your father’s case, of course. He wants to try some experimental drugs. Keep your voice down.”
“What did you say?”
“That we can discuss it after we know what the side effects might be. Shhhh.” She blew on the steaming coffee, which created a small tide in the cup. We all looked back at my sleeping dad, the way people look at Christmas trees, I bet. Can’t stop looking.
While he slept, Baby Teeth dozed in my mother’s lap. I swear that sweltering room would put anybody to sleep. My mother opened a magazine, though I didn’t notice her turning any pages. My brother just stared out the window a lot. He took his pocket watch apart and put it back together several times. That watch had belonged to Pop, my mother’s dad, before he died. It was silver and opened and shut with the most satisfying click. There was a flying eagle etched on its cover.
I sat back in my chair by the end of the bed, watching my dad’s feet move while he dreamed. Eventually they would slip from beneath the yellow blanket and I would drape a piece of the white sheet over them, so when he woke up, at least his feet wouldn’t be cold. Would he like his slippers? They were still at home.
I began to wonder what it would be like if he never woke up, and my hand froze with that thought. I was numb and I was sweating. I wanted him to wake up immediately. Then I wanted him to wake up when I wasn’t around so he wouldn’t have the chance to ask me questions, something he always did.
“What are you reading?” he’d say. He’d be looking through me with those eyes of his and I’d mumble something dumb, sounding like an idiot, probably, because at this point it felt berserk to imagine having a regular conversation with somebody who’d been twisting all over the bed and turning green. Somebody who couldn’t keep any food down. Somebody who looked like a shrunken version of my father and whose hands were suddenly the biggest, strongest part of him. So what was I going to do?
I’d manage to say, “I’m sorry you’re feeling so bad,” or something like that, because then an inch of a smile would widen his mouth, which had begun to look unnaturally pasty, as if it could not smile if it wanted to, and some life would spring into his eyes.
What was I going to do? I found myself staring at his hands, and I guess I began to feel guilty because I didn’t want him to wake up and start asking me questions, because I suddenly felt weightless, like I was made of air and mig
ht float away. I decided I’d better get out of the room for a while. My mind said flee. My heart said stay. When the conflicting voices became a rubber band ready to snap behind my eyes, I sprang out of my chair.
And Think It Were Not Night
Maybe I could fly. There were five flights to the hospital cafeteria. It didn’t occur to me to wonder how many steps in a flight, because as I left my dad’s room and stormed down the hall, I kept my eyes on the black-and-white spotted floor. I ignored the open doors to other rooms, where other swollen, moaning patients lay. I ignored the elevator, where there might be a freshly croaked body on a rolling table.
| | |
I had never known glee until I saw the red EXIT sign and swung open the thick fire door beneath it. A cool gust of air hit me in the face, and that’s what I wanted, to take my mind off those awful voices inside of me. They were so loud, I heard nothing else as I hurried down the steps. Not even my own footfalls. I saw my boots beneath me, stepping without a sound. And then the picture in my mind changed, from my black boots to the ones of the silent-footed girl. Her name is Jane.
I stepped into homeroom the other day—when, last week?—and there she was, standing in the back of the room, the tattered maps of the world on the wall behind her. Her smile bloomed before that tired scene.
After Ms. Labianca, the homeroom teacher, called the roll, she asked Jane to introduce herself. And this Jane, like some Mediterranean model with a deep olive complexion that glowed, sauntered up the aisle, sauntered in her silent black boots and skintight faded jeans with her motorcycle jacket draped off one shoulder. Nobody moved as she walked, but she didn’t seem to notice. At least, not in a way that made her uncomfortable. That smile just bloomed.
I thought of a scene I’d just read in Romeo and Juliet.
The brightness of her cheek would shame those stars As daylight doth a lamp; her eyes in heaven
Would through the airy region stream so bright
That birds would sing and think it were not night.
Then the stream-so-bright Jane just turned on her heels and said, “Hi, guys, I’m Jane. Nice to meet you,” and smiled that smile.
There’s usually a period of time, anywhere from a couple of days to a few weeks to forever, that nobody talks to the new kid, depending on what kind of case someone is. But not with Jane. Everyone started talking to her. Somebody was always swooping around her. Crowds, in fact. The boys were in love with her, their eyes lit up like Shakespeare’s lamps. Except for Sullivan, of course. Too busy with Loretta Getz.
Sullivan, in my opinion, is with Loretta for two possible reasons: Her brain is still so saturated with oil, she cannot respond normally and flee from him. Or she is as mentally unformed as he is, and they belong together happily ever after.
Even the Romantics talked to Jane. It was easy to see jealousy there. All someone had to notice was the way they kept jerking their heads around, flapping at themselves like chickens when they talked to her. Jane made them extremely uncomfortable. Maybe it was the jacket. Or her incredible green eyes.
So everyone but me was already talking to her. I wasn’t talking to anybody. But it was particularly awkward changing into my ugly gym suit next to her. It’s not an easy task to be half naked next to someone who is not only a total stranger, but who happens to be gorgeous as well. When I dared look at her, and I tried not to, she seemed to already be looking at me, smiling in that blooming way that started a fire on my face, I was so embarrassed.
What was she smiling at? What did she think? Were my tits too big or too small? I had a pretty good body, but not like hers. Hers was perfect. My shoulders were too big, my hips narrow. I was shaped like a telephone pole. When our eyes caught, it was as if magnets pushed against each other—that strange field in which one veers away from the other. I’d end up staring off into the distance, suddenly looking through mindless space.
The moment finally came—when?—the end of last week, when we spoke. We were sitting in the back of French class. Jane and I had, coincidentally—or does anything happen by accident?—arrived early. There were only a few people around. I wanted to ask her about Rimbaud, this mysterious character who wrote stuff like
Over the roads, by winter nights,
without a home, without bread, a voice
would clutch my frozen heart: “Weakness or strength: you exist, it’s strength—
You never know where you go or why: go everywhere, answer everyone . . .”
But I couldn’t ask. It was as if I’d forgotten how to talk. Rimbaud seemed so brave. I wondered if Jane was too.
Then a couple of Romantics passed by and said to me, “Hi, Le Chien.”
That’s when Jane turned her smile on me. “Why do they call you that?”
“I’ll tell you later,” I said.
And these are the first words we spoke.
Later that day I was standing in front of my gym locker, supposedly changing. Really what I was doing was staring at the lock because I couldn’t remember the combination. Did I exist? Jane showed up and was watching me.
“You haven’t told me why they call you Le Chien.”
“Oh. It’s from a poem.” Answer everyone, Rimbaud wrote.
“You were a dog in a poem?”
“No,” I said. But I was not in any frame of mind to tell any stories. I had just heard that my father was going to die. My father was going to die, and I had to go to school like he wasn’t. And so I suddenly couldn’t remember things like my lock combination, or how to talk sometimes. Then I looked over at Jane. Her face had gone pale. What did she care about me? I thought.
“I’m sorry,” I said. My voice swayed. “I’m wiped out.”
“I can tell.” She nodded in an easy way, bending toward her locker. Her impossibly long hair swept across my arm then, soft as wind.
I was ready to bust. There were no words I could think of. “It’s just, my dad, well, it’s . . .”
“Your dad.” Even her voice was soft. She was kind.
“You know?”
“Everyone does. Sorry,” she said, looking directly at me. She didn’t pretend I wasn’t there, like everyone else—or if I was, that I had two heads.
“Me too. Everyone’s acting like I’ve got a disease.”
“Do you want to talk about it?”
“It’s just unbelievable. One day he’s fine—and now he can’t even swallow a pill.” I felt my face burn, but I didn’t care.
“What’re the numbers?”
“What?” I said.
“Your locker.”
“Twenty-two, three, seventeen.”
She opened my locker. “Change,” she said, “or you’ll be late.”
“So what.”
“So Greene will give you detention.”
“So?”
“So then we won’t be able to walk home after school.” Miraculously, I could think of nothing to say. At least one person in the world would speak to me.
Maybe I’m Not Ready
Sometimes I wake up in the morning and I don’t know why. My eyes just open. I mean, there I am. If I don’t move when my eyes open, it’s easy to feel like I don’t have a body at all. Like it’s only what’s in my head that exists. If I don’t move, it’s my brain that feels the sensations my body would normally experience. My mind feels the blanket covering me. It’s warm in my mind, and peaceful. Not to have a body at all. I wonder if this is what it feels like to be dead. I wish my dad would wake up.
I open my eyes. Baby Teeth is staring at me.
“Do you ever sleep?” I say.
“I’m an early-riser individual, different from you,” she says.
“I’m awake,” I. say. “Isn’t that enough?” I yawn and listen for the usual stirring. Lucky yawns beside my bed. My dog warms me; my mind can feel it. I am alive.
“So the phone rang really early,” Baby Teeth says. I look at her nightgown, its frilly, short sleeves, its roses spreading over the white cotton. She’s holding a vanity mirror b
efore her face as she sits on her unmade bed. With two fingers she tugs her mouth wide, peering inside for any sudden changes.
“Maybe you’ll be a dentist when you grow up,” I say as I blink the sleep away and lean on an elbow. My other hand reaches down to greet the dog. His wet nose nudges my hand.
“That’s not what I think. You know when you go to sleep and you have hopes?” Her dimples deepen.
I only nod. I would wait forever for an answer to that.
“Don’t be funny when I tell you, okay? Maybe I’ll have real teeth when I grow up.”
She’s serious, poor kid. “Of course you’ll have real teeth. Since you waited so long for them, they’ll be drop-dead gorgeous, I bet.”
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