by Amy Bloom
He is there, at the end of the hall. He comes out of his room to greet me in a state-of-the-art wheelchair, its front built up like a combination keyboard and portable desk. He holds a silver stick in his mouth and presses the keys on the console with it. We watch each other. He is ugly, not at all what Saul would have been. Sallow, greasy little rat face, buzz-cut black hair, stick-out ears. As he bends over the console, I see the back of his thin, hairy neck.
“Hey,” he says, letting go of the stick. I thought he couldn’t be more than three, but no toddler could speak like that—as if he’d been living on the streets for fifteen years and this hospital was just one more dead-end job.
“Hey, yourself.” I’m blushing.
“Could you move?”
I flatten myself against the wall and he rolls past, stick pressed hard to the flat orange disk in a row of concave blue buttons. The wheelchair has tires fit for a pickup truck, and the sides go up to his neck like a black box. I look down as the whole thing lumbers past. Under his little T-shirt he has no arms.
“Bye,” I say.
“Yeah.”
I cannot befriend the nurse at the front desk, but I do persuade her to tell me about him. Jorge. His story is horror upon unending horror—proof, not that I needed it, that the thought of a God is even more frightening than a world without one. Nobody is coming to take him home. He is not considered lovable, and the occasional saints—the foster parents who take in the AIDS babies and the cancer-ridden children—don’t want him. What does he like? I ask the nurse. Nothing, she says. Whatever he likes, he’s been keeping it to himself.
I wait by his room. He will not show his pleasure, but he will be reluctantly, helplessly pleased. Who has ever come back for a second, nonclinical look?
“Gum?”
“What kind?”
“Bubble Yum. Mint or grape.” It is what I chew.
“Grape.” He opens his mouth, and I unwrap the gum and place it on his white-coated tongue. He chews away, and then purses his lips around his joystick and moves off. At the end of the hall, he sits up and looks over his shoulder at me. He tongues the stick aside, keeping the blue gum in.
I wave. “See you tomorrow, Jorge.”
At home, I prepare for diplomacy and war. I shower, even using the marjoram gel. My spirits are lifted. I make Julia Child brisket and arrange a pretty salad. I open a bottle of Stag’s Leap and use the big-bowled wineglasses, the ones I have to wash by hand.
I tell Marc about him, lying. I make him sound sweet, responsive, appreciative. I don’t tell the story the nurse told me: how he spat in the face of an aide, saving up a mouthful of penicillin to do so. I don’t mention his all-over ugliness, the gooey squint in his right eye, the slight fecal odor surrounding him. I might as well have told Marc the truth. No, he says, we cannot take a disabled child right now.
We? I have to laugh. That old joke: What do you mean “we,” white man? I pick over the words in my mind, to get him to say yes, and then I don’t care.
“I’m bringing him home if they let me. He doesn’t have to be in the hospital, but his family can’t care for him, and his needs are too much for a residential place.” Of course they’ll let me. It must cost a fortune to keep him. And he’s so ugly.
“If you bring him home, I don’t know … I don’t think I can stay. Please don’t do this to us.”
An aide brings Jorge off the elevator, and they both stare at me in surprise. I open my briefcase slowly, making a show of the tight buckles as Jorge approaches. I can hear the warm, sticky roll of the tires on the linoleum floor. We’ll have to pull up the guest room carpeting.
“Gum?” he says.
I unwrap the gum and put it in his mouth, telling him my name so that the grape sugar on his tongue will become his thought of me.
He nods and chews. I sneak my hand to the vinyl headrest, almost skin temperature, and smoothed by his neck and hair.
“Let’s go find the unit chief,” I say, and Jorge follows, the heavy movement of the chair shaking the floor beneath us.
I get into bed with the phone book and my list: medical equipment, pharmacy (delivery service?), furniture, foreign-language tapes (in case his Spanish is better than his English), carpenter (ramp). I underline “carpenter” twice and call three names, leaving messages on their machines. It can’t take more than a week to put a ramp where the kitchen steps are now. In my mind I move the living room furniture around and get rid of the glass coffee table. When Marc falls asleep, dried red wine sitting in the corners of his mouth, I get up and move the actual pieces, shoving the coffee table into Marc’s study for now. My body hums. I hang up my clothes, wipe Marc’s damp mouth with my fingers, and pull the blanket up around him. I fall asleep easily, dreaming of Jorge, my little egg, rolling around on our queen-size bed, the silk spread smooth beneath his skin.
Hold Tight
My senior year in high school, I was in two car accidents, neither of them my fault, and I was arrested twice, also not my fault. I couldn’t keep my hands on the wheel, and the guardrails flew right at me.
I found myself on emergency room examining tables, looking into slow-moving penlights, counting backward from forty to demonstrate consciousness, and calling my mother terrible names. I hate hospitals. The smell makes me sick, and the slick floors trip me up. When I visited my four dying grandparents, who dropped like dominoes the winter I was ten, I had to leave their rooms and go throw up. By February I had a favorite stall. With my mother, I could never get that far; before I even saw her I’d throw up from the thick green smell laid over the pain and stink and helplessness. When there was no reason to keep her, they let her come home.
My mother painted about forty pictures every year, and her hands smelled of turpentine, even when she just got out of the shower. This past year she started five or six paintings but only finished one. She couldn’t do the big canvases anymore, couldn’t hang off her stepladder to reach the upper corners, and that last one was small enough to sit on a little easel near her bed so she could work on it when she had the strength. After December she didn’t leave the bed. My mother, who could stand for hours in her cool white studio, shifting her weight from foot to foot, moving in on the canvas and backing off again, like a smart boxer waiting for the perfect opening. And then, in two months, she shrank down to an ancient little girl, loose skin and bones so light they seemed hollow. A friend suggested scarves for her bald head, but they always slipped down, half covering her eyes and ears, making her look more like a bag lady than a soap opera star. For a while she wore a white fisherman’s hat with a button that said “Don’t Get Me Mad,” and then she just gave up. I got used to the baldness and to the shadowy fuzz that grew back, but the puffiness in her face drove me crazy. Her true face, with cheekbones so high and sharp people didn’t think she spoke English, was hidden from me, kidnapped.
When I got too angry at her, I’d leave the house and throw rocks against the neighbors’ fences, hoping to hit someone’s healthy mother not as smart or as beautiful or as talented as mine. My friends bickered with their mothers over clothes or the phone or Nathan Zigler’s parties, and I wanted to stab them to death. I didn’t return calls and they all stopped trying, except for Kay who left a jar of hollyhocks or snapdragons on the front porch every few weeks. When I can talk again, I’ll talk to her.
I could hardly see the painting my mother was still working on, since I went blind and deaf as soon as I touched the doorknob. I stared at the dust motes until my vision blurred and I could look toward the bed. My mother held my hand and sighed, and her weakness made me so angry and sick that I’d leave the room, pretending I had homework. And she knew everything, and I couldn’t, and cannot, forgive myself for letting her know.
It was June, and everything outside was bright green and pale pink, and our house was dark and thick with dust. My mother used to say that we were messy but clean, and that used to be true. My father hid out in his study, emerging to entertain my mother and then lumbering back
to his den. He’d come out, blink in the light, and feel his way to the kitchen, as if he’d never been in our front hall before. We avoided dinner conversation by investing heavily in frozen foods. He’d stay with my mother from five to six, reading to her from the National Enquirer, all the Liz Taylor stories, and then I’d take over the chitchat brigade while he drank bourbon and soda and nuked a Healthy Choice. The nurse’s aide went home at five, and my father and I agreed we could save money by not getting another aide until the late shift. Six terrifying hours every night. While my mother rested a little, if the pain wasn’t too bad, I’d go down to the empty kitchen and toast a couple of apple-cinnamon Pop-Tarts. Sometimes I’d smoke a joint and eat the whole box. If my father’s door was open, I’d sit in the hall outside and wait until the sharp, woody smell brought him out shaking his head like a bloodied stag; we didn’t have the energy to really fight. More often than not, we’d end up back in the brown fog of his study, me taking a few last puffs with my legs thrown over his big leather armchair, my father sipping his bourbon and staring out at the backyard. I ate Cheez Doodles most of the night, leaving oval orange prints all over the house. We took turns sitting with my mother until eleven. I watched the clock. One night I woke up on the floor of my mother’s room, my feet tangled in the dust ruffle. I could see my father’s black shoes sticking out on the other side of the bed, gleaming in the moonlight. He’d fallen asleep on the floor too, his arms wrapped around my mother’s cross-stitch pillow, the one that said “If you can’t say anything nice, come sit by me.” I don’t know what happened to the aide that night. By morning I was under my father’s old wool bathrobe and he was gone.
On her last good days, in March and April, I helped my mother paint a little. She always said I had a great eye but no hand. But my hands were all she had then, and she guided me for the bigger strokes. It was like being a kid again, sitting down at our dining room table covered over with a dozen sheets of slippery tan drawing paper.
And I said, “Mommy, I can’t make a fish, not a really fishy one.” And she told me to see it, to think it, to feel its movements in my hand. In my mind it glistened and flipped its adorable lavender tail through bubbling rainbows (I saw Fantasia four times), but on paper all I had were two big purple marks and two small scribbles where I wanted fins. She laid her big, square hand over mine lightly, like a magic cloak, and the crayons glided over the paper and the fish flipped its tail and even blew me a kiss from its hot-pink Betty Boop lips. And I was so happy that her hand could do what my mind could see.
By the end of June, though, she stopped trying to have me do the same for her. We just sat, and I’d bring in paintings from the year before, or even five years before, to give her something new to look at. And we looked hard, for hours, at the last painting she’d done on her own, not a sketch or an exercise, a finished piece called Lot’s Wife. The sky was grays and blues, beginning to storm, and in the foreground, in the barren landscape, was a shrouded figure. Or it could have been just the upright shroud itself, or a woman in a full-length muslin wrap. But the body was no longer alive; it had set into something dense and immobile. And far off to the right, bright and grim, were the little sticky flames of the destroyed city, nothing, not even rubble, around it.
“It’s so sad,” I complained to my mother.
“Is it?” She hardly talked anymore; she didn’t argue; she didn’t command. She never said, “Can I make a suggestion?” A few requests for nothing much, mostly silence. She took a deep breath. “Look again. The sky is so full and there is so much happening.” She looked cross and disappointed in my perception until she closed her eyes and then she just looked tired.
My graduation was the next day and it went about the way I expected. I overslept. My father overslept. The aide didn’t wake us when she left. I didn’t even open my eyes until Kay called me from the pay phone at school. I told her I didn’t know if I could get there on time. I didn’t know if I wanted to. I asked my father, who shrugged. He was still half asleep on his couch.
“I don’t know if you want to go, Delia. I suppose you should. I could come if you like.”
My father was, and is, a very quiet man, but he wasn’t always like that. This past year she took the life right out of him. I have spent one whole year of my life with a dying woman and a ghost.
I went, in my boxer shorts and ratty T-shirt, and until I saw all the girls slipping their blue robes down over off-the-shoulder clouds of pink and white, I forgot that we were supposed to look nice. Kay flattened my hair with spit, stuck my mortarboard on my head, and elbowed me into our section (Barstow, Belfer). In our class picture there are five rows of dyed-to-match silk shoes and polished loafers and a few pairs of sneakers and my ten dirty toes. I didn’t win any prizes either, which I might have if I hadn’t been absent for fifty-seven days my senior year.
Kay’s parents, who are extremely normal, dropped me off on their way home to Kay’s graduation party. Mrs. 118 Belfer showed me the napkins with Kay’s name flowing across in deep blue script, and she reached into the bag on the front seat to show me the blue-and-white-striped plastic glasses and the white Chinet plates.
“Send our … Tell your father we’re thinking of you all,” Mrs. Belfer said. Kay and I had made sure our parents didn’t know each other, and even when my mother was okay, she was not the kind of person to bond with other mothers.
My father made room for me on the porch swing. He ran one finger over the back of my hand, and then he folded his arms around his chest.
“How’d it go?”
“Okay. Mr. Switzer says hi.” Mr. Switzer was my ninth-grade algebra teacher. He used to play chess with my father, when we had people over.
“That’s nice. You were a hell of a chess player a few years ago. Eight years ago.”
I didn’t even remember playing chess; my father hadn’t taken the set out for ages, and when he did, he didn’t ask me to play, he just polished the marble pieces and rubbed a chamois cloth over the board. My mother got him that set in Greece, on their honeymoon.
“Eight years ago I was a chess player?”
My father shut his eyes. “I taught you when you were five. Your mother thought I was crazy, but she was wrong. You were good, you got the structure immediately. We played for a few years, until you were in fourth grade.”
“What happened?” I saw him sitting across from me, thinner, with more brown hair. We were on the living room floor, a little bowl of lemon drops between us. My mother was cooking chicken in the big red wok, and the chess pieces were gray-and-white soldiers. My queen was gray with one white stripe for her crown.
“Mommy got sick, the first time. You don’t remember?”
I didn’t say anything.
“You don’t have to remember, Delia. We don’t even have to talk about this now. Your mother says, your mother used to say, that I don’t say what needs to be said.”
He put his head back, and I did too. We looked up at the old hornet’s nest in the corner of the porch.
“Car accidents or no, she’s going to die. She is going to leave us to live this life. Even if I am blind drunk and you are dead in a ditch, she is still going.”
The swing creaked, and I watched our feet flip back and forth, long, skinny feet, like our hands.
“The aide’s leaving. Let’s go upstairs. It’ll be a treat for your mother, two for the price of one.”
“I’ll stay here.”
His fingers left five red marks on my arm, which bruises up at nothing.
“Please come.”
The swing rocked forward, free of us, and I followed him.
________
When she died that night, I wrapped the painting of Lot’s wife in an old sheet and hid it in the closet, behind my winter boots. My father said it was mine. We sprinkled her ashes at the Devil’s Hopyard.
My father began tucking me in, for the first time in years. He did it for weeks. We still hadn’t really cleaned up, not ourselves, not the house. My father ste
pped over my CDs and cleared a space for himself on my bed. He said, “It’s a little late for bedtime stories, I guess.”
“Tell me about Mommy.”
“All right,” he said. “Ask me something. Ask me anything.”
“Anything?” I didn’t even know how many siblings my father had, and now I could ask him anything?
My father put the bottle of Jack Daniel’s on the floor and rubbed my feet. “Cast discretion to the winds, Delia.”
“Why did Mommy get cancer?”
“I have no idea. I’m sorry. Next?”
“Did Mommy mind your drinking?”
“Not very much. I don’t think I drank too much when she was well, do you?”
“I don’t remember. Next. Were you and Mommy virgins when you got married?”
My father laughed so hard he stamped his feet up and down and wiped his eyes.
“Christ on a crutch, no. Your mother had had a dozen lovers before me—I think a dozen. She may have rounded down to the nearest bearable number. I was a callow youth, you know, I didn’t really appreciate that being last was much, much better than being first. And I had slept with two very patient girls when I was at Swarthmore. Slept with. Lain down with for a few afternoons. Sorry. Too much?”
“Was it great, with Mommy?” I said this into my pillow.
My father pushed the pillow away from my ears. “It was great. It was not always fireworks, but it was great, and when it was fireworks—”
“She rocked your world.”
My father patted my feet again. “That’s right. That’s a great expression. She rocked my world.”