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2.
My mother appears in the doorway, silhouetted in the morning light. Her dark hair stands up stiff, like a shrub. Smoke from her cigarette curls up. I'm half awake but I can see how bony she is, a skeleton in a nightie, barely ninety pounds. She's not much heavier than the two Brittany spaniels that hover behind her-Lady and Peaches, my mother's dogs, watching as she wakes me, alert and so quiveringly shy around men that they sometimes pee a little when I speak to them. I can feel their tension as I stir in my bed.
"Okay," I murmur. "I'm up, I'm up." But my mother and her dogs just stand there. My mother is a few weeks away from her sixtieth birthday and I am nearly forty, but for a moment, here in my old teenage room, we replay our roles from the past. She knows that if she leaves, I will roll over and go back to sleep. Lazybones.
So after a moment, I sit up. I'm an adult, and I wipe my fingers across my face. "What time is it?" I say, though she can't hear me.
She's been deaf for almost five years now. A freak infection shut her ears down despite various attempts at intervention by various doctors-but the truth is that in half a decade she hasn't done much to help herself. She stopped going to her lip-reading cla.s.ses early on, and forget about sign language or anything like that. She refuses to hang out with other deaf people.
Mostly, to be honest, I don't know what she does with herself. I don't know who her friends are or where she goes or what she does with her soundless days. The dogs make little anxious noises as I pull the covers off myself, and I watch as my mother turns, as her bare, crooked feet slide across the carpet toward the kitchen, where she will make me coffee and breakfast. It's about six in the morning, time for me to drive back from Nebraska to Los Angeles, where my fairly successful grown-up life is waiting for me.
I am in between my second and third date with Rain at this point, and I'm looking forward to seeing her-things are going well, I think. "I've met a girl I really like," I tell my mother. At the time, I have no idea that she will fall out of a tree. I have no idea that she thinks I am a bad kisser.
3.
In the emergency room, there is a Plexiglas barrier between me and the receptionist, whose name tag says VALENCIA.
"I'm here with Rain Welsh," I tell her, and she asks me how to spell it. I have the purse and the billfold and I put Rain's driver's license and insurance card through the little mouth hole at the bottom of the gla.s.s wall.
"Are you the husband?" Valencia asks me, and I s.h.i.+ft awkwardly, looking at the stack of neatly rowed credit cards in Rain's billfold.
"I'm the boyfriend," I say. "I don't really know that much about her. She fell out of a tree."
"Please take a seat in the waiting area," Valencia says. She gestures toward the couches just beyond. A series of five Mexican children-boys and girls, aged approximately two to nine-are sitting politely together, watching a sitcom on the television mounted on the wall.
"Do you know how long it's going to be?" I ask Valencia. But that's not the right question. "Is she going to be all right?" I say, and our eyes meet for a moment. I am usually pretty good at these kinds of encounters-I have the face of a nice person-but Valencia doesn't approve. "Take a seat," Valencia says. "I'll let the doctor know that you're waiting."
4.
I've been talking to myself a lot lately. I don't know what that's about, but my mother was the same way. She hated to make small talk with other people, but get her into a conversation with herself and she was quite the raconteur. She would tell herself a joke and clap her hands together as she let out a laugh; she would murmur to the plants as she watered them, and offer encouragement to the food as she cooked it. Sometimes I would walk into a room and surprise her as she was regaling herself with some delightful story, and I remember how the sound would dry up in her mouth. She stood there, frozen in the headlights of my teenage scorn.
Now, as I close in on my fortieth birthday, I find myself doing a lot of the same sort of things. An ant crawls up my leg and I say, "Excuse me? May I help you?" before I slap and crush it. I get up in the morning and narrate my way through the rituals of awakening. "Okay, we're taking a shower now," I whisper, and I mumble shampoo into my hair and toothpaste into my mouth and stand mesmerized in front of the coffee machine. At times, the procedure seems heartbreakingly complicated-grinding the beans into dust, separating the filter from the packet (which requires the same kind of fine-motor skills as threading a needle), bringing water from the sink to the reservoir of the automatic coffeemaker. My G.o.d, it's like building a house every morning, just to get a cup of coffee! I stand there at the counter holding my mug, waiting as the water burbles through its cycle and trickles into the pot. "Okay," I encourage softly. "Okay, go-go!" At times I get very urgent with my coffee, as if I am watching a horse race that I have a lot of money riding on. Now, in the emergency-room parking lot, I am having a very involved talk with the contents of my girlfriend's purse. "I cannot believe this is happening," I mutter to the handbag confidentially. "This is ridiculous," I say, and then I find what I'm looking for. "Well, h.e.l.lo, beautiful," I say, to a crumpled pack of extra-long, extra-thin, feminine cigarettes: Misty, they are called.
5.
My mother collapses on the floor of her bedroom. She is perhaps on her way to the bathroom or to let the dogs out. I am sleeping in a motel outside of Provo, headed back to L.A., and she lies there with her face pressed against the carpet, unconscious. The dogs are anxious, pacing from the bedroom to the back door in delicate circles, nosing my mother with their muzzles, whimpering introspectively. They lower themselves down beside her and rest their heads against her side as her breathing slows and she goes into a coma. They lick her salty skin.
She is still alive when her neighbor friend comes by the next morning. The dogs have relieved themselves in the kitchen, unable to control their bladders any longer, and they hide in shame under the bed as the neighbor friend calls my mother's name. "Mary Ann! Mary Ann!" the friend, Mrs. Fowler, calls. Even though my mother has been deaf for as long as they've known each other, Mrs. Fowler nevertheless continues to speak at her-loudly, steadily determined, oblivious. When she sees my mother on the floor, she screams like a maid in a murder mystery. When I get back to Los Angeles, there is a message waiting for me on my answering machine. "Charles," Mrs. Fowler will recite in her most declamatory voice. "This Is Mrs. Fowler. Your Mother's Friend. I Am Sorry To Have To Tell You That She Is In The Hospital, And Very Ill."
After I've listened to the message a few times, I get on the cellphone and call Rain. "Listen," I say, "it looks like I'm going to have to cancel our date again. You won't believe this but I have to fly back to Nebraska. My mom's in the hospital! It must have happened practically the minute I left!"
"Oh, my G.o.d," she says. Her voice is soft with concern, actually very warm and-though we've only dated briefly-seemingly full of genuine tenderness. I imagine her touching my hand, stroking my forearm. She has beautiful dark-brown eyes, the ineffable sadness of a girl who drinks too much-I'm drawn to that.
"Actually," I say, "I think my mom's going to die. I just have this feeling."
"Go," Rain says, firmly. "Just get on that plane and go to her," Rain says. "Call me when you get there."
6.
I know that she is going to fall, but I'm not sure how to stop her. I stand there, with my hands clasped awkwardly behind my back as she s.h.i.+mmies unsteadily up the tree toward her cat. "You know," I say, and clear my throat. "Rain, honey, that doesn't seem like such a good idea." She pauses for a moment, as if she's listening to reason; and then, abruptly, she loses her hold on the branch. I watch as her body plunges down like a piece of fruit, not flailing or screaming or even surprised, but simply an expressionless weight coursing to earth. She hits the edge of the deck's railing, knocking over a plant, and I say: "Oh, my G.o.d!" And then she lands on her back. "Oh, my G.o.d," I say again, and finally have the sense to move toward the flower bed where she has come to rest.
"Are you hurt?" I say, leaning over her, and for a moment she doesn't open her eyes. I take her hand and squeeze it and a tear expels itself from beneath her eyelid and runs down her face.
The wind has been knocked out of her, and at first her voice is hinged and creaky. "I'm so embarra.s.sed," she whispers, wheezing. "I'm such an idiot."
"No, no," I say. "Don't worry about it."
But she begins to cry. "Ow," she says. "It really hurts!"
I bend down and kiss her on the mouth, comfortingly. "It's okay," I murmur, and run my hand over her hair. But she flinches, and her eyes widen.
"What are you doing?" she gasps. "I can't feel my legs." And then she begins to cry harder, her mouth contorting with a grimace of sorrow like a child's. "Don't touch me!" She cries. "I can't feel my legs! I can't feel my f.u.c.king legs!"
7.
Another hour pa.s.ses. The five children and I sit in the waiting area and watch the television together, and I keep my eye on them. These children seem to know what they're doing, whereas I have never been in a hospital waiting room before. Rain's purse sits in my lap and the children laugh politely along with the prerecorded laughter on the soundtrack of a comedy show.
I am not really sure how I am supposed to behave in this situation. I can't help but think that I should be sitting at Rain's bedside, pressing her damp hand between my palms. I should be arguing vehemently with doctors, demanding results, I should be surrounded by people who are bleeding and screaming and shocking one another with defibrillators. I sit there for a while longer, imagining this romantic pandemonium, and then finally I go to stand in line at the reception booth again.
When I sit down in the chair opposite the bulletproof gla.s.s, Valencia stares at me grimly. "Yes?" she says, as if she has never seen me before.
"Hi," I say. "I was just checking on the status of Rain Welsh. I've been sitting here for a while and I hadn't heard anything so I thought ..."
"And you are ...?" Valencia says.
"I'm the boyfriend. I'm the one that called the ambulance. I've been sitting right over there waiting because you said ..."
But she is already looking away, staring at her computer screen, which faces away from me, typing a little burst of fingernail clicks onto her keyboard. Pausing, pursing her lips. Typing again. Pausing to consider. Typing again.
"She's in X-Ray right now," Valencia tells me at last, after several minutes.
"Well," I say, "do you have any idea how long it's going to be? I mean, do you have any idea what the situation is? I've been sitting here patiently for a long time now, and I'd just like to know ..."
"That's all the information I have, sir," Valencia murmurs firmly, and gives me a look that says: Are you going to give me trouble? Because I know how to handle troublemakers.
"So I guess I'll just wait," I say. "I'll just wait right over here."
8.
NO SMOKING ON HOSPITAL GROUNDS, so I head out to the bus stop on the sidewalk just beyond the parking lot and stand there to smoke one of the nasty Mistys that I found in the purse. It has a kind of perfumey, mentholated flavor, like a cough drop dissolved in Earl Grey tea.
I had no idea that Rain smoked, and in some ways this makes me like her more. The fact that she was shy about it, that she wanted to hide it from me. That's kind of sweet.
I've always liked the idea of smoking more than I liked the actual smoke. Watching someone smoke in movies, for example, is a lot more pleasant than waking up after a pack of cigarettes and coughing up a yellow-green slug of phlegm.
Nevertheless I have a predilection for it. My mother was a fiercely committed smoker, and, growing up, I probably ingested half-a-pack-a-day's worth of secondhand smoke. I've always found cigarettes comforting, a taste of childhood, the way some people feel about Kellogg's cereal or Jell-O or Vicks VapoRub.
I'm just about finished with my smoke when I look up and see three women coming toward me. The women are being led out of the emergency room in their gowns and slippers, pus.h.i.+ng their wheeled IV stands down the sidewalk. The IV stands look like bare silver coat racks; a clear plastic bag full of clear liquid hangs from each one, and a tube runs from each bag to each woman's arm. They walk along, single file, followed by an orderly who is talking on a cellphone. When they get close to me, they all stop, take out packs of cigarettes, and light up.
It's pretty surreal, I guess. I didn't realize that such things were allowed, but apparently they are desperate enough for nicotine that someone (the orderly, smoking himself) has decided to take pity on them. Has sneaked them out the back door for a quick fix.
This isn't, after all, the fanciest neighborhood in the world, nor the nicest of emergency rooms. The women are all poor to working cla.s.s, grim-faced, clearly having a bad day, and I can't help but think of my mother-who wouldn't go anywhere unless she could smoke. Had, in fact, once left a hospital in outrage because they refused to give her a "smoking room."
I stand up, gentlemanly, and nod as the women approach.
"h.e.l.lo, ladies," I say. "Beautiful evening."
Having grown up kind of poor to working cla.s.s myself, I can't help but feel a kins.h.i.+p with them. "You really romanticize the white-trash period of your life," Rain once said to me, which I thought was a little hurtful but perhaps true.
There is, for example, this blond woman who reminds me of my mother's side of the family-all sharp cheekbones and shoulder blades and sinewy muscle, a body built for hardscrabble living-and I smile companionably at her as she breathes smoke into the night air. She is gazing off toward some cheap apartment buildings in the distance, the vertical rows of identical balconies, and I stare out with her. Together we look up and see the moon.
9.
As expected, she's dead by the time I get there. By the time my plane touches down she's being moved from the hospital to the funeral home, and her friend Mrs. Fowler calls me on my cellphone as I'm standing in line at the rental-car place.
"Charles," Mrs. Fowler says. "Would you go and sit down somewhere for me, honey? Sit down in a comfortable chair." And then her voice breaks. "I have some terrible news."
About two hours later, I pull into the driveway of my mother's house in my rented car and it still hasn't sunk in.
The death of a parent is one of those momentous occasions, one of the big events of your life, but what do you do, exactly? My father died when I was three, so I barely even remember it, and my ex-wife's mother pa.s.sed away during the early, happiest years of our marriage, and I hardly had to do anything at all; I just stood by looking sympathetic and supportive and people would occasionally nod at me or pat me on the shoulder.
So: sinking in. I sit there in my car, idling in the driveway, and I try to remember exactly what went on at the funeral of my late ex-mother-in-law but my mind has gone completely blank. Here is the door of my mom's house, well-remembered childhood portal. Here is the yard, and a set of wires that runs from the house to a wooden pole, and some fat birds sitting together on the wires, five of them lined up like beads on an abacus.
I left home when I was eighteen-more than twenty years have pa.s.sed!-and though I came back dutifully every year the connections that held us together grew more threadbare as time went on.
I can remember being about five or six and running around and around that lilac bush in the front yard, chased by Mother. Laughing, joyous, etc.
I turn off the ignition in the rental car and after a minute I take out my cellphone and call Rain.
I don't know why. We seem to have connected, she seems like a very bright, sensitive, caring woman.
"This is Rain," she says. She is in the midst of directing a commercial, a public-service announcement about teen suicide, and her voice has an official snap to it.
"I need some advice," I say. "I'm not sure what to do."
"Charlie?" she says, and I love the way that she says my name, a matter-of-fact tenderness.
"My mom's dead," I tell her.
10.
A little past midnight, the television has been shut off and the children in the waiting room are huddled together in a row on the chairs, leaned up against one another, smallest to largest, sound asleep.
How long are people expected to wait in these places? No one seems to know the answer, though as time has pa.s.sed I've tried to engage some of my fellow waiters in conversation on the subject.
"I've been waiting here for five hours," I disclose, and people regard me with varying degrees of commiseration. "Does that seem normal?" I ask them. I don't know why I do this: why, after all these years in Los Angeles, I still have the Nebraska-like urge to banter with strangers.