Thursday, September 20, 2012

The Outing



In the kitchen I find my par­ents have be­come Sid and Nan­cy. It even smells like a shoot­ing gallery, the de­cay of hu­man spir­it, or is the garbage dis­pos­al bro­ken again? My six­ty year-old fa­ther with sil­ver bare­ly trac­ing his dark hair, stands be­fore a win­dow, an eye cocked on the con­tents of a sy­ringe he holds nim­bly be­tween his fin­gers. Mom, hair­less and crum­bled, sits on a chair gaz­ing up at him; a pa­tient girl friend wait­ing for her fix. I watch as my dad flicks the plas­tic with the tips of his nails, re­mov­ing all the air bub­bles and care­ful­ly push­es the plunger up un­til just a drop slips out of the nee­dle and glides smooth­ly down the sleek shiny prick.
It’s some drug to thin my moth­er’s blood, to make cer­tain it won’t clot. Some­thing can­cer makes hap­pen along with too many oth­er things we don’t know yet. Like grief. He hands the nee­dle to her and I wait in hor­ror, half ex­pect­ing that she will roll up a sleeve, make a fist un­til a fat green snake of a vein slith­ers up her arm. In­stead, she lifts the cot­ton thin night­gown to her thigh and jabs the nee­dle in. The fast beat­ing of my heart makes the ba­by skit­tle fast in­side me.
My fa­ther an­nounces, fi­nal­ly notic­ing me propped against the counter top I am grip­ping for bal­ance, “just fix­ing Mom up.”
"I no­ticed, hi Mom.” I man­age to smile down at my moth­er, who is care­ful­ly aim­ing her nee­dle through a hole in an emp­ty plas­tic sev­en-up bot­tle for safe­ty.
"Hi, Hon­ey.” Her voice has rapid­ly aged and sounds el­der­ly, de­lib­er­ate and slurred. As she at­tempts a grin, her thin lips stretch and pull against her teeth.
“What time is the ap­point­ment?”
“Ten o’clock,” my fa­ther an­swers. We on­ly have an hour.
“Mom, you should get ready." I tell her squint­ing as sun­light falls bright through the dusty win­dows above. A lone streak lands on her head, high­light­ing the scar made when they re­moved the brain tu­mor. Al­though it has healed well and lit­tle stub­bles of fuzz have be­gun to hide it, there is still a re­sem­blance to a large ques­tion mark.
“Oh? Well, let me take the rest of my pills and I’ll get dressed,” my moth­er sighs and goes about pick­ing at her brown plas­tic vials. There are eight dif­fer­ent pre­scrip­tions.
“I’ve got pills to make me eat, to go to the bath­room, not to go, to feel no pain, but noth­ing that’s go­ing to keep me alive for long.” My fa­ther blinks and ap­pears star­tled by this, as if he’s fi­nal­ly get­ting it: That this ill­ness is killing her.
“Well,” he clears his throat, “guess I’ll be go­ing to work then.” He leans over my moth­er and quick­ly brush­es her in­flat­ed cheek.
With his brief­case in one hand, he holds up a wrin­kled brown pa­per bag in the oth­er. “My lunch,” he ex­plains, “been mak­ing it my­self." And then stays that way wait­ing, it seems, for some kind of ap­plause.
Af­ter he has left for the of­fice I fol­low my moth­er to­ward the stairs to dress. She has be­gun to shuf­fle more than walk and our jour­ney from the kitchen seems to take hours. I wad­dle be­hind her, down the clut­tered hall, lit­tered with things like shoes and last sea­son’s cat­a­logs from places like Ed­die Bauer and Spiegel. Some­thing is still ran­cid and I fig­ure it’s prob­a­bly a per­me­at­ing per­ma­nence about the house be­cause no one has en­er­gy to keep it up. With can­cer, we’ve come to re­al­ize, there is no time for sil­ly things like or­der or clean­li­ness. Can­cer is a dirty dis­ease and to clean just takes en­er­gy no one seems to have.
As I get clos­er to my moth­er, I am hor­ri­fied. The pun­gent odor is em­a­nat­ing from her skin, reek­ing like food left in teeth overnight. Ra­di­a­tion has ru­ined her sense of smell and I can­not imag­ine how to tell her she stinks.
“Maybe you should take a nice warm bath be­fore we leave,” I sug­gest.
“We have time. It might help you re­lax.”
“I am re­laxed,” Mom man­ages huff­ing and climb­ing the steps like a tod­dler, grasp­ing the wood­en rail, one foot, two feet.
“Re­al­ly, you’ll feel bet­ter,” I squeeze quick­ly past her, my bel­ly hit­ting the top of my thighs, up the soft car­pet and then quick­ly down to the bath­room. “Be­sides, you kind of smell.”
“I do?” She stands wheez­ing in the bath­room door­way, her hands cling­ing to the frame, try­ing to sniff.
“Come on,” I smile stiffly and jig­gle my stom­ach in­to the tiny space be­tween the tub and sink. As I do this the ba­by whacks me in the gut.
“Here, Mom! Feel the ba­by,” I grab her hand and hold it against the taut skin of my bel­ly, stroking the dry claws her fin­gers have be­come. When the ba­by reach­es out again the might in his fist is so pow­er­ful both of our hands jump off my shirt.
“There! Did you feel that?” I ask ex­cit­ed, there is no doubt this time.
“No,” my moth­er re­moves her hand. “I nev­er do.”
“Well, you will.” I pre­tend not to be dis­ap­point­ed, but I know she won’t.
She doesn’t want to. I shrug my shoul­ders and rub my side, still feel­ing the fist like a hard growth. My moth­er has nev­er grown a ba­by in­side of her and some­times I won­der if this dis­tance she keeps is en­vy.
“It must be strange to feel some­thing alive in you like that,” she looks for a split sec­ond di­rect­ly in­to my eyes. “I think I would cry.”
“It feels like I’m a drum be­ing played from the in­side.” I am ea­ger to share with her my side of moth­er­hood, but the wall goes up be­fore I can con­tin­ue.
“Okay, I’ll take it.” She slips her fin­gers around the tiny but­tons on her night­gown, not want­ing to lis­ten to me about preg­nan­cy and ba­bies.
“What?” I near­ly snap.
“I’ll take the bath,” she smiles. “Be­sides, it might feel nice to soak in some bub­bles. Add some of those, will you?”
As she pulls off her night­gown, I turn away to­ward the mir­rors above the sink. Caught in the glass I have nowhere to hide my ex­pres­sion. The last time I saw my moth­er naked, fat shift­ed eas­i­ly around her mid­dle. Now, her skin drops thick and loose, her breasts sag, de­flat­ed. In less time than it has tak­en to grow this ba­by, my moth­er has dis­ap­peared. She is nowhere any longer.
“Look at me! Thir­ty years of di­et­ing and now it on­ly takes a cou­ple of months to lose fifty pounds. Should have thought of this ear­li­er,” she laughs. “You know, I’m as thin as I was on my wed­ding day!”
“Re­al fun­ny Mom,” I al­so laugh be­cause there is noth­ing else to do.
I shake a cloud of pur­ple bath pow­der in­to the wa­ter and ease her in­to the tub where she es­capes in­to a cloud of laven­der mist like a mag­ic trick
“Hon­ey, rub my back will you?” My moth­er hud­dles for­ward in­to the mound of glis­ten­ing bub­bles, wait­ing for my touch.
One hour lat­er, when Dr. Shaw opens the door to the ex­am room, I catch a glint of sur­prise in him that my moth­er is still among us. He is a short wiry man, with clean del­i­cate wrists I no­tice to­day as he pon­ders her chart. My mom is still slouched on the ta­ble, star­ing down at the space be­tween her legs. It has passed the point where chang­ing in­to gowns is nec­es­sary. In­stead, she keeps on her out­fit, the on­ly clothes she has that fit her now – yel­low den­im bell­bot­toms and a polyester shirt stored in the at­tic since Nixon’s res­ig­na­tion.
“You’ve lost ten more pounds. How are you eat­ing He­len?” Dr. Shaw stud­ies her.
“Oh, fine.” My moth­er smiles like a ly­ing Cheshire.
“What are you eat­ing and how much?” He doesn’t buy it and leans back, cross­ing his thin arms, look­ing at her.
“Oh, I eat lots of things: car­rots and sal­ads and ham­burg­ers from Mc­Don­alds and…”
“She’s not eat­ing,” I in­ter­rupt.
“I am too! You don’t live with me, how would you know,” my moth­er snaps, mak­ing her wig scram­ble all over. Be­cause she has shrunk it has be­come too big it looks like a drunk pup­py cling­ing to her scalp.
“Dad told me.” Is this what hav­ing a child will be like, I won­der, you didn’t eat your car­rots….Did too…Did not…?
“You have to eat He­len, that’s the on­ly way to fight the can­cer,” Dr. Shaw sighs.
“Noth­ing tastes good though, and I’m nev­er hun­gry any­more,” she pulls at thewrin­kles in the knees of the yel­low jeans, mak­ing ridges and val­leys in the ma­te­ri­al. She glances down to me sit­ting against the wall. “Be­sides, the chemo­ther­apy makes me sick to my stom­ach. I just throw it back up.”
I nod, meet­ing the tired, near­ly un­fa­mil­iar gray eyes of my moth­er. I can­not bear this much longer and I won­der if she sus­pects.
“I know it’s dif­fi­cult,” the doc­tor says com­pas­sion­ate­ly and en­cour­ag­ing­ly as a friend would. “But He­len, you have a grand­child to be here for.”
For sec­onds she is in her own world and we wait for her, the hum of the ghost­ly lights above is al­most deaf­en­ing. I hold my breath. I want to hear it fi­nal­ly – that she is try­ing to hold on. That by my hav­ing her grand­child is help­ing her live.
When she fi­nal­ly an­swers him it is not what I’ve ex­pect­ed to hear. “I just want to feel like my­self again.”
I lean back en­tire­ly hum­bled. On­ly then does it oc­cur to me how cru­el we have all been. How dan­gling this ba­by in front of her is akin to some sort of Pavlo­vian ex­per­i­ment to keep her alive. As if her grand­ba­by grow­ing in me will some­how sub­sti­tute her own pain and fear. That while I’m cre­at­ing life, my moth­er has been ag­o­niz­ing­ly and sin­gle-hand­ed­ly re­liv­ing each mo­ment of her own. How ut­ter­ly un­bear­able this has to be for her. What has she be think­ing; that in­side my­self I am sculpt­ing her re­place­ment?
“I re­al­ize that, He­len.” Dr. Shaw is say­ing kind­ly to my moth­er. “But it’s your first grand­child, you must be ex­cit­ed?”
But she doesn’t an­swer him. In­stead, my moth­er mere­ly shrugs her pointy shoul­ders ev­er- so-slight­ly while her fin­gers still pull at her knees. Her wig slips slow­ly for­ward, drift­ing over her eyes.

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