Chapter 35
Anna
T
he sun was not quite above the backyard fence when she discovered they were out of both milk and breakfast cereal.
“I want Kix,” Chris called. He leaned against the kitchen doorway, clutching the crotch of his pajama bottoms. His hair was tangled and only three of the six buttons on his pajama top were fastened.
She parted his hair with her fingers.
“Do you have to go potty?”
“No. I want Kix.”
Besides no milk and no cereal, there were no eggs. She couldn’t make omelets or pancakes or even French toast.
“Go potty and get dressed while I figure out something to eat.”
She’d have to make a trip to the grocery store. Day after day, she’d put it off, but now the food situation was a crisis.
Eddie, awake but silent, lay in his new recliner, Jake’s invention that looked like a car seat on high-chair legs. The paint had finally dried and just last night she had finished the gingham covers for the cushion that lined the wooden frame. She had made three covers, assuring a clean one when the others were in the laundry. Jake had built it with room to grow, so that Eddie’s legs could get longer and his trunk could get taller, and he would still fit in his new seat. When, or if, he had the strength to sit up alone, he could go back to the regular high chair. In the meanwhile, this worked well. They all agreed Eddie needed to be at the kitchen table when they ate.
She thought about the tasks ahead and shook her head at the enormity of it all. She needed to arrange for Rose Marie to take the boys again so she could get back to work. She could feed Eddie immediately before dropping the boys at day care and immediately after picking him up four hours later. That way Rose Marie wouldn’t have to deal with the feeding tube. Monday was the target, so she had three more days to iron out the details.
She hadn’t driven the car since that horrible trip to the emergency room three weeks ago. She and the kids would go to the store after they finished eating. There must be something in the house to eat for breakfast.
Inside the freezer she found a carton of vanilla ice cream; in the fridge, a wilted head of lettuce, three green onions, and an assortment of half-filled jars—ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, dill pickles, olives, and BBQ sauce. Nothing of substance.
“Can I have a cookie?” Chris called from his bedroom.
“We don’t have any,” she called back. “Besides, we’re working on breakfast.”
“Grandma made some. I want one of Grandma’s cookies.”
She opened the door to the corner cupboard. Tang. That was a start. Next to the bag of brown sugar stood a plastic container she’d never seen before. Inside were cookies; they smelled like oatmeal and the little brown things looked like raisins.
Her grandmother’s words tracked through her head: “Necessity is the mother of invention.” That resourceful woman would have been able to cobble together something for breakfast.
She stirred two tablespoons of Tang into a glass of water and set a bowl of ice cream on the table beside a cookie. Ice cream was, after all, made of cream, which was close to milk, and the cookie was close to oat cereal. The raisins were fruit.
Then she called to Chris, “Breakfast’s ready.”
He wandered to the table and looked at the bowl of ice cream. Then he looked at her. She couldn’t read the expression on his face.
Before Eddie’s illness, he never would have found a breakfast like this. They would have had plenty of cereal and milk. There were lots of differences since Eddie’s illness.
“You found Grandma’s cookies,” he finally said.
“I did, and figured we could try them out for breakfast.”
He smiled and blew a mouthful of air into his brother’s face. Eddie squirmed and sputtered.
Chris climbed on his stool at the table. The rays of the morning sun, which had cleared the top of the backyard fence by now and streamed through the kitchen window, lit up his face.
“Ow, too bright.” He clamped his eyes shut.
She drew the curtain across the window, shutting out the harsh rays, letting in the filtered ones.
Chris was already strapped into his car seat when she carried Eddie out the back door and into the garage.
She laid Eddie in the infant seat, but his body didn’t mold to the padding the way it used to—now his legs were stiff and his spine, rather than bending at the waist, arched backward. She leaned into the rear car door and tried to push him into place. She kneaded his belly to make it bend, tried to fold his knees toward his chest, but his rigid body wouldn’t slide into the seat. She took a step backward and bumped against the snow shovel, knocking it off the wall. It landed in an oil puddle on the garage floor. She let out a sigh of frustration.
Chris kicked against the upholstery. “Let’s go,” he said, a perfect imitation of an impatient Jake.
She couldn’t remember how Jake had gotten Eddie into the car for the ride home from the hospital. He hadn’t had any trouble that she could recall. But then, she hadn’t given that part of going home much attention.
“Chris, settle down,” she called. “Quit kicking.” She stood beside the open car door and rubbed her sore back.
“Mommy.”
Chris’s call was sharp as an ice pick. “Let’s go.”
She tried once more to prop Eddie into his car seat. This time a gentle push seemed to coax his body into the right position—his bottom settled into the seat padding, his spine leaned easily against the back. Something had changed in him, something had loosened him up.
“In a minute, Chris.” She fastened the straps of Eddie’s car seat.
“I wanna get out, Mommy.” Chris was clawing at his seat belt.
“Stay there. We’ll get going to the store in a minute. Count to thirty.”
She fished the snow shovel from the oily puddle and hooked it on the nail in the wall.
“Twenty-one,” Chris droned. “Twenty-two.”
As she turned back to the car, she caught the smell.
“Twenty-nine. THIRTY,” Chris yelled, victorious. Then his voice dropped. “Eddie pooped. It stinks.”
She wiped her face with her hands, ran her fingertips over her forehead. How could a trip to the grocery store be so difficult? It wasn’t like this before. She reached into the car and unbuckled Chris from his car seat. He clung to her as if stitched to her body, his arms so tight around her neck she could hardly breathe. She rubbed his legs, patted his back, and stroked his hair while she swayed side to side in the damp, earthy morning air that, like her, was trapped inside the garage.
She had no idea how Eddie’s illness, the hospitalization, her long absence had affected Chris. In spite of his sometimes cocky talk, he was still a little boy, a child who needed his mother to take care of him, to protect him. The past three weeks must have felt like a hurricane, followed by a tornado, followed by a blizzard for him. Like hell to the third power.
When Chris finally let go of her neck, she set him on the floor and picked Eddie out of his seat. “We’ll clean him up and then go to the store.” With Chris hanging like moss from the waistband of her slacks and Eddie cradled in her arms, she hobbled back to the kitchen door.
She laid Eddie on the sofa to change his diaper. He had always been a placid baby but now, was more so—no crying, no cooing. His hips splayed apart, his knees were tightly bent and the soles of his feet rubbed against each other. He didn’t pull against her, didn’t kick at the air, didn’t try to flip over while she slid the new Pamper under his little butt. She ripped the backing off the sticky tabs, smoothed the plastic edge against his belly, and remembered the old days—back when she took for granted that Eddie was a healthy baby, back when she took everything for granted. A month ago, she found his rolling around irritating. “Lie still, would you?” she had said, half playfully as she grabbed his leg to keep him on his back. Right now, more than anything, she wished he would flip over while she changed his diaper.
She washed her hands, gave Chris another cookie, and paged Jake.
“Where are you?” she asked when he called back.
“In the clinic.”
She explained what had just happened, about the junk food for breakfast, about the snow shovel, about the impossibility of getting to the grocery store. She wasn’t sure what she wanted from him. She remembered how, when she was a little girl, her father kissed her scraped knee, made monkey faces, danced around her like a clown. How her tears had turned to smiles when her father had whispered, “After the rain comes the sunshine, Anna-danna-my-dear-bobanna,” and everything was good again. But that was long ago.
“It’s okay.” Jake’s voice was smooth as brandy. “Ice cream and cookies won’t hurt him. Actually, it’s a pretty clever solution to the no-breakfast problem. I can stop for milk and cereal on the way home. What else do we need in the line of groceries?”
“No, we’ll go. Hopefully later this afternoon. I just wanted to tell someone how difficult this seems.”
“You’re doing great, honey.”
His voice was comforting. His reassuring words seemed honest. She had to believe they were. She wished he were there, but he would be home later that evening and would help with the children. He had even begun to do some of the cooking. He and Chris. “The Campbell guy chefs,” Jake called them.
“Can I do that?” Chris asked as he watched her prepare the feeding tube.
“No, sweetheart. I have to do this.” She attached the formula-filled syringe to the hub of the tube and slowly pushed the plunger.
“Does he like that?” Chris asked.
“Do you mean does he like the tube? Or does he like the formula?”
Chris shrugged, staring solemnly at his baby brother.
“Well, he can’t taste the formula because it doesn’t go into his mouth. I think he likes to eat by the tube, because he feels full when we’re done.”
When she finished feeding Eddie, she laid him in his crib. “Chris,” she called. “Nap time.” How could she manage to return to work? She doubted she would ever get into a routine. At best, it would be a new routine, not like before.
Chris argued with her about the nap, whined that he wanted to sleep standing up. “Don’t be silly,” she said and led him into his room. She lifted him into his bed, handed him Alphie the stuffed alligator, shut the blinds, kissed him, and left.
With both boys asleep, she decided to take a bath. She used to relax in the tub, back when it had been possible to relax. In the past, the warm water that lapped against her skin while she swirled her arms through the soapy liquid had softened tight muscles, quelled hurt feelings, sweetened sour moods.
Naked, she sat on the toilet lid. Goose bumps sprouted on her bare belly as she waited for the hot water to wash through the pipes. She studied her bare feet, the pink of her toes against the brown floor tiles. Toes were funny things, she thought, a row of swollen, fleshy fringe hanging off the end of each foot. It was hard to believe such ridiculous tags of bone and skin belonged to her. Inching her feet apart slightly, she squared her toes with the grout lines. It was satisfying, the sight of her bare feet against the tile grid—evidence that predictability and order still existed in the world.
As she stared at her two baby toes that curled inward, at her bruised right ankle, at the way her second toes were longer than her great toes, she wondered if she was really sitting there. She wiggled her feet, watched them rise and fall against the brown tiles.
“Am I dreaming this,” she muttered out loud. “Is this real?”
Six weeks ago she had taken a bath; six weeks from now she would take a bath. As she wondered about former, present, and future baths, time seemed very fluid; days had sloshed into weeks, which would slosh into months. The baths themselves were routine, almost boring in their sameness. It was the surrounding circumstances that distinguished one from the next. Maybe she could magically transform this one into a previous bath—the last one before Eddie’s illness—and redo the events that had followed.
Suddenly, the reality of Eddie swept over her—a crushing, suffocating, blinding, inky green truth. She wanted to run, to get away from it, to race to where it wasn’t. The room darkened. Her stomach twisted. She shut her eyes, moaned, and grabbed at the side of the sink, trying to escape the inescapable knowing that overwhelmed her—Eddie would never be normal, would never run up a flight of stairs, never blow a chewing gum bubble, never count from one hundred backward by sevens just for the fun of it. He’d probably never count at all. Maybe he’d never talk, never tell anyone he loved her, never tell her of his victories, his worries, his sorrows. Would he be able to hear her voice? To see a beautiful sunset? Maybe he’d just lie like a blob of dough and grow old.
For a while at the hospital, she had thought Eddie would die. At other times she had convinced herself he would snap out of it—that the magic of modern medicine would erase his infection and return him to a healthy baby. None of that was real. Absolutely none of it. What was real about Eddie was that he would never, never, never be normal.