by John Donaghy
After
Father died, Mother did not pine away; hers was not that kind of desolation.
She lived for twenty-four more years. During that quarter century she
elaborated a glittering vision of her marriage and fixed it in a set of
canonical anecdotes which she told us over and over. We were to understand that
she and Father enjoyed a passion that could only have developed long ago among
people who were more vital and closer to the source of life than our own anemic
generation with its provisional, little loves.
On her
kitchen table she kept a pile of old letters in tattered and yellowing
envelopes: they were all the letters she and my father had exchanged from their
courtship onwards. "I don't know what to do with all these,” she would
always say, “I don't know who would
be interested in them," and I always said, who knows why, “I'd love to
take care of them for you.” And she: "I don't know. There's awfully
personal stuff in here. Some of these are the letters of a man who is totally gone on a woman. Maybe I'll have them
cremated with me. And yet I hate to do that, someone might find them very interesting.”
Within that pile of letters there was a
smaller bundle bound with a purple ribbon. These were the letters that
chronicled The Argument. The Argument was the central story in the canon, the
one that she told us more often than any other: She had been head of pediatric
nursing at the Mass General. He was doing his residency there. They had been
going together for months. She did not drink and flirt like the other girls. He
was crazy about her, and she was crazy about him. He would call her every night
at ten. When he was away, he would write to her every day. Sometimes twice. He
had to go away for three weeks. He was resting; he had been overworking. But he
missed her. He had to give a lecture in Montreal. He had arranged to take her
with him; he had arranged for them to share a hotel room. He had acted as
though it were a fait accompli. He
had assumed and had not asked. Well, she was furious. She wanted to know if this was his habit. She wanted to
know if he thought she was like other girls. She would most certainly not go with him to Montreal or anywhere
else for that matter. He was hurt. He behaved as though he were angry. She
would have none of that. She would
not listen to him. They were estranged for days, oh, it might have been two
weeks; she heard not one word. Then one night at ten o’clock, the phone call
came. She had won. It was a glorious love affair. It lasted a lifetime.
In advanced old age when the
multiplying frailties of nature send most people collapsing into themselves,
Mother’s vigor seemed divorced from her flesh. In her eighties and nineties she
became tiny, bowed, seamed with wrinkles, dry as a cricket, but she stacked her
own wood and pushed her own reel mower and took as many trips to the landfill
as she could. She amazed people with her wit and her activity, and she took so
much pride in their amazement that she developed a kind of geriatric bravado.
At ninety-three she stood on the very top of her step ladder—the “This Is Not A
Step” step—in order to prune her lilacs. The ladder was on uneven ground and it
began to tip, “It was going to take me through the kitchen window,” she said,
“So I jumped.” She hit the ground and rolled, breaking nothing but straining
her coccyx. She refused the doctor. It only hurt, she said, whenever she tried
to lift something heavier than thirty pounds.
I could not
help thinking that she might grow in energy as she shriveled in mass until
eventually, a century from now perhaps, she’d whirl up into the hungry vortex
of herself and disappear. But at the age of ninety-seven she began to fail. Her
eyesight grew worse; her hearing began to go; her gait became unsteady; her
driving became lethal. She tore out the undercarriage of her car by driving, at
speed, into a ditch. She emerged from that accident unscathed, angry and, she
claimed, blameless. It would never have happened had the town made that ditch
more visible. As soon as the car was fixed, she visited my brother’s law
offices for a quick consultation. Leaving his parking lot, she stomped on the
accelerator rather than the brake. She shot across the road, over the sidewalk
and down a stretch of lawn before coming to rest wedged under someone’s front
porch. Again she was unhurt though this time she conceded that the incident had
quite taken her breath away. Still, it was the sort of thing that could happen
to anyone.
My brother
appropriated her car keys. One of her neighbors, an extraordinarily kind woman,
offered to drive her whenever she needed a ride. But Mother did not want to be
driven. She did not like the neighbor who seemed to want to become a friend. She had gone so far as to send a
birthday card. God. Mother was not going
to saddle herself with that bit of
inanity. Her errands were her own
damned business, and she could do them herself.
She discovered a spare set of car keys, and after a few weeks, when the car had
been repaired from its collision with the porch, she drove it to the grocery
store.
She left
early in the morning so that she would arrive while the parking lot was still
empty. She did not like parking lots. When they were busy, they confused her, and
because she feared that by the time she was ready to leave, the store lot would
be swarming with other vehicles, she parked strategically—nose up to a short,
ornamental hedge beyond which she could see, reassuringly, the sidewalk and the
street. It was clever of her to do so, she told us later, for when she emerged
with her groceries, the parking lot had become a madhouse. Cars were pulling into
spaces and pulling out of spaces and
driving around looking for spaces,
bumper to bumper like salmon in a stream. There were people everywhere
walking as though they hadn’t a care in the world right where she had to drive.
She didn’t think it would be quite safe to
back out into all that confusion. Instead, she put the car in drive and bulled
her way through the shrubbery, across the sidewalk, and into two cars which
were parallel parked in the street. These were an unexpected impediment. They
had not been there when she had chosen her parking space, but she found that if
she applied the gas, she could push them slowly outward, and so force her way
between them and gain the open road and freedom and, eventually, home.
She
suspected that some busybody might have seen her and assumed she was breaking
the law. She was preemptive. She called the grocery store. “Hello,” she said,
“This is Frances Donaghy. I’m afraid I may have damaged some of your lovely
plantings as I was leaving your parking lot.” When the police showed up on Horn
of the Moon, she was a very fragile, very old lady. “The officer was a woman and she was very nice. She asked if she could bring my car keys to anyone who
might keep them for me. I didn’t want to argue, and I won’t go into it now, but
apparently I did more damage than I
had thought. I told her that it was
all right and that I wouldn’t drive again.”
She never did. She stopped
going out. She had no friends to visit and none who would visit her.
Occasionally my brother drove her to the doctor, but otherwise she occupied
herself at home as she always had when we were young—reading, listening to the
CBC, cleaning the house, and brooding on her children. We were the mediators of
her image and the guardians of her legacy, and yet, she knew, we were not true
believers. She tried and tried to set us straight. She explained to each one of
us, many, many times, that we were Superior People because everything she had
ever done had been for us. Our
childhood had been an idyll, really, the rococo dream of Watteau or Fragonard.
She painted it for us. She put herself in the foreground as a set of
allegorical figures: Wisdom, Discipline, and Benignity in stately dance,
draperies billowing under a sky piled high with summer clouds. Her children
were two happy little shepherds and two happy little shepherdesses piping on a
distant hillside. We, the perfect offspring of a perfect union, had enjoyed a
perfect upbringing.
The hardest
point to revise was my sister Peigi. Mother had scrubbed and scrubbed her
conscience, but some shadow of Peigi’s childhood years—years of unbroken rancor
and derision, of slaps and blows and hair-pulling and starvation—returned and
returned like Lady M’s damned spot. Part of the problem was that Peigi, who now
lived far away in Oregon, had become very gracious. She had kept in touch. She
called regularly. She did her best to see that Mother was as comfortable as she
could be, that she was on the right amount of the right medications, that she
would be able, if she chose, to die in her own home. Whenever she visited the
east coast, Peigi stayed for a day or two on the Horn of the Moon even though
the proximity of all those childhood artifacts could give her spells of
dizziness and nausea which made Mother worry that she might be in ill health. Mother couldn’t understand it. Peigi had always been
such a robust child. In fact, we all
had been ridiculously healthy. We
were never sick at all.
“Well,” Mother said to me one day, “your
sister is just a fantastic mother,
and she has worked very, very hard. Her boys
are doing well; she has a great reputation where she works. Wherever she’s worked. She’s really done something with her life.” This was
delivered earnestly, reproachfully, as though she suspected I wanted to accuse
Peigi of sloth and bad parenting. “I know,” I said. She was silent for a moment
of dramatic consideration and then: “You know, I think she must have been
bi-polar when she was in high school.”
It did no
good to point out that bi-polar disorder is not like mono or that Peigi is
essentially the same person she always was. “Oh, come on. She is absolutely not the
same person. She is completely
different. No one could have
predicted how she would turn out. She needed a very firm hand. She calls me every day. I don’t know why. I
suspect it’s good for her.”
This Grand Revision was
somewhat undermined by the way she sought, as her widowhood advanced, to
reclaim her ancient powers of command. Increasing frailty gave her a leverage
she had not enjoyed for decades. She called us more and more frequently asking us
to drive up to Horn of the Moon and help her with one thing or another.
We always
went, and when we arrived, we discovered that help consisted not so much in
accomplishing anything practical as in doing exactly what we were told. She was
particular and insistent. She could take over a minute explaining exactly how to empty a barrel of weeds
over the pasture fence. We were to do what we were asked and not one thing
more; we were absolutely not to
freelance. One late August day, after I had stacked a couple of cords of wood
for her, I noticed that the catch on her wood stove door had rusted and seized
up over the summer. I got a hammer and was just about to tap it free when she
came into the room and asked, “What are you doing?”
in a tone that suggested she had caught me with my hand in the till.
“I’m fixing
your stove,” I said.
“That’s
Pede’s job.”
“I’m right
here. It’ll take less than a second.”
“You will not touch my stove with that hammer.
You’ll shatter the whole damned thing.”
“Fuck you,”
I thought graciously and tapped it anyway. Immediately the catch released and
the handle was freed.
“See?” I
said. “All better.”
“Thank-you,”
she said crisply.
Gradually
we became specialists, performing only those tasks she suspected we found most
irksome. For me it was driving her places, especially to her hairdresser who
lived forty minutes away and who, as he worked on her wisps, flattered her so
relentlessly that she was compelled to disavow every unctuous word of it with
breathless, elaborately artificial modesty all the way home. For Pede she
reserved requests that were irritatingly vague or burdensomely trivial or which
frustrated action. She might call him late at night to inform him that she
thought she was having a medical emergency but that she didn’t want to go to
the hospital; he was not to worry, and could be bring her more hand cream in
the morning? But it was Betsy who stirred up Mother’s old blood lust. Betsy had
always been the most responsible of us, the most easily moved to guilt; her
vulnerability made her irresistible.
Mother
wanted Betsy to touch her, to bathe her, to drive up to Vermont from
Massachusetts to wash her hair. I once arrived at the Horn of the Moon
unannounced in the middle of one of these shampooing sessions. Mother was
standing at the kitchen sink and Betsy stood over her, gently massaging suds
into her scalp, a pitcher of lukewarm water at her elbow. It sounded as though
Mother were directing her own waterboarding. She groaned and spluttered,
nothing Betsy did was right: she was
being too rough; she was missing places; she wasn’t getting all
the soap out; she wasn’t using enough
water; she was using too much water;
couldn’t she see she was getting soap in her eyes? Did Betsy think Mother had
asked her to come all this way to drown her
in her own sink?
Betsy
looked at me over the top of Mother’s head and rolled her eyes. Mother did not
immediately notice me; she was too lost in whatever was going on between the
two of them. It wasn’t until Betsy was gently patting her hair dry with a
towel, that she saw me, and then she lifted her head and stared like a lioness
disturbed on a carcass. “Now,” she said to Betsy, “Upstairs for a bath.”
Mother’s
hunger for attention was terrible. She could not find nourishment in the world
as it is. She wanted us near her all the time, but as soon as we got close, she
erased us. She could eat only the promise-crammed air of her own fantasies. She
conjured an illusory empire out of darkness visible: Pandæmonium, palace and
city, seat of power to rival the towers of Heaven, the trickster kingdom of
narcissism, the old fabric of wind and shadow and wish and denial.
It is a week before
Thanksgiving 2012. Mother is ninety-eight years old. It is early in the morning
and the sun has not yet risen. The month has been unseasonably warm, but today
is raw and windy up in the hills on Horn of the Moon. Overnight the ruts have
frozen in the narrow road that runs by her place and gusts of snow sweep down
the mountain, through the stunted upland orchards and over her little
farmhouse. Today she is paying her bills. She works at the little kitchen table
under a dim lamp writing checks and addressing envelopes in her quivery hand.
She has boiled a sauce pan of coffee for herself on the woodstove, the door of
which she leaves precariously open because she “likes to keep an eye on it”. A
tinkling mound of coals throws a red warmth across the cobbled hearth and up
the back of her chair. By the time the sun has come up she is ready to go to
the mailbox down at the end of the drive. She does not bother with her overcoat
or her blackthorn stick because they are a bother and because the stick makes
her look like a crone.
She goes
out the back door because both the heavy front door and the glass storm door
stick. She has been having dizzy spells recently. Something the doctor has put
her on, something that was intended to keep her heart from racing, makes the
damned thing stutter and stop instead. When it stops, she faints. It always
gets going again, but when it does, she generally finds herself on the ground.
She is crossing through the woodshed with its uneven gravel floor when she
loses consciousness, pitches forward and lands hard. When she comes to, she
knows she has broken something and she appears to be bleeding from deep cuts on
her forearms. Her knees too feel sticky with blood. She gathers the bills from
where they have scattered, crawls to the woodpile, hauls herself upright and
keeps going. Bleeding, in pain, with the world and its snow whirling around
her, she makes her way down the driveway through the brown and blowing weeds to
her mailbox. “They were bills”, she
explained later, “I was going to mail
them.”
A neighbor
is driving up the hill in his pickup truck. When he sees her, he slows. She’s
not dressed warmly enough; she appears to be staggering, and the sleeves of her
sweat shirt are soaked with blood. He stops. He puts her in the warm cab, goes
inside and gets a jacket for her and then takes her to the hospital. She has a
broken pelvis and extensive lacerations on her arms and legs.
Within a
few days she is in a rehabilitation facility. It’s actually quite a nice place.
It does not smell like a nursing home. It’s quiet, with broad corridors and
large, sunny rooms. When I drop in to see her, she is alone. It is odd to see
her name plate on the door like a secret that should not be exposed: “Frances
Donaghy.” She is lying on her bed before a big window; she looks as though she
has been dropped there by a careless hand. Her head is thrown back, canted off
to one side. Her mouth is open and dark, the upper lip drawn back from long,
ochre teeth. I have never seen this woman before. That scant nimbus of gray
hair. That small, high-shouldered bone-cage of torso. The arms loose jointed
and thin like the arms of a child or a marionette, the palms upward, a final
shrug. The old feeing again; it is not her, it is something else, it is
uncanny, it’s a doll, a fetish; it is feathers and bones and leather and
baboon-blood paste and teeth of old cowrie shells. “Mom”, I say, and then
louder, “Mom.” Incredibly she stirs, shifts. Her sleep has been deep and she is
confused, “Pete?” she asks. “No,” I say. “John”. “Oh,” she says, “John.” She
struggles into a sitting position and finds her glasses.
She looks
at me, and fills up with herself. “I’m glad I have lived so long,” she says
even before she is all the way back, as though she were taking up a
conversation we had been having when she nodded off. “It has given me a chance
to review my life.” I wait and say nothing. “I’ve always been frugal. I’ve never asked for a thing. I never even asked for a job. I would never have asked for a job, but they wanted to give me one. And
then my nursing classmates made me a class officer. Well, I was no more interested in that kind of thing
than in . . . ” she pauses, unable to think of anything in which she could have
comparably little interest. “Even with your father. I never pursued him. I was crazy about him of course but I never pursued. He pursued me. I count myself very lucky. And here.
My God, any little thing I happen to
say they think is the height of cleverness. The nurses, of course. And the
psychologist was in here the other day testing my cognitive function. He gave
me three words at the beginning of our conversation and told me to remember
them because at the end he was going to ask me what they were—I remembered all
but one, and that one I recalled immediately with a hint. He seemed to think that was extraordinary. Well,
afterwards, he was no sooner gone than he was back again. ‘I forgot my
clipboard,’ he said. ‘Ah,’ I said, ‘forgot.’
Well, he laughed and he said, ‘Give me a high-five. I guess there are no
problems here.’”
I have reviewed my
life and discovered that from the day I was born everybody has loved me, wanted
me. An offering from Pandæmonium; an exact untruth.
Thus Mother
announces herself to herself, standing at the entrance to the shack she
imagines, in her terrible weakness and her terrible strength, is a palace. She
is a plucky five-year-old in outsized livery—knee breaches with silk stockings,
a frogged and brocaded coat, a cocked hat that comes down over her eyes. “Her
most high and puissant majesty,” she declaims “Empress of Life, Queen of all
Knowledge and of all Virtue; Singular and Flawless, Tower of Ivory,” and she
ushers in something dark and bent, something with crooked little horns, with
shit in its burlap pants and lice crawling under its blackened scales.
She died at the age of one
hundred and one. When she went into hospice, I found myself afflicted with a
kind of tenderness for what had never been. I wanted to read to her. I needed to read to her—a compulsive
return, perhaps, to the best part of childhood, to the only intimacy that had
not been dangerous. I found one of her favorite books—Cider with Rosie—a too-charming-to be-quite-true account of a rural
English childhood by the poet Laurie Lee. I thought it might turn her mind
fondly backwards. I tried to read to her several times, but she would have none
of it. “What?” she’d say. “I can’t make heads nor tails of what you’re saying.”
Why did she resist? That she could have
listened if she chose is certain. After she died, when we were clearing out her
room, the nurse—a big, gentle man with a full beard—came to me and said, “I
want you to know how much I enjoyed taking care of your mother. Such an
extraordinary woman. You know, I read to her almost every evening. It was so
peaceful. She’d listen very carefully and say the most intelligent things.”
In her last
two months she began to pass in and out of a terrible dementia that whittled her
all the way down to her essential hunger. It was a madness that came upon her
in fits. When she was in its grip, she’d call us from her hospice room. She
wanted us to come visit. It did no good to remind her that one of us had been
there earlier in the day or to reassure her that another of us would be there
tomorrow; she lived only in the starving now.
She saw no reason we could not sit by her in shifts, one after another for
twenty-four hours every day. She wanted us to bring her things: Kleenex because
“They told me here that they will charge me more if they supply it,” shampoo
because “the stuff here makes my hair fall out,” clocks with extra-large
numerals because “nothing you’ve given me is large enough.” She could be
wheedling and tearful in one moment and choking with fury in the next.
Sometimes she would fall into the very center of herself. Then she would
believe, as I have always believed in my heart, that someone was missing. She
did not know who it was. She was desperate to know, and she wanted us to find
out. At the peak of these fits the calls would come every three minutes for an
hour or more until the facility, at our request, replaced her room phone with
one that had no keypad.
Two days before Mother
slipped into her final coma, Pede and I visited her. Her thoughts lay, like
Ozymandias, in blocky ruins that communicated a message she did not intend.
Pede had brought her a new talking clock, a small box that spoke the time when
you pushed a button on top of it. She had broken the old one in her palsied
impatience; the new one was bigger and easier to operate; the button on top was
so big and so red that it looked like it might launch missiles.
"What's this?" Mother
asked when she saw it.
"It's your new talking
clock," Pede said.
"Where's the old
one?"
"It's broken."
"Oh, it's broken?"
she looked at the new clock as if it were a large spider. “Then why give it to me?”
"No, the old one is
broken."
"But this isn't the
old one."
"No".
"Well where is the old one?"
"I took it. It was broken.
I threw it out"
"It's in my bag."
"No, I took it,"
Pede said. "It didn't work. I tried to get you one just like it,
but the Society for the Blind doesn't have them anymore. They have these instead.
They’re better."
"My bag is on the floor,”
she said “It’s in there. Get it for me."
“I took it home and threw it out. It’s not there.”
We are all silent for a moment
and then with an angry bounce she said, "Just get me my goddamned bag!"
There was no clock in the bag,
and her anger had exhausted her. “Wait a moment,” she said, “I have to catch my
breath. I can’t be talking all the
time although I know it’s good for you.” Pede and I looked at one another and
kept still.
At last she said, “That other grandmother was quite a foul-mouthed old lady.”
“What other grandmother?” I
asked.
“You know. Annie’s mother.
Tay. That’s what I heard. I hope I may never stoop to such
a low expediency.”
Another long silence while we
all considered this. Pede grinned at me. Anne’s mother, Tay, was widely
acknowledged as a kind of saint. At last Mother said, “I was always a leader.”
“A leader of what?” I ask.
“A leader of mankind,”
she said and fell asleep as though someone had hit a switch. When she woke up some
twenty minutes later, she said, “I am about to deliver my last sermon. I will
be dead in this many weeks,” she held
up three fingers and looked first at Pede and then at me over the top of her
glasses. “Then I will be alone, alone, alone—flat on my back, staring into the
sky with open eyes, seeing nothing. Strangers will walk by me all day long.”
One night a few weeks before
her one hundredth birthday Mother was seized by twelve violent hours of
vomiting and diarrhea. She soiled her nightgown, her bedding, her bedroom
carpet. She staggered to the bathroom where she lay until dawn, cold, filthy
and wet, huddled on the floor next to the toilet. When the sun rose, she called
my brother and asked him to come. She told him it was very important, but she
did not tell him exactly what the problem was. When he was done cleaning up, he
bought her a new nightgown and some new sheets and blankets, and when he put
her to bed, she enjoined secrecy on him. He must tell no one, especially not his wife. Then she called Peigi to complain.
No one has ever passed such a night.
She had been dizzy; she had had no control of her bowels; she had been
in pain; she had been dying. Peigi must not tell a soul.
Betsy,
hearing of the episode from Peigi, drove up from Massachusetts the next
afternoon to see how Mother was doing. She noticed the wood box was empty and
offered to fill it. “No. Just leave it,” Mother said.
“Why?”
Betsy asked, “It’s going to get cold again. You need it filled and I’m not sure
you can manage it yet. I’m here and happy to do it.”
“Ne-ver
mind. I have my reasons. You are not to touch a stick of that wood.”
When Betsy
had gone, Mother called me. She told me that she felt fantastic. She had just
awoken from the longest sleep of her life—almost eighteen hours. She asked me
to come and fill her wood box for her. I was concerned. She had always taken
great pride in filling the wood box by herself, but now she told me that,
curiously, she seemed to have lost the strength of her hands. I imagined she
was far worse off than she was letting me know. I imagined she feared the
approaching cold snap, that she had no stove wood in the kitchen and no
strength to fetch it from the shed. I imagined she was nearing the end.
But when,
on the following day, I got to her house, I saw that she had not weakened in
the least. There was a heavy, dark, antique bureau in her kitchen full of
linens and old silver and candles and papers and photographs. It weighed
considerably more than she did, but she had dragged it across the lumpy
friction of braided rugs in order to get at the dust underneath it and in order
to remove a heavy picture that had hung on the wall behind it. I saw that she
had removed another large picture as well from an awkward spot over the sink,
and she appeared to have carried them both off to some other room to dust them
under better light. I was impressed: Stonehenge, the pyramids, the mysterious
power of the ancients.
“Hello?” I
called, doubting that she could hear me, but she emerged from the dim interior
of the house, swaying stiff-legged into the kitchen doorway. She was very
upright, barely five feet tall, and weighing considerably less than one hundred
pounds. She was wearing black trousers and a short woolen coat with brass
buttons that gave her a tin-soldier, military look. I thought of Hoffmann’s
nutcracker.
“Who’s that?” she said.
“It’s me,” I said.
“Who? John? You’re early.”
“Did you move the bureau by yourself?” I asked.
“Yes,” she said. “It wasn’t much. It was harder getting
those pictures down.”
“Good Lord” I said, “Like an ant carrying a cricket’s
carcass. For all your faults you’re the strongest damned centenarian that ever
lived.”
“For all my what?” she asked. She was deaf, but she also
feigned deafness.
“Faults,” I said.
“What?”
“I
said, faults.”
“Oh, faults”. She
assumed the arch expression that signaled she was about to make a serious joke.
“I have no faults.”
When I had filled the wood box and rehung the pictures and
moved the bureau back against the wall, she said, “Okay, now. For God’s sake
sit down and talk to me.” I removed a copy of the Times from a chair and sat at the table. She had something
particular to say, and she wasted no time in saying it:
“Your father and I always took such delight in you,” she
says. “And we were proud of you. You
never had to go to medical school,
you know.”
This again. “Mother, please,” I said, “drop it.”
But she would not drop it. “You said such funny things when you were small and you
were such a character all through
high school. You made us laugh and whether you believe it or not we were proud of you.”
A one-hundred-year old great-grandmother gaslighting a
sixty-year old grandfather about events from forty-five years ago. There was
something utterly unclean in the way she so relentlessly pried, though more and
more weakly, at the heavy stonework of what was and is. And there was something
utterly infantile and hopeless in the rage and exhaustion I felt when she did
it.
Let it go, I told myself. But I said, “You didn’t seem all that proud. Do you remember not
going to my high school graduation because I wasn’t valedictorian? Do you
remember asking, ‘How did it feel to sit among the idiots?’ when I got home?”
“You didn’t need us to keep telling you we were proud of you did you?” she pursued. And when I
didn’t answer, she tried a new line of attack—“You gave up an awful lot for
Jesus.”
“Well, I should get home,” I said and stood
up.
“Are you going so
soon?” she said. And immediately she was no longer confiding and superior. She
may have been acting, and she may not have been, but she seemed frightened. She
did not want to be left alone. “Wait a minute,” she said, “there’s something
else I’d like you to do for me. These things are driving me crazy.” She held up
her thumbs; the nails were long and broken and notched. “They keep snagging on
things,” she said, “I have an appointment next week with a podiatrist who will
cut all my nails, but I can’t wait
that long with these.” Her neediness felt like cobwebs in my hair.
She had no
nail clippers and so I went into the pantry where she kept her first aid kit in
a dim corner under some cupboards and next to an old-fashioned breadbox. I carried
it to the window and rummaged through the bandages and rolls of gauze and
antibacterial creams and discovered the same small, curved pair of scissors
with which, when I was a child, she had cut my
nails. She moved a standing lamp over next to the rocker on the hearth. “Do it
over here,” she said, “where there is light.”
I would have
rather not. I did not want to touch her, but I sat next to her. Through the
window I could see the falling snow turning the afternoon to twilight. The
woods were growing invisible along the far edges of the fields, and the old
house was fading into its hillside. We were an aging man and an ancient woman
bending our heads together under the yellow light of a small lamp. We were on
opposite sides of the same void; we were infiltrated by the same dread. Her
hand was small and parched, spotted and bruised, wrinkled as a sparrow’s claw.
It was very strange, that dying flesh—twisted, stained,, halfway to
mummification. But when I held her hand against my knee to suppress its tremor,
there was a sudden bustling far off in the back of my mind—doors opening and
closing, running footfalls in the corridors, hurried whispers, heads craning over
the banister to see who it was who had returned after all those years.
Her flesh was
full of many voices calling to me from many places: memories beyond memory,
ghosts of the ancient needs and terrors too faint for words. There in that dim
kitchen was the dark stream, the lustral basin, the brazen threshold and the
downward stair. Mother wanted me to take her nails down as far as I could, but
she feared I would cut her. She was on blood thinners and would not be able to
stop bleeding. With each snip she flinched and hissed as though I were hurting
her, but when I was done, she kept finding rough places and asking me to cut
more. I insisted that I’d taken her nails down to the quick and could not
safely go any further, but she did not want me to stop touching her. And when at last, desperate for the upper air, I stood
and put the scissors away and shrugged on my coat she asked, “When will you be
back?”
“Not for a
couple of weeks,” I said.
“No,” she said,
“You’ll come back sooner. You cannot
get away so easily.”
John Donaghy spent twelve years teaching and
coaching at a secondary school and twenty-six more serving as an adjunct in
both the English Department and Institute for Writing and Rhetoric at Dartmouth
College before he mustered the courage to drop it all and become a writer. At
the age of sixty-seven he received his MFA from the Rainier Writers Workshop in
Tacoma, WA. He lives in New Hampshire with his wife who is also a writer.
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