Part 18 (1/2)
I lifted the lid off the second tureen and uncovered a wedge of macaroni, stone-cold and stuck together in a gluey paste. The third and last tureen was chock-full of baked beans.
Now I knew perfectly well you didn't serve two kinds of beans together at a meal. Beans and carrots, or beans and peas, maybe, but never beans and beans. The Negro was just trying to see how much we would take.
The nurse came back, and the Negro edged off at a distance. I ate as much as I could of the baked beans. Then I rose from the table, pa.s.sing round to the side where the nurse couldn't see me below the waist, and behind the Negro, who was clearing the dirty plates. I drew my foot back and gave him a sharp, hard kick on the calf of the leg.
The Negro leapt away with a yelp and rolled his eyes at me. ”Oh Miz, oh Miz,” he moaned, rubbing his leg. ”You shouldn't of done that, you shouldn't, you reely shouldn't.”
”That's what you you get,” I said, and stared him in the eye. get,” I said, and stared him in the eye.
”Don't you want to get up today?”
”No.” I huddled down more deeply in the bed and pulled the sheet up over my head. Then I lifted a corner of the sheet and peered out. The nurse was shaking down the thermometer she had just removed from my mouth.
”You see, see, it's normal.” I had looked at the thermometer before she came to collect it, the way I always did. ”You it's normal.” I had looked at the thermometer before she came to collect it, the way I always did. ”You see, see, it's normal, what do you keep taking it for?” it's normal, what do you keep taking it for?”
I wanted to tell her that if only something were wrong with my body it would be fine, I would rather have anything wrong with my body than something wrong with my head, but the idea seemed so involved and wearisome that I didn't say anything. I only burrowed down further in the bed.
Then, through the sheet, I felt a slight, annoying pressure on my leg. I peeped out. The nurse had set her tray of thermometers on my bed while she turned her back and took the pulse of the person who lay next to me, in Mrs. Tomolillo's place.
A heavy naughtiness p.r.i.c.ked through my veins, irritating and attractive as the hurt of a loose tooth. I yawned and stirred, as if about to turn over, and edged my foot under the box.
”Oh!” The nurse's cry sounded like a cry for help, and another nurse came running. ”Look what you've done!”
I poked my head out of the covers and stared over the edge of the bed. Around the overturned enamel tray, a star of thermometer shards glittered, and b.a.l.l.s of mercury trembled like celestial dew.
”I'm sorry,” I said. ”It was an accident.”
The second nurse fixed me with a baleful eye. ”You did it on purpose. I saw saw you.” you.”
Then she hurried off, and almost immediately two attendants came and wheeled me, bed and all, down to Mrs. Mole's old room, but not before I had scooped up a ball of mercury.
Soon after they had locked the door, I could see the Negro's face, a mola.s.ses-colored moon, risen at the window grating, but I pretended not to notice.
I opened my fingers a crack, like a child With a secret, and smiled at the silver globe cupped in my palm. If I dropped it, it would break into a million little replicas of itself, and if I pushed them near each other, they would fuse, without a crack, into one whole again.
I smiled and smiled at the small silver ball.
I couldn't imagine what they had done with Mrs. Mole.
15.
Philomena Guinea's black Cadillac eased through the tight, five o'clock traffic like a ceremonial car. Soon it would cross one of the brief bridges that arched the Charles, and I would, without thinking, open the door and plunge out through the stream of traffic to the rail of the bridge. One jump, and the water would be over my head. o'clock traffic like a ceremonial car. Soon it would cross one of the brief bridges that arched the Charles, and I would, without thinking, open the door and plunge out through the stream of traffic to the rail of the bridge. One jump, and the water would be over my head.
Idly I twisted a Kleenex to small, pill-sized pellets between my fingers and watched my chance. I sat in the middle of the back seat of the Cadillac, my mother on one side of me, and my brother on the other, both leaning slightly forward, like diagonal bars, one across each car door.
In front of me I could see the Spam-colored expanse of the chauffeur's neck, sandwiched between a blue cap and the shoulders of a blue jacket and, next to him, like a frail, exotic bird, the silver hair and emerald-feathered hat of Philomena Guinea, the famous novelist.
I wasn't quite sure why Mrs. Guinea had turned up. All I knew was that she had interested herself in my case and that at one time, at the peak of her career, she had been in an asylum as well.
My mother said that Mrs. Guinea had sent her a telegram from the Bahamas, where she read about me in a Boston paper. Mrs. Guinea had telegrammed, ”Is there a boy in the case?”
If there was a boy in the case, Mrs. Guinea couldn't, of course, have anything to do with it.
But my mother had telegrammed back, ”No, it is Esther's writing. She thinks she will never write again.”
So Mrs. Guinea had flown back to Boston and taken me out of the cramped city hospital ward, and now she was driving me to a private hospital that had grounds and golf courses and gardens, like a country club, where she would pay for me, as if I had a scholars.h.i.+p, until the doctors she knew of there had made me well.
My mother told me I should be grateful. She said I had used up almost all her money and if it weren't for Mrs. Guinea she didn't know where I'd be. I knew where I'd be though. I'd be in the big state hospital in the country, cheek by jowl to this private place.
I knew I should be grateful to Mrs. Guinea, only I couldn't feel a thing. If Mrs. Guinea had given me a ticket to Europe, or a round-the-world cruise, it wouldn't have made one sc.r.a.p of difference to me, because wherever I sat--on the deck of a s.h.i.+p or at a street cafe in Paris or Bangkok--I would be sitting under the same gla.s.s bell jar, stewing in my own sour air.
Blue sky opened its dome above the river, and the river was dotted with sails. I readied myself, but immediately my mother and my brother each laid one hand on a door handle. The tires hummed briefly over the grill of the bridge. Water, sails, blue sky and suspended gulls flashed by like an improbable postcard, and we were across.
I sank back in the gray, plush seat and closed my eyes. The air of the bell jar wadded round me and I couldn't stir.
I had my own room again.
It reminded me of the room in Doctor Gordon's hospital--a bed, a bureau, a closet, a table and chair. A window with a screen, but no bars. My room was on the first floor, and the window, a short distance above the pine-needle-padded ground, overlooked a wooded yard ringed by a red brick wall. If I jumped I wouldn't even bruise my knees. The inner surface of the tall wall seemed smooth as gla.s.s.
The journey over the bridge had unnerved me.
I had missed a perfectly good chance. The river water pa.s.sed me by like an untouched drink. I suspected that even if my mother and brother had not been there I would have made no move to jump.
When I enrolled in the main building of the hospital, a slim young woman had come and introduced herself. ”My name is Doctor Nolan. I am to be Esther's doctor.”
I was surprised to have a woman. I didn't think they had woman psychiatrists. This woman was a cross between Myrna Lay and my mother. She wore a white blouse and a full skirt gathered at the waist by a wide leather belt, and stylish, crescent-shaped spectacles.
But after a nurse had led me across the lawn to the gloomy brick building called Caplan, where I would live, Doctor Nolan didn't come to see me, a whole lot of strange men came instead.
I lay on my bed under the thick white blanket, and they entered my room, one by one, and introduced themselves. I couldn't understand why there should be so many of them, or why they would want to introduce themselves, and I began to think they were testing me, to see if I noticed there were too many of them, and I grew wary.
Finally, a handsome, white-haired doctor came in and said he was the director of the hospital. Then he started talking about the Pilgrims and Indians and who had the land after them, and what rivers ran nearby, and who had built the first hospital, and how it had burned down, and who had built the next hospital, until I thought he must be waiting to see when I would interrupt him and tell him I knew all that about rivers and Pilgrims was a lot of nonsense.
But then I thought some of it might be true, so I tried to sort out what was likely to be true and what wasn't, only before I could do that, he had said good-bye.
I waited till I heard the voices of all the doctors die away. Then I threw back the white blanket and put on my shoes and walked out into the hall. n.o.body stopped me, so I walked round the corner of my wing of the hall and down another, longer hall, past an open dining room.
A maid in a green uniform was setting the tables for supper. There were white linen tablecloths and gla.s.ses and paper napkills. I stored the fact that there were real gla.s.ses in the corner of my mind the way a squirrel stores a nut. At the city hospital we had drunk out of paper cups and had no knives to cut our meat. The meat had always been so overcooked we could cut it with a fork.
Finally I arrived at a big lounge with shabby furniture and a threadbare rug. A girl with a round pasty face and short black hair was sitting in an armchair, reading a magazine. She reminded me of a Girl Scout leader I'd had once. I glanced at her feet, and sure enough, she wore those flat brown leather shoes with fringed tongues lapping down over the front that are supposed to be so sporty, and the ends of the laces were k.n.o.bbed with little imitation acorns.
The girl raised her eyes and smiled. ”I'm Valerie. Who are you?”
I pretended I hadn't heard and walked out of the lounge to the end of the next wing. On the way, I pa.s.sed a waist-high door behind which I saw some nurses.
”Where is everybody?”