Part 23 (1/2)

Cage Of Night Ed Gorman 36940K 2022-07-22

I got sick.

For three days I stayed in bed, my mom calling work and telling them that I couldn't come in, the way she used to call school for me.

She'd take my temperature in the morning and afternoon but couldn't find a fever, even though I felt hot and sweaty.

She'd give me cough syrup because I said my chest felt so tight. But I never coughed, and I didn't have any sinus drainage in the back of my throat.

Mostly, I slept.

I didn't eat much, didn't watch TV, didn't even read.

The third day, she came in and opened my curtains and said, ”I thought you might want to look at the snow.”

It was beautiful, that snow, the kind that you always see on Christmas cards mantling snug rooftops and providing traction for sleighs and s...o...b..a.l.l.s for s...o...b..ll fights. Sometimes when I saw Christmas card paintings of the turn of the century, I wanted to climb into the picture, and go back there. Life seemed so much easier, then.

”Honey,” she said, turning from the window, ”I wonder if I could talk to you.”

”Sure.”

”I mean, without you getting mad or hurting your feelings.”

I guess I pretty much expected what she was going to say.

She sat herself on the edge of my bed and said, ”It's Cindy, isn't it?”

”What's Cindy got to do with it?”

”Why you're in bed.”

”I'm sick, Mom.”

”I know you're sick, honey. But it's not the flu or a cough or a cold. It's Cindy.”

I dropped my head and started staring at my hands folded on my lap.

”Right before I met your father, I broke up with this young man because I found out he'd been unfaithful. And I got sick, too. I stayed in bed for almost two weeks.”

It's always a strange feeling when your parents force you to confront the fact that they were your age once, and went through all the same things you're going through.

The thing is, you secretly suspect that it was easier for them to survive all the perils of youth. Your parents always strike you as a little naive, and you think that naive people can't get hurt as much as hip, sophisticated people like yourself.

”Two weeks?” I said.

”Two weeks. My mother had the doctor come overa”they still made house calls in those daysa”and he examined me and then he asked my mother if she'd step out of the room and then he said, 'I heard about you and Ted Malley.' And all I could say was, 'Oh,' and he said, 'That's why you're sick in bed.' I didn't believe him at first but he explained to me that any time you have a big shock in your life, you can get sick. You don't run a fever or have a scratchy throat or have a headache, but you're still sick. And you really are sick. The doctor asked me if I'd ever heard the expression 'heartsick,' and I said, 'Sure,' and he said, 'Well, that's what this is.

You're heartsick. And it's just as real as having the flu or the measles or anything else. But the trouble is, there isn't any medication I can give you. You have to provide your own cure.' I didn't know what he meant. 'You have to get up out of that bed,' he said, 'and force yourself to go on with your life. At first, it'll be very, very difficult, and you'll want to go back to bed and start sleeping all the time again. But if you go on with your life, a little bit at a time it'll get easier for you. And then one day, maybe six months, maybe a year from now, you'll look back and wonder why you ever let yourself get so wrought up about it. And I asked him how he knew all this and he laughed and said, 'Because I went through it myself. I fell in love with the prettiest girl in the Valley right after I got out of med school, and after we were engaged for about a year, she told me that she still loved the boy she'd been seeing before me. She went back to him then. I had to have another doctor subst.i.tute for me for about a week and a half. I took to bed and couldn't get out. All I wanted to do was escape everything by sleeping as long as I could.' So, see, it even happens to doctors.”

I think I loved my mom more than I ever have right at that moment, loved her for her kindness and optimism and concern for me.

I threw one leg out of bed and said, ”You call work for me this morning?”

”Not yet.”

”Good.”

”You getting up?”

”Uh-huh.”

I leaned over and gave her a kiss on the cheek. ”I'm going to take a shower and I'll be down in a few minutes.”

”I'll have waffles and bacon waiting for you.”

”Thanks, Mom. I really liked that story you told me.” I grinned. ”By the way, was it actually true?”

She grinned back. ”Most of it.”

Then she went downstairs, and I went to the bathroom. I hadn't shaved in the three days I'd been in bed, and I had only showered once.

Two nights later, at the dinner table, just as we were finis.h.i.+ng our spaghetti complete with the I'M ITALIANO bibs Dad made us wear whenever we ate Italian, Josh said, ”We're leaving right at 7:30.”

At first, I thought he was talking to Mom and Dad, some event I didn't know about.

”You hear me?”

I looked up from my spaghetti. ”Me?”

”You.”

”What's 7:30?”

”When we leave.”

”Leave for where?”

”For our dates.”

”I don't have a date.”

Josh winked at Mom. ”You do now.”

”What're you talking about?”

Dad said, ”One of Josh's lady friends has an older sister.”

”You should see her,” Josh said.

”Wasn't that nice of him?” Mom said.