Laughing, Laughing, Fall Apart / Richard Leise
Propped upright in bed, and buried beneath a mound of bright white blankets, my mom can’t move. Her bad hand positioned atop a stack of pillows, her bug-eyes bug-zapper blue, she looks asleep, but impossible to wake, as if the Ifex and the Adriamycin have taken what was needed from those cells the drugs had otherwise destroyed and repurposed them to regenerate that collagen and fiber necessary to erase wrinkles and restore, to her face, a queer sort of agency. It’s absurd. It’s impossible. How the hushed crush of so much meaninglessness has, like dust, settled here, upon this silent and sepulchral space.
“Knock, knock—”
Pulling aside the privacy curtain and stepping into the room, the Eucharistic minister raps an imaginary door. Dressed like a doctor, on one white lapel her gold tag broadcasts: Volunteer. On the other, her huge, golden crucifix screams: God plays a fundamental role in informing my life decisions!
Technically, my mom isn’t paralyzed. Literally, pain moves in slow, concentric circles, from her left shoulder to her left hand. As though her blood were bruised. As if her blood were sprained.
Her pain.
On a scale from one through ten, if pain were a smiley face, was her face crimson, eyes x’s of agony, mouth mashed, tears—or sweat—bursting off the page?
How can this pain be the worst pain of her life if this pain (the worst pain she’s ever experienced in her life) is a different version of the same pain she had yesterday?
On her backside there’s a bedsore the size of a softball.
How do you describe ache?
How can you explain the misery of knowing that you, so long as you’re alive, are limited to your understanding of hurt, and all that you understand is that you’re alive?
You don’t.
“Oh, Junie!” the minister whispers. “I didn’t see Richie. Is this a bad time?”
Feet crossed at the ankles, hands folded on his stomach, and his loafers on the floor, my dad wears a hooded sweatshirt. I stand in a corner. I can’t remember the last time I saw Dad in socks. They came to Sloan for a consult. They hadn’t planned on staying. Head splayed, his mouth open and bright with silver fillings, gray stubble is just now growing. He nicked himself, shaving – that spot on his neck he pulls taut with two fingers. The wound bright as wet blood. When the television cuts to commercial, or jumps from scene to scene, Dad changes colors.
I process the silence. Unsure what the minister wants, I tell her it’s cool, that she can stay.
“You must be Peter,” she says. She speaks slowly, draws a pyx from her purse. “Are you going to join your parents in Eucharist and in prayer?”
My father. A man who, unmoving, except to grip the armrest, or to make a mutter of some unspoken fear. Eyelids fluttering, I can’t remember if this means he is, or isn’t, dreaming.
“I’ll do the prayer part?”
“Well,” she smiles. “Prayer’s certainly an instrument that makes beautiful music. And while it may not change God, it certainly changes those of us who do pray.” There’s a pocket stitched inside her jacket. She frees an index card, says, “Your mother appreciates this.”
I eye Mom. Who knows?
“I’d like to read from St. Anne,” the Eucharistic minister raises her index card, the pyx blue and bright, reflecting televised light. “St. Anne is glorious among the Saints, not only because she’s Mary’s mother, but because she gave Mary to God. The number of cures wrought through the inter—”
She has a nice voice. She reads absent embellishment, but with rehearsed refinement, so the words, strange as they are, possess a strong cadence, a particular intercession. I relax. I imagine us in scene. A cartoon. Mom, in bed, rigid as a cross. Dad, awake now, hunched, arms resting on his thighs, head lowered. The Eucharistic minister, dressed like a pharmacist, holds the host. And me, mouth open, speaking. Black and white, a series of simple slashes, there’s also, as means to add dimension, a window. Beneath it all, the caption: Actually, I’ll have to pass. I’m a vegetarian.
“June,” the minister says, waking my dad. “The Body of Christ.”
She reaches forward. She rotates the host. She considers June’s open mouth. She manipulates the wafer. It’s obvious that Jesus isn’t going to fit. I expect her to back off. She doesn’t. “June,” she says. “Would you like me to break off a little piece?”
Mom stares.
“That’s fine,” the minister smiles. She breaks free a tiny triangle. She places it on Mom’s tongue. “It’s just the same exact Jesus, no matter the size He comes in, now isn’t it.”
The minister turns. And then it’s one of those things. My father, half-asleep, tongue lolled like an idiot, tired of waiting for his turn, closes his mouth.
“The body of Christ,” the minister reaches out. The bread, hard as slate, and snapped, now, to a point, cuts open Dad’s lip. Stung, he raises a hand, smacking the host, which falls to the floor. The Eucharistic minister drops to her knees.
“Here,” I say, looking at Mom, who was, she couldn’t be ….
“Try this,” I grab a piece of paper, kneel beside the minister. I brush the bread on to the paper. “Kind of like scooping a spider? I have little kids. They drop stuff all the time. Stickers. Those little, like, eyeballs?”
June hasn’t laughed in so long she doesn’t know what’s happening. She isn’t coughing so much as having trouble breathing. There’s too much fluid in her lungs. The tumor is too big. But Peter! June can’t remember the last time she heard him laugh. Oh, how he was so much like his father. And June wanted to laugh. To let Peter know. But the pain was incredible. And the pain was different, too. More like a blow. June raised a hand, she—
“Richard,” the Eucharistic minister said. “Richard. Isn’t June making the inter— Richard. Isn’t that the universal sign for choking? Is she? Richard. Richard? I think June’s choking?
June can’t stop laughing. Vision splinters into bright prisms. White lights signaling nothing. So she listens. Eyes fixed on the face of some color, her look is like a gentle touch, as wet as water. So much of her wanted to hear Peter’s voice. So much of her wanted to hear him speak. But the sound of your son’s laughter—
“Mom?” I say, trying not to laugh. “Hey, Mom? What’s wrong? You’re not choking, are you?”
Dad is broken beyond repair. His idea of living has been reduced to hearing Mom say “Yes” in this corner of this building in this city where these sorts of rooms erase everything, reduce everyone inside them to their solitary purposes for being (which, of course, is to find comfortable, or agreeable, ways of dying). He’s not a terrible person, but he’s no longer working, properly. Like a televangelist, he tells promising lies.
June closes her eyes. Even if she could see, watching any of this would sully the experience, would separate the mental from the mental communion, would render this—all of this—nothing more than communion. She lowers her hand. It’d be nice to relax, but of course she can’t. She’s rigid. Her body taut as rigor mortis. Her expression an approximation of agony.
Still, she laughs. And laughing delivers waves of pain which arrive as an estimate of ecstasy. And white light illuminates the insides of her eyelids.
Someone—June can’t remember who—told her that people, when dreaming, and wake up terrified, think it was the monster that scared them. But, June now knows, it’s not the monsters that frighten. What really scares us are our dreams.
The Eucharistic minister grabs my arm. Orderlies wheel Mom from the room. Maybe, as the Eucharistic minister suggests, her voice wavering as if caught between wrung hands, she’s going to be fine. It’d be nice to think so. It’d be nice to believe in something other than the bags, the cannula that had fallen free from her face, this room, this space, all of which affirms a certain maximalist collective in which the assault on my mom’s dignity becomes the graver injury. I step across the room. I rest my forehead against the window.
It’s a wonder we do anything. How, in the face of everything, we make first one decision, and then another, until our lives, like involuntary actions, are lived for us.
And it’s sad, considering how much we see, how little we know.