If Mr. Green, or Noah, as he says I
should call him, notices the slight smell of garbage, he ignores it. Just follows Laurie into my kitchen, shakes
my hand as he sits down and starts pulling papers out of his black knapsack. My daughter smells it though. I see her nose wrinkle as she picks up a
half-eaten bowl of oatmeal, stacks it with the unwashed dishes in the sink and
wipes the sticky table. Too bad. It’s raining. It’s November. My shoulder aches. I’d like to stretch out in my chair for a few
minutes but little chance of that.
“Isn’t Mum up?” Laurie
asks.
“Not yet.” I don’t tell her I’d followed Grace from room
to room most of the night, checking the locks each time she moved to another
window. I’m too tired to hear another
lecture about schedules and I just want the next few minutes over with.
We join Noah at the table.
He’s in his best social worker mode, talking about how he knows this is
difficult but it’s for the best. He
pushes the paper and a pen toward me. “I’ve filled in the paperwork. Just need you to sign here and we’ll be all
set.”
There’s no we here, I want to say. Then I remind myself there’s no need to pick
on him. I pick up the paper, pull out my
glasses and start to read.
The form is surprisingly
short considering what it means. The
important ones always are – birth certificates, death certificates, those kinds.
It’s those other legal papers that confuse
you with the multiple pages and big words.
Application for Admission
to a Long-term Care.
Long-term care. That’s the right term. Not nursing home, as I called it the first
time Laurie brought Noah to see me last summer.
He all but said I wasn’t taking
care of Grace. I told him we were doing
fine and there was no way I was locking Grace up. Part of me wanted him to argue back so I could
yell some more and maybe feel better but he didn’t - just kept smiling and saying
I didn’t need to rush, but we all knew what lay ahead. By then my heart was pounding so hard I
thought I was having another heart attack.
I told him to leave.
The place Laurie and I picked is called Pleasantview Village. We decided, or she finally wore me down, at Thanksgiving. She wanted to call Noah right then, but I refused. Fallwas is Grace’s
favourite time of year. No need to rush.
The place Laurie and I picked is called Pleasantview Village. We decided, or she finally wore me down, at Thanksgiving. She wanted to call Noah right then, but I refused. Fall
When I was growing up,
there was one nursing home in town. People
called it The Manor, and used funeral voices when they talked about it. I have vague memories of visiting a crumpled
man in a dark room full of crumpled men.
Mother told me to call him grandpa and be nice but, as much as he smiled
at me and reached out his hand, I refused to shake it. He smelled and he had no teeth.
“Promise you’ll never put
me in The Manor,” Mother used to say.
And we didn’t. Grace insisted she
move in with us after Mother broke her shoulder. And when she fell again, and broke her hip,
Grace visited Mother in the hospital every day until the end. At the funeral, a cousin told Grace she’d
been an absolute martyr and she didn’t know how Grace stood it for so
long. Grace didn’t say anything,
just tightened her lips and turned away to shake someone else’s hand.
The Manor is long gone. According
to the perky tour guide we had, Pleasantview Village is a modern building with
natural light and semi-private rooms with plenty of space for a favourite piece
of furniture. You can hang your own pictures, wear your own clothes (although
nothing that isn’t washable) and have a cup of coffee whenever you want. They have therapy dogs, memory gardens, and special
events like pizza night.
Boomers are Transforming Long-term
Care I
read in the paper a while back. Grace
will still be locked in a special wing, with a huge mural camouflaging the door
so she can’t find it. She’ll still
wonder who I am and forget that she likes pizza. Transform that, boomers.
Two days ago, I fell
asleep in my chair after supper. Grace
managed to unlock the door and get outside.
I called Laurie who called the police. They found her about three am. She’d made it right across town to the fair
grounds and was sleeping under a bleacher.
When Laurie heard Grace was safe, she started to cry. I wanted to cry. I wanted to kick myself for falling asleep. I wanted Grace. I wanted to fall asleep again, and never wake
up. I just wanted.
Yesterday, I told Laurie
to call Noah. Then I went into the
bedroom and pulled down the little blue suitcase I’d stuck at the back of the
closet last August. I stared at it and
wondered if I had the right. Or is it
the courage?
“Mr. Attlin?” It’s Noah.
“We just need your signature right here.” He’s pointing at the dark line
on the paper.
“Gimme a minute.”
When something unpleasant
needs to be done, there’s no point dragging it out. If you wait, you start to think. Thinking doesn’t change things. Father taught me that when I was ten. We found my dog by the side of the road, run
over and hurting. Father got the rifle
to shoot him but I begged him to wait. I
held that dog and cried and the longer I sat the less I was able to let him
go. Finally, Father pulled me away. Then he shot the dog. I pick up the pen and turn the paper slightly
toward me.
Near the top of the form,
Grace’s name is written in dark green ink. Grace likes green. And writing lists. And taking car trips, and reviving dead
plants and lipstick that’s not too dark. My heart starts to wobble.
Maybe I can put more locks
on the windows. And that security system
that buzzes if a door is open the guy on the phone tried to sell me. I feel the thumping against my chest, a fist
trying to break through. I put down the
pen. The kitchen table wobbles as I push
back and stand up. Noah steadies it. He looks confused. Laurie doesn’t. “Dad… Please…. We’ve got to do this.”
Now my chest is
tight. I grab my walker and head for the
back door.
“Dad.”
“I’ll come back tomorrow.”
I hear Noah say. “He’ll get there.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“No worries. He isn’t my first.”
That’s just it. I’m
supposed to be first. I’ve always known, always felt it in my bones.
Grace used to laugh at my
certainty. “Go ahead and die on me,”
she’d tell me. “But if you go first, I’m
getting a horse.” She knew that would get me.
I hate horses, refuse to have one on the place. I wish I’d let her have a horse.
The air is lighter on the
porch and I grab for it. Easy, I
tell myself. Slow and steady. Like
when you’re hauling a full load and have to stop the truck on ice.
Finally, this day is
over. I cleaned up the kitchen and took
out the garbage. The rain stopped about
noon so I filled the bird feeders for the first time this fall. I tried to take Grace for a walk but she said
she was cold and started to cry. Now I’m
in bed, half hoping Laurie will call; half glad she hasn’t. What’s there to say anyway? It’s a mess.
“What’s a mess?” says
Grace. Her voice is clear and confident. I feel the little glow in my gut that happens
when she finds me. Just when I figure
she’s gone for good; she finds her way back. I reach across the bed and take her hand. She squeezes it back.
“Nothing, Gracie.”
“Are you doing okay,
George? You’ve got such a load.”
“I’m fine Gracie. Don’t you worry about me.”
“But I do.”
There’s nothing to say so
I don’t. I just lie beside my wife, feeling
the life in her hand. She speaks again. “Is it time to go?”
The question punches like
an airbag. I turn to face her. She’s looking at the dresser where the little
blue suitcase is still sitting.
Last summer, it seemed
that Grace carried that suitcase everywhere. One day, I looked inside. I thought I might find something I
recognized. Something that might help bridge
the darkness between us. Instead, I
found a stash of pills. Thirty at least,
small white tablets, neatly wrapped in a beige silk scarf I had never seen her
wear.
After I got over the shock,
it made sense. A few years ago, when the
medically-assisted dying law was coming in, we’d agreed it was a good
thing. Grace’s cousin’s cousin died of
ALS. We heard enough about her struggles
to believe we’d choose a different ending if the option was there.
But Grace didn’t tell me
about the pills. And I couldn’t find the
right time to ask her. One day she put the
suitcase down and that was that.
Grace is still looking at it. She’s frowning. Does she remember the pills? There’s no glow in my gut now. It starting to fizz like someone just
dropped in a dose of alka-selzer. What
if she asks? And then, what does it change? Another familiar thought, are there enough
for both of us? The fizz is
boiling. Would Laurie hate me? Would Grace? I swallow, trying to work up some spit for
whatever is going to come out of my mouth.
“Time to go where,
Gracie?”
“On the road of
course. Are you heading out already?” The fizz flattens and settles into a hard lump
as I watch Grace sit up and start to climb out of bed. “It can’t be Sunday night. I’ve got too much to do.”
I pull her back. “Shh, Gracie.
I’m not leaving until morning.” She lies against me and I listen as she lists her
chores. Her nightgown is soft and smells
faintly of lemon.
And now it’s morning. Laurie is back. She hasn’t said anything about yesterday but
she sees the paper is lying on the desk exactly as she left it, and I can tell
it’s making nervous. Noah is here too. He greets me at the door and asks if I’m
feeling better. “Yes, thank you.” I curse myself for sounding like a guilty
schoolboy.
The paper is back in front
of me. A neighbour has dropped by and is
sitting with Grace. I hear music coming
from living room, John Denver singing about country roads. Just for a moment, I let myself remember. Heading out for the week. The throb of the engine as I shifted
gears. The sound of the tires as I
slowly moved down the drive, trying not to throw gravel on the lawn. Grace calling “Cake or pie when you get
back?” Like she didn’t know the answer.
Don’t think. I feel Laurie’s touch on my arm. Somehow, I’ve picked up the pen. It’s heavy.
I start to write, but it doesn’t leave a mark. I put it down and Noah grabs it. He scribbles on the supermarket flyer
announcing this week’s sales. The ink flows smoothly and Noah offers the pen back. Now, John Denver is leaving on a jet
plane. I hear Grace talking to her friend. “George will be home tonight. I must get started on that pie. Cherry today, I think.” I empty my head and pick up the pen again.
Deb
Stark lives in Wellington
County, Ontario, with her husband, two cats and too many raccoons. Her work has
appeared in magazines, several anthologies, including CommuterLit, From the Cottage
Porch (Sunshine in a Jar Press), and You are Not Alone, 52 stories
of hope (One Thousand Trees) and the Globe and Mail (Facts & Arguments).
“Holding the Dog” won second place in the Toronto
Star short story contest, winning Deb $2,000 (yay, Deb!) and was published in The
Star on May 2.
See Brian Henry’s schedule here, including writing workshops, weekly writing classes, and weekend retreats
in Algonquin Park, Alliston, Bolton, Barrie, Brampton, Burlington, Caledon,
Collingwood, Georgetown, Georgina, Guelph, Hamilton, Jackson’s Point,
Kitchener-Waterloo, London, Midland, Mississauga, New Tecumseth, Oakville,
Ottawa, Peterborough, St. Catharines, Sudbury, Toronto, Windsor, Woodstock,
Halton, Muskoka, Peel, Simcoe, York Region, the GTA, Ontario and beyond.
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