Read All the Good Parts Online
Authors: Loretta Nyhan
CHAPTER 14
“What did you decide about that thing?” Jerry said. He sat in his recliner, feet up, munching on roasted peanuts and half watching
Cheers
reruns. He asked in an offhand, casual manner, but his pink cheeks told me otherwise. I decided to mess with him.
“What thing?”
“You know . . .”
“Not sure what you’re talking about.”
He gave me a pointed look. “Fine. If you want me to say it. Have you been to the sperm place to pick a guy?”
I bent at the waist, trying not to pee from laughter. “No, I’m waiting for a coupon.”
“Just trying to make conversation,” Jerry said, glaring at me.
“I know. I’m sorry. No, I haven’t done anything. I can’t afford one of those places. You know they charge five hundred dollars a pop? And some are duds.”
“Don’t they check? What kind of guys do they have going to these places?”
“No, I meant, they just might not work for me. Or my egg might be the dud. Then I’ll need another. I might as well save the money for when the baby comes.”
“How is the baby gonna come, then?” Jerry said, not unkindly.
“I might ask someone. A friend.”
“Helluva friend.”
“Maybe some people are generous that way,” I said while straightening up the room. “At least I hope so.”
Jerry’s eyelids started drooping as I switched topics, rambling on about Kevin’s undefeated football team, Maura’s latest sassy comeback, and the art award Patrick won for his copy of Edvard Munch’s
The Scream
.
“Who screamed?” Jerry said, jolting awake.
“Are you tired? Do you want to take a nap?” I wondered if his sleep habits should disturb me. I made a mental note to find out if they were normal for his age.
Jerry cleared his throat. “Only for an hour. You’ll stay, right?”
“Of course.” I reached out to help him up.
He was slower than he’d been before, his back taking a long time to straighten. When it did, he looked me in the eye and said, “Don’t take this the wrong way, but if I was twenty years younger and not still in love with my wife, I’d help you have a baby, Leona. And if I’d be willing, you’ll find someone who doesn’t have the same hang-ups.”
I wanted to hug him. He looked so fragile, so I settled for patting his good arm. “You don’t think it’s a mistake?”
“More babies have been born from mistakes than not, I’d guess,” he said, his smile wavering. “The world’s probably better for it.”
I thought about Maura and silently agreed. Jerry held on to me as we walked to the bedroom.
Professor Larmon had discussed fading in the elderly, that time when the body, previously getting along just fine, begins to break down all at once, in small but significant ways. At only sixty-eight, I worried that Jerry’s state of mind acted as an accelerator, his depression dousing his joints and heart and bones like gasoline. His memories were like candles flickering throughout the house, dangerous but alluring, a disaster waiting to happen.
It was also possible Jerry’s sleepiness was a side effect of his meds. I had mixed feelings about pills—I’d watched my father pop them like candy near the end, praying the nausea and dizziness were small prices to pay for relief. Nothing came without a cost, and never was that so clear as when treating someone very sick.
Once I tucked Jerry in, I said, “I need to check your medicine cabinet. Is that okay with you?”
Paul never allowed his father the basic right of dignity. I hadn’t either, and that needed to change.
Jerry stared at the ceiling for a moment. “Knock yourself out. Paul wants a full report?”
“Something like that.”
“Asshole.”
“He cares about you.”
“That might be true, too. One doesn’t make a difference to the other.”
“Close your eyes,” I said. “Dream of ice cream.”
The bathroom appeared the same, maybe a little dingier. The medicine in the cabinet was pushed to the side like before, and I paused before grabbing the bottle of antidepressants, feeling a little guilty about what I had to do. I shook the pills onto my palm, counted, and made a quick notation in a notebook Paul had left on the back of the toilet. Then I replaced the pills and returned the bottle to the exact spot where I’d found it. I was quiet leaving the bathroom, expecting Jerry to be sound asleep, but he was still in the same position, cradling his stump and staring at nothing.
“You okay?”
“My body is tired, but my mind won’t give up the ghost. Talk to me for a minute?”
“Sure,” I said, sitting at the edge of the bed.
“I don’t want to talk about medicine or Paul or anything like that.”
“That’s fine.”
“Got any more stories about those nieces and nephews? That crazy sister of yours or her husband? What’s his name again? Donald?”
“Donal.” Stalling, I adjusted the covers around his middle. I could spend the rest of the night telling him things I was worried about, but I’d already told him about the baby dilemma, which was unprofessional at best, and I worried about cracking open my life further, and dragging him into my abyss. Maybe what I really worried about was that I’d just miss him too much when I left.
“Start talking,” he said. “I don’t care what you say. Tell me something.”
I told him about Donal and his possible deportation. It all came tumbling out in a rush, and at some point Jerry’s hand found mine, and held it tightly.
“Don’t getting married take care of that problem?” he said, his voice muted, when I was done.
I sighed. “Not anymore. 9/11 changed things.”
“Oh.” He nodded knowingly. “Yeah.”
We were quiet for a moment. It was tranquil in Jerry’s room, the welcome sound of his steady breathing so soothing to my jittery thoughts. I didn’t want to move, to wreck the fragile peace I knew was only temporary.
Jerry gave my hand a quick squeeze. “I know what’s bothering you, and I told you before, it’s okay to fight loneliness with whatever you’ve got.”
“That’s not sitting right with me. With them gone, it makes even less sense for me to have a child, from a purely practical point of view. I really will be on my own, and subjecting a baby to all the challenges that come with living that way is unconscionable.”
“Bullshit.”
“I don’t know if it is.”
“No matter what, you’ll put everything you have into that kid, won’t you? You can think about it that way. Better than a lot of kids get,” Jerry said. “And you know it.”
The familiar doubts crept back in. “Maybe a baby deserves more than that? There are things I can’t give, things I don’t know I’ll ever be able to give.”
Jerry’s blue eyes met mine. “That kid would be lucky to have you.” He pushed himself up, waving me off when I tried to help, and then brought two fingers to his mouth, kissed them, and pressed the kiss to Anna’s photograph before turning it facedown. “Look, I changed my mind about what I said back in the living room. I want to give you that baby. It might take a couple of those little blue pills and a shot of vodka, but I want to help you get what you want. You want a baby? I’m your guy. What Anna doesn’t know isn’t gonna hurt her, and anyway, I’d think she’d approve.”
Such a rare thing, to be offered true kindness.
This is a beautiful moment in your life, idiot, remember it.
I thought about that empty side of the medicine cabinet, the smiling woman on the nightstand next to his head, and the sacrifice he was willing to make for me. I wanted to say something, to say no, to thank him for even thinking it, but the emotion stopped up my throat, and tears filled my eyes.
“Don’t cry,” he said, distressed. “I don’t want to make you cry.” And then his good arm pulled me in for a hug, which I welcomed, sobbing on his flannel shirt, wetting it with tears cried for so many reasons.
“Leona,” said a voice, but it wasn’t Jerry’s. I leaped off him, turning to see Paul, his body filling the door frame, his face frozen in disgust. “Can I speak with you in the kitchen?”
“Paul—” Jerry said, half warning, half plea.
“Let’s talk now,” Paul said brusquely, and I followed him, head down, wondering just how long he’d been standing there, listening.
“You’re fired.”
Long enough, apparently.
“It wasn’t what you thought,” I said. “Wait . . . what exactly do you think?”
A red flush crawled up Paul’s cheeks, the warning clouds of an encroaching storm. “I’m wondering just how far you’d go to insinuate yourself into my father’s life. I don’t know what kind of scam you’ve got going, but it’s not getting any further than what happened today.”
“You’re letting me go without talking to Jerry?”
“I think you’ve manipulated him emotionally.”
“I would never manipulate your father.”
“I was standing there awhile, Ms. Accorsi. I know I don’t understand the whole story, but I heard enough to know whatever is going on between you two is inappropriate at best.”
“There’s nothing going on,” I said, my voice getting desperate. “He’s a good man is all.”
“You don’t think I know that?” he retorted. One large hand grasped the back of his neck, and he pushed at the muscles there. “He’s not well. That makes him vulnerable. You are taking advantage of that.”
Every part of me wanted to protest, but the look he gave me was completely closed off. He was done. Mind made up.
It felt cowardly when I asked, “What will you say to Home Health?”
He thought for a minute, torturing me. “Not much. I’ll tell them my father’s circumstances have changed.”
I squeaked out a thank-you.
“I’m not doing it out of the kindness of my heart,” he retorted, and I wanted to tell him his heart was deficient, that his father got all the kindness and unfortunately didn’t pass any along. “That mirror you brought over. It’s been helpful. I figure I owe you for that.”
Jerry called from his bedroom, the word muffled and indistinct. We both froze.
“This isn’t right,” I said. “I should go in there.”
Paul stood his ground. “I don’t think it was your name he called.”
“Even if that’s true, won’t you at least let me say goodbye to him?”
A flash of pity sparked in his eyes, but just as quickly, it was gone. “Be honest. Would you allow it if he was your father?”
I thought of how fiercely I’d protected my dad when he was at his most vulnerable. I’d built a wall around him more massive and powerful than the man standing in front of me. “No,” I admitted. “I guess not.”
I heard her careful footsteps on the basement stairs, the small click in her right knee as she bent next to my bed. Carly’s presence shifted the energy in a room—she was like a really intense Reiki practitioner. “I know you’re there,” I whispered. “You smell like Play-Doh.”
“Homemade Play-Doh,” she said, dropping her butt at the edge of the bed. “Temporary insanity brought on by Pinterest exposure. There are little balls of dough stuck into the living room rug, probably permanently.”
“Consider them fossils. Fossils of your children at play. That’s nice, right?”
“No, that’s depressing.” She shifted forward, her warm hand on my arm. “So are you. You’ve been walking around in this constant state of mild despair. What is it, Lee? I’ve tried not to push, but that’s what I do best, so I’m pushing.”
You might be leaving me. You won’t have much say in the matter and it will kill you in a million different ways and you’ll pretend that it doesn’t and we will both lose something valuable from deep inside and it will hurt, hurt, hurt.
“Is it the baby? Is that what’s messing with your head?”
“Paul Pietrowski fired me.”
“What? He really is an asshole, then. Why would he fire you?”
“Jerry and I were talking about the baby thing and he overheard some of it and misunderstood. I couldn’t explain because he didn’t want to hear it. And, to be honest, I kind of didn’t want to explain to him. I didn’t want his judgment.”
Carly was silent for a moment. “What did Jerry say about the baby thing?”
“He offered to help me out.”
“Did you say yes?”
“No! How could I? I wasn’t serious when I put his name on the list. I wanted someone
like
him, but not him. He’s a good person, and I think I added something to his life, which makes me feel terrible about how things ended like they did. I didn’t even get a chance to say goodbye.”