Read The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus Online
Authors: Sonya Sones
Behind that closed doorâ
a lightning storm is crashing
through my mother's skull.
When they wheel my mother out
and I rush to her side,
her eyes widen and fill with tears.
“Holly?!” she cries. “Why didn't you tell me
you were coming to Cleveland?
Is it really
you?”
“Yes, Mom,” I say,
gathering her into a hug.
“Is it really
you?”
I bury my face in her soft neck,
and we hold each other for a moment.
Then she pulls back, and sniffs the air.
“Oh, my⦔ she says,
a hopeful grin spreading across her face.
“Do I smellâ¦butterscotch?”
I reach into my purse
and pull out one of Samantha's brownies.
She plucks it from my hand and wolfs it down.
“I have died and gone to brownie heaven,” she sighs.
“Do you have any more of those?
I feel as if I haven't eaten in days.”
I hand my mother another brownie.
And she's so busy scarfing it down
that she doesn't even notice
when Dr. Gold and I exchange a high five.
When she wakes up,
and sees me sitting next to her bed,
her eyes widen and fill with tears.
“Holly!” she cries. “How wonderful
to see you! Why didn't you
tell
me
you were coming to Cleveland?”
I lean in,
giving her a squeeze, and say,
“Iâ¦I wanted to surprise you, Mom.”
A few minutes later, I step out of the room
so that I can see what happens
when I come back in.
Sure enoughâ
my mother's just as stunned and delighted
when she sees me walk through the door.
And for the next few hours,
I keep finding excuses to leave the room,
so that I can delight my mother upon my return.
I guess
every shock treatment
has a silver lining.
While
I
paint
my mother's fingernails and toes.
Then, out of the blue, she says,
“That Dr. Hack was a real hunk.
But he had the most god-awful chuckle,
didn't he?”
It takes me
a few minutes
to stop laughing.
Then my mother says,
“Did you bring any photos ofâ¦of⦔
She pauses, trying to remember.
“Ofâ¦Sabrina?” she finally says.
“You mean Samantha?” I say.
“That's what I said,” she murmurs.
So I pull out my recent favorite shotâ
taken in the backyard
just before Sam left for college.
“Look at those eyes!” she says.
“I swearâone glance from that child
could turn winter into spring⦔
But then she peers more closely at the picture,
furrows her brows, and asks,
“Why does your pepper tree look so bare?”
My pepper tree�
A jolting emptiness fills my chest.
“Oh, Mom⦔ I say, my voice cracking.
“What is it, dear? What's the matter?”
She reaches over to circle me with her frail arms.
“It got sick, Mom. We had to cut it down⦔
Tears well up in my eyes.
“That must have been hard for you,” she says.
“It was,” I say. “It was so hard⦔
My mother pats my back,
rocks me,
lets me cry.
When I finally quiet, she says,
“You need to go home now, Holly.
Go home to Michael and plant a new tree.”
And, of course,
she is exactly
right.
I stop in to see Dr. Gold, before
heading down the hall to see my mother.
He sits behind his deskâ
his eyes as merry as Christmas.
He tells me that after just one shock treatment
not only has my mother's appetite returned,
but the physical therapist says she was finally
willing to participate in rehab this morning.
He says he's confident
that with just a half dozen more treatments
and maybe a month or two of rehab,
he'll be able to send my mother home.
“How can I ever thank you?” I say.
Dr. Gold smiles at me and says,
“Just send me a batch
of Samantha's brownies.”
And, as if on cue,
my cell phone rings,
and Samantha's name
appears on the screen.
I hold up the phone to show the doctor.
He raises an eyebrow and says,
“I hope it was her
ears
that were burning.
Not her brownies!”
And when he begins chuckling
at his own little joke,
I'm struck by the lovely, quiet sound of itâ
like water flowing over smooth stones.
Samantha says
she's walking though the quad
looking up at the bell tower,
and that it looks
exactly like a postcard
of how a college
should
look.
And just then,
the bells begin to ringâ
great booming, echoing, peals of them.
She laughs and says,
“And it
sounds
exactly like
a college should
sound!”
She says the leaves are falling.
She says the air is frosty.
She says, “Thank you, thank you,
thank
you!”
She tells me
she can't believe
how lucky she is.
And I tell her
I can't believe
how lucky
I
am.
My phone rings again.
I check the number
and see thatâ
shit!
âit's Roxie.
I let it go to voice mail.
But a second later,
it rings again.
And this time it's Alice,
sounding oddly breathless.
“Oh, Holly,” she says,
“I'm so glad you picked up.”
And right away, I know
that something is very wrong.
“Alice,” I say. “What's the matter?”
“It'sâ¦it's Michael. I'm sure he's
going to be totally fine, but Noah and I
just drove him to the emergency room.”
An orderly brushes past me,
pushing someone lying on a tableâ
someone entirely covered with a sheetâ¦
My knees begin to quake.
“Oh my God, Alice. What's wrong with him?”
She tells me that they aren't sure yet,
but that Michael called her a half hour ago
and said he was in a lot of pain.
He said that it came on fast.
That at first he thought maybe it was his appendix.
“But then,” Alice says, “he went to the bathroom
andâ¦and⦔
“And
what?”
I say.
“Well⦔ she says. “There was a teeny bitâ¦
a teeny bit of blood in his pee.”
My heart skids to a stop.
“Is he there? Can I talk to him?”
“Not right now. They're running some tests.
But he asked me to call you
and tell you he loves you.”
“Tell him I love him, too,” I say.
“Tell him I'll catch the next plane out.”
And when Alice doesn't say,
“Don't be silly. You don't need to fly home.”
a tsunami of terror engulfs me.
It isn't until a couple of harrowing hours later,
when the flight
that I somehow managed to get a seat on
is zooming me home to California,
that I find myself
thinking about
how dangerously close
I came
to doing
what I almost did
when I was stuck in the elevator
with He Who Shall Not Be Named.
And my stomach lurches so violently
that I pull the airsickness bag
out of the seat pocket in front of me.
Just to play it safe.
When your husband's
in the hospital
due to the mystery pains
knifing through his abdomen
and he sends you home to feed the cat
and pick up a few things for him
while you're waiting
to hear the test results
and you happen to notice
his scruffy bedroom slippers,
the ones you're always tripping over
because he forgets to put them in the closet,
those same aggravatingly old-mannish slippers of his,
whose presence there on any other day
would have irritated
the living daylights out of you,
isn't it strange
to find yourself fighting a sudden urge
to reach down and scoop them up
into an embrace,
those tattered old mutts
standing guard so faithfully
next to the empty
unmade bed?
And, braving the morass of Michael's studio,
I somehow manage to locate the sketchbook
and the charcoal pencils he asked me to retrieve.
Then I head outside to pick some roses for him.
I'm snipping a bouquet of Double Delights,
when I glance next door
and see Duncan and Jane
rocking on their covered swing.
Madison and Pinkie
are curled up next to them,
both of them
deep in dreams.
Suddenly, Jane takes hold
of her husband's hand
and places it on her full moon belly.
“Did you feel
that?!”
she says.
“Wow⦔ Duncan says.
“Our baby's gonna be a drummer!”
“Just like her daddy,” Jane says.
And a proud-papa grin spreads across his face.
Then, very lightly,
he starts drumming on her stomach
and Jane joins inâ
singing “God Only Knows.”
Geez.
I better get out of here
before I start
blubberingâ¦
Michael has dozed off.
That Percocet the nurse gave him
must have knocked him out.
Alice and Noah are snoring away, too.
I gaze at my cousin, drooling on Noah's shoulder,
and my heart nearly cracks with tenderness.
Then I ease down onto the edge of Michael's bed
and reach for his handâso warm and solid,
so familiar and comforting.
I watch my husband sleep,
moved beyond words by each line on his faceâ
his “etchings,” he likes me to call them.
I lean down
and gently press my lips
to his.
The
hands
on
the
face
of
the
big
round
clock
on
the
puke
green
wall
move
so
slowly
that
between
each
tick
I
age
ten
years.
But
Â
Â
this
Â
Â
is
Â
Â
ridiculousâ¦
It turns out
it's only kidney stones.
Nothing life threatening.
So Michael's doctor sends us home.
But just as we exit the hospital,
we see Duncan racing in with a groaning Janeâ
she's dripping with sweat, her cheeks flushed,
her bangs plastered to her forehead.
“The baby's coming!” Duncan shouts gleefully.
“Good luck!” Michael and I call out
as they dash past us
and disappear into the maternity ward.
A second later, we hear Jane let loose
with a gut-wrenching scream.
“You know something⦔ Michael muses,
clutching his midsection.
“I think I know just how she feels⦔