Published in The Angel Rust magazine, issue VII, January, 2022
When the call came to
tell me mom died
my hand put the phone
down and reached for the glass pipe.
I wanted the familiar fog
that failed to numb,
but did hide the world.
I had seen her the night
before, and carefully cleaned
the putrescence draining
from her bedsores. I’d looked down to see her face
smashed into the chrome
guardrails; she’d made no sound.
I rolled her on her
burning back, sought her eyes,
“do you know your whole
family loves you?”
She stared back from some
mysterious space,
eyes once brown and
powerful dried with gray pain now,
baffled that I’d said
anything denying the mystery she saw.
Did I expect an answer?
Months before tumors the
size of grapefruits
had cleaved her brain
away and left her sputtering.
Then I, having read of
the mindful role of loved ones
meeting at the edge,
asked, so to give her permission to go,
“mom, do you want to
die?”
She turned those knowing
eyes to focus
on her youngest son,
“are you crazy?”,
she asked.
She didn’t expect an
answer.
A week later, a bright
blue winter day,
I found her in her room
slumped in a wheelchair,
the sun, through Venetian
blinds, throwing horizontal bands
on her hands, pricked and
swollen.
I rolled her out to the
tarmac and the air outside where
the rocky San Gabriels
were white with rare snow.
She looked up to those
mountains and she, haphazardly
capable of any word at
all with less than
half her brain left in
her skull, sang out loud and strong
“When it’s Springtime in
the Rockies…”
We stopped rolling, I
stopped pushing her, to focus
on this artifact of who
she was. Or even more, a clue,
emerging now at the end,
of someone she was
I didn’t know. She looked back at me from the mountains,
blasé
almost surprised herself
at these parts of her still left,
and she sang a robust
second verse
And though I long to be
back in the Rockies
I'll wait until the
springtime comes…
The Trickster, though
terminal, still had a pretty voice.
Another day at the City
of Hope,
before she came home to
live with dad and die,
(she’d been housed in a bungalow
like a vintage SoCal hot springs spa -
starched white sheets, TB recovery, and healing
mineral water -
or a Raymond Chandler mystery’s illicit autocourt,
or the old rehab cottage at Los Robles hospital
where W.C. Fields died and where I’d spent time too)
I walked in and she was
on her back, looking up at the ceiling,
her hands lightly poised
in the air above her chest,
fingertips touching, left
and right hands
lightly bouncing against
each other,
the scholar’s gesture.
She
was ruminating, considering,
pondering, not
unpleasantly, some deeper meaning
only she knew.
She turned her head when
she heard me.
She smiled softly,
politely greeting a familiar face,
“here’s my little
girl-boy,
I wish I knew your
story.”
Then the shadow passed
over her face,
with half a brain left,
she still traced
a certain line that
perhaps she’d crossed.
Although, too, maybe just
a reflection from my unset face.
We both pulled back.
Again. She, back in the body ending life.
Me, hiding from too much
light.
“Mildred, I wish you knew
my story.”
Are the mountains far
away?
I don’t expect an answer
right now.
Not yet.