TWELVE
RAIN AND PAIN
I hurry back to Phase Two. I walk
fast and I talk
out loud to myself. I feel crazed. What did
I do? I've lost Jack again. What's wrong with me? What's wrong with
him? What was so terrible if I didn't want to run away with him and
elope that very second? Wet, sloppy tears run down my face. Huge
wet tears. Then I realize it's raining. That's rain pouring down my
face. Big sloppy tears of rain. The rain is crying with me. It's a
typical Florida instant downpour. It feels like tons of water
drowning me. Drowning me and my sorrow. Why did I think I could
ever find love again? It's too hard. It's too much . . . what?
Pressure? Is that what I feel? Why can't Jack understand how much
my girls mean to me? How much we've all needed one another and
helped one another through the years? I just can't abandon them. He
acts as if it's so simple. Let's just run off. But life is more
complex than that.
A few people run past me hurrying for shelter. I
don't want shelter. I want to drown standing up. I want to keep
running in this downpour forever.
"That's it!" I scream to the skies. "I've had it!
How dare he tell me I'm not ready? How dare he make me move to his
time clock? And what about all those beautiful words he said to me
that first night in the Greek restaurant? It doesn't matter how
much time we have left. A year. A month. As long as we're together.
What happened to those sentiments? He's dumped me again!"
Someone passes me, looks at this crazy, drenched
woman screaming to the skies. She pauses. Thinks maybe I need help,
and then another cloud bursts and she runs to the nearest sheltered
area.
"That's it, Jack Langford. Forget it. I'm done.
Not one more tear will I shed for you. Not one more thought will I
give this stupid relationship. I'm through! I'm going to get on
with my life. I was fine before I met you, Jack Langford, and I'll
do very well without you, again!"
* * *
The first thing I hear when I reach our club room is Tessie saying, "Let's kill all the doctors." Ida says, "That's supposed to be lawyers."
"Them, too." Tessie sees me before the others do.
"Look what the cat dragged in!"
I am totally soaked and my teeth are
chattering.
The room is filled with women now staring at me.
They are seated in a huge circle, sewing. Then I realize, it's the
monthly Hadassah meeting.
Lola jumps right on me. "You're too dumb to come
in out of the rain?" She takes after her husband, Hy, quick with
the unkind cuts.
I see my girls and instantly realize that Bella,
Ida, and Sophie are sitting next to one another as usual, and Evvie
is seated as far away from them as possible. I guess the feud is
still going strong.
Evvie jumps up and runs over to me. She takes her
sweater and wraps it around me.
"Florence Nightingale, she thinks she is," says
Sophie snidely. Evvie shoots her a dirty look. The girls won't be
quick to forgive Evvie for grabbing the plum role of being my
partner when and if we go to Wilmington House. More aggravation.
Just what I need.
Ida yells, "Someone turn the air down or she'll
get pneumonia." Nobody moves quickly enough, so she turns the
thermostat up herself.
I am still shaking. But I don't know if it's from
the rain or shock or just plain rage. I try to calm myself. Sophie
hurries over and offers me some hot tea. She avoids looking at
Evvie.
"We got caught in the rain, too," Irving says.
He's with Millie in her wheelchair, seated near the door. Of
course, Yolie is there with them, holding Millie's hand. All three
look bedraggled. Irving waves to me.
"Come see how we're doing," Mary suggests, holding
up the square she's working on. Their Hadassah chapter's good works
project is making quilts for underprivileged children. The colors
are bright and the patterns cheerful. This was Ida's
idea.
Someone pulls a chair over for me, and one of the
members who had come in to the meeting directly from swimming
offers me her towels to dry myself.
Sophie informs me that they were in the middle of
an important discussion. Doctors. "Of course, I was bragging about
my darling Dr. Friendly."
Ida shoots me a look of resignation. "As if we
could shut her up."
I think dismally to myself, it was Sophie's
"condition" that brought me to my current misery. But I can't blame
sweet Sophie; I can only blame myself for causing it to happen. If
only I could have . . . I stop myself. Woulda coulda shoulda . . .
Sophie has a real problem and my feeling sorry for myself won't
help her. I think about Sophie and her pills and wonder if Esther
Ferguson took pills, too. Maybe too many? Or maybe Romeo fed her
pills along with romance. But I can't think now. My brain feels too
fuzzy.
"We were also sharing war stories. Of some of the
terrible experiences people have had with doctors and hospitals,"
Mary informs me as she offers me a cookie. Mary used to be a nurse
and she ought to know. "My poor cousin went to Mexico for a cure
for her MS. I warned her not to go. They injected her with bee
venom and charged her twenty thousand dollars. They almost killed
her down there."
Tessie says, "I was telling them about my niece
who went into the hospital for a knee replacement and they replaced
the wrong one."
The women continue sewing while they talk. From
what I can tell, they are already at the piecing process where they
sew all their small cotton fabric patches together to create the
pattern of the top half of the quilt.
I should take part in this discussion, but I don't
want to. I let myself lean back against the wall and close my eyes
and allow the pleasant hum of words to wash over me.
"Well," Chris Willems, from Phase One, comments,
"I hear hospitals now write on the leg in ink saying 'cut this
one.' "
"It's about time," adds Jean Davis from Phase
Four.
"I had a doctor tell me I had something called
fibro myalgia. Which I didn't have. And later on I found out he
told all his patients the same thing. Maybe he owned stock in
Celebrex." This from Tessie.
"Maybe he was just lazy," comments
Bella.
"Well, things like that wouldn't happen with
my
GP, Dr. Friendly. In fact, I think he's found a cure for
Alzheimer's." Sophie announces this with great pride.
Ida reaches over and pokes her. "Don't talk
stupid. No one has such a cure."
Sophie pokes Ida back, barely missing her with her
embroidery scissors. "And how do you know he doesn't?"
Evvie glances over toward Irving, who's sitting
with Millie, listening to this. She whispers to Sophie. "Miss
Insensitive, be quiet."
"What are we supposed to do? We're old and
helpless." Ellie Fisher, in her nineties, from Phase Three, says
this in a small, frightened voice. "Our lives are in their hands."
She puts down her sewing to dab at the tears in her weak
eyes.
"Yeah, those mamzers come down here to bleed us
seniors dry," Tessie adds.
"Not all doctors are here to cheat us. There are
some fine ones, too." Mary is the voice of reason.
"You have to learn how to protect yourself," Ida
comments.
"I'll drink to that." With that, Tessie downs the
rest of her bottle of Dr. Brown's Cel-Ray tonic.
"How?" Ellie squints as she tries to thread her
needle. "What about that couple I read about? His wife died because
she accidentally took his pills and the dosage was too high for
her. They were both taking the same pills for the same illness. It
could happen to any of us. Our pills change so often and the
dosages change, too. Half the time I don't know what I'm
doing."
They look to Mary for some advice from a
professional. She thinks for a moment. "I've got an idea. We form a
group and take care of one another. For example, how many of you
can still see pretty good?"
A smattering of hands go up. "Okay. I do, too. So
we now are the medications group. Especially call me and I'll help
anyone who has trouble figuring out their pills."
"Good idea," adds Evvie, one of the wellsighted
ones. "We can make charts in very big letters and with black felt
pens so you know when to take what, and also write the names of
each prescription in very large black letters on the bottles so you
know which is which."
There is applause at that.
"You can call yourself the Pill Poppers," suggests
Sophie, who always has to name everything.
I find myself thinking about Philip Smythe and
Esther Ferguson again. Were they taking any pills? Is it really
possible she was overdosed? I remind myself to look into this
later.
"Where do we sign up?" asks Jean Davis. "I can
barely see the writing on those little bottles. Every morning I
pray that I take the right ones."
"I'm always scared I took them already, so
sometimes I don't take them at all. I need help," Chris Willems
adds.
"We can work out a system where you keep all the
bottles in one basket or on one shelf and after you take one, you
move the bottle into another basket or shelf and that way you can
keep them straight," Mary suggests.
Ida instructs them, "Call me. I'll keep a list of
who's available. And send someone up to help."
"And what about picking doctors? How do we know
we're not getting a quack?" Chris asks.
Evvie answers excitedly. "We ask Barbi and Casey.
They know how to find out anything on their computers. They can do
a search for us and get recommendations. And also find out the
doctors who get sued a lot."
"Who's Barbi and Casey?" asks Flo. "I never met
them."
"They're the young ones who live in our building,"
Bella answers shyly.
I hold my breath waiting to hear one of my girls
say more. But they don't. My eyelids are beginning to close. I am
so tired. As they continue their plans I find myself dozing off.
The stress has exhausted me.
* * *
I feel a hand shaking me. It's Evvie. "Wake up, Sleeping Beauty. The sewing bee has ended. All medical problems have been solved and the rain has stopped. Care to go home?"