The nurse saw this and came hurrying toward me, her skirt rustling, her face alarmed. The little gold pin on her breast read ANNE CORRIGAN. 'No, no, I just meant the
'No,' I said, not knowing if I was going to faint or not. The world was swooping and there was a buzzing in my ears. I thought of how the road had leaped toward the car, a black-and-white movie road in all that silver moonlight.
Anne Corrigan led me into the room and I saw my mother. She had always been a big woman, and the hospital bed was small and narrow, but she still looked almost lost in it. Her hair, now more gray than black, was spilled across the pillow. Her hands lay on top of the sheet like a child's hands, or even a doll's. There was no frozen stroke-sneer such as the one I'd imagined on her face, but her complexion was yellow. Her eyes were closed, but when the nurse beside me murmured her name, they opened. They were a deep and iridescent blue, the youngest part of her, and perfectly alive. For a moment they looked nowhere, and then they found me. She smiled and tried to hold out her arms. One of them came up. The other trembled, rose a little bit, then fell back. 'Al,' she whispered.
I went to her, starting to cry. There was a chair by the wall, but I didn't bother with it. I knelt on the floor and put my arms around her. She smelled warm and clean. I kissed her temple, her cheek, the corner of her mouth. She raised her good hand and patted her fingers under one of my eyes.
'Don't cry,' she whispered. 'No need of that.'
'I came as soon as I heard,' I said. 'Betsy McCurdy called.'
'Told her . . . weekend,' she said. 'Said the weekend would be fine.'
'Yeah, and to hell with that,' I said, and hugged her.
'Car . . . fixed?'
'No,' I said. 'I hitchhiked.'
'Oh gorry,' she said. Each word was clearly an effort for her, but they weren't slurred, and I sensed no bewilderment or disorientation. She knew who she was, who I was, where we were, why we were here. The only sign of anything wrong was her weak left arm. I felt an enormous sense of relief. It had all been a cruel practical joke on Staub's part . . . or perhaps there had been no Staub, perhaps it had all been a dream after all, corny as that might be. Now that I was here, kneeling by her bed with my arms around her, smelling a faint remnant of her Lanvin perfume, the dream idea seemed a lot more plausible.
'Al? There's blood on your collar.' Her eyes rolled closed, then came slowly open again. I imagined her lids must feel as heavy to her as my sneakers had to me, out in the hall.
'I bumped my head, Ma, it's nothing.'
'Good. Have to . . . take care of yourself.' The lids came down again; rose even more slowly.
'Mr. Parker, I think we'd better let her sleep now,' the nurse said from behind me. 'She's had an extremely difficult day.'
'I know.' I kissed her on the corner of the mouth again. 'I'm going, Ma, but I'll be back tomorrow.'
'Don't . . . hitchhike . . . dangerous.'
'I won't. I'll catch a ride in with Mrs. McCurdy. You get some sleep.'
'Sleep . . . all I do,' she said. 'I was at work, unloading the dishwasher. I came over all headachy. Fell down. Woke up . . . here.' She looked up at me. 'Was a stroke. Doctor says . . . not too bad.'
'You're fine,' I said. I got up, then took her hand. The skin was fine, as smooth as watered silk. An old person's hand.
'I dreamed we were at that amusement park in New Hampshire,' she said.
I looked down at her, feeling my skin go cold all over. 'Did you?'
'Ayuh. Waiting in line for the one that goes . . . way up high. Do you remember that one?'
'The Bullet,' I said. 'I remember it, Ma.'
'You were afraid and I shouted. Shouted at you.'
'No, Ma, you—'
Her hand squeezed down on mine and the corners of her mouth deepened into near-dimples. It was a ghost of her old impatient expression.
'Yes,' she said. 'Shouted and swatted you. Back . . . of the neck, wasn't it?'
'Probably, yeah,' I said, giving up. 'That's mostly where you gave it to me.'
'Shouldn't have,' she said. 'It was hot and I was tired, but still . . . shouldn't have. Wanted to tell you I was sorry.'
My eyes started leaking again. 'It's all right, Ma. That was a long time ago.'
'You never got your ride,' she whispered.
'I did, though,' I said. 'In the end I did.'
She smiled up at me. She looked small and weak, miles from the angry, sweaty, muscular woman who had yelled at me when we finally got to the head of the line, yelled and then whacked me across the nape of the neck. She must have seen something on someone's face—one of the other people waiting to ride the Bullet— because I remember her saying
'Mr. Parker, it really is time to go,' the nurse said.
I raised my mother's hand and kissed the knuckles. 'I'll see you tomorrow,' I said. 'I love you, Ma.'
'Love you, too. Alan . . . sorry for all the times I swatted you. That was no way to be.'
But it had been; it had been
'I'll see you tomorrow, Ma. Okay?'
She didn't answer. Her eyes had rolled shut again, and this time the lids didn't come back up. Her chest rose and fell slowly and regularly. I backed away from the bed, never taking my eyes off her.
In the hall I said to the nurse, 'Is she going to be all right? Really all right?'
'No one can say that for sure, Mr. Parker. She's Dr. Nunnally's patient. He's very good. He'll be on the floor tomorrow afternoon and you can ask him—'
'Tell me what
'I think she's going to be fine,' the nurse said, leading me back down the hall toward the elevator lobby. 'Her