bed trying to sleep each night while waiting to hear him testing our doorknob again or scratching against our thick pile carpet as he came worming his way back inside our bedroom again, rousing us, frightening us, from sleep in sluggish protest and torment again, or to awake disgruntled in the morning and discover him lying prostrate on the floor at the foot of our bed or in some corner of the room, with his quilt, near the legs of a dresser or chair, his sticky, heavy-lidded eyes glued shut finally with exhaustion, his misshapen lips lax, swollen, and blubbery, his thumb lying lifeless near his mouth as though it had just fallen out. (What a terrible time that tonsillectomy of his was for me. It was worse than my own. I may never recover from it fully.)
'Stay in your room,' I would command him sternly.
'You have to go back to your room,' I would try to coax him gently in the darkness of our bedroom when some unexpected new reserve of kindness and pity would flow within me (pleading with him, really, to please let us alone). 'You can leave the lights on if you want to. There's nothing to be afraid of.'
'I'm not afraid.'
'One of us will stay with you.'
'Then you'll go.'
'I can't stay in your room all night.'
'Then why should I?'
'It's your room.'
'I want to be in your room. I want to stay with you and Mommy.'
'A doctor said you shouldn't. He said it would be bad for you.'
'What doctor?'
'A doctor we saw.'
'I don't believe him.'
'Do you want to go see him?'
He was afraid of doctors then and has been afraid of doctors, nurses, and dentists ever since. (He doesn't ever want to have to have teeth drilled or pulled.) I don't think he will ever recover from that operation of his fully either. I fear he and my daughter too may never forgive me for permitting their tonsils to become so severely infected that it was necessary for them to be taken to a hospital to have them pulled out (or cut, if that's what they do. And his adenoids too. He isn't mad at me about his adenoids because he doesn't know what they are yet, and neither does anyone else, although those were taken away from him, too. They seem to be highly specialized organs growing inside a person's pharynx whose only natural function is to be taken out), and he keeps associating men he doesn't trust (not me, although he doesn't always trust me) with the anesthetist there, whose appearance he recalls only hazily.
'He gave me an enema,' he alleges with abiding resentment and embarrassment during one of our disorganized discussions about everything that might be on his mind.
'No, he didn't,' I correct him again. 'That was an anesthetic. We gave you an enema at home the night before.'
'He looked like Forgione.'
'He was a Jap. You didn't even know Forgione then.'
'Forgione is an Italian,' he concedes abstractedly. 'Forgione doesn't like me.'
'Yes he does.'
'No he doesn't.'
'Yes he does. He does now.'
'I don't like him.'
'You don't have to. Just pretend.'
'Miss Owens doesn't like me.'
'Yes she does. She gives you good grades.'
'She always hollers at me.'
'She never does.'
'I'm afraid she will if I don't do my work.'
'Do your work.'
'He says I can't climb ropes.'
'Can you?'
'I hate Forgione.'
'You don't have to.'
'How come?'
'He likes you.'
'Did you go see him again?'
'Did you want me to?'
'I'm afraid of Forgione.'
'You don't have to be.'
'How do you know?'
'He says you've got a good build and can run like a weasel. You don't try to learn! You're supposed to use your feet too when you climb ropes. Not your legs, your feet.'
'What's a weasel?'
'A four-legged animal that runs like you.'
'Will I have wisdom teeth?'
'Sure. When you grow up.'
'Will they have to be pulled?'
'Are you going to start worrying about that?'
'Do you think I can help it?'
'If they're bad.'
'You don't like me.'
'Yes I do.'
'You go away.'
'Where?'
'To Puerto Rico.'
'I have to.'
'To Puerto Rico?'
'When?'
'Last year. You went away to Puerto Rico.'
'I had to.'
'Are you going again?'
'I have to.'
'Soon?'
'In June.'
'To Puerto Rico?'
'I'm on the committee. I help pick the place.'
'Is that your new job?'
'I don't have it yet.'
'To make a speech?'
'I hope so.'
'They stole my bike when you were away.'
'I bought you another one.'
'I thought they were going to beat me up.'
'They would have stolen it anyway, even if I was here. I would have been at the office.'
'Don't go.'
'I have to.'
'Whenever you go away I'm afraid you won't come back.'
'I know.'