No ratings.
A broken woman wakes up in a hospital from a twenty year coma to find her world is gone. |
I woke up in a hospital nine months ago. The doctors told me, I had been in coma for twenty years, more than half my life. I was a medical phenomenon. During those two months of recovery, I excelled in both speech and mobility rehabilitation. I could tell the nurses to get me the fuck out of here, not pee myself, and throw a bird at the annoying sick people. “Honey, you did good today,” a nurse said who entered the room and changed my drip. “You must have some folks praying for you.” Today in Rehab, I had been able to pick up a box with my right arm. Fuck, I wasn’t dreaming. I was still in this hell hole. “What day is it?” I asked. “You mean, what year?” she said, paging the doctor. “Did you tell her, about her parents?” the doctor whispered as he passed the nurse in the doorway. “I’m not paid enough to do that,” the nurse said. He was a young doctor; he barely had any worry wrinkles. He might not have even killed anyone yet. He looked at his chart as he spoke. “Well, Miss Wallace, your recover has gone exceptionally well.” I can’t move my fucking body. I’m a fat doll, with a dirty mouth. Goodie for me. “Never before, have we had a coma patient wake up and began speaking so well within such a short time. Incredible, which is why we are discharging you today,” the doctor said smiling. “Doc, do me a favor?” “Yes, of course.” “Let me go back to sleep, would ya?” “As soon as your paper work is filled out, you get to go home. Miss Wallace, I have some . . .I saw your aunt in the lobby, I’ll go get her now.” My aunt Mildred entered the room. She wore blue stretch pants that matched her vibrant eyes. Almost all of her rich, thick black locks had fallen out, but she still walked upright, like a cane was stuck up her ass. James, an old friend, walked in behind her. He was smiling, a sickening smile like the kids on “it’s a small world” do. They looked aged, gray, fat. “Look who it is, Romeo,” I said. “Romeo?” James asked. His cheeks and chin were lined with gray stubbles, his hair was still thick, but was salt and pepper now. The skin on his cheeks pushed up into his eyes, obscured his vision as he smiled. “The doc tells me, you’ve kept me on the machine for 20 years. Oh, Romeo, what would I do without you.” “You get to go home, now,” he said smiling. “Yeah, we’re going back to Cambodia. Did you hear that Mrs. Snobby Face? Well if you didn’t, you can just ask Mr. Know It All. He’ll fill you all in,” I yelled at my parents two, old neighbors peering through the hospital window. “Where’s my mommy?” I asked my aunt. “Are you my mommy?” “In recovery my ass. Take the fool home already,” my aunt told Romeo. The nurse and Romeo helped me into a wheel chair and rolled me out of my room into the gleaming white-walled hall. A crowd had gathered outside. They suddenly began to talk about the chances of rain for tomorrow as I was wheeled out of the lobby into the sunlight. “Mrs. Bake-sale, Mrs. Sleep-around, Mr. Cigar man and the rest of my lovely town folk, I wish to thank you for your thoughtful prayers. Without them, I’m sure I would be star gazing on a nice bunny cloud, eating a cream cheese bagel. Much obliged to you all!” I said to my meddlesome neighbors. They pretended I hadn’t spoken, thanked God for my recovery, and issued hugs of congratulations to my aunt. “James, you look so old,” I said as we pulled out of the hospital parking lot. “I hope I don’t look that old.” “You look good, just as always,” James said. “I don’t think I can trust your opinion,” I said and laughed. “Can we stop for ice cream on the way home?” I asked. “I feel like I haven’t had ice cream in twenty years.” I laughed again. “Does that boy we went to high school with, what was his name, Cougar boy, you know the one who always went after moms.” “No, I don’t think so,” he said. “I can’t believe how old you look, and Aunt Mildred too. She has no hair. She should buy some wigs, and then she could go to a restaurant as brunette Mildred and leave as blond Mildred with a free meal,” I said. “I can’t believe Mr. Know it all and Mrs. Snobby Face and all the others came to the hospital. I would have thought age would have instilled some propriety in them. Nothing ever changes, does it?” “Jane,” James said, “Jane, I need to talk to you.” “Don’t be so serious James. I just got out of the hospital. You wouldn’t want to be the cause of a relapse,” I said. “Jane, it’s about your parents,” he said. His hands weren’t at two and ten. “What’s wrong with them?” I asked. “Have they started to go loopy? I know they’re in the hospital, I out of the doc. They’ve gone loopy, haven’t they?” “Jane, they’re dead,” he said taking hold of my hand. “Sky diving?” “Jane.” “Mountain climbing?” I asked. “Running with the Bulls?” “Jane,” he said. “Shut up, Jane. Let me finish.” “You’ve gotten feisty while I’ve been away. They faked their deaths to outsmart the IRS, right? They took their million dollars in unpaid taxes to Mexico. Have you visited them yet? I hear it’s lovely this time of the year.” “It’s winter, Jane,” he said. “Precisely, their favorite season,” I said. “Jane they,” he said. He had pulled over into a McDonald’s parking lot. “They committed suicide, a year after you . . .” Romeo was crying now. Long, rapid tears, were pouring down his face. “I’m so, so sorry Jane.” I got out of the car and went into McDonalds. I went into the Women’s bathroom and waited. There was still one person in the stall. I kicked the trash can against the bathroom stall. The woman came running out, toilet paper stuck to her shoe. I broke every seat in the bathroom, clogged each drain with wads of paper and let the sinks overflow. I broke the doors off the hinged and punch at the walls, leaving a trail of red blood. I straightened my hair and walked back into the lobby. I ordered a number two. “I didn’t think you were in a state to eat,” I said as I climbed into the car. I opened my bag of grease fried goodness. “Don’t look at me like that Romeo. I can’t have you barfing and driving at the same time.” I took a bite and as we drove down the street, my stomach turned. I rolled down the window. I couldn’t help it. I threw up and it hit the car next to us, and ran down the window. It looked like pink curdled milk. “Bulls eye!” I screamed “It even looks like a J.” “What did you do that for?” Romeo asked me. “Just drive Romeo. Do as you’re told,” I said. I was discharged, but put under house arrest at my parent’s old digs. The doc said it would be the best place for my continued recovery. Luckily it was dark out, when we pulled into the drive way. I didn’t want to have to deal with Mrs. Clare Nosy Robinson and Mr. Frank Knows Everyone’s Business Johnson today, or any day in the future. I still was hooked to an IV; the doctor’s didn’t want a relapse, I hadn’t been documented yet. I was still in a wheelchair too and I was rolled down the stone path towards the blazing red door. It was the only light in the dark. Romeo opened the door and a freezing breeze shook our hands. It was if they were still home. Romeo flipped on the lights. I blinked. Strange objects starred at me from every inch of the house. I blinked twice more, still everything inside was the same, all wrong. I smashed the wheelchair’s joystick down and sped into the bathroom, sweeping the trash can up into my lap with my functional, right arm. I dumped the vanilla candles off the mantle into it, a Persian rug, a picture of two old graying people and a scruffy old mutt off the coffee table, a purple phone off the counter, and a twelve pound fish hanging on the wall. I looked up. Urine oozed from the lamp in the corner, covering the room in a yellowish glow. I wanted to cry. I rammed the wheelchair into the light, flinging the metal fixture and myself onto the floor, bits of shining urine flying everywhere, turning to sand, and littering the floor. “What are you doing?” Romeo asked. I scrambled to get the wheelchair back on its wheels, but I didn’t have the strength, my coma had left me weak and useless. His hand caught my wrist as I reached out to grab the TV stand and pulled it away. “What in God’s name are you doing?” “Getting rid of these. . . Spring cleaning,” I said. I pushed with all my strength, but couldn’t budge the wheelchair. He pushed me back onto my wheels. He still held my wrist tightly. I picked up the trash bin and my hand reached for the joy stick. “And now?” he asked. “I’m taking them to the dumpster down the street.” “Give them to me,” he said. “Come on, give them to me. I’ll take care of them.” I handed over the bin reluctantly. “I want a funeral,” I said. I looked up and saw them, gray and old holding hands, sitting on the couch, not with a child between them, but with an old scruffy mutt. She was wearing a pink collar with a silver letter J hanging from it. “You realize, your parents were buried, ten years ago.” “Twice, for good luck then.” I was supposed to be the one to bury them, dead or alive, no one else. “I’ll call the priest tomorrow.” My phone had been disconnected all week. It had been ringing too much. Friday I received word from the New York Ballet company, I hadn’t been picked for the company. I was too old, too out of shape they said. I plugged the phone back in to call for pizza. It rang not stop after that, bouncing on the table as it jingled. “Yes, Dad,” I said having heard that buzzing sound just one too many times. “I’ve been calling all afternoon, Mary Jane,” his voice cracking on the last word. There was a dead silence. “How are you?” “Fine.” Only my lifelong dreams have been crushed, but I’m fine. Ever since I was five years old, I told my parents, my friends, everyone, that I wanted to be a ballet dancer. I wanted to dance the lead role in the Nutcracker, travel to Russia and be amongst the best of the best, study under Dmitri Roudnev. I was getting closer to my dream each day, with 25 hours of dance lessons, and hours, upon hours of practice at home. I installed a bar in my room. Then the notice came on my 13th birthday, I had received a spot to audition for the New York School of Ballet. After one year of hard training, I could audition to be in the company. My audition was a week from Monday. I was so very close, and then it all came crashing down. “No,” my parents said. “You can’t go to New York. You’re just a kid. You have to finish school, go to college. Wouldn’t you like to become a doctor?” “No,” I said. But they didn’t listen. They wouldn’t let me go. So I went by myself. I stole my mother’s credit card and booked a flight the night before to New York City. The taxi took me from the airport right to the front door of the New York School of Ballet. It gleamed in the sun, every one of its hundreds, thousands of windows, beamed at me, and beckoned me forth. I went inside and was greeted by a receptionist; she led me to the back, to the dancers warm up room. There sprawled on the floor, against the walls were a hundred dancers. Some my age, some older, some too old, but they all understood, they were all like me, in love with ballet. I stretched out, and changed into my leotard and Pointe shoes. I had one chance to nail it, but I wasn’t scared at all. My blood was hot running through my veins; I couldn’t keep a smile from my face. I had waited all my life to be here. "Miss Wallace, they’re ready for you now,” the receptionist said opening the black steel door. I couldn’t see beyond it, only a bright light. I stepped through the door, past the thick black curtains, and onto the center of the stage. “You are Miss Wallace, correct?” a man’s voice said. I could not see his face or any other of the judges faces. “Yes, sir,” I said. “Then, are you ready Miss Wallace?” he asked. “Yes, sir.” The black door behind me swung open and smashed into the wall. A hand squeezed around my arm and pulled me into the shadows. “Miss Wallace? Are you alright?” the man’s voice called. “Excuse us,” my father said, stepping into the light, “My daughter is not allowed to audition for your school. She knows this and she disobeyed our orders.” “You scared us to death. We woke and you were gone, no note, nothing,” my mother said holding tight to my arm and looking at my face. “I would encourage you to reconsider. Your daughter is what we call young potential. Indeed my fellow judges and I have been looking forward to her audition ever since she applied.” “I’m sorry, but she can not. I’m sorry, we wasted your time.” “I’m sorry, we wasted hers.” I wasn’t allowed to dance anymore. They took away my leotards, my shoes, my tights, but I still practiced late at night in my room. They promised they would give back my things if I did well in school, got straight A’s and so I did. When I turned 17, I took my first ballet class after four years of not dancing. I had been saving for the last four years, every Christmas, every birthday; every penny went to my savings. At 17, I got a car and got to dance again. The whole next year, I worked harder than ever before and on my eighteenth birthday, I went to New York and auditioned. “Mary Jane, are you there?” my father asked. “Push a button if you can hear me.” I pushed the star button and held it the whole time he spoke, “You don’t have to be fine.” “I am," I said. “It’s okay to talk about it. We know you’re upset," my father said. “I got a job in Cambodia as an English teacher and I’m going to open my own dance school once I save up some money.” “What about USC? You’ve been accepted into their Pre-med program. All your hard work would finally pay off.” Your hard work, not mine. “My flight leaves in two weeks. I’ll be coming over to your house next week sometime. There are still a few things I need to get.” Wind swept over the phone and my father’s voice was far away as he said “You’re throwing your life away.” “Don’t yell at her. It won’t do anyone any good,” my mother’s voice, muffled too, crept through the covered phone. “She’s very upset right now. In a couple of days, after the initial shock wears off, she’ll come home. We’ll send James to her; he’ll talk her into coming home. Everything will work out you’ll see, but we can’t push her right now.” Silence as my mother’s hand slipped off the receiver and her voice grew loud and clear again “Hi, sweetie. Dad’s just run to get the door. I think its aunt Mildred; she’s coming over for lunch today. We’re both very sorry about your audition, sweetie. Don’t be sad, we’re here for you and so is James. We love you, and we’ll talk to you soon. Good bye sweetie,” she said and hung up the phone. “Sure thing,” I said. I slammed the receiver down, pushing down hard even after the call had ended. I only had to see them one more time. James came out of the bathroom. He has picked me up at the airport, after I flew back from New York. I wouldn’t let him take me back to my parents’ house, so we went to a hotel instead. “Jane, marry me,” he said. “Marry me, and we’ll go to USC together. I’ll take care of you. We’ll start a family together and have our own practices. I hope we have a daughter just like you.” “Fuck, James! I am never going to marry you. I am never going to love you. Never! You only want to marry me because you’re supposed to. You don’t even know me, what I’ve been through, what I want to do. I’m used goods, not your type. I never have been.” I threw my purse over my shoulder and slipped my shoes on. “Bring that back to them, won’t you?” I said indicating to the suit case. “It’s all there’s. Don’t be sad James, go back to them. It’s where you belong. Go back to them and be happy.” I walked towards the door and stopped, turned and walked back to James who was still sitting on the bed, starring at me. I kissed him on the lips, quick, no tongue. “See, nothing. You’re not losing anything.” And I left. |