Authors: Jill A. Davis
“I'm proud of you for getting to the stuff about Roger. Not that you need me to be proud of you or anything,” I say.
He was always hiding behind the mythical combination of drugs that would cure loss. His pharmacologist had become Oz.
I don't remember much fighting. Except for one fight. It happened on Christmas Eve. I was probably four.
My father had come home from work late. My mother called his office. She called his friends. She couldn't track him down. She snapped at me. I remember thinking, at that young age, that my mother wasn't worriedâshe was mad.
Just before I went to bed, he arrived home. My mother met him at the apartment door. He greeted her with a huge smile and said he'd been out shopping all dayâlooking for the perfect gift, for the perfect wife.
She opened a small box and pulled out a pearl and gold bracelet. She didn't swoon, or melt. She looked at the bracelet, then looked at my father. She handed him the bracelet and said: “Take it back to whomever it belongs to.”
He tried to convince her this bracelet was for her. She pointed to some dents in the gold.
“I don't know where you got this. I don't know if I want to know where you got this. But this is not my bracelet!” she yelled.
My mother was not a yeller. Not really, anyway. She could scream as good as the next mom. But mostly she
bottled it up, and it came out at inappropriate times. This time, though, she couldn't.
I was afraid of Christmas after that. Worried what my father might drag home. Worried my mother wouldn't save up her anger. That was the last Christmas we had as a family.
UNTIL PERRY MENTIONED
my father's heart attack, I hadn't given the specifics of it much thought. I was busy absorbing the shock that he was dead. It felt good at the funeral finally to have everyone's pity and prayers. At last I was getting the sympathy I deserved when I was five years old and he left. I'll admit, the condolences I received only left me wanting more.
For months after he died I reread the sympathy cards. Printed proof of my loss, and that the world knew something had been taken from me.
I have an urgent need to understand what actually happened inside of him, to him. Is the heart as unforgiving as a human? Does it turn on its master?
It's just a muscle the size of your fist, but it runs the whole show. It can pump a gallon and a half of blood per minute, while resting. The production requires the complete effort of the whole team. The atria, the aorta, the superior vena cava, the valves, the ventricles, the arteriesâthey're all there, plugging away every day, all the
time. No loafing. No time for hobbies. Or families. A thankless job. And it takes only one of them to go on strike to shut down the whole factory. Which one of them gave up, I wondered, on my dad? What part of me might quit first? Who would feel my loss the most?
WE BUY THE TREE
on the corner of Seventy-ninth and Madison. Some Boy Scouts are selling them. For five dollars they haul it home and into the apartment. It's a very Norman Rockwell way to get a tree in New York City. Who delivers anything for five dollars?
We have a large bread knife that we are using to shave the trunk of the tree so that it will fit into the stand. We take turns doing the sawing. Then hoist the tree into the stand, and slide it into the corner.
“I know what you can get me for Christmas,” Sam says, breathing heavily.
“What?” I ask.
“You can get me someone to put the Christmas lights on the tree,” Sam says.
“Chores? You want someone to do your chores for Christmas?” I ask. “And you want your gift
before
Christmas. That's just not right.” Besides, I was envisioning something that could be wrapped up very nicely.
“But it's what I want,” Sam says. “What do you want?”
“I don't know,” I say.
“Gotta be something,” Sam says.
Well, sure. There's always something. It's just a question of whether you have the courage to say the
something
.
“So, what do you want?” Sam asks.
“A baby,” I say.
“A baby?” Sam says. “I thought you were going to say jewelry.”
I SPEND VERY LITTLE
time thinking about the perfect gift for Sam. Instead, I believe the perfect gift will appear, and by doing so will obviously present itself as the right choice. By December 23, that does not happen. I experience some panic. Should I have planned something weeks ago while planning was still a possibility?
I go to Bergdorf's to find something overpriced to prove my love. What is the perfect gift for the person who makes me believe, really believe, that it's possible to work through things? That leaving is the last resort, not the first? I want to give him something big and unnecessary to properly thank him. So I buy him, of all things, a leather coat.
On Christmas Eve, he opens some champagne. Builds a fire. We're opening some gifts. He's more of a suede coat guyâbut I don't realize this until he's about to open the leather coat. And then, too late, it seems so obviously wrong for him.
He unwraps the box. Opens it and holds up the coat. He's stumped.
“A leather coat?” Sam says.
“I'm taking it back,” I say.
“I'll be a tough guy in this, huh?” Sam says.
“Put it back in the box,” I say.
“No, I'm a tough guy. I'm getting a tattoo. I'm a tough guy,” Sam says, walking around in the leather coat. “Look at me, I'm tough, I wear black leather. That can mean only one thingâ¦.”
“You're a tough guy?” I say.
What is the right gift to properly thank someone for not running away, for not letting me run away? A gift certificate didn't seem right, either.
“I'm so sorry,” I say. “I really did want to get you something you'd like.” I start to cry.
“You're such a baby,” Sam says, hugging me.
Mainly, I'm crying out of embarrassment. The coat has epaulets! What was I thinking?
“What do you say we go work on your gift, now?” Sam says.
I INTENTIONALLY WAIT
until after Christmas to get my mammogram. Specifically, I wait until after Christmasâbut before December 31. I've only canceled three appointments.
I wait until after Christmas because I really love Christmas. And if I have breast cancer, Christmas will be ruined. I reason that if I have breast cancer, I want to learn this after Christmas, but before New Year's. Because if I learn this before New Year's, my resolution will be to kick cancer's ass. I will have a plan. A plan equals success. If I learn this after New Year's, it will seem too late, somehow. I will sink into a deep depression and have to wait a year to start my plan of attack.
Waiting for a ghost that may never come is exhausting, and has taken more of a toll on me than I realized.
The doctor, recommended months ago by Mom's oncologist, has a way of making me feel that things are fine. More than fine. A-OK. He seems to know how fearful I am in spite of the fact that I've claimed not to be scared, says I should come to his office after I'm dressed. He wants to talk to me.
He's older than my father was. That's how I think of men now. Older than my father, or younger than my father.
“So, what are your plans?” Dr. A-OK asks.
“I'm going to get lunch, and then head back to work,” I say. “On the other hand, I could have a complete mental breakdown. Do you have the results?”
“Yes. You're one hundred percent fine. But I thought now seemed like a good time to talk about your concerns,” Dr. A-OK says.
“Yes, well, my mother had cancer, my grandmother had cancerâguess who's next?” I ask.
“Well, it's important to be aware of that history. It's no guarantee you'll get cancer, though. It means you're at an increased risk. Both your mother and your grandmother are still living, right? And that's good news. Even if they weren't living, I'd just encourage you to test when you're younger instead of waiting until you're thirty-eight or fortyâand you've done that,” he says.
“Right,” I say.
“Are you planning to have children?” Dr. A-OK asks.
“Yes,” I say.
“So let me lay out the options,” he says.
“I have options?” I say. That had not occurred to me.
“There usually are,” he says. “Depending on your level of anxiety about history repeating itselfâ¦you could continue with regular mammograms; have one just before you plan your pregnancy so that you won't go more than a year between tests. Continue self-exams. When you're finished having children, consider having the nodes removed,” he says.
It all sounds so easy. So relaxing. He makes it sound like a nonemergencyâ¦I could have a facial, get my nodes removed, and then have a spa lunch.
I ask him the question to which I want the answer, but never thought I'd ask.
“When will I know that I'm safe?” I ask. “If I don't
have it at forty, am I safe, or fifty, or sixty? At what point do I relax?”
“You relax now,” he says. “You don't have cancer now. All you have is an increased risk.”
The conversations that I'm the most afraid to have are the ones I most need to have. They almost always come as a relief. I've danced around these questions my entire life, avoiding relief.
WE'RE AT NICK & TONI'S
sitting in the corner. We drove to East Hampton at the last minute to get here in time for dinner. It was as if we both knew we had to choose the perfect backdrop for the most important conversation we might ever have.
Sam orders what he always orders hereâthe elaborate pasta dish with the egg on top of it. He doesn't even look at the menu anymore. What's the point when reliable perfection has been achieved?
“I got a call from Susanna,” Sam says.
“Oh,” I say. “How's Chicago?”
I liked Susanna. We spoke a few times after she left Sam. The conversations were short and I had the impression she was gauging my interest in her complaints about Sam. Was she anticipating that I'd defend him? The way lawyers do? Or the way couples do? I stopped returning her calls.
“She sounds good. She said she'd heard about me and you,” Sam says.
I was never really sure what to say to Sam about Susanna. They seemed really well suited until they split up. Then they seemed so obviously terribly matched I was surprised they ever got married.
“Were you in love with her when she left?” I ask.
“No,” Sam says.
“Why did you stay married?” I ask.
He sits for a while.
“Honestly, it seemed easier than getting divorced,” Sam says.
“Easier how?” I ask.
“I know it sounds ridiculous,” Sam says. “It's not rational. I didn't want to be a divorced guy. I didn't want to move. I didn't want to decide who gets the blender or the china. We were pretty good at living separate lives together.”
“I can remember driving home from the Hamptons that day, when your ankle was broken and Susanna had left,” I say. “It was such a relief to me that you were in the middle of a divorce because it seemed like I might have time to figure out how to handle a relationship. Buy some how-to books, or something. It was as if I wasn't quite sure I knew how to love someone even though I'd told other men I loved them.”
“I don't think I need to hear about you telling other men you love them,” Sam says, smiling. “Telling me would be good enough.”
“I love you,” I say.
It was nearly a year of having relationships carried out in parallel with my father and Sam and my shrink. Eventually the training wheels have to come off and it's always a surprise when you find you don't need them.
I'D PLANNED AN
elaborate dinner. I was going to replicate something I'd seen in the
Times
food section. Succulent duck with figs and port wine. The kind of recipe everyone longs to make but never does. I bought the ingredients. Who knew there was more than one kind of fig? But life crept in and I never quite got to it, and then I heard Sam's key in the door.
I had envisioned a scenario where he walks into the apartment, smells this great meal, and starts to believe I'm getting my act together. I'm not sure how I concocted this flawed equation.
“I didn't make dinnerâ¦. I told you I'd make a special dinner, and I didn't make anything,” I say.
He kisses me. “Let's go out,” Sam says.
I want to stay in. I've been working late interviewing receptionist candidates. Replacing one's self is no small feat. I didn't make it to the grocery store this week. I look in the freezer. Sam hangs up his coat.
“Would you eat French bread pizza?” I say. I don't mention how long it's been in the freezer.
He's in the other room still wearing his suit. He claims a suit is what he is most comfortable in, and he does seem to spend a lot of time lingering in it.
“Sure. What
is
deep-fried pizza?” Sam says.
“Deep-fried pizza?” I repeat. “I saidâ¦I said French bread pizzaâ¦but you were willing to eat deep-fried pizza? You have the absolute best attitude of anyone I've ever met.”
“It's just food,” Sam says.
“Deep-fried pizza is attempted murder,” I say. “You're right, let's go out.”
We walk to Sushi of Gari. Over sake at the crowded counter, Sam starts cleaning out his pockets. He lines his stuff up on the counter. Change. A paper clip. A mint. A ring.