Read You're Not You Online

Authors: Michelle Wildgen

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary

You're Not You (21 page)

“We had a great time,” she said, and she seemed to mean it. “I ate a little apple filling.”

“Really?” I said. “Simone was cool?”

Kate nodded. “She was great. It was nice of you to offer, though, Bec.”

“Sure,” I said. I went around to the other door and got in. “Is Simone
getting ever so slightly better or is it just me? Much less about conceptuals, for one thing.” I couldn’t resist adding that.

Kate looked pained. “I’ve been feeling guilty about a couple things,” she began. She looked at me to be sure I’d caught it. I nodded and she went on. “Simone is really improving, and I haven’t always been fair to her.”

I sighed. “I do the same thing,” I admitted. I turned the key in the ignition, and though it was in the single digits outside the car started right up. I never stopped appreciating that, compared to my Honda.

“I drew you into it,” she said firmly. “And I let you do too much for me. We get along so well that it’s easy to let you handle everything, and it isn’t fair. To you.”

“It’s not like I mind,” I said. She was looking at me carefully. “I don’t, really. It’s just the job, that’s all. I’m just being you.”

“Say no to me sometimes,” she replied. “You can, you know.”

“I know.” I turned the radio to a rock station, glancing at her to see if she liked it. She nodded.

“What are you doing for Christmas?” I asked. I didn’t want her alone, Evan off across town drinking champagne with The Replacement.

“I think I’m going to my parents’,” she said. “They’ll come and get me.” She smiled grimly. “This is like eighth grade.” Then she kept talking, but I couldn’t get the words.

“Sorry?” I had been glancing behind us for traffic and now I stopped and concentrated on watching her.

She said it again. I thought maybe she’d said “pretend,” which baffled me. Patiently, she repeated herself for a third time.

“Am I going to my parents’?” Finally, she nodded. “Oh, yeah,” I said, “I always do. They’d freak if I didn’t come home for that.”

We drove in silence for a few minutes, and then she said, as we stopped at a light, “Is it harder for you to understand me lately?”

I shook my head. “No, I think that was just me being thick. Why?”

She looked away. “Because it’s harder for me,” she said. “I’m really working to talk lately.”

I stared at her. “I’m sure it’s just that you’re tired,” I began. “The house, and—”

She shook her head and interrupted me. “No,” she said. “I held
steady, for a few months, but I know this feeling. My legs are harder to work too.”

I didn’t know what to say. The truth was I had noticed some changes, but I’d thought maybe I was mistaken.

“Is there anything you need me to do?” I asked. “What about Christmas? Or New Year’s? Are you positive you won’t need me then?”

 

“WHAT’S KATE DOING FOR
Christmas?” Jill asked. We were sitting on a couch beneath a huge fake oak tree festooned with little white lights. The bar, which had opened recently, was beset with university people here to check out the new place: guys in rugby shirts, sorority girls, and a squealing group we knew was a bachelorette party because of a girl wearing a veil with her jeans and a fake penis pinned to her shoulder. It dangled, limply, over one breast.

Jill and I were here for the jukebox. The rest of our friends liked it for the tree. Every time Nathan passed by it he touched the bark like he thought it might be made of velvet.

Jill took a sip of her beer, a cloudy amber from somewhere in northern Wisconsin. She made a face.

“That’s what you get for ordering pumpkin beer,” I told her.

“I thought it would be Christmasy. Sam kept going on and on about how it was like drinking pumpkin pie.”

“That was a point in its favor?” A Neil Diamond song came on the jukebox and a general cheer went up among our friends, who had recently decided to find him cool. I watched Samantha raise her beer in the air and do a little shimmy.

“We have to quit listening to our friends,” I told Jill. The bachelorette was perched on a stool, being kissed on the cheek, one by one, by a bunch of guys in cable sweaters and hair gel. “Although I can’t quite decide if I like this place or think it sucks.”

“I know. Is it possible I’m too mature to enjoy it?” Jill sipped her beer resolutely. We were not of the mind that you threw away a bad beer once you’d paid for it, and it would never have occurred to us that we could ask for a new one.

“Oh,” I said, recalling Jill’s question. “Kate’s going to her parents’ house.”

“Is she close to them?”

“Not really. I met her mom a couple times and she thinks Kate’s about twelve. I don’t think she was like that before she got sick, but she just is all over her now.”

“What do you mean? It’s not like Kate can do that much for herself,” Jill pointed out.

“No, but there’s an attitude to it. You know what I mean—like she’s a toddler, not a grown woman who needs help.”

“Oh.”

The bachelorette was in tears. One of her friends hugged her.

“They better be careful,” Jill noted, watching them. “They’re gonna squish that nice penis.”

“Want to hear something weird?”

Jill’s eyebrows darted up. “What?”

“It’s nothing crazy. It just happened when her mom was there last time and she’d had all these home movies put together on videotape. So they were watching them, while I was doing some filing, and her mom called me in to watch part of it.”

Before they called me over I had been nearby but not watching, when I caught the unmistakable sounds of a wedding reception, people talking to the camera about marriage and offering honeymoon advice. I heard Kate’s mother say, “I feel like an idiot. I’d already ordered the tape,” so I walked a little closer in case they needed a translator. Kate had replied, “That’s okay, Mom; it was nice of you.” Her mother had looked my way, an apologetic smile on her face. She had had a difficult time comprehending Kate during this visit, apparently worse than usual. I pitied her, so I gave her an exact repeat instead of paraphrasing. “ ‘That’s okay, Mom,’ ” I said. “ ‘It was nice of you.’ ” Her mother had looked relieved after a moment, but I saw that the exact repetition hadn’t had the right effect: I’d wanted to let her hear Kate as clearly as possible, and keep my voice out of it, but instead what Kate’s mother saw was a total stranger turning to her with a little grin and calling her Mom.

Anyway, I had gone to the study to file some insurance forms, but Kate’s mom called me back a few minutes later. I sat next to Kate on the couch. Her mother was on her other side, Kate’s empty wheelchair
pushed away near the table. Kate nodded toward the television. Before the segment there was a computer generated placard saying 34
TH BIRTHDAY
. The screen lit up on a kitchen filled with people. It must have been an office kitchen, too white and plain to be in someone’s house. The camera was focused on a door. The sounds were all disembodied conversations from the people milling around. Someone peered out into the hallway and turned back to the room, flapping her hands and shushing, and everyone got quiet.

In Kate’s living room, her mother and I were quiet too. The three of us sat there on Kate’s couch, Kate in the middle. Her mother stroked her hair. Kate leaned her head back against her hand.

In the video the door opened and Kate came in. It had taken me a moment to realize what was different: She was walking. She had this fast, bouncy stride, and she was turned halfway around, talking to another woman as she walked, and when people yelled, “Happy birthday,” she gasped, her hands flying up toward her face and her whole body leaping in a flutter of surprise, and then she leaned against the woman next to her and laughed. When they raised their cups in a toast, you could see just the slightest tremor in her hands. And in the video you could tell she saw it too. As her cup gave a tiny lurch, a shadow of confusion flickered over her face, and she looked around to see if anyone else had noticed.

I had put the remote beneath Kate’s fingertips, and now she hit the pause button and turned her face to me. On the screen the image flickered of her and her cup.

“That,” she said, “is when I started to wonder.” She made a face, as though she disagreed with herself, and then said, “To know.”

 

JILL HAD FINISHED THE
pumpkin beer. Mine was still pretty full.

“It’s amazing to think her own mom can’t understand her,” she said finally.

“It might not be her fault,” I said. “Kate thinks she’s getting worse.”

“God,” said Jill. “In a way I want to say how could she?” She blushed. “I’m sorry; that was awful. I didn’t mean it that way.”

“I know what you mean,” I told her. “You’d think it’s almost as bad as it could get.”

“Doesn’t it make you paranoid?” she mused. “Every time you have a cramp or tremble or something?”

“It kind of does,” I said. “Except that the odds of the caregiver and givee with the same disease are pretty slim. If I did get sick I’d just glom onto her and we’d boss the other caregivers around, share a forked feeding tube.”

“Don’t joke about that,” Jill said.

“Oh come on,” I said. Kate would have laughed. “What if it’s a good joke?”

 

WE GOT KATE INTO
the new house shortly after New Year’s. I reeled a little at how quickly it had all been accomplished: Even as close as Christmas Eve, when I’d told my family about the move as we nibbled on herring and rye bread and boiled shrimp at my grandmother’s house, I hadn’t really believed we’d pull it off. But it turned out this was one of those problems that responded briskly to a shower of money. The movers did everything for us, even putting books on shelves and dishes in cupboards. The house was almost completely in place when we walked in. Kate had painted the kitchen the same butter color as her old one, but the other rooms she did in a series of bright colors: a crimson wall in one room, azure in another, a rich grassy green in the living room. As you walked through them they looked like a series of jewel boxes, with that air of surprise.

“It’s like those myths where fairies do everything,” Simone had said, gazing around at the paintings on the walls and the fruit bowl on the end table.

“I’m sure the moving men would appreciate that image,” Kate said. But she was grinning. The house looked perfect.

A few days later, as I got her into bed, I said, “What else do you need? Do you want the remote?”

She shook her head. “I didn’t want to ask you this,” she began. I turned aside, laying a blouse on a hanger, to hide a flare of annoyance. What could there be that I couldn’t do?

“But . . . it’s in that drawer,” Kate said, turning her chin toward the bedside table. I opened it and saw a blue butterfly, modeled out of some smooth, cushiony rubber. Its wings were attached on either side
to two loops of black elastic. When I picked it up I saw there was a compartment for batteries. I turned it over a few times, looking at it.

“The loops go around your legs, like underwear,” Kate said.

“My legs?” I said. I had realized what the butterfly was for, and I had a terrifying flash of myself standing at the foot of Kate’s bed, stark naked except for black straps slung over my hip bones and a butterfly buzzing brightly between my legs.

She started to laugh. “No, mine,” she said. She blushed, and looked away, then said, “I need something, you know?” There was another pause. “You just put it on me and put me on my stomach and go out for an hour or so and that’s it.”

I was blushing too. I thought I had gotten over this. Wiping away urine or shit was just cleaning. Even with bathing her I just relied on briskness, and my hands stayed safely behind a sponge or a removable showerhead. But now I was as mortified as on my first day.

I hadn’t dealt with this yet and frankly I’d thought I’d never have to. That there was a clitoris tucked behind the lips of her vagina was something I knew but had been pretty careful not to consider. I had never even considered how sensitive she might still be—I’d imagined her rather numb, her flesh inert as clay, from knees to waist. I’d always assumed she was angry at Evan for getting the sex she couldn’t have, but now I realized she was capable at least of some things. He just wouldn’t give it.

I brushed my hair behind my shoulders.

“No problem,” I said. I laid the covers to one side and reached beneath her nightgown. I drew her underwear down, trying to be gentle and less businesslike than usual, folded them, and set them on the chair. She was still blushing a little, gazing firmly at the lamp as I came back to the bed. I put the two loops around her ankles and eased the butterfly up, lifting her legs as I went to make it easier.

I settled the butterfly on the soft brown curls between her legs. I was thinking of my own body and I tried to put it low enough that it would touch her clitoris. I adjusted the straps over her hip bones. “Is that all right?”

Kate nodded. “Thanks,” she said. I nudged the tiny switch on with my fingernail, and the butterfly began buzzing. We both ignored it, and the sound was muted by her body when I turned her onto her
stomach, making sure her head was comfortably to one side and her hair out of her face. I started to leave, but then I stopped at the door, one hand on the light switch.

“Do you need anything else?” I looked back over my shoulder at the headboard of the bed. I focused just above her blond hair.

“No, thanks,” Kate said, and I nodded and took a deep breath. I turned out the light.

 

OUT IN THE LIVING
room I turned on the television. The volume was too high, and a laugh track burst out. I lowered it and flipped through the channels. I didn’t know what Kate could hear from her bedroom, but I didn’t want her to have to hear canned laughter or the screams from a cop show. I had switched the lights off earlier and now I reached over and turned on a lamp as I searched the channels. There was nothing—wildlife shows, the Food Network, football games. Nothing at all romantic. Finally I tried the stereo. There was a jazz CD in it from dinner, and I raised the volume enough so that Kate could probably hear it, but I couldn’t hear anything from the bedroom.

Other books

Safe House by Dez Burke
Lovers & Liars by Joachim, Jean C.
Ever by My Side by Nick Trout
Yesterday's Dust by Joy Dettman
Looking Back From L.A. by M. B. Feeney
The Departed by Templeton, J. A.
Body in the Transept by Jeanne M. Dams
The Lynching of Louie Sam by Elizabeth Stewart
Bond of Fate by Jane Corrie