Read Born Under a Lucky Moon Online
Authors: Dana Precious
Using my key I entered his house. “Aidan?” I called out. When I heard no response I checked from room to room. The house felt oddly empty. On a hunch I opened his closet door. Half of his closet had been cleared out. In the storage closet several of his suitcases were missing.
Aidan was gone.
L
ucy and I drove the two hours to Muskegon in silence. Chuck didn't come with us because he wasn't supposed to leave the city limits until his mess was straightened out with the courts. I watched the bare trees fly by as we drove west on I-96. It was a grim, gray morning, which fit our mood. We had stopped once at a gas station to use the pay phone. Lucy had called General Hospital but Dad wasn't there. That left Northern Hospital and that's where we were going. I didn't dare think about any other option. He just had to be at Northern and not at one of the funeral homes on Getty Street. As I hit the Holt city limits, I slowed down. I could hear Dad's voice reminding me that the cops had a speed trap there. When we finally reached the hospital, I parked in a red zone and Lucy and I ran through the doors.
“Harold Thompson? Where is he?” Lucy blurted to the lady at the desk.
She shuffled through some papers for an agonizingly long minute. Then she said, “He's still in surgery.” Still in surgery? I thought. It had been hours since we had gotten word that he had been taken to the hospital. The lady continued speaking. “I know your mom is in the waiting room.” She pointed down the mint green hall. We ran to the waiting room and Mom was immediately on her feet hugging us hard. I peppered her with questions but Evan pulled me away.
“Let's go outside,” he said gently. We went into the hall and left Mom with Anna. Evan spoke firmly to Lucy and me. Elizabeth stood in all her big belly-ness next to him. “The county board brought up firing Dad at a meeting last night. It was about that dumpsite on Muskegon Lake that Dad has been trying to get moved. It was pretty brutal. Channel Thirteen was covering it and everything. Dad got home and started having chest pains, so Mom, Anna, and I brought him in to the emergency room. The doctors discovered a blockage in his heart. So the surgeon did an angioplasty. They ran a tube up an artery in his leg and tried to push the blockage against the walls of the artery to open it up.”
We waited breathlessly for the rest.
“But the angioplasty triggered a massive heart attack. Dad is having a quadruple heart bypass right now.”
Elizabeth put her arm around me. “Now we're all going to be cheerful and hopeful. Mom is under enormous stress. So no moping or crying. She's worried enough about Dad without worrying about us, too.” Lucy and I nodded.
“Did the doctors say what his chances are?” I asked quietly.
Elizabeth and Evan looked at each other. “They said his chances are fifty-fifty,” Evan finally replied. That's what Sammie heard as she came racing down the hallway pulling a suitcase behind her. She had come straight to the hospital from the airport.
“His chances are only fifty-fifty?” Her voice was several octaves above normal and had a hysterical edge. She dropped her suitcase and ran toward us. “Evan, do something! Find another doctor! Another hospital! Do something!”
Elizabeth spun Sammie around so she was facing her. “Shut up! Mom doesn't know!” Sammie stared at her as Elizabeth commanded, “Take a deep breath and calm down!” Sammie did as she was told.
A doctor strode toward us and Evan went to meet him, with Elizabeth, Sammie, Lucy, and I trailing behind. Evan wanted to hear the news before Mom. He shook hands with the doctor. “Hi, John.”
“Evan, sorry we have to see each other under these circumstances,” the doctor responded. I vaguely recognized the doctor as one of my brother's high school classmates.
“He made it through the bypass,” the doctor said. “Now we just have to wait to see how your father responds.”
“When can we see him?” Evan asked.
“He's in recovery now and he'll be groggy for quite a while.” The doctor hesitated before adding, “Do you have a family priest?”
Elizabeth answered crisply, not acknowledging what this question meant. “Yes, Father Whippet.”
“I'd suggest you call him here as soon as possible,” the doctor said as his beeper went off and he excused himself.
I wrapped my arms around Elizabeth. She put her chin up in the manner of my mother. “I'm going to go tell Mom he's safely out of surgery.” I nodded at her. “And you are going to go get Father Whippet,” she continued.
“I can just call him, Elizabeth,” I said. “That way I can be here if, you know.”
“No, I want you to go because I want you to take Sammie with you. She doesn't handle trauma well and I don't want Mom to be more upset. The drive will give Sammie a chance to calm down.”
I nodded again. She was right. Elizabeth turned to speak quietly to Sammie, then disappeared into the waiting room. Sammie stomped over to me and I tried to hug her but she shook me off. Tears streamed down her cheeks as she stormed toward a bicycle rack in front of the hospital and untied a large white dog that promptly planted both paws on my chest.
“What the hell is this?” I asked, backing up under his weight.
“That's Snowflake.”
“Get him off of me.”
Sammie hauled Snowflake down and we walked to the car. “I had to bring him home,” she said. “I couldn't find anyone to take care of him on such short notice.” Sammie pushed him into the backseat.
Sammie railed the entire way to the church about the inadequacy of medical care in Muskegon and why hadn't Mom and Evan seen fit to have flown him to a better hospital, at least one in Grand Rapids, for God's sake? I didn't bother trying to tell her that the medical care in Muskegon was actually pretty good. I finally pulled up at the church. Sammie said, “I can't stand that sanctimonious old bastard and I'm not going in there.” So I climbed the steps alone, walked down the hall, and, without knocking, opened the door to Father Whippet's office.
“Oh for God's sake!” I gasped while covering my mouth with my hands. Father Whippet had Roly Poly pinned against his desk with her skirt hiked up over her hips. I caught a glimpse of a tan Playtex slip. Dropping my hands, I demanded, “Can't you do this somewhere more private? Don't you ever think some parishioner might walk in here in a time of need?” Roly Poly shoved Father Whippet away, giving me an unwanted view of his erection. It died quickly, but still. Yuck.
Father Whippet yelled at me angrily as he stuffed his offending member into his pants and fumbled with his zipper. “I've had about enough of you!” He advanced on me and I backed away. “You're spying on me! I know people spy on me. They have cameras on me all the time!” He kept coming toward me. Christ Almighty, I was going to get decked by a man of the cloth. I'd like to say that what I did next was only in self-defense, but the events of the previous few days seemed to have incited a rage in me. I grabbed a heavy book off the end table and swung it hard. It clocked him on the head and he went down like a stone. Roly Poly and I stood over him, staring at his chest to see if he was breathing. He was. Then Roly Poly picked up the book. “I guess this is appropriate,” she said wonderingly. It was a Bible.
“He's a nutcase, you know,” I stammered.
“I know.” She looked at his still form fondly.
“When he wakes up, tell him that my dad might need last rites. He's at Northern Hospital.” Then I turned and ran. I heard Roly Poly shout after me, “Oh, honey, I'm so sorry! Give my best wishes to your mom, and I'll pray for your dad!”
When I opened the car door, Sammie was more composed. “Is he coming?” she asked.
“Yeah, but he needs a few minutes.” I threw the car into drive and headed back to the hospital. When we arrived, Elizabeth and Lucy came out before we even parked. I rolled down my window anxiously. “What's happened?”
“Nothing,” Elizabeth said and got in the car. “Mom just thought it would be better if only she, Evan, and Anna stayed. She said we girls were making her nervous.”
Lucy got in the other side and slammed the door. I pulled away from the hospital and started for home. They didn't even ask why there was a large, smelly dog in the car. Lucy just shoved Snowflake to the middle of the backseat and said, “It's not us making her nervous. She doesn't handle true trauma well. That's where Sammie gets it from.”
“What do you mean, I don't handle trauma well?” Sammie snapped her head away from the window to look at Lucy.
“You always fall apart,” Elizabeth said.
“That is a total lie!” Sammie stormed.
“Why are you saying mean things about Mom, Lucy?” I blurted. “She's under pressure.”
“She's under pressure because she puts herself there,” Lucy said while picking ferociously at a cuticle.
“That is such a cruel, bitchy thing to say! Dad is really sick! He might die!” Elizabeth retorted.
“And if he does, she'll somehow figure out how to blame herself for it. She'll spend the next twenty years mentally flogging herself for not getting Dad to a doctor for his annual checkup.” Lucy's voice was rising.
“Lucy, why don't you just shut up? Nobody needs to hear any of this right now,” I said as I clenched my hands on the steering wheel.
“Nobody in this family says what they really think, or what's really real, except me!” Lucy roared. I slammed the car to a halt in the middle of the street. All four car doors flew open and all four of us stormed out. We each took up a defensive position by our door.
“Nobody says what's real except you? Is that what you just said?” I shouted at her over the car roof. “Then why don't you just say what's real in your own life, Lucy? You married a guy that you didn't want to marry because you didn't want to tell Mom and Dad that you didn't want to get married. And you don't even realize that they don't like the guy and they wish you never married him! And why don't you tell Elizabeth and Sammie how he nearly killed his boss at work!”
“Don't you tell
me
what's real!” Lucy screamed right back. “You're engaged to a guy who barely gives a shit about you. Is that how much you think of yourself? Ooooh, he goes to Princeton! Ooooh, he can win the regatta! So big fucking what! And you hardly try at school because God forbid you should not measure up! Better not to know, right?”
“I think that's about enough, you two,” Elizabeth snarled from her side of the car door. “Get back in the car.”
I turned on her. “You! You say that's enough? Not hardly, Miss I-Don't-Have-Any-Money-Because-My-Loser-Husband-Stole-It-All! Miss I'm-Having-My-Baby-at-Home-Because-I-Don't-Have-Health-Insurance-But-I'm-Telling-Mom-It's-So-I-Can-Be-Close-to-Her! Do you really think Mom and Dad don't know something is wrong? Why can't you tell the truth? Is that so hard? Do you think we'd care any less about you?”
“Goddamn it!” Sammie screamed over the car roof. “I can't take this. This isn't about us, it's about Dad! You're all being selfish bitches!”
“Stop being so goddamn above it all, Sammie!” Elizabeth yelled as her hair whipped around her face in the cold wind. “You look down your nose on all of us because you're an
artist
!” Elizabeth fairly ripped the word out. “You're so much deeper than all of us. You're so much cooler than all of us. You are so much
better
than all of us! I may not have any money now but at least I've
made
some in my lifetime!”
“Shut up, shut up, shut up!” Lucy had her hands over her ears. “I hate you all!” she screamed.
I felt a desperate need to be as far away from my sisters as possible. Reaching into the car, I grabbed the car keys. Then I arched back and threw them as far as they would go into the woods off the side of the road. They wouldn't be able to follow me.
I broke into a run and I didn't stop for a long time. I saw the playground ahead of me and collapsed against the chain-link fence. I sank down among the dead leaves that were stuck in its crevices at the bottom. I buried my head in my arms and gulped air until I thought I was going to throw up. I said every prayer that I could remember for my dad to be safe. I apologized to God for every bad thing I had just said to my sisters and for every bad thing I had ever done. I swore to be a better person. When I finally threw my head back to plead to the sky, I saw that it was snowing.
Sammie and Lucy found me a few hours later. They knelt beside me and took my hands and rubbed them to warm them up. Then they helped me to my feet and into the car.
Elizabeth breathed a sigh of relief when we all came into the living room. Her swollen, red feet were propped up on the table. She held out to me the hand that wasn't caressing her belly. I took it and sank down next to her on the couch. “Is Dad okay?”
Sammie stroked my hair from above. “He's out of the woods. The doctor said so far so good.”
“Thank God.” I closed my eyes against the tears. “How's Mom?”
“She's doing better now. You know her; she toughs it out. She's staying with him tonight.”
Throughout the years, on the rare occasion when one of us was in the hospitalâElizabeth with her tonsils, Evan with his broken collarbone, me with mononucleosisâMom had sat up all night in a hospital armchair right there at our bedsides. She said that there was nothing worse than waking up in a strange place in the middle of the night without a loved one there to comfort you. Even though it was against hospital policy, no nurse or doctor had ever taken her on. One look from her and they were out the door.