Happiness of Fish (24 page)

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Authors: Fred Armstrong

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BOOK: Happiness of Fish
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“Good morning, Kayla. Where are you off to?”

“Oh hi, Gerry. Toronto. They're sending me on the radio skills course.”

She wears jeans and a sweater and a short suede coat. She has a Kool-Aid orange streak in her short hair and carries a tiny knapsack. Gerry is reminded of the teddy bear and puppy knapsacks that were in vogue a few years back. Tanya had a floppy-eared beagle.

“That's a good course,” Gerry says. “Someday, I ought to take it and acquire a few radio skills myself. There've been a few changes since I started with carrier pigeons.”

She realizes he's joking and guffaws. It's gratifying. She has a nice big laugh, unaffected. It's a nice balance to her serious workplace manner.

“Where are you going?”

“Ottawa. My mom's not very well. She's ninety-six.”

“Wow! That's too bad.”

“Well, she's a pretty old lady. You've got to expect...”

Gerry wonders what ninety-six means to Kayla: A bargain-price for a pair of sneakers, or a number of beer bottles in a kid's song, or do they even sing the beer-bottle song anymore?

Gerry thinks of the headache commercial with the singing kids and the woman in the car. It is the song that has no end. It goes on and on my friend...

Once he web-searched “Song That Has No End” on the computer and found that Shari Lewis wrote it. Shari Lewis has been dead for half a dozen years. Gerry remembers her and her puppets on
Ed Sullivan
a billion years ago.

Their flight is called. Kayla and Gerry walk together through the zigzag accordion walkway and board the plane. “I change in Halifax,” she says, tossing her little knapsack into the bin. Her seat's far ahead of his.

“See you when we get back.”

Gerry goes to his own seat and for most of the flight snoozes or looks at the daylight growing stronger as they fly west, a milk-run, delivering the morning.

Inland weather always comes as a bit of a surprise to Gerry now. He's lived beside the ocean too long. The apparent stability of a bright, late fall day in Ontario catches him off guard as he drives to the hospital. The sky seems curiously empty and static.

If the sky is empty, the parking lot is not. Gerry gets a reminder he's not on his home turf where he knows the best hidden parking places. The lot is full and two lanky Somalis tell him to just leave his car in the middle of the lot's traffic lane, blocking at least two cars into their spots, and leave the keys with them.

The Somalis are swaddled in marshmallow-pile jackets and fake-fur bomber hats although there's only a degree or two of frost.

“Nobody is going to steal your car, mister,” the shorter of the two tells Gerry. He has an aquiline face with a spatter of pock marks on his cheekbones. He seems to be senior in the hierarchy of the parking lot. “Just leave your keys here on this board, with a tag on them.”

Gerry hesitates for a moment and then thinks, Hick! Why should you care if some secret organization of Somalis decides to take your rent-a-car for a drive, show your luggage the sights?

The board is full of keys with tags. All sorts of cars are blocking off all sorts of other cars. The system apparently works. He leaves the rental agency keys, with their unfamiliar electric door-opener-cum-horn-blower attached, and walks away, feeling strangely conscious of not having their weight in his pocket.

His early morning flight has brought him here too early for regular visiting hours. When Gerry goes to the floor his mother is on, it is in its full mid-morning internal routine. People in pastel uniforms push high-tech floor cleaners around the halls. Posses of doctors and medical students roam the wards. Because Gerry has come so far, the nurses at the nursing station tell him he can look in on his mother.

She is asleep when he goes to the room. She looks small. Her head is thrown back on the pillow, and under a clear plastic oxygen mask, her mouth, with her dentures out, is open. With her eyes tight shut she looks like she's breathing for a sprint in slow motion. Her breathing gurgles. Her injured arm is in a plastic sleeve, like an elongated archer's wrist brace with Velcro straps. It strikes Gerry that plaster casts seem to have gone out of fashion. He touches her hand but she does not wake.

There are two other women in the room. One moans softly but persistently. Two nurses come in and rattle a curtain around her bed. Inside it, they begin some procedure that makes the moaning louder. When they finish, Gerry sits and holds his mother's hand for a bit. Then he goes downstairs for something to eat. The airlines don't feed you breakfast any more. On his way past the nursing station, a podgy man in a mauve sweater over green scrubs tells him that the
real
visiting hours start at one.

The hospital is old with wedding-cake pillars and stone railings, but the cafeteria is in a newer section, big and modern. It seems to be driven into an angle of the old building like some mountaineer's wedge, made of space-age material forced into the ancient rock. It is big and busy and timeless. People order whatever meal is appropriate to where they are in their staggered days. Gerry buys bacon and eggs but walks past an iced counter of sushi in plastic containers. Sushi has been in the supermarkets of St. John's for only a year or two. Gerry is impressed that, here, you can buy it in a hospital canteen. The coffee comes in a California confusion of canisters, flavours and levels of caffeine, but when Gerry tracks down French Blend among the hazelnut and vanilla oddities, it's tasty. He takes his breakfast to one end of a long table. A clutch of hospital workers are taking their break at the other end. They're rehashing a reality TV show that was on the night before. Outside a plate-glass wall are little round, street café tables, bolted to a patio. The chairs have been removed in preparation for winter. As Gerry finishes his coffee, a man with a gas-powered leaf-blower chases leaves into lines among the tables. His partner rakes them into plastic bags. The blower makes a cocky, outboard-motor sound. The men's breath makes clouds in the bright November air. Cramped from his plane ride and the unnatural stillness of sitting in his mother's room, Gerry decides he needs to be outside.

Across six lanes of traffic, in front of the hospital, is the old federal experimental farm. Now the experimental plots and the animals have been mostly moved to other research facilities, but years ago, when he was in university, Gerry worked there. He strides down the hospital walk, past the flowerbeds winterized with evergreen branches, and punches the buttons on the traffic light at the road crossing. The farm is mostly greenbelt parkland now. There are few fences. In a minute he's hiking over slightly frosty fields.

Gerry figures that at some point in the centennial summer of 1967, he probably hoed this field. Before the war, his parents had worked at the farm. His mother had spoken to someone she used to know and Gerry had got a summer job as a labourer at the plant research division. Now he walks briskly but aimlessly across the crisp fields, swinging his arms to shake out the kinks. Fields away, traffic growls around the edges of the farm, a distant accompaniment to the crunch of his feet on frosty turf.

In early afternoon, Gerry is back on the ward at the hospital. His mother is awake but doesn't seem to know him. The top of her hospital gown is stained with the spatters of an attempt to feed her, and she tosses and feebly fights the mask, the saline drip in the back of one hand and the weight of the plastic on her arm. A nurse comes and gives her an injection and she lapses into quiet with only occasional moans and whimpers. Gerry sits and holds her hand.

Later that afternoon, a blonde woman in slacks and a shaggy sweater of earth tones comes to the door and gestures him into the hall.

“Mr. Adamson?”

“Yes, that's me.” Gerry does his helpful big kid impression. “I just got in this morning.”

“I'm Rosalind Fife, hospital social services,” she says and presents a card. She is about Gerry's and Vivian's age and, like Vivian, looks like she works out and takes care of herself. Her only concession seems to be her feet. Her shoes are smooth walnut leather and look expensive, but they are one of those shapes that grew out of Earth Shoes and clogs thirty years ago. They have a width and bluntness that is, somehow, slightly clownish, Hobbit chic or shoes for a fat cartoon animal. Still, she's pleasant and confiding, and sitting in a corner of a ward waiting room, Gerry finds he's quite happy to have her to talk to.

“She seems pretty out-of-it,” he says. “If she doesn't get better than that, I don't know about her care. She's in Laurier Lodge at the moment. We live out of town, Newfoundland.”

“There is long-term care available,” Rosalind Fife says. “We went to Newfoundland in 1997, the Cabot anniversary.”

They talk about nursing care and visiting workers and what's available at Laurier Lodge. They agree to meet at her office on Monday and go into more detail. They shake hands and she walks silently away in her stylish/comfortable Wally Walrus shoes.

As the evening starts to draw in, Gerry meets his mother's doctor. On the telephone the night before, Gerry had thought the man's name sounded like “Oompah.” It turns out to be Huta.

And he's not fifteen, Gerry thinks. He's sixteen if he's a day.

As well as being young, Dr. Huta is slight, deep-eyed and sandy-haired. He wears an Oxford-cloth shirt and khaki pants. He has a stethoscope around his neck and a Velcro pouch for some other equipment on his belt.

If you're not careful, you'll grow up to look like me on holiday, Gerry thinks. Still, Dr. Huta is sensible and practical.

“She's not eating,” he tells Gerry. “She hasn't got much strength to fight the pneumonia. Her lungs don't sound good. I think we ought to tube-feed her and see if we can get her strength back.”

“Is she going to be okay?”

“I'm not very happy with the pneumonia. She is quite old. Do you know what her wishes might be? Is there any sort of living will?”

This is for real, Gerry thinks. The false alarms and dry runs are over.

“There is, and I've heard her talk about it, but her lawyer has it. As far as I recall, it's just to keep her comfortable and not prolong things if she's not going to get better.”

“No heroic measures,” Dr. Huta says. “That's the normal thing.”

Gerry feels anything but heroic. He wonders if he's coming across as ghoulish, bloodthirsty: Can't wait to get the old lady out of the way. He must call his buddy, Bob the Lawyer, and see what the living will actually does say.

“So if it's okay with you, we'll put the tube in now and start feeding her,” Dr. Huta says. “But I probably should mention that if she's going, some people find it harder to ask us to stop a procedure than it is to just not start it.”

“So you think she's going?”

“Not right away and the feeding may make all the difference. I would say we'll know better after the weekend.”

Gerry waits on the couches by the nursing station while Dr. Huta, an intern and a nurse go into his mother's room to put the tube in. When they usher him back in, it is dark outside the windows. An overhead lamp highlights the new additions to his mother's medical hardware. A plastic bag of eggnog-looking stuff hangs from a hook. A plastic gizmo on a trolley turns a little wheel that massages the liquid down the tube that runs to his mother's nose.

“She'll probably sleep now,” the doctor tells Gerry. “We're adding medication through the IV now so we don't have to keep jabbing her. She's getting something for pain in the IV.”

The doctor is right. She does sleep while Gerry sits, holding her hand for a while, and later, working the crossword from an abandoned
National Post
from the waiting area. She is still sleeping when Gerry leaves about eight that night.

When Gerry goes to the parking lot, the two Somalis are gone. At a sodium-lit kiosk, he picks up his keys from a little beige man in round glasses, an astrakhan wedge hat and an army-surplus parka. His rental car now has a space of its own and much of the lot to itself. It's nosed against the fence, separating the parking lot from a backyard. Across the yard, Gerry can see into a back dining room window. There are candles and people moving around. It looks warm. He shivers, looking around the unfamiliar dashboard to turn up the car's heater and blower.

Because Gerry doesn't know how long he'll have to stay, his friend Doc is putting him up. They had made the arrangements the night before over the phone. If Gerry's mother dies and Vivian comes up to join him, they'll move to a hotel. Until then he's camped on a couch in Doc's loft.

Doc lives in the building he runs his business from. It's in a small island of commercial buildings that would have been on the edge of the city forty years ago but has been surrounded by suburbs. It's a two-storey cinderblock building that began life as a sign company when plastic signs were new. It has a tidy shop front in one front corner and warehouse doors at the back. There are double doors to the second-storey loft as well, with a jutting boom for a block and tackle. However, since he's been living upstairs, Doc has winter-sealed those with silicone goo and sheets of plastic.

Over the front-corner sales office, Doc has a neat, old-fashioned green and gold sign: Mariposa Carpentry. Doc took a long time coming up with the name. It's supposed to make boomers think of the Leacock stories in old school readers and big Victorian houses. At the time, Gerry and Mort had suggested Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie and There Goes the Neighbourhood.

The sales office, with its window full of bits of stained glass, antique tile and brass lamp fittings, is shut and dark when Gerry pulls up and parks in the Mariposa lot. Doc had a bit of luck finding a retired teacher and antique fan to run the retail end and answer the phones.

Next to the shop is Doc's front door, an oak and lead-glass monster with an arts-and-crafts knocker. Gerry knocks. There is a muffled clatter of feet on stairs and Doc welcomes him in.

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