Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
the room, so that only the anesthesiologist
remained behind. The abrupt silence didn't sit
well with me. I looked at Dad and Granny.
Granny's face was buried in a magazine. Dad's
face looked like the face of a statue: Everything
seems right, at a glance, but you look closer and
you notice the eyes are off.
The anesthesiologist stuffed a needle into my IV.
It's crazy how fast I felt sleepy.
"Skylar," Dad said.
Dad never called me Skylar unless he was serious.
He said something more to me--but what, I don't
recall. Seconds later I was sound asleep.
I wish I could tell you what the surgery was like,
but I was unconscious for all of it, so that's kind of
impossible. I'm sure it was really awesome; a
gang of strangers sticking hooks down your throat
sounds like the makings of an epic slasher flick.
I'll try to fill in the gaps.
Blood spurted out of the blond kid's mouth and
drenched the doctors' lab coats. Dr. Demain
stepped back and gasped. "Mon dieu," she said,
because Demain is a French word. "This
lifeform is hostile!"
The blond kid on the bed was actually a
Skinwalker. The Skinwalker ripped off his skin
and revealed his true and monstrous form.
"Beware the Skinwalker!" a little old Navajo
woman cried. And then I turned into a cat.
That's not an exact recount, but I think it's pretty
close.
All I know is that I woke up thinking: Skinwalker.
That lady who harassed Rafael was really cool. I
wonder if she was a Skinwalker...
"Cubby?"
I opened my eyes. The whole room was blurry,
although I could make out blue paint on the walls.
I saw Dad's opaque head hovering over me and
thought: Oh, God. The Skinwalker decapitated
him.
My vision corrected itself. That was when I
became aware of a deep ache at the base of my
throat. My throat was dry. I couldn't swallow. I
don't mean that I tried it and met resistance. I mean
that my brain suddenly didn't know how.
Intense stinging flitted across my stomach.
"How do you feel?" Dad asked.
I tried to pat his shoulder, but came up short.
Dad tucked a couple of pillows behind my back
and helped me sit up straight. I felt like a weight
was sitting against my stomach. Maybe I was
going to throw up.
"Your surgery went just fine," Dad said. "Patricia
was in here earlier. I didn't want to wake you."
I stretched my arm. A bag full of fluids was
feeding into my vein. Gross.
"I'll bet you're thirsty," Dad said. He got up from
his chair and rummaged around in a small cooler.
He handed me a styrofoam cup full of ice chips.
I stuck an ice chip in my mouth. I still wasn't sure
how to swallow, but the cool water came as a
relief.
"Skylar," Dad said, this time without meeting my
eyes. "Could I talk to you about something?"
That alarmed me. Why did he need permission?
Dad took his time sitting down. He reached for my
hand, but seemed to think better of it. His hands
rested on the armrests of the chair.
"I feel as though I owe you an apology," Dad
began.
I shook my head. I couldn't think of anything he
possibly had to apologize for.
"No, Skylar," he said. "I'm serious about this.
You became sick because Eli...because a man hurt
you. He had the opportunity to hurt you because I
walked out on you and your mother."
This again. Of course he walked out on Mom and
me. Mom cheated on him and I was the result. No
guy should have to put up with that. Besides, Dad
came back in the end. He didn't have to, but he
did.
"You don't understand. There was a time when we
were very good friends, he and I... A time when I
told him everything."
Dad swallowed. I wished I could swallow.
"When your mother told me about--the affair--of
course I ran my mouth off and talked to Eli about
it. And I can't help but wonder... The night he
chose the two of you; I've always wondered..."
I whistled, just to get Dad's attention. I wanted
him to stop. I didn't want to hear this. Wondering
never did anyone any good.
"I'm so--"
To my incredible relief, a knock sounded on the
open door.
It was Dr. Demain. She walked into the hospital
room with one of her peculiar, clenched smiles,
like she was showing off her teeth.
"Mr. Looks Over," she greeted. "Skylar. I trust I
find you well?"
I wiggled my eyebrows.
"I wonder whether you're ready to be fitted for
your radiation mask."
I looked at Dad.
"Can it wait?" Dad asked. "Just a little while.
Please."
"Cancer doesn't wait, Mr. Looks Over. I'll give
you ten minutes, after which I'll need you to leave
the room."
I watched Dr. Demain walk away. I wondered
what a radiation mask was.
I set my ice chips on the table next to the hospital
bed. I noticed for the first time that the walls were
painted to look like balloons against a blue sky. I
felt like laughing. Why was I in a kiddie room?
"Can you ever forgive me?" Dad asked.
Maybe if there was something to forgive. There
wasn't.
Granny suddenly shuffled into the room, looking
irate. "I brought the boy's flute," she said. "Oh!
You're awake."
She shocked me when she bent down and gave my
forehead a hasty kiss.
"Mother," Dad said. "I'm told the surgery went
well."
"Of course it went well. Skylar is a strong boy."
I made a muscle.
Robert knocked on the door and sauntered in.
"Yoo-hoo," he said. "I'm going to need you old
geezers to clear the room."
"Who are you calling old?" Granny demanded.
"Mother," Dad said wearily. "We'll be back,
Cubby. I'll see if I'm allowed to bring you some
ice cream."
Just as long as Dad didn't make it himself, I
thought. I grinned.
Dr. Demain came back into the room just as Dad
and Granny were leaving it. I sat up against the
pillows behind my back. I felt fine, I thought.
Woozy, but fine.
"Patricia," Robert said, "can he have ice cream?"
"Give him time. We only just installed the
stomach pump."
The blood drained from my face. Robert and Dr.
Demain talked between themselves. I lifted the
paper-thin quilt off the bed and peered underneath
my hospital gown.
A clear, plastic feeding tube was sticking out of
my belly button, the brand new incision taped shut
while it healed. The top of the tube was capped
off, the PEG neck surrounded by a rubbery pump.
Hello, old friend, I thought dismally.
"Please lie back, Skylar," Dr. Demain said.
The last thing I wanted to do was lie back; but I
didn't have a choice. Robert took the pillows out
from under my head and pulled a mesh cap over
my hair. I lay on my back, pain in my stomach,
pain in my throat, and waited.
I jumped when Dr. Demain started stretching a
small square of plastic across my face.
"Lie still," she said, sounding decidedly less
patient. She gripped my shoulder until I felt the
nerve trickling out of my body.
I don't know what that plastic stuff was, but the
way Dr. Demain wrapped my face up in it, I felt
like a New Year's gift, or a modern-day mummy.
The texture was cool and sticky and melded to my
skin in a way that made me want to scratch all my
flesh off. Dr. Demain stretched the plastic around
my lips.
"Say 'Aah,' " Robert instructed.
I briefly wondered whether he'd lost his mind. He
prodded my arm and I realized he was serious. Of
course I couldn't say "Aah"--I couldn't say
anything--but I opened my mouth. Or tried to. The
plastic straining against my lips hurt like a son of a
bitch.
Robert stuffed what felt like a piece of styrofoam
into my mouth. I was afraid I might gag on it, so I
quickly clamped down with my teeth. As it
happened, that was his intention.
"Shh," he said. "Calm down, sweetie. It's okay."
Please let it be over, I thought.
It wasn't over. Next came the most horrifying part
of the fantastic experience. Dr. Stout unrolled a
long sheet of mesh and pulled it tightly over my
face and throat.
My breath caught, and I wasn't sure whether it was
psychological, or actual hyperventilation. The
mesh bit my eyes and pressed down on the plastic.
The combination of mesh and plastic dug into my
skin. I felt like I was in a cage. I guess I was, in a
way. My face was squeezed in a vicegrip. The
blood pounding in my ears was so loud, I
wondered that Dr. Demain didn't comment on it.
I think Robert picked up on my panic. I felt his
hand on my arm, still and steady. "I've seen that
boyfriend of yours," he said. "He's a real cutie.
How come he didn't show up for moral support?
School's out for winter break, isn't it?"
I hadn't actually told any of my friends about--you
know. This. I didn't want the fuss.
"I bet you wish you could talk back to me," Robert
said. "Well, I wish it, too. You poor thing, I can't
imagine not having a voice... I'd
really
be up the
creek without a paddle. I'm so gabby it's a crime.
There was a medical study a while back. Late
nineties? Turns out they can transplant a larynx,
but they can't transplant vocal cords. Vocal cords
are thinner than human
hair
. Try to move them
from one body to another and they'll rip. But hold
out for a miracle. Medicine's getting better every
day."
I didn't realize Robert was distracting me from the
unpleasant ordeal--not until Dr. Demain peeled the
mesh and the plastic off of my face and I felt that I
could breathe again. I sat up so fast, I banged into
Robert's forehead. "Ow!" he said.
"I don't think your body is ready for radiation just
yet," Dr. Demain said to me. "Perhaps by
tomorrow. In any case, this mold should suffice
for the mask."
I ripped the surgical cap off of my hair. Robert
carried the mesh mask out of the room, Dr. Demain
following. I was alone.
I hope this doesn't sound pathetic, but I didn't like
being alone. I never have. I wished Dad and
Granny would come back, even if only for a
moment. I wasn't sure whether they were still in
the building. It wasn't as though I could call for
them.
I spotted my plains plute on the table next to my
bed. Comforting warmth washed over me. I was
fine, I thought. I was fine as long as I could make
music. I lifted the flute to my lips and started to
play.
Nothing came out.
Later I would find out that your throat and your
lungs are situated to your vocal folds. So I guess
the problem was that my throat didn't know what it
was doing when it was missing a huge chunk of its
ordinary structure. At the time, though, I didn't
know any of this. I didn't know what was going
on. All I knew was that I felt helpless. Really,
really helpless.
I felt like I was six.
I don't know if you've ever had radiation therapy
before. I sure hope not. But if you have, you know
how annoying it is to sit under an X-ray machine,
day after day after day, with an unbearably tight
mask pinching your face. You start to feel like
Hannibal Lecter, or The Punisher.
And if you've ever been an inpatient for treatments
like those, or treatments of any sort, then you know
how mind-numbing it is to be confined to the
hospital with nothing but a radio to keep you
company.
That's not to say that Dad and Granny didn't visit
me. They did. Granny even spent a whole night at
my side. But just because I had cancer didn't mean
the rest of the reservation stopped thriving. With
Christmas close at hand, and New Year's after that,