Exit
~ Where do I
put my trust, you ask? Everywhere. Even into the arms of strangers.~
I do not want to know it,
but I do: I know this is the last day I'm here. I feel it in the deep-seated
and radiating pain in the chest, and in the tripping, trembling, unhinged
muscle in it. I feel it in the way I'm holding the pen (one of the few remaining
ones from the pharmacy while I still worked there), and writing, meticulously,
conscientiously, small notes about my rising blood pressure in a spare wall
calendar -- for someone to find; maybe collect or take a picture of. I feel it
in the way the air of this June day seems to be reaching an exhaustion point,
announcing a vacuum after.
This is not how I
imagined it. How I imagined it ... is not just yet, and with enough time
to say a few words in person, words that are self-aware, words that mark the end
of something, words that rise tall and protect whatever and whoever stays
behind. Instead, I am spending this last day far from those who will stay
behind, who still don't know that I am going. They are hundreds, thousands of
kilometers far, and there is no time for any of them to come before this day is
over. There are some minutes in this day when I numb myself into thinking that
this turbulence will pass like all the other ones before, and tomorrow I'll
pick up the phone and call all of them one by one, and tell them about it, and
tell them with relief that it was a false alarm, or perhaps I won't even
mention it, but I will use the opportunity and tell them, just in case, those
words I have been rehearsing my whole life, it seems. In those minutes, I refuse
to believe that this is what I fear it is. But then, there is the violent
vomiting, the 911 calls, the ambulance and fuss of getting out of the apartment
building in the stretcher, the wary looks of random passers-by, urgent gasping
for breath as the panic kicks in again and the real me knows that this is
really happening right now, to me. That I will not come back to my home. That
whatever I left scattered in the chaos of the critical departure -- my
slippers, my glasses, my pen -- will have to be picked up and tidied by someone
else. That I'd better look carefully at the June-green chestnut tree in front
of the entrance as they are carrying me past it, where my children played when
they were little; I'd better take the mental snapshot of it with me -- I have
no other pictures, no mementos, no souvenirs. How could this be? Is it fear
that made me so unprepared? I always planned for everything, even the most
trivial things, always thinking ahead, anticipating situations and securing
solutions even before they were needed... But I failed to plan for this. For my
exit from this last day. For my own exit.
The moment they lock the
stretcher into position inside the ambulance, my life does not belong to me any
more. I am out of my depth here, and through the fear and the rugged pain
nestled insidiously inside that vulnerable spot in my chest, I am trying to
hang on to the image of the sky-patch I caught a glimpse of just before they
closed the door at the back and, immediately, a thought comes to me -- of a glittering
star-filled sky one night towards the end of the war, as my mother held me in
her arms somewhere outside. Mother. And when the news reaches her-- what then?
Through the deafening wailing of the sirens, I am straining to hear the usual,
normal noises of a regular day in this city where I have been living for many
years, in these streets which I walked thousands of times, carrying bags,
groceries, presents, happiness to those at home; as I am lying here, I am
imagining known faces -- a neighbour, a colleague, a family friend -- walking
down the street obliviously as the ambulance wails by, not suspecting that I am
inside, never to return.
If they knew, what would
they do?
The car winds down the
green, tree-lined streets of the city, before it goes uphill to the distant
central clinic. I do not see outside but the auto-pilot in me is vaguely
sensing the route, now passing somewhere close by the first pharmacy I worked
in. There is that photo of all the pharmacists in our white coats, on this
street on a green day not unlike today, proudly posing with our young faces
turned towards the camera. The howling of the siren, and the skipping, loud and
vibrating rhythms of that contracting muscle blow this image up to shreds,
which disperse along the street... Who will end up with that photo? And will
they know the names of my colleagues in it...
Then the commotion of the
arrival at the hospital -- too soon, not leaving me enough time to think of
this city, to part from it (it was a good city, despite a few dark years during
the civil war), before the rushing, and the long corridors, and the flickering
lights, and the busy strangers with kind, uninterested faces who take me and my
body even further away from the familiar, who stamp even more categorically my
exit from the worldly regions, and an entrance into some uncharted territory.
Some purgatory. Is this really how it is going to be? Hospital sheets, smell of
disinfectant, distant faces? The muscle is spastic, my hands begin to tremble
--
In and out. Drifting,
sedated. The light has changed, dispersed, then concentrated in the bright
bulbs overhead. The edges of my body have become fuzzy; the central pain has
lost its blade but my chest feels indented, sunk under an undefined weight; it
feels like the slightest move will trigger another onset... When my daughter
was six, she was often sick with bronchitis. Once, they kept her in the
hospital, in a small room with a few beds on the ground floor; they took the
little plastic bag she was clutching with a comic book and a couple of other
personal items from home, and put it away in a drawer -- I saw her face sink,
and her chin begin to tremble, on the verge of tears. Then my husband and I
walked outside to the back of the building, found her room and the window through
which we saw her, leaned our faces in, and knocked on the glass, with big
smiles on... In and out. The window in this room is black, it is night-time.
The man in the other bed is quiet, living through some reckoning of his own.
My mind is a riot of torn
thoughts. They said not to think of anything, not to talk, not even to move,
the night was critical. But how can I do that, on a night like tonight...
Everything is screaming for attention, to be once more considered, remembered,
imagined, to be there. To be. If only there were a known voice. I think of my
cell phone, but they have taken it somewhere to another room; this is Intensive
Care, here you can only lie (in silence) and wait (in silence) and hope (in
silence), and even my husband was asked to leave. And that was it for us. 40
years and no real goodbye. Like a small animal cornered into a hopeless
position, my mind is defeated but can't believe it is defeated and is testing
the walls of the enclosure over and over again. If only I could hear a voice,
share the burden of an unwanted end, the shame of helplessness, the grief of
being silenced by a cruel solitude... My son's voice, talkative, garrulous. I
told him many times we'd be millionaires if he spat out money with every word
he uttered. A golden sense of humour, and a kindness, a protectiveness behind
it, always on the alert. I have surprised myself by learning that I can rely on
him - a young man now, who used to be that little thing that would toddle over
into the pantry and stick both his hands into the sack of flour because it made
him so happy, whom everyone used to call "the little guy"... But he'd
be worried and scared now, because my voice does not sound like my voice any
more; because it would betray the need to say goodbye. Is there a time when you
should forget about not worrying others, especially if they are your children?
Is this one of those times? But there is no choice anyway. I am stuck here,
with an emptiness outside, and a fidgeting inside.
There is a hint -- is it
just a hint? -- of a surge, still distant, still uncertain, rising from
somewhere deep; I'm listening for signs. In this blurred and fraught state, it
is hard to distinguish the dreaded from the real. I hope for some more time. A
little more. A little more time to think, against that distant rumble, about
the last words I said... What did I say? What will they remember? Was the last
known person I saw the son of the family friends who works as an
anesthesiologist in this hospital? My husband must have asked him to drop in to
see me, to assess the situation. I remember him from my daughter's third
birthday -- my son was not born yet. He was a gap-toothed kid, about 9, had a
striped buttoned-down cardigan, and agreed shyly to sing a song while I played
the accordion...
... the accordion I had
hugged close to me on many stages, framed into dozens of black-and-white
photographs: an obedient bright-eyed kid with hair clips and thin arms, a young
woman with a coy smile, uneasy in front of the microphone... A young woman with
her hair covered by a shawl tied under her chin, her half-closed eyes looking
wistfully into the distance, into the heart of the matter, perhaps, the winter
sun everywhere on her face and her hair. I am beyond fear now. The thuds of the
drums in these depths are still in the background, but are unmistakable.
Getting louder.More erratic. I do not want to know it but it is inevitable.
Inevitable, like the best things in life. I told her: Tijana, did you hear how
rich that music is. There is no richer music than the swell of the classical
orchestra. Everything is there, everything. Will she remember
Will they remember that
song about the bunny we used to sing, a long long time ago
From the vast horizon of
nothingness, we carve out our golden moments to have and to hold, until they
too go extinct.
A tide is rising,
carrying with it anything in its way, rising towards the surface, lifting my
upper body abruptly, bending me in the middle. The man from the next bed is
suddenly right there, propping me up, holding a tray up to my mouth for all the
liquid. A visceral tremor cuts into the core, shakes up the roots -- there will
be more -- and while somewhere beyond the drums of the darker register, the
commotion of the hospital panic-sounds begins to barrel down the corridor
towards us, and before they burst inside, press me down, clear the bed, and
switch on their machines, I manage to look up at this man, this stranger,
holding me and the tray, I look him in the eyes, and in the oasis of silence
which blooms like a delicate flower, he is now you, all of you; my mother, my
father, my brother, my husband, my son, and my daughter, and the moon-faced
girl with the sun on her covered hair, looking dreamily into the distance.
And you are all with me,
now.