The Anchor
Jello. I feel like I am pushing through Jello.
Not the red kind, cherry or strawberry, but the old fashioned kind that
promised lots of protein for healthy nails. Suddenly I remember that I used to
bite my nails as I keep pushing through the clear gelatin that now is tinted
silver because of the streaming light rays flowing from the drain. I am not
ready yet. Not ready to fall down the drain. I laugh at my own joke because it
is really up, the drain, but it isn't really a drain. Then what is it? My body
is stretching and pulling as if an unseen driver holds the reins, the same
driver who pulled the plug in the upside-down drain. I am drifting the wrong
way. Down, I need to stay down.
And I do it. It is easier after I slide behind the blond
wooden table set between the seats like a booth in a restaurant. Richard and I
both liked the idea once. Now, the table makes a good anchor, it helps to
anchor my thoughts too. I rub my fingers across the darker wood where the grain
is rough, where plates of fried chicken and cups of coffee and bowls of stew
have been placed. There, to my right is the dark ring stain from the hot chili
pot Janie set on the table. My mental balance sways as I reach my hand over to
the burnt stain and remember her young, white face, red with tear streaked
cheeks, the burnt varnish odor, and emotional young cook. I catch myself
drifting once more as the bumps of burnt wood threaten to throw me backwards
into memories, but I stop the memory. It has almost melted the thick jelled air
in which I move. No, I have business to tend to, must keep my anchor true. Hold on.
I turn away from the stain determined to keep my mind in
the right direction. I face forwards, towards the newspaper and the man behind
it sitting across from me. A cup of coffee and saucer with
dry toast on the wood table. His spot, I see now, is also worn with
wear. I don’t know why I never noticed such details before. Perhaps it is the jello or the silver light that intensifies everything.
Never mind. Remember why you must hold on. I do try to hold on.
"Did you sleep well?" I sent across the table,
but my words, as if printed on a piece of plastic wrap caught in the breeze,
drift upwards and away in a parabolic curve and up towards the glittering
drain.
Not
everything flows up to the drain, light streams down through it like narrow
ribbons floating on frosting, even curled at the tips. The
kind of ribbon that curls into ringlets with scissors, ringlets like they used
to put on little girls heads long ago. I did Janie’s golden hair once
like that. The light glows iridescent at the edge of each ribbon converting the
thick air into a wonderland of dancing light. I catch my thoughts back. No time
for wonderland right now.
My
hands rest neatly just above the table surface and I watch as a string of
silver light streaks across the table into my trembling fingers, curling around
my wrist as if to pull me away. As if
gravity is lost for the moment. Gravity turned wrong, pulling the other way. I
smile at my thought, but I keep my eyes on the white paper with its trivial,
printed ink words.
Suddenly
the newspaper is laid flat on the table. Richard, white hair quivering in and
out of place, gives out a whole body sigh and lifts his coffee cup to his mouth
for a drink. I watch his hands grip the cup just as I watched them for the last
thirty years. His eyes have that same intensity of thought, the same wrinkles
that give him a squint, his deep hazel eyes and rough eyebrows that always look
like a frown.
I must speak and this time I gather up all my strength so
my words will be more forceful.
"I
forgive you. It wasn’t your fault." I yell into the thick air only to
watch my words slowly float across the table and bounce off his cheek. Some
slide off and past his left ear which gives me hope. “I love you.” I say but
the words flatten out and go nowhere.
His eyes take on a glassy, staring look. He seems to look
right at me but does not reply. He sighs once more as his shoulders droop. His eyes forget to blink.
I know this isn't possible. Eyes always blink. I know it is
a reflex and we humans must always blink, but Richard's eye lids do not move.
He is staring directly at my face while his eyes do not blink.
Once more I ask, "Are you well?"
I have spoken to softly and lovingly because the letters
that form my words float down falling onto the printed news paper page that
faces up on the table. I look down as if I could catch the letters back with my
eyes but they have fallen near my name printed in small, bold ink letters. Now
they lift and float away towards the sky drain and my eyes follow the words up
because I have no interest in the small paragraph that portends to display my
life in quick form.
A single life distilled and
inked into wood pulp dust. But the memory of the accident came back suddenly. A
memory of myself confined inside a body that refused
to move. I heard the medic say "Probably paralyzed for life." My eyes
were glued to Richard face bent above mine, his eyes looking deep into my own
with fear and rain and steam forming a halo around his white hair. I would have
spoken to him then, but could not.
I must speak now. So little time.
I sigh and push my head forward towards Richard, but a soft ribbon catches my
eye and my sudden turn almost pushes me to far to the right. I am able to
clutch the table if I move slowly and use it as an anchor for a moment, though
the table too is made of hardened gelatin and would melt at my touch if I
squeeze too hard. I loosen my grip.
That night his eyes
looked just as they do now, fearful as he looks across the table at me. Has he blinked yet?
Forgetting, I reach my hand out to ease his sorrow and
mental turmoil. The sudden movement has pulled me from the table anchor and I
watch in horror as the palsied, green seat covers get smaller while they move
down and away. I am rising, lifting
towards the blue, sky drain. I can hear bells tinkling or soft whispers
calling? Not yet! My anxiety increases into a crescendo of fear as I drift further
upwards. I reach for the table but it has moved too far from my grasp.
Anchorless I panic until I close my eyes against the drift. This slows me down
and I notice that my movements and sent me on a collision course with Richard
right shoulder.
Yes, this will work I think as I brush against his side. My
lips push through the Jello and brush against his
ear. Now I throw my voice into his ear canal with all the force I can summon
up. “I love you,” I yell, “I forgive you.” Oh, yes, this is what I needed to
say.
Richard’s head twists around and turns my way as I float
upwards towards God's blue sky drain. I see shock mirrored in his eyes and his
mouth opens. He blinks and looks in the direction of the kitchen ceiling where
I was only a moment ago.
“I love you.” I hear him say as I move further upward and
far from reach.
The gelatin has thinned and discolored turning milky silver
and blue. The sky drain pulls at my thoughts almost scattering them in
disarray. But not before I have time to call my words down a narrow twisting
ribbon. "Good by my love.”