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Chapter no 31

The Nightingale

May 6, 1995

Portland, Oregon

โ€œI am running away from home,โ€ I say to the young woman sitting next to me. She has hair the color of cotton candy and more tattoos than a Hellโ€™s Angel biker, but she is alone like me, in this airport full of busy people. Her name, I have learned, is Felicia. In the past two hoursโ€”since the announcement that our flight is delayedโ€”we have become traveling companions. It was a natural thing, our coming together. She saw me picking at the horrible French fries Americans love, and I saw her watching me. She was hungry, that was obvious. Naturally, I called her over and offered to buy her a meal. Once a mother, always a mother.

โ€œOr maybe Iโ€™m finally going home after years of running away. Itโ€™s hard to know the truth sometimes.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m running away,โ€ she says, slurping on the shoebox-sized soft drink I bought her. โ€œIf Paris isnโ€™t far enough, my next stop is Antarctica.โ€

I see past the hardware on her face and the defiance in her tattoos, and I feel a strange connection to her, a compatriotism. We are runaways together. โ€œIโ€™m sick,โ€ I say, surprising myself with the admission.

โ€œSick, like the shingles? My aunt had that. It was gross.โ€ โ€œNo, sick like cancer.โ€

โ€œOh.โ€ Slurp. Slurp. โ€œSo why are you going to Paris? Donโ€™t you need, like, chemo?โ€

I start to answer her (no, no treatments for me, Iโ€™m done with all that) when her question settles in.ย Why are you going to Paris?ย And I fall silent.

โ€œI get it. Youโ€™re dying.โ€ She shakes her big cup so that the slushy ice rattles inside. โ€œDone with trying. Lost hope and all that.โ€

โ€œWhat theย hell?โ€

I am so deep in thoughtโ€”in the unexpected starkness of her statement (youโ€™re dying) that it takes me a moment to realize that it is Julien who has just spoken. I look up at my son. He is wearing the navy blue silk sport coat I gave him for Christmas this year and trendy, dark-washed jeans. His hair is tousled and he is holding a black leather weekender bag slung over one shoulder. He does not look happy. โ€œParis, Mom?โ€

โ€œAir France flight 605 will begin boarding in five minutes.โ€ โ€œThatโ€™s us,โ€ Felicia says.

I know what my son is thinking. As a boy, he begged me to take him to Paris. He wanted to see the places I mentioned in bedtime storiesโ€”he wanted to know how it felt to walk along the Seine at night or to shop for art in the Place Des Vosges, or to sit in the Tuilleries Garden, eating a butterfly macaron from Ladurรฉe. I said no to every request, saying simply,ย I am an American now, my place is here.

โ€œWeโ€™d like to begin boarding anyone traveling with children under two years of age or anyone who needs a little extra time and our first-class passengersโ€ฆโ€

I stand, lifting the extendable handle on my rolling bag. โ€œThatโ€™s me.โ€ Julien stands directly in front of me as if to block my access to the gate.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to Paris, all of a sudden, by yourself?โ€

โ€œIt was a last-minute decision. What the hell, and all that.โ€ I give him the best smile I can muster under the circumstances. I have hurt his feelings, which was never my intent.

โ€œItโ€™s that invitation,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd the truth you never told me.โ€

Why had I said that on the phone? โ€œYou make it sound so dramatic,โ€ I say, waving my gnarled hand. โ€œItโ€™s not. And now, I must board. Iโ€™ll call youโ€”โ€

โ€œNo need. Iโ€™m coming with you.โ€

I see the surgeon in him suddenly, the man who is used to staring past blood and bone to find what is broken.

Felicia hefts her camo backpack over one shoulder and tosses her empty cup in the wastebasket, where it bounces against the opening and thunks inside. โ€œSo much for running away, dude.โ€

I donโ€™t know which I feel moreโ€”relief or disappointment. โ€œAre you

sitting by me?โ€

โ€œOn such short notice? No.โ€

I clutch the handle of my rolling suitcase and walk toward the nice- looking young woman in the blue-and-white uniform. She takes my boarding pass, tells me to have a nice flight, and I nod absently and keep moving.

The jetway draws me forward. I feel a little claustrophobic suddenly. I can hardly catch my breath, I canโ€™t yank my suitcaseโ€™s black wheels into the plane, over the metallic hump.

โ€œIโ€™m here, Mom,โ€ Julien says quietly, taking my suitcase, lifting it easily over the obstruction. The sound of his voice reminds me that I am a mother and mothers donโ€™t have the luxury of falling apart in front of their children, even when they are afraid, even when their children are adults.

A stewardess takes one look at me and makes thatย hereโ€™s an old one who needs helpย face. Living where I do now, in that shoebox filled with the Q-tips that old people become, Iโ€™ve come to recognize it. Usually it irks me, makes me straighten my back and push aside the youngster who is sure that I cannot cope in the world on my own, but just now Iโ€™m tired and scared and a little help doesnโ€™t seem like a bad thing. I let her help me to my window seat in the second row of the plane. I have splurged on a first-class ticket. Why not? I donโ€™t see much reason to save my money anymore.

โ€œThank you,โ€ I say to the stewardess as I sit down. My son is the next one onto the plane. When he smiles at the stewardess, I hear a little sigh, and I thinkย of course.ย Women have swooned over Julien since before his voice changed.

โ€œAre you two traveling together?โ€ she says, and I know she is giving him points for being a good son.

Julien gives her one of his ice-melting smiles. โ€œYes, but we couldnโ€™t get seats together. Iโ€™m three rows behind her.โ€ He offers her his boarding pass.

โ€œOh, Iโ€™m sure I can solve this for you,โ€ she says as Julien stows my suitcase and his weekender in the bin above my seat.

I stare out the window, expecting to see the tarmac busy with men and women in orange vests waving their arms and unloading suitcases, but what I see is water squiggling down the Plexiglas surface, and woven within the silvered lines is my reflection; my own eyes stare back at me.

โ€œThank you so much,โ€ I hear Julien say, and then he is sitting down beside me, clamping his seat belt shut, pulling the strap taut across his waist.

โ€œSo,โ€ he says after a long enough pause that people have shuffled past us in a steady stream and the pretty stewardess (who has combed her hair and freshened her makeup) has offered us champagne. โ€œThe invitation.โ€

I sigh. โ€œThe invitation.โ€ Yes. Thatโ€™s the start of it. Or the end, depending on your point of view. โ€œItโ€™s a reunion. In Paris.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t understand,โ€ he says. โ€œYou were never meant to.โ€

He reaches for my hand. It is so sure and comforting, that healerโ€™s touch of his.

In his face, I see the whole of my life. I see a baby who came to me long after Iโ€™d given up โ€ฆ and a hint of the beauty I once had. I see โ€ฆ my life in his eyes.

โ€œI know thereโ€™s something you want to tell me and whatever it is, itโ€™s hard for you. Just start at the beginning.โ€

I canโ€™t help smiling at that. He is such an American, this son of mine. He thinks oneโ€™s life can be distilled to a narrative that has a beginning and an end. He knows nothing about the kind of sacrifice that, once made, can never be either fully forgotten or fully borne. And how could he? I have protected him from all of that.

Still. I am here, on a plane heading home, and I have an opportunity to make a different choice than the one I made when my pain was fresh and a future predicated on the past seemed impossible.

โ€œLater,โ€ I say, and I mean it this time. I will tell him the story of my war, and my sisterโ€™s. Not all of it, of course, not the worst parts, but some. Enough that he will know a truer version of me. โ€œNot here, though. Iโ€™m exhausted.โ€ I lean back into the big first-class chair and close my eyes.

How can I start at the beginning, when all I can think about is the end?

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