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Chapter no 15

The Fault in Our Stars

A few days later, at Gusโ€™s house, his parents and my parents and Gus and me all squeezed around the dining room table, eating stuffed peppers on a tablecloth that had, according to Gusโ€™s dad, last seen use in the previous century.

My dad: โ€œEmily, this risotto โ€ฆโ€ My mom: โ€œItโ€™s just delicious.โ€

Gusโ€™s mom: โ€œOh, thanks. Iโ€™d be happy to give you the recipe.โ€

Gus, swallowing a bite: โ€œYou know, the primary taste Iโ€™m getting is not- Oranjee.โ€

Me: โ€œGood observation, Gus. This food, while delicious, does not taste like Oranjee.โ€

My mom: โ€œHazel.โ€ Gus: โ€œIt tastes like โ€ฆโ€ Me: โ€œFood.โ€

Gus: โ€œYes, precisely. It tastes like food, excellently prepared. But it does not taste, how do I put this delicately โ€ฆ ?โ€

Me: โ€œIt does not taste like God Himself cooked heaven into a series of five dishes which were then served to you accompanied by several luminous balls of fermented, bubbly plasma while actual and literal flower petals floated down all around your canal-side dinner table.โ€

Gus: โ€œNicely phrased.โ€

Gusโ€™s father: โ€œOur children are weird.โ€ My dad: โ€œNicely phrased.โ€

A week after our dinner, Gus ended up in the ER with chest pain, and they admitted him overnight, so I drove over to Memorial the next morning and visited him on the fourth floor. I hadnโ€™t been to Memorial since visiting Isaac. It didnโ€™t have any of the cloyingly bright primary color-painted walls or the framed paintings of dogs driving cars that one found at Childrenโ€™s, but the absolute sterility of the place made me nostalgic for the happy-kid bullshit at Childrenโ€™s. Memorial was soย functional. It was a storage facility. A prematorium.

When the elevator doors opened on the fourth floor, I saw Gusโ€™s mom pacing in the waiting room, talking on a cell phone. She hung up quickly, then hugged me and offered to take my cart.

โ€œIโ€™m okay,โ€ I said. โ€œHowโ€™s Gus?โ€

โ€œHe had a tough night, Hazel,โ€ she said. โ€œHis heart is working too hard. He needs to scale back on activity. Wheelchairs from here on out. Theyโ€™re putting him on some new medicine that should be better for the pain. His sisters just drove in.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said. โ€œCan I see him?โ€

She put her arm around me and squeezed my shoulder. It felt weird. โ€œYou know we love you, Hazel, but right now we just need to be a family. Gus agrees with that. Okay?โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said.

โ€œIโ€™ll tell him you visited.โ€

โ€œOkay,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™m just gonna read here for a while, I think.โ€

She went down the hall, back to where he was. I understood, but I still missed him, still thought maybe I was missing my last chance to see him, to say good-bye or whatever. The waiting room was all brown carpet and brown overstuffed cloth chairs. I sat in a love seat for a while, my oxygen cart tucked by my feet. Iโ€™d worn my Chuck Taylors and myย Ceci nโ€™est pas une pipeย shirt, the exact outfit Iโ€™d been wearing two weeks before on the Late Afternoon of the Venn Diagram, and he wouldnโ€™t see it. I started scrolling through the pictures on my phone, a backward flip-book of the last few months, beginning with him and Isaac outside of Monicaโ€™s house and

ending with the first picture Iโ€™d taken of him, on the drive toย Funky Bones. It seemed like forever ago, like weโ€™d had this brief but still infinite forever. Some infinities are bigger than other infinities.

Two weeks later, I wheeled Gus across the art park towardย Funky Bonesย with one entire bottle of very expensive champagne and my oxygen tank in his lap. The champagne had been donated by one of Gusโ€™s doctorsโ€”Gus being the kind of person who inspires doctors to give their best bottles of champagne to children. We sat, Gus in his chair and me on the damp grass, as near toย Funky Bonesย as we could get him in the chair. I pointed at the little kids goading each other to jump from rib cage to shoulder and Gus answered just loud enough for me to hear over the din, โ€œLast time, I imagined myself as the kid. This time, the skeleton.โ€

We drank from paper Winnie-the-Pooh cups.

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