โWhat did you tell Finn?โ Rodney asks me, when we video-chat two days later.
โThe truth,โ I say. โKind of.โ He raises an eyebrow. โGirl.โ
โI said that I had a dream and I thought I wasnโt going to wake up.โ
โHm,โ Rodney says. โThatโs like when you bought a vibrator and said it was for neck massages.โ
โFirst,ย youย bought me the vibrator for my birthday because youโre an asshole. Second, what was I supposed to say when Finn found it? โThought you might like a little helpโ?โ
I watch as Rodneyโs adorable little niece, Chiara, toddles up to him with a baby-size plastic cup. โYou sit!โ she orders, pointing to the floor.
โOkay, baby,โ Rodney says, plopping cross-legged onto the carpet. โI swear to Jesus, if I have to have one more tea party Iโm gonna lose my shit.โ
Chiara starts lining up stuffed animals and dolls around Rodney. โThe thing is, I was trying,โ I tell him. โI did what Dr. DeSantos said. I started making routines and sticking to them. And since Iโm stuck here all day in an apartment, I now clean and cook, too. I have dinner on the table for Finn every time he comes home.โ
โWow, so you single-handedly set back womynโs rights by like fifty years? You must be so proud.โ
โThe only thing I did different that day was paint from memory. A little swimming hole that Gabriel and Beatriz took me to. Iโve been out of rehab for a couple of weeks, Rodney, and I havenโt dreamed my way back there until now.โ I hesitate. โI tried. Iโd lie in bed and hold on to an image in my head and hope I could still hang on to it after I was asleep, but it never
worked.โ
โAlternative thought,โ Rodney suggests. โGabrielโs been trying this
whole time to break through to you. Kind of like the way Finn was, when he sat next to you at the hospital and talked to you while you were
unconscious.โ
โThen which oneโs the real me?โ I ask, in a small voice.
From a purely scientific standpoint, it would seem to be this worldโthe one where I love Finn and am talking to Rodney. Certainly I have been here the longest, and have more memories of it. But I also know that time doesnโt correspond equally, and that what is moments here might be months there.
โWouldnโt it be weird if I were talking to you in this world and you were trying to convince me I donโt belong here?โ I ask.
โI donโt know,โ Rodney says. โThat kind of shit makes my head hurt. Itโs like the Upside Down inย Stranger Things.โ
โYeah, like with fewer demogorgons and more coconuts.โ โYou already talked to a shrink โฆ,โ Rodney mulls.
โYeah. So?โ
โWell, I want you to talk to someone else. Rayanne.โ โYour sister?โ I ask.
โYeah,โ Rodney says. โShe has the sight.โ
Before I can respond, the camera tumbles sideways and then rights itself and there is a woman standing next to Rodney who looks like a bigger,
more tired version of Chiara. โThis her?โ Rayanne asks. โHi,โ I say, feeling ambushed.
โRodney told me all about what happened to you,โ she replies. โThis
virus sucks. I work in a group home for developmentally disabled folk, and we lost two of our residents to Covid.โ
โIโm sorry,โ I say, that familiar wash of survivorโs guilt flushing my face. โWhen Iโm not working there,โ Rayanne says matter-of-factly, โIโm a
psychic.โ
She says this the way youโd say,ย Iโm a redheadย orย Iโm lactose intolerant.
A simple and indisputable fact.
โHe says youโre salty because you feel caught between two lives.โ I make a mental note to kill Rodney.
โI mean, I donโt know if Iโd put it quite like that,โ I qualify. โBut then again, Iย didย almost die.โ
โNoย almostย about it,โ Rayanne says. โThatโs your problem.โ
A laugh bubbles out of me. โI promise you, Iโm very much alive.โ โOkay, but what if death wasnโt the ending youโve been told it is? What
if time is like fabric, a bolt thatโs so long you canโt see where it starts or it ends?โ She pauses. โMaybe at the moment a person dies, that life gets compressed so small and dense itโs like a pinprick in the cloth. It may be that at that point, you enter a new reality. A new stitch in time, basically.โ
I feel my heart start to pound harder.
โThat new reality, it takes place for you at a normal pace, but within that giant fabric of time. What felt like months to you was actually days here,
because again, time was compressed the minute you left that other life.โ โI donโt really understand,โ I say.
โYouโre not supposed to,โ Rayanne tells me. โMost lives end and get compressed into that tiny, tiny hole and we pick up a new threadโa brand- new existence that goes on and on until itโs over and gets condensed down into a single stitch in the fabric again. But for you, the needle jumped. For you, death wasnโt a stitch. It was a veil. You got to peek through, and see what was on the other side.โ
I imagine a universe draped with the gauzy textile of millions of lives, tangled and intersecting. I think of needles that might have basted together me and Finn, me and Gabriel, for just a moment in time. I think of yards and yards of cloth as black as night, every fiber twisted into it a different life. In one I am an art specialist. In another, a stranded tourist. There could be infinite versions, some where I cure cancer, or fall in battle; some where I have a dozen children, break a heart, die young.
โWe donโt know what reality is,โ Rayanne says. โWe just pretend we do, because it makes us feel like weโre in control.โ She looks at my face on the screen and laughs. โYou think Iโm loony tunes.โ
โNo,โ I say quickly.
โYou donโt have to believe me,โ Rayanne replies. โBut just remember โฆ you donโt have to believeย them,ย either.โ She shrugs. โOh, and youโre not
done with all this yet.โ โWhat does that mean?โ
โDamned if I know. I just get the message, I donโt write it.โ She glances to her left. โReal talk, though, right now the universe is telling me to change Chiaraโs diaper before the stench wipes us all out like an asteroid.โ
She hands Rodney the phone again. He raises his eyebrows, as if to say, I told you so.
Then he lifts the plastic toy cup in his free hand. โAnd thatโs the tea,โ he says.
On the days I visit my mother at The Greens, I pack a picnic lunch and
always bring extra. I canโt give any to her, because I am still not allowed inside, but I always have a cinnamon roll or a slice of pumpkin bread for Henry, who is there every time I go, no matter what day of the week it is. I always leave a wrapped offering at the front door, too, for the staff, with a note thanking them for keeping the residents safe.
I start bringing a blanket with me, which I set up on the lawn outside my motherโs screened porch. When I call her, she answers, and I tell her the
same thing each time: Itโs a beautiful day, would she like to join me?
We talk like strangers who have only recently been introduced, which isnโt really that far off the mark. We watch recorded episodes ofย American Idol,ย and she points out her favorite singers, who are now being filmed from their garages and living rooms without a studio audience. We look over the weekly menus at The Greens. I tell her about the little dog in a yellow raincoat that I saw in the park, and the plots of the books I read. Sometimes she takes out photo albums and walks me through her journeys, while I sketch her in an unlined journal. She can remember the most minute details about the flooding rains in Rio de Janeiro in the eighties, a dynamite explosion in the Philippines, landslides in Uganda. She was in New York City when the Twin Towers collapsed and the air was white with ash and grief. She captured the aftermath of the Pulse nightclub shooting. She did an entire series on the coyotes who brought children over the Mexican border. โI got into a lot of trouble for that one,โ she tells me, running her finger over a grainy photograph of a man and a little girl walking across a barren wasteland.
โHow come?โ
โBecause I didnโt show a clear villain,โ my mother says. โItโs hard to
blame someone for breaking the law when all your choices have been taken away from you. Nobodyโs all good or all bad. They just get painted that way.โ
I think about what my life would have been like if she had come home and sat down at the kitchen table with me and told me these stories. Surely I would have understood better what captured her attention and drew her away from my father and me, instead of only feeling jealous of it.
These days I am thinking a lot about loss. Because of this pandemic, everyone feels like theyโve been robbed of something, orโin the most extreme and permanent of casesโsomeone. A job, an engagement, a painting for auction. A graduation, a vacation, a freshman year. A
grandmother, a sister, a lover. Nobody is guaranteed tomorrowโI realize that viscerally nowโbut that doesnโt keep us from feeling cheated when itโs yanked away.
During the past two months, the things we are missing have come to feel concentrated and acute, personal. Whatever we forfeit echoes the pain from all the other times we have been disappointed in our lives. When I was sedated and I thought I had lost my mother, it was amplified by all the times she left me when I was little.
She looks up and finds me watching her. I do that, now, trying to see myself in the curve of her jaw or the texture of her hair. โHave you ever been to Mexico?โ she asks.
I shake my head. โIโd like to go, one day. Itโs on my bucket list.โ Her face lights up. โWhat else is on there?โ
โThe Galรกpagos,โ I say softly.
โIโve been,โ she replies. โThat poor tortoiseโLonesome George. He died.โ
I was the one to tell her that, a day before my life changed. โSo I hear.โ I lean back on my elbows, glancing at her through the screen. She is pixelated and whole at the same time. โDid you always want to travel?โ I ask.
โWhen I was a girl,โ my mother says, โwe went nowhere. My father was a cattle farmer and he used to say you canโt take a vacation from the cows.
One day an encyclopedia salesman came to the house and I begged my
parents to subscribe. Every month there was a new volume showing me a world a lot bigger than McGregor, Iowa.โ
I am entranced. I try to connect the dots between her childhood and her move to New York City.
โThe best part was that we got a bonus bookโan atlas,โ she adds. โThere werenโt computers back then, you know. To see what it looked like
thousands of feet up a mountain in Tibet or down in the rice paddies of Vietnam or even just the Golden Gate Bridge in San FranciscoโI wanted to be there. All the places. I wanted to put myself in the frame.โ She shrugs. โSo I did.โ
My mother, I realize, mapped out her life literally. I did mine figuratively.
But it was for the same reasonโto make sure I didnโt get trapped someplace I didnโt want to be.
I donโt know what makes me ask the next question. Maybe it is because I have never struck a tuning fork in myself and heard it resonate in my mother; maybe itโs because I have spent so many years blaming her for not sharing her life with me, even though I never actually asked her to do so.
But I sit up, legs crossed, and say, โDo you have children?โ
A small frown forms between her brows, and she closes the photo album.
Her hands smooth over its cover, nails catching at the embossed gold words.ย A LIFE, it says. Banal, and also spot-on.
โI do,โ my mother says, just when I think she will not answer. โIย did.โ
Let this go,ย I tell myself. Alzheimerโs 101 says do not remind a person with dementia of a memory or event that might be upsetting.
She meets my gaze through the screen. โI โฆ donโt know,โ she says.
But the cloudiness that is the hallmark of her illness isnโt what I see in her eyes. Itโs the oppositeโthe memory of a relationship that wasnโt what it might have been, even if you do not know why.
Itโs blinking at your surroundings, and not knowing how you got to this point.
And I am just as guilty of it as she is.
Iโve spent so much time dissecting how different my mother and I are that I never bothered to consider what we have in common.
โIโm tired,โ my mother says.
โYou should lie down,โ I tell her. I gather up my blanket. โThank you for visiting,โ she says politely.
โThank you for letting me,โ I reply, just as gracious. โDonโt forget to lock the slider.โ
I wait until she is inside her apartment, but even in the space of those few seconds, sheโs forgotten to secure the latch. I could tell her a million times; she will likely never remember.
While Iโm waiting for my Uber, I laugh softly at my foolishness. At first, I thought maybe Iโd come back to this world so that I could give my mother a second chance.
Now Iโm starting to think Iโm here so she can giveย meย one.
Every night at sevenย P.M., New Yorkers lean out their windows and bang pots and pans for the frontline workers to hear, in a show of support.
Sometimes Finn hears them when he is headed home from work.
On those days, he comes into the apartment and strips and showers and goes right to the cabinet over the refrigerator to take out a bottle of Macallan whiskey. He pours himself a glass and sometimes doesnโt even speak to me until heโs drunk it.
I didnโt know Finn even liked whiskey.
Each night, the amount he pours gets a little bigger. He is careful to leave enough in the bottle for the next night. Sometimes he passes out on the couch and I have to help him to bed.
During the day, when heโs at work, I climb on a step stool and take out the Macallan. I pour some of the whiskey down the sink. Not an amount that would raise suspicion; just enough for me to protect him a little from himself.
By the end of May we arenโt washing the groceries anymore or waiting to open our mail, but weโre freaked out about slipstreams, and whether you can catch the virus from a jogger who runs past you. I start receiving the unemployment benefits I became eligible for when I was furloughed, but they certainly donโt cover my half of the rent.
When I start to feel like Iโm going stir-crazy, I remind myself of how lucky I am. I scour forums of long-haul Covid survivors, who are still suffering weeks later with symptoms no one understands and no doctors have the bandwidth or knowledge to address. I read articles about women
who are balancing work and online education for their kids; and profiles of frontline workers who get paid scandalously little to risk their exposure to the virus. I see Finn stagger in after his long shifts, haunted by what heโs seen. Sometimes it feels like the whole world is holding its breath. If we donโt gasp, soon, we will all pass out.
One Saturday when Finn has the day off, we spend the afternoon getting back to ground zero: cleaning the apartment, doing laundry, sorting through the mail that has piled up. We play Rock Paper Scissors to choose chores, which leaves me scrubbing toilets while Finn fishes through piles of
envelopes and junk mail for the cable bill and the bank statements. Every
time I pass by him at the kitchen table, I feel ashamed. Usually we split the
cost of utilities and rent, but with my contributions reduced to a trickle, heโs paying the lionโs share.
He picks up a stack of glossy catalogs he has separated out from the bills and tosses them into the milk crate we use as a recycling bin. โI donโt know why we keep getting these,โ he says. โCollege brochures.โ
โNo, wait.โ I put down my dustrag and sift through them, pulling a bunch back out and cradling them in one arm. โTheyโre for me.โ I meet his gaze. โIโm thinking of going back to school.โ
He blinks at me. โForย what? You already have a masterโs in art business.โ โI might change careers,โ I tell him. โI want to find out more about art
therapy.โ
โHow are you paying for tuition?โ Finn asks. It stings. โI have some savings.โ
He doesnโt respond, but implicit in his look is:ย You may not by the time this is over.
It makes me feel equally guiltyโfor wanting to spend money on myself when I havenโt been carrying my own weight on household expenses, and
angryโbecause heโs right. โI just feel like this could be โฆ a wake-up call.โ โYouโre not the only one who lost a job, Di.โ
I shake my head. โNot only getting furloughed.ย Everything. There has to be a reason that I got sick.โ
Finn suddenly looks very, very tired. โThere doesnโt have to be a reason.
Viruses donโt need reasons. They strike. Randomly.โ
โWell, I canโt believe that.โ I lift my chin. โI canโt believe Iโm alive because of the luck of the draw.โ
He stares at me for another moment, and then shakes his head and mutters something I donโt hear. He rips open another envelope and
eviscerates its contents. โWhy are you mad?โ I ask.
Finn pushes his chair away from the table. โIโm not mad,โ he says. โBut, I meanโgoing back to school? Changingย careers? I canโt believe you didnโt happen to mention this anytime over the last month.โ
I blurt out, โIโve been visiting my mother.โ
โWow,โ Finn says quietly. Betrayal is written all over the margins of his face.
โI didnโt say anything because โฆ I thought youโd tell me not to go.โ
His eyes narrow, as if he is searching to find me. โI would have gone with you,โ he says. โYou have to be careful.โ
โYou think I could get hurt taking the trash into the hallway to dump it.โ โMy point exactly. You shouldnโt be doing that, either. Youโre only a
month out of rehabโโ
โYou treat me like Iโm on the verge of dying,โ I snap.
โBecause youย were,โ Finn counters, rising from his chair.
We are standing a foot apart, both of us crackling with frustration.
He wants to gently set me down exactly where I was before this happened, like heโs been holding that place for me in a board game, and we are going to pick up where we left off. The problem is that Iโm not the same player.
โWhen I thought you were going to die,โ Finn says, โI didnโt believe
there could be anything more awful than a world you werenโt in. But this is worse, Diana. This is you, in the world, not letting me be a part of it.โ His eyes are dark, desperate. โI donโt know what I did wrong.โ
Immediately, I reach out, my hands catching his. โYouโve done nothing wrong,โ I say, because it is true.
The relief in his eyes nearly breaks me. Finnโs arms come around my waist. โYou want to go back to school?โ he says. โWeโll figure out how. You want a PhD? Iโll be in the front row at your dissertation defense. Weโve always wanted the same things, Di. If this is a detour on the way to everything weโve dreamed about, thatโs okay.โ
A detour. Inside, where he cannot see, I flinch. What if I donโt want what I used to?
โWhat did you want to be when you grew up?โ I murmur. A laugh startles out of Finn. โA magician.โ
Iโm charmed. โReally? Why?โ
โBecause they made things appear out of thin air,โ Finn says, with a shrug. โSomething from nothing. How cool is that?โ
I nestle close to him. โI would have come to all your shows. I would have been that annoying superfan.โ
โI would have promoted you to magicianโs assistant.โ He grins. โWould you have let me saw you in half?โ
โAnytime,โ I tell him.
But I think:ย That is the easy part. The trick is in putting me back together.
The next morning, I video-call Rodney and tell him that Finn doesnโt want me to go back to school. โRemind me why you need his permission?โ he says.
โBecause it changes things, when youโre a couple. Like how much we can pay in rent, if Iโm not making a salary. Or how much time weโll actually spend together.โ
โYou hardly spend any time together now. Heโs a resident.โ
โWell, anyway, I didnโt call to talk to you. Is Rayanne there?โ Rodney frowns. โNo, sheโs working.โ
โLike โฆ doing a reading for someone?โ
โNursing home,โ he says. โThe only thing that pays worse than a career in art is being a psychic.โ His eyes widen. โThatโsย why you want to talk to her.โ
โWhat if Iโm being an idiot, thinking about starting over now? Finn could be right. This could be some weird reaction to having a second chance, or
something.โ
Rodney slowly puts it all together. โSo you want Rayanne to take a peek a few years out and tell you if youโre gluing pom-poms together with kids who have anxiety from gluten allergiesโโ
โโThat isย notย art therapyโโ
โโor if youโre wearing stilettos and in Evaโs old office? Mmnope. It doesnโt work that way.โ
โEasy for you to say,โ I tell him, pressing my hand to my forehead. โNothing makes sense, Rodney.ย Nothing. I know Finn thinks that I shouldnโt make any radical changes, because Iโve been through so much. Instead of trying new things, I should find the stuff that feels comfortable.โ
Rodney looks at me. โOh my God. Nothing badโs ever happened to you before.โ
I scowl at him. โThatโs not true.โ
โOkay, sure, you had a mother who didnโt know you existed, but your daddy still doted on you. Maybe you had to go to your second-choice college. You had a share of white lady problems, but nothing thatโs knocked the ground out from under your feet. Until you caught Covid, and now you understand that sometimes shit happens you canโt control.โ
I feel anger bubbling inside me. โWhat is your point?โ
โYou know Iโm from Louisiana,โ Rodney says. โAnd that Iโm Black and gay.โ
My lips twitch. โIโd noticed.โ
โI have spent a great deal of time pretending to be someone that other
people want me to be,โ he says. โYou donโt need a crystal ball, honey. You need a good hard look atย right now.โ
My jaw drops open.
Rodney scoffs. โRayanneโs got nothing on me,โ he says.
In late May, the strict lockdown of the city is eased. As the weather improves, the streets become busier. Itโs still differentโeveryone is masked; restaurant service is solely outdoorsโbut it feels a little less like a demilitarized zone.
I get stronger, able to go up and down stairs without having to stop halfway. When Finn is at the hospital, I take walks from our place on the Upper East Side through Central Park, going further south and west every day. The more people venture outside, the more I tailor my outings to odd times of the dayโjust before dawn, or when everyone else is home eating dinner. There are still people out, but itโs easier to social-distance from them.
Early one morning I put on my leggings and sneakers and strike off for
the reservoir in Central Park. Itโs my favorite walk, and I know it is because it makes me remember another static body of water and a thicket of brush. If I close my eyes and listen to the woodcock and the sparrows, I can pretend they are finches and mockingbirds.
This is exactly what Iโm doing when I hear someone call my name. โDiana? Is that you?โ
On the running path, wearing a black tracksuit and a paisley mask and her trademark purple glasses, is Kitomi Ito.
โYes!โ I say, stepping forward before I remember that we are not allowed to touch, to hug. โYouโre still here.โ
She laughs. โHavenโt shuffled off the mortal coil yet, no.โ โI mean, you havenโt moved.โ
โThat, too,โ Kitomi says. She nods toward the path. โWalk a bit?โ I fall into step, six feet away.
โI admit I thought I would have heard from you by now,โ she says. โSothebyโs furloughed me,โ I tell her. โThey furloughed almost
everyone.โ
โAh, well, that explains why no oneโs been beating down the door asking for the painting.โ She tilts her head. โIsnโt the big sale this month?โ
It is, but it has never crossed my mind.
โI must say, Iโve never been more grateful for a decision than I was to not auction the Toulouse-Lautrec. For weeks now, itโs just been the two of us in the apartment. I would have been quite lonely, without it.โ
I understand what sheโs talking about. I was just staring at a man-made reservoir, after all, and pretending it was a lagoon in the Galรกpagos. I could close my eyes and hear Beatriz splashing and Gabriel teasing me to dive in.
I remember, again, that the last normal thing I did before getting sick was go to Kitomiโs penthouse. โDid you get the virus?โ I ask, and then blush beneath my mask. โI donโt mean to intrude. Itโs justโI had it. I went to the hospital the day after our meeting. I worried that I might have given it to
you.โ
She stops walking. โI lost taste and smell for about a week,โ Kitomi says. โBut it was so early that nobody knew that was a symptom. No fever, no aches, nothing else. Iโve been tested for antibodies, though, and I have them. So maybe I should be thanking you.โ
โIโm just glad it was mild.โ
She tilts her head. โBut for you โฆ it wasnโt?โ
I tell her about being on the ventilator, and how I almost died. I talk about rehab, and explain thatโs why I am trying to walk further and further each day. I tell her about my mother, who was dead to me, and then wasnโt. She doesnโt ask questions, she just lets me speak into the gap between us and fill it. I remember, then, that before she was married to Sam Pride, she was a psychologist.
โIโm sorry,โ I say after a moment. โYou should probably bill me for this.โ
She laughs. โI havenโt been a therapist for a very long time. Maybe itโs a muscle memory.โ
I hesitate. โDo you think thatโs the only way memories work?โ โIโm not sure what you mean.โ
โWhat if your body or your brain remembers something youย havenโtย done before?โ
She looks at me. โYou know, I used to study different states of consciousness. Itโs how I met Sam, as a matter of fact. That was during the hard drug years of the Nightjars, and after all, whatโs an acid trip but an altered state?โ
โI think I was in two places at one time,โ I say slowly. โIn the hospital, on a ventilator. And in my head, somewhere completely different.โ I do not look at her as I sketch the story of my arrival on Isabela, my adoption by Abuela, my conversations with Beatriz.
My time with Gabriel.
Including the moment I let myself drown.
โI used to do past life regressions for clients,โ Kitomi says. โBut this isnโt a past life, is it? Itโs a simultaneous one.โ
She says this mildly, like sheโs pointing out that thereโs a lot of humidity today. โHave you returned there?โ she asks.
โOnce,โ I admit.
โDo you want to go back?โ
โI feel โฆโ I begin, trying to choose the right words. โI feel like Iโm on loan here.โ
โYou could go to the Galรกpagos,โ Kitomi points out. โNot now,โ I say wryly.
โOne day.โ
I donโt have a response. Kitomi and I walk a little further. We are passed by a jogger with a headlamp. โI could have moved to Montana during any of the past thirty-five years,โ Kitomi says. โBut I wasnโt ready yet.โ She
tilts her head to the sky, and the rising sun glints off the lenses of her glasses. โWhen I lost Sam, I lost all my joy. I tried to find itโthrough
music and art and therapy and writing and Prozac. Then I realized Iโd been looking in the wrong place all along. I was trying to find meaning in his deathโand I couldnโt. It was violent and tragic and random and wrong. It
alwaysย willย be. The truth is, it doesnโt matter how or why Sam died. It never will.โ
Just then, the sun breaks over the tree line, setting the trees aflame. It is the kind of art that no master could ever capture on canvas, but itโs here for the viewing every single day.
I understand what Kitomi is telling me: Trying to figure out what happened to me isnโt important. Itโs what I do with what Iโve learned that counts.
There are more people on the reservoir trail now. All of us are grievingย something.
But while we are, weโre putting one foot in front of the other. Weโre waking up to see another day. Weโre pushing through uncertainty, even if
we canโt yet see the light at the end of the tunnel.
We are battered and broken, but weโre all small miracles.
โIโm here most days before the sun comes up,โ Kitomi says. โIf you want to join me.โ
I nod, and we walk a little further. Just after we part ways, my phone dings with a notification.
It is a Facebook message from Eric Genovese, with a cellphone number and an invitation to call.
Eric Genovese tells me that in his other life, he lives in Kentwoodโa suburb of Grand Rapids heโd never heard of before and had never been to, before he was hit by a car. โMy wifeโs name is Leilah,โ he says. โAnd my little girl is three.โ
I notice he uses the present tense.ย Lives. Is.
โI do computer programming there, which if you know me here is laughable,โ Eric says. โI canโt even figure out my TV remote.โ
โWhen I was in the Galรกpagos, months passed,โ I tell him. โBut here, it was days.โ
We have been on the phone for an hour, and it is the most liberating conversation Iโve had in over a month. I had forgotten that I messaged him, itโs been so longโbut Eric apologizes and says he doesnโt use Facebook much anymore. He completely understands what Iโm talking about when I say that I was somewhere else while I was lying in a hospital bed; that the people I met there are real. He doesnโt just give me the benefit of the doubt
โhe dismisses the people who are too narrow-minded to know what we know.
โSame,โ he says. โMy wife and I have been together for five years in Kentwood.โ
โHow did you get back here?โ
โOne night we were watchingย Jeopardy!ย like we usually do, and I was eating a bowl of ice cream. And it was the damnedest thingโmy spoon kept going through the bowl. Like it was a ghost spoon, or something. I couldnโt stop staring at it. I couldnโt go to bed, either, because I had the weirdest premonition that this was just the beginning.โ He sighs. โI donโt blame my wife. Leilah thought I was going crazy. I called in sick to work
and stared at the spoon and the bowl the whole day. I kept telling her that if the spoon wasnโt real, maybeย nothingย was. She begged me to call the
doctor, and when I wouldnโt, she took Maya and went to her momโs place.โ He hesitates. โI havenโt seen them since then.โ
โWhat happened to the spoon?โ
โEventually, it got bright red, like a coal. I went to touch it and burned my hand and it hurt like hell. I started screaming, and then the room fell away like it was made out of paper, and all I heard was yelling and all I felt was pain. When I opened my eyes, there was a paramedic pounding on my chest and telling me to stay alive.โ
I swallow. โWhat about after that? When you came back?โ โWell,โ he says. โYouย know. Nobody believed me.โ
โNot even your family?โ
He pauses. โI had a fiancรฉe,โ he admits. โI donโt anymore.โ I try to reply, but all the words are jammed in my throat. โDo you know what an NDE is?โ he asks.
โNo.โ
โNear-death experience,โ Eric explains. โWhen I got out of the hospital, I became obsessed with finding out more about them. Itโs when someone whoโs unconscious remembers floating over his body, or meeting a person who died years ago, or something like that. Ten to twenty percent of people report having them after an accident, or if their heart stops.โ
โOn Facebook, I read about this farmer,โ I say excitedly. โIn the middle of bypass surgery, while he was under anesthesia and his eyes were taped shut, he swore he saw his surgeon do the Funky Chicken. When he said something after surgery, his doctor was shocked, because he does wave his elbows around in the ORโitโs how he points, so he doesnโt contaminate his gloves.โ
โYeah, exactly. It even happens during cardiac arrest, when thereโs no brain activity. Have you ever seen the MRI scan of someone with end-stage Alzheimerโs?โ
I feel a shiver run down my spine. โNo.โ
โWell, you can literallyย seeย the damage. But thereโs hundreds of reports of patients with dementia who can suddenly remember and think clearly and communicate just before they die. Even though their brains are destroyed. Itโs called terminal lucidity, and thereโs no medical explanation for it. Thatโs why some neurologists think that there might be another reason for NDEs other than messed-up brain function. Most people think
that the cerebral cortexย makesย us conscious, but what if it doesnโt? What if itโs just a filter, and during an NDE, the brain lets the reins go a little bit?โ
โExpanded consciousness,โ I say. โLike a drug trip.โ
โExcept not,โ Eric replies. โBecause itโs way more accurate and detailed.โ
Could it be true? Could the mind work, even when the brain doesnโt? โSo if consciousness doesnโt come from the brain, where does it come from?โ
He laughs. โWell, if I knew that, I wouldnโt be working for Poland Spring.โ
โSo, this is what you do now? Armchair neuroscience?โ
โYeah,โ Eric says, โwhen Iโm not doing an interview. I canโt tell you how awesome it is to talk to someone about this who doesnโt think Iโm a whack job.โ
โThen why do them?โ
โSo I can find her,โ he says flatly. โYou think your wife is real.โ
โIย knowย she is,โ he corrects. โAnd so is my little girl. Sometimes I can hear her laughing, and I turn around, but sheโs never there.โ
โHave you been to Kentwood?โ
โTwice,โ Eric says. โAnd Iโll go back again, when we donโt have to quarantine anymore. Donโt you want to find them? The guy and his
daughter?โ
My throat tightens. โI donโt know,โ I admit. โIโd have to be ready to accept the consequences of that.โ
Heโs lost a fiancรฉe; he understands. โBefore my accident, I was Catholic.โ
โI read that.โ
โI never even met anyone Muslim. I wasnโt aware there was a mosque in my town. But there are things I justย knowย now, part of me, like my skin or my bones.โ He pauses. โDid you know that the Sunni believe in Adam and Eve?โ
โNo,โ I say politely.
โWith a few differences. According to the Quran, God already knew before he created Adam that heโd put him and his offspring on earth. It wasnโt a punishment, it was a plan. But when Adam and Eve were
banished, they were put on opposite ends of the earth. They had to find each other again. And they did, on Mount Ararat.โ
I think I like that version betterโitโs less about shame, and more about destiny.
โDonโt you feel guilty?โ I ask. โMissing a person everyone else thinks you invented? When all around us, because of the virus, people are losing someone they love? Someoneย real,ย someone theyโll never see again?โ
Eric is quiet for a moment. โWhat if thatโs what people are saying to him, now, about you?โ
Kitomi tells me that someone has made an offer on the penthouse. A
Chinese businessman, although neither of us can imagine why someone from China would want to come to a country where the president refers to the virus as the Wuhan flu. โWhen would you move?โ I ask.
She looks at me, her hands resting lightly on the railing that borders the reservoir trail. โTwo weeks,โ she says.
โThatโs fast.โ
Kitomi smiles. โIs it? Iโve been waiting thirty-five years, really.โ We watch a flock of starlings take flight. โHow disappointed would you be if I decided not to auction the Toulouse-Lautrec?โ she asks.
I shrug. โI donโt work for Sothebyโs, remember.โ
โIf I donโt consign it,โ she asks, โwill youย everย work there again?โ
โI donโt know,โ I admit. โBut you shouldnโt make a decision based on me.โ
She nods. โMaybe I will have the only ranch in Montana with a Toulouse-Lautrec.โ
โYou do you,โ I say, grinning.
For a moment I just hold on to this: the wonder that I am walking at dawn with a pop culture icon, as if we are friends. Maybe we are. Stranger things have happened.
Stranger things have happenedย to me.
Kitomi tilts up her head, so that she is looking at me from under the rims of her purple glasses. โWhy do you love art?โ
โWell,โ I say, โevery picture tells a story, and itโs a window into the mind of theโโ
โOh, Diana.โ Kitomi sighs. โOnce more, minus the bullshit.โ I burst out laughing.
โWhy art?โ Kitomi asks again. โWhy not photography, like your mother?โ
My jaw drops. โYou know who my mother is?โ
She raises an eyebrow. โDiana,โ she says, โHannah OโToole is the Sam Pride of feature photography.โ
โI didnโt know you knew,โ I murmur.
โWell,ย Iย know why you love art, even if you donโt,โ Kitomi continues, as if I havenโt spoken. โBecause art isnโt absolute. A photograph, thatโs different. Youโre seeing exactly what the photographer wanted you to see. A painting, though, is a partnership. The artist begins a dialogue, and you finish it.โ She smiles. โAnd hereโs the incredible partโthat dialogue is different every time you view the art. Not because anything changes on the canvasโbut because of what changes inย you.โ
I turn back to the water, so that she canโt see the tears in my eyes.
Kitomi reaches across the distance between us and pats my arm. โYour mother may not know how to start the conversation,โ she says. โBut you do.โ
On my way back home through the park, I discover that I have three messages from The Greens.
I stop walking in the middle of the path, forcing joggers to flow around me. โMs. OโToole,โ a woman says, moments later when I redial. โThis is Janice Fleisch, the director hereโIโm glad you finally called back.โ
โIs my mother all right?โ
โWeโve had an outbreak of Covid at our facility, and your mother is ill.โ
I have heard these words before; I am caught in a cyclone of dรฉjร vu. I even remember my lines.
โIs she โฆ does she need to go to the hospital?โ
โYour mother has a DNR,โ she says delicately. No matter how sick she gets, she will not get any life-saving measures, because thatโs what I deemed best when she moved there a year ago. โWe have multiple residents whoโve contracted the virus, but I assure you weโre doing everything we can to keep them comfortable.โ
โCan I see her?โ
โI wish I could say yes,โ the director says. โBut we arenโt letting visitors in.โ
My heart is pounding so hard that I can barely hear my own voice thanking her, and asking her to keep me updated.
I start walking as fast as I can back home, trying to remember where Finn put the toolbox we use for emergencies in the apartment.
They may not be letting visitors in. But I donโt plan to ask permission.
I ask the Uber to drop me off at the end of the driveway, so that I can detour across the lawn away from anyone who might see my approach. For once, Henryโs car is not at The Greens, and the bird feeder outside his wifeโs porch is empty. I can think of only one reason.
I push that thought out of my mind. The only silver lining is that there will be no witnesses for what Iโm about to do.
Although I have wire cutters, I donโt really need them. One of the lower corners of my motherโs screened porch is peeling at the base, and all I have to do is hook my fingers underneath and tug hard for the screen to rip away from its moorings. I create just enough space to wriggle through and step around the wicker chair and table where my mother usually sits when I
come for my visits. I peer into her apartment, but she isnโt on the couch.
I donโt even know, really, if sheโs here. For all I know, theyโve moved all the Covid-positive residents to a completely different place.
I pull on the door of the slider that opens into the porch. Thank God my mother never remembers to lock it.
I tiptoe into the apartment. โMom?โ I say softly. โHannah?โ
The lights are all turned off, the television is a blind, blank eye. The bathroom door is open and the space is empty. I hear voices and follow them down the short hallway toward her bedroom.
My mother is lying in bed with a quilt thrown down to her waist. The radio is chattering beside her, some program on NPR about polar bears and the shrinking ice caps. When I stand in the doorway, her head turns toward me. Her eyes are feverish and glassy, her skin flushed.
โWho are you?โ she says, panic in her words.
I realize that I am still wearing the mask I wore in the Uber, and that all the times I have visited her, I have stood in the fresh air not wearing one. She may not know me as her daughter, but she recognizes my face as a visitor she has had before. Right now, though, she is sick and scared and I am a stranger whose face is half-obscured by a piece of cloth.
She has Covid.
Finn has drummed into me, daily, how little we know about this virus, but Iโm counting on the fact that I still have antibodies. I reach up and
unhook one side of my mask. I let it dangle from my ear. โHi,โ I say softly. โItโs just me.โ
She reaches toward her nightstand for her glasses, and has a coughing fit.
Her hair is matted down in the back and through pale strands I can see the pink of her scalp. Thereโs something so tender and childlike about that it makes my throat hurt.
She settles her glasses on her face and looks at me again and says, โDiana. Iโm sorry, baby โฆ I donโt feel so good today.โ
I fall against the frame of the door. She hasnโt called me by name in years. Before Covid, she referred to me as โthe ladyโ to staff, when they talked about my visits. She has never given me any indication that she
knows we are related. โMom?โ I whisper.
She pats the bed beside her. โCome sit.โ
I sink down on the edge of the mattress. โCan I get you anything?โ She shakes her head. โItโs really you?โ
โYeah.โ I remember what Eric Genovese said about terminal lucidity.
Terminal. Whatever is causing this clarity from her dementiaโwhether itโs fever, or Covid, or just sheer luckโis it worth it? If the trade-off is knowing that it means sheโs probably going to die? โIโve been here before,โ I tell her.
โBut sometimes Iโm not,โ she says. โAt least not mentally.โ She hesitates, frowning, like sheโs probing her own mind. โItโs different, today.
Sometimes Iโm back in other places. And sometimes โฆ I like it better there.โ
I understand that viscerally.
She looks at me. โYour father was so much better at everything than I was.โ
โHe would have argued about that. He thought your work was brilliant.
Everyone does.โ
โWe tried to have a baby for seven years,โ my mother says. This is news to me.
โI tried fertility treatments. Traditional Chinese medicine. I ate bee
propolis and pomegranates and vitamin D. I wanted you so badly. I was going to be the kind of mother who took so many photos of my baby that
we had a whole closet full of albums. I was going to chronicle every step of your life.โ
This is so far from the Hannah OโToole I knowโthatย everyoneย knows.
An intrepid photographer of human tragedy, who didnโt realize the
shambles sheโd made of her own deserted family. โWhat happened?โ
โI forgot to take you to the pediatrician when you were a week old,โ she says.
โI know. Iโve heard the story.โ
โIt was an appointment forย you,ย and I left you sitting at home, in your little baby car seat,โ she murmurs. โThatโs how awful I was at being a mother.โ
โYou were distracted,โ I say, wondering how itโs come to this: me making excuses for her.
โI was determined,โ she corrects. โThere couldnโt be more mistakes if I wasnโt around to make them. Your father โฆ he was so much better at taking care of you.โ
I stare at her. I think of all the times I thought that I was a distant runner- up to her career, that photography held her captive in a way I never could. I never imagined sheโd had so little confidence parenting me.
โI used to get asked why I photographed catastrophes,โ my mother says. โI had a whole list of stock answersโfor the excitement, to commemorate tragedy, to humanize suffering. But I mostly shot disasters to remind myself I wasnโt the only one.โ
There is a difference, I realize, between being driven and running away from something that scares you to death.
โI forgive you,โ I say, and everything inside me shifts. I may not have had much of my mother, between her career and her dementia, but something is better than nothing. I will take what I can get.
โDo you remember the time Dad and I went with you to chase a tornado?โ I ask.
She frowns, her eyes clouding. โI do,โ I say softly.
Maybe thatโs enough. Itโs not having the adventures or crossing off the line items of the bucket list. Itโs who you were with, who will help you recall it when your memory fails.
My mother coughs again, falling back against the pillows. When she glances at me, something has changed. Her eyes are a painted backdrop, instead of a dimensional landscape. Thereโs nothing behind them but anxiety. โWe have to get to higher ground,โ she says.
I wonder where she is, what other time or place. I hope itโs more real to her than here and now. That in the end itโs where she will choose to remain.
I imagine her existence shrinking down to the point of a pin, a hole in the fabric of the universe, before she jumps into another life.
She seems to be falling asleep. Gently, I reach for her glasses and slide them from her face. I let my hand linger along the soft swell of her cheek, her paper-thin skin. I set the folded glasses beside a paperback novel on the nightstand, and notice the deckled edge of an old photo that is sticking out from between the pages, like a bookmark.
I donโt know what makes me open the book to better see the image.
Itโs a terrible picture of my mother, when she was young. The top half of her head is cut off, and her wide smile is blurry. Her hand is outstretched,
like sheโs reaching for something.
Someone.
Me.
I remember being the one behind the shutter, when I was no more than a toddler.
Here. You try.
I must make some small noise, because my mother blinks at me. โHave we been introduced?โ
Surreptitiously, I slip the photo into my pocket. โYes,โ I tell her. โWeโre old friends.โ
โGood,โ she says firmly. โBecause I donโt think I can do this alone.โ
I think of the staff, who might come in to check on her at any moment. Of this virus, and how if I catch it again, I may not survive a second time. โYou donโt have to,โ I tell her.
I donโt realize how late I am until I am in the Uber on my way back to the apartment, and see that Finn has left me a barrage of texts and six phone messages. โWhere have you been?โ he says, grabbing me when I walk through the door. โI thought something terrible happened to you.โ
Something already did,ย I think.
I set down the toolbox I took with me. โI lost track of time,โ I tell him. โMy mother tested positive for Covid. Thereโs an outbreak at The Greens. But they told me I couldnโt visit.โ
Finnโs fingers flex on my arms. โGod, Diana, what can I do? It must be killing you to not be able to see her.โ
I donโt say anything. My gaze slides away from his face. โDiana?โ he says softly.
โSheโs dying,โ I say flatly. โShe has a DNR. The odds of her getting through this are virtually nonexistent.โ I hesitate. โNo one even knows I was in her apartment.โ
Yet. Eventually someone will notice the torn screen.
He suddenly lets go of me. โYou went into the room of a Covid-positive patient,โ he states.
โNot just some patientโโ
โWithout wearing an N95 mask โฆโ
โI took off my mask,โ I admit. Now, in retrospect, it seems ridiculous.
Risky. Suicidal, even. โShe was scared and didnโt recognize me.โ โShe has dementia andย neverย recognizes you,โ Finn argues. โAnd I wasnโt about to let that be the last experience we had!โ
A muscle leaps in his jaw. โDo you realize what youโve done?โ He spears a hand through his hair, pacing. โHow long were you in contact?โ
โTwo hours โฆ maybe three?โ
โUnmasked,โ he clarifies, and I nod. โForย fuckโs sake,ย Diana, what were you thinking?โ
โThat I could lose my mother?โ
โHow do you think I felt aboutย you?โ Finn explodes. โFeelย about you?โ โI already had Covidโโ
โAnd you could get it again,โ he says. โOr do you know more than
Fauci? Because as far as we know right now, itโs a crapshoot. You want to know what weย doย know? The more time you spend in a closed-in space with someone contagious the more likely you are to catch the virus, too.โ
My hands are shaking. โI wasnโt thinking,โ I admit.
โWell, you werenโt thinking about me, either,โ Finn shoots back.
โBecause now I have to quarantine and get tested. How many patients am I not going to be able to take care of, because youย werenโt thinking?โ
He turns like a caged animal, searching for an exit. โGod, I canโt even get away from you,โ Finn snaps, and he stalks into the bedroom and slams the door.
I am shaky on the inside. Every time I hear Finn moving around in the bedroom I jump. I know that he will have to come out sooner or later for
food or drink or to use the bathroom, even as the shadows of the afternoon lengthen into the dark of night.
I donโt bother to turn on the lights. Instead, I sit on the couch and wait for the reckoning.
Iโve already learned today that caretaking is not a quid pro quo; that if
someone neglects you in your past, that doesnโt mean you should abandon them in their future. But does it hold the other way? Finnโs as good as any other reason for why I survived such a bad case of Covidโhe tethered me. So what do I owe him, in return?
Obligation isnโt love.
It stands to reason that Finn and I might have disagreements while weโre locked together during a quarantine. Heโs exhausted and Iโm recovering and nothing in a pandemic is easy. But our relationship used to be. I donโt know if Iโm just noticing the hairline fractures for the first time, or if theyโve only just appeared. Where we used to be marching toward the future in lockstep, Iโm now stumbling or trying to catch up. Something has changed between us.
Something has changed inย me.
At about nine oโclock, the door of the bedroom opens and Finn emerges. He goes to the kitchen and opens the fridge, taking out the orange juice and drinking from the carton. When he turns around, he sees me in the blue
glow of the refrigerator light. โYouโre sitting in the dark,โ he says.
He puts the carton down on the counter and comes to sit on the other end of the couch. He flicks on a lamp, and I wince at the sudden brightness.
โI thought maybe you left.โ
At that, a laugh barks out of me. โWhere would I go?โ Finn nods. โYeah. Well.โ
I look down at my hands, curled in my lap like they do not belong to me. โDid you โฆ do you want me to leave?โ
โWhat makes you think Iโd want that?โ Finn seems honestly shocked. โWell,โ I say. โYou were pretty pissed off. You have every right to be.โ
And Iโm not paying any rent right now,ย I think. โDiana? Are you happy?โ
My gaze flies to his. โWhat?โ
โI donโt know. You just seem โฆ restless.โ โItโs a pandemic,โ I say. โEveryoneโs restless.โ
He hesitates. โMaybe thatโs not the right word. Maybe itโs moreย trapped.โ He looks away from me, worrying the seam of the couch. โDo you still want this? Us?โ
โWhy would you ask that?โ I choose those words carefully, so that I donโt have to lie, so that he can interpret them however he wants.
Reassured, Finn sighs. โI shouldnโt have yelled at you,โ he says. โIโm really sorry about your mother.โ
โIโm sorry I contaminated you.โ
The corner of his mouth tips up. โI needed a vacation anyway,โ he says.
Two days later, my mother is actively dying. You would think that FaceTiming her while she was unconscious would be old hat, after all the energy I expended on her while I was a child and receiving nothing in return. Instead, I only feel silly. A staff member holds up the iPad near her bed and pretends she isnโt listening. I stare at my motherโs sedated body, curled like a fiddlehead under the covers, and try to find things to talk about. Finn tells me itโs important to talk to her, and that even if I think she canโt hear me, on some level, she can.
Heโs right. The message might be garbled, but it will get through. My voice might be a breeze in the weather of whatever world sheโs in.
Finn sits with me, and when I run out of words, he jumps in and charms with the story of how we met and how heโs teaching me the rules of baseball and that he thinks the apartment is haunted.
The last thing I say during our call is that itโs okay for her to leave, if she has to.
I realize sheโs been waiting to hear those words from me her whole life, because less than an hour later, The Greens calls to tell me she has passed away.
I make the necessary arrangements in a strange, detached wayโdeciding to cremate her body, deciding not to have a funeral. I remember learning, as a child, how the Shinnecock made dugout canoesโby burning out the
middle of a log and carving the insides away. Thatโs how I feel. Hollow, scraped, raw.
For someone I was angry at for so long, someone I rarely sawโI miss her.
Itโs amazing how easily someone can leave your life. Itโs standing on a beach and stepping back to see the hole of your footprint subsumed by the
sand and the sea as if it were never there. Grief, it turns out, is a lot like a one-sided video conversation on an iPad. Itโs the call with no response, the echo of affection, the shadow cast by love.
But just because you canโt see it anymore doesnโt make it any less real.
The day that we get a message saying my motherโs ashes are ready to be picked up,ย The New York Timesย runs her obituary in their Covid section,
Those Weโve Lost. They talk about her rise as a feature photographer and her Pulitzer Prize. There are quotes from colleagues fromย The New York
Timesย andย The Boston Globeย and the Associated Press, from Steve McCurry and Sir Don McCullin. They call her the greatest female photographer of
the twentieth century.
The very last line of the obituary, however, is not about her art at all.
I take the paper with me into the bedroom, crawling under the covers. I read that sentence, and read it again.
She leaves behind a daughter.
For the first time since I got the call about my motherโs death, I cry.