I was flying from Boston to
Virginia Beach to be with my mother for her first radiation treatment, the
second line of defense against her advanced cancer. The front line troops had
already fallen when she proved unable to tolerate chemotherapy and so we were
particularly apprehensive about this new plan of attack.
I chose an insanely early morning
flight so I would arrive in time to help her prepare. However, my 30-minute
layover at BWI morphed into 10 hours in the three, lousy, soul-sucking minutes
it took me to miss my connection. I remember staring at the fluorescent orange
ring on the gate agent’s thumb as he held out my new boarding pass, absurdly
suggesting I accept the unwanted seat on the traitorous flight that would deliver
me to my mother eight hours after her treatment.
I never cry in public. I barely cry
in private … unless I’m watching that hospital scene in Steel Magnolias where
Mrs. Lincoln reads Cosmo to a comatose Julia Roberts … or that hospital scene in
She’s Having a Baby where Kevin Bacon thinks his wife, the spirited
Countess of Grantham, has died in childbirth.
Come to think of it, give me any
hospital scene on Lifetime and I’m
pretty much toast. But I never cry in
public. So I can’t explain my reaction that day.
But I’ll try.
One minute I was wondering if thumb
rings were a thing now, and the next, my body went rogue. My chin took on a
life of its own. Like Jello on steroids, it wiggled and jiggled in what I can
only imagine was a desperate attempt to detach itself from my face. At the same time, my eyes blew up
like twin puffer fish poofed to capacity. Flakes of my “waterproof” Clinique
mascara tumbled in the turbulent white water rapids crashing down my swelling
cheeks, careened off my jawline, and came to rest in a rising pool inside the
collar of my fleece pullover … which, by the way, I had
slept in the night before in a futile effort to save valuable minutes getting
dressed that morning so I wouldn’t … miss.
my. flight.
But I digress.
Apparently disgusted by the
overblown dramatics of my face, my nose up and left like a deadbeat dad heading
out for cigarettes and a carton of milk. In its place was my bathroom faucet,
opened all the way and efficiently dumping torrents of hot salty liquid onto
the slope of my upper lip where it hung for a brief, hopeful moment before dropping onto the rotating blades of my chin and shooting outward to land in slimy splats all over a group of unfortunate tourists (who learned a very valuable lesson
that day about respecting a stranger’s personal space.)
I tried to speak but was limited to
one mangled vowel sound per expulsion of jagged breath. My steamed eyeglasses
provided me a hazy view of the horrified attendant now frozen in the
awesome wake of my sudden transformation from traveler to travesty. Somehow I managed
the words “mother” and “dying” … which now horrified ME, because “dying,” or
any of its derivatives, was strictly prohibited from entering the room where my
words were kept. How did it sneak in? How did it get out? And Holy
Hulking Toblerone, Batman, was I crying?
“Please, Mrs. Kerman.”
I turned my leaking face towards
the sound.
“We placed you on stand-by for an
earlier flight. Please go to gate A13.”
The “please” was a true plea,
beseeching me … please, oh please, oh snot-radiating lady, please go to Gate A13 where we will have MPs awaiting your arrival.
I grabbed the ticket and made a
beeline, Mr. Magoo-style, for the nearest restroom. I stared in amazement at
the creature in the mirror. My skin was a mottled, magenta mess covered in
raised hives in various shades of white, brown and neon pink. My swollen eyes
were indistinguishable from the rest of my face except for two barely
discernible slashes of black, as if they were hastily drawn in with a fine-point
Sharpie.
I was the Purple People Eater.
I took a deep breath and held it the way my mother taught me to do in times of stress. “I can do this,” I thought, and I slowly
released it.
I determinedly trudged the
concourse, ignoring the wide-eyed toddler hiding from me behind the neck pillows at
Hudson News, and the gawking teenager blatantly recording my trail of tears with
his You-Will-Soon-Be-On-YouTube phone. I stayed focused and pointed my
oscillating chin towards Mecca, Gate A13.
The agent saw me coming and braced
for impact. He was an airline
supervisor and he had been forewarned. He was a slight, middle-aged
fellow, with warm brown skin, black hair and earnest eyes. He came towards me
with his arms outstretched and upon arrival grasped both my hands in his own.
“What is the matter,” he asked in
an almost musical lilt. “Are you afraid of flying?”
No, I thought. I’m afraid of landing.
And there it was. I realized I was
afraid to see my mother. I hadn’t seen her in almost a month. A month where
powerful poisons had been pumped up her arm and almost killed her. A month
where her hair fell out and her voice grew weak and she had been moved to a
nursing home. A month where her beloved books were closed in drawers because
she could no longer absorb the words.
A month where she asked the priest
to hear her confession … and he gave her Last Rights, just in case.
The airline placed me on the next
available flight and seated me in the front row so they could keep an eye on
me. But I still missed my mother’s appointment.
I stood in the doorway to her room
as she finished her lunch served in pink plastic-domed dishes. She sat on the
edge of her bed, braced her slippered toes against the linoleum floor and
slowly rolled the wood-veneered tray table away from her. She took a deep
breath and held it.
So did I.
She turned her head and saw me.
I whispered a wobbly, “Hi, Mom.”
She cried.
I walked over, bent down, and
hugged her. I can still feel that embrace. The warmth of it, the shape of it,
the softness of it.
It's that hospital scene that
makes me cry the hardest.