He sneered at Joy now as he struggled in his webbing. “You can’t take care of anything, you know that? You can’t do anything right. Nothing. You can’t do anything…”
Molly steered her mother out of the room. Her father’s enraged screams followed them down the hall. “Okay,” Molly said, holding her mother’s arm, feeling the bone of the skinny arm beneath Joy’s sweater. “Okay,” she said again, but her mother said nothing, and Molly found herself looking away, ashamed, almost as if she’d walked in on her parents having sex. Or something. “Okay.”
Her mother turned on her, yanking her arm free. “I’ve had it,” Joy said fiercely, as if Molly were going to argue with her.
“Yeah,” Molly said. “Yeah. Jesus.”
“Am I not flesh?”
“I know. He’s not himself.”
“If you prick me, do I not bleed?” her mother continued. She was crazy-eyed now and walking quickly, waving her arms.
“Mom…”
“Don’t Mom me. After everything I’ve done. Everything I’ve lived with all these years. Everything I’ve had to do. I am a human being!”
Shylock, the Elephant Man. Her mother was pulling out all the stops. And why shouldn’t she? Molly felt as if she had just seen a horror film, a monster movie, and her poor father was the monster.
She coaxed her mother to a couch in the waiting room.
“I’ve had it,” Joy kept saying. “I’ve had it, I’ve had it.”
Then, almost in slow motion, she slumped forward.
She said, “Had I, haa … I…” She stopped.
“Mom?”
“Haaa daaa. I haa. I, I.” She stopped again and looked at Molly in alarm.
12
What was that awful smell? The smell was almost a parody of a fresh smell, a little like chewing gum or floor cleaner, but sickly and decomposed, as if someone had tried to cover up the stink of decaying flesh. Was it decaying flesh? Was it gangrene? Joy thought of wiggling her feet to make sure they were there, but they seemed far away and she was so tired. She heard Molly badgering someone. She heard Daniel’s voice, too: “But I thought you said she’d had a stroke.”
Oh yes, now she remembered. She was in the hospital visiting Aaron. Someone must have had a stroke.
“She did, a mild one. But we also think she has a highly contagious antibiotic-resistant infection called Clostridium difficile. C. diff for short,” said a male voice Joy did not recognize.
But who had had a stroke? Who were they talking about?
“C. diff is common in older patients being treated with antibiotics in the hospital or in a nursing home,” the male voice continued. “Has your mother been in a nursing home recently?”
“No,” Molly said. “But she practically runs one.”
“That’s why she’s in an isolation room. The C. diff.”
“Excuse me, Doctor,” Daniel said. “It’s just that there’s another patient here. In this isolation room.”
Daniel was always so polite, using someone’s title, his voice soft, though Joy could hear the frustration and anger. She worried about him hanging around a hospital after what he’d been through. He should go home to his family. She would look after Aaron.
“Well,” the doctor was saying, “we believe the other patient probably has C. diff, too.”
“You believe?” Molly said. “They both probably have C. diff? What if one has it and the other doesn’t? The one who has it will give it to the one who doesn’t.”
“Then they’ll both have it,” the doctor said, his voice a little impatient with Molly’s absence of scientific method. “That’s why they’re in isolation.”
C. diff. Joy knew she had heard about C. diff somewhere. On the radio, perhaps. Did C. diff cause a terrible odor? The smell, that was what was worrying her.
Molly and Daniel stood together in the blue paper gowns and caps and booties, the white masks and the almost transparent gloves they had to wear in their mother’s room. It was hot in her curtained-off portion and rivulets of sweat ran down Molly’s back. The woman in the next bed, who may or may not have had C. diff, was small, even smaller than Joy. Her face was caved in around her missing dentures. Her skin was dry and yellow and mottled and tight as a cadaver’s. She looked very much like a cadaver. She nearly was a cadaver. A man, Molly presumed it was her son, sat beside her, rocking forward and back, saying, “Mommy, Mommy,” and for the first time in her life Molly wondered if it was bizarre that she still sometimes called her mother Mommy, because this man was as old as she was and he was saying Mommy and he was surely bizarre. “Nurse! Doctor! Help! Help!” he would occasionally cry out, running into the hall. He had a disturbing voice, flat and desperate and loud. “My mommy’s not answering me,” he would say, wringing his hands, when a nurse appeared. “My mommy’s not talking!”
The nurses did not like this odd middle-aged man who behaved like a child. And they did not like coming into the room, because of the smell.
“What is it?” they asked each time they entered.