“I’m sorry,” I said. “I’m sorry about your calls. I’m sorry about school. I’m so sorry that I let you down.”
All the while, Mom just lay there, her chest moving up and down with the machinery. The hums, beeps, and clicks were the only sounds as the medical equipment tracked her vital signs, more in sync with my mother than I ever was.
41
Nan and I hugged for so long I lost my sense of time. When I lifted my head, there was only darkness outside her window. It chilled me to think of Mom sleeping in the hospital with tubes coming out of everywhere.
“They love her so much,” I said. “I could see it in their eyes. They knew about her drinking, but they still loved her.” I felt weepy again. So did Nan, her soft little hand holding mine in an iron grip.
“I always knew she had it in her,” Nan said, shaking her head. “But with me she was so angry, and her drinking made everything impossible.” She wiped a tear from her cheek.
“It’s wonderful she’s with friends,” Nan said, firmly patting my hand and straightening herself on the couch. Nan had tried to visit three days earlier when they admitted Mom, but Mom wouldn’t see her. I couldn’t even process how that must have felt to Nan.
“Are you okay?”
“Don’t worry about me,” she said. “Your mom and I will be close again some day. I’m sure we will. As you know, things can be very difficult between mothers and daughters.”
“Do you want to talk about it at all? I mean, what happened between you and Mom? You don’t have to,” I said.
Nan regarded me in silent sadness.
“You have been my shoulder to cry on for so long, you can cry on mine, too.”
“I don’t know,” Nan said, trailing off into her own thoughts. We sat there for a while, holding hands, stuck in the sadness of it all, until I felt Nan stir. “I guess we were unlucky,” she began. “There is a history in our family of rebellious daughters. I certainly know that. But the time just ran away from us. And we grew further and further away from each other.” Just like me and Mom, I thought.
“Did you ever try to stop her from drinking?” I asked.
“Of course, and unfortunately that was another unlucky part.” Nan looked so sad as she said those words. For the first time, she seemed old to me. I knew she was old, of course, but I never thought about her that way until she started talking about Mom.
“What did you do?” I asked, hoping I wasn’t pushing too hard. But with Mom in the hospital, I wanted to know.
“You know, it’s not like on those reality shows they have on the television about intervention where nine times out of ten they seem to succeed,” she said. “I’ve read quite a lot about it. Many times, the percentages aren’t really very good.”
“So you and Grandpa actually did a full-on intervention?”
“Yes. And, well, the danger in an intervention is what you’d expect. If it fails, everything can become much worse. I remember the therapist advising that there could be a ‘subsequent period of strained communication,’ as he called it, and that we shouldn’t lose hope.” Nan gripped my hand and looked me in the eye. “In our case, that subsequent period of strained communication has lasted for twenty-three years.” I saw a tear slide down her cheek. “I try to hope,” she said. Nan stood up and went to the kitchen to collect herself. It was too much for her.
“Some tea, Lisbeth?” she asked, her tiny voice still weepy. I nodded yes. She returned a moment later with a tea setting on a silver platter, placing the tray down on the table.
“So Lisbeth,” she said, pouring me a cup, “I want to know what is going on with you. Where have you been, what have you been doing? What is your plan?”
There it was, the dreaded word “plan,” always looming over me like a guillotine, but I couldn’t pretend anymore. Not to Nan. Not even to Mom.
“I’m not going to college,” I said. “Not for nursing. Not yet anyway.” I waited for a reaction of disappointment to come over her face. But Nan was too cool for that.
“Really,” she said. It wasn’t a question, although it was. “Well, what are you going to do?”
“I don’t know, but I want to try to get a job in fashion,” I said.
“Really?” This time it was definitely a question.
“You think I’m silly,” I said.
“Well, you know I follow your blog. And what do you call that other thing? A Tumblr?”
“You do?”
“I was a bit bewildered to see my maiden name, ahem,” Nan said, giving me a sly glance. I winced. “But then I saw you had thousands of followers and you have quite a lot of wonderful things to say and I agreed with it all!” she said. “I don’t know how you have time for so many entries. And such lovely photographs, by the way. Do you have a concrete idea how you’re going to work in the fashion business?”
I shrugged. I really didn’t have the slightest idea. Don’t ask how or why, but Nan’s question brought to mind the woman Tabitha introduced me to at her record party. Flo Birkenhead, that tiny intense woman with the close-cropped red hair who talked about ad placement, endorsements, and aggregators. I hoped I still had her card. I had heard of people making money on their blogs and Tumblr sites.
“Okay, well, we will have to come up with something, won’t we?”
I nodded, wondering how I could possibly have anything resembling a career.
“In the meantime, we have work to do,” Nan said with a sense of determination that startled me. “Even if your mother won’t talk to me, we have to make a plan that will work for everyone.”
42
Penthouse A.
I still had the thick cream-colored invitation in my purse. Dr. Newton wanted to run more tests, so Mom was still tucked away in her hospital room. But like King Kong ready to break his chains and roar, Mom was starting to go nuts. I heard she pleaded with her nurse friends, to “rip these fucking catheters out” and let her go back to work. For obvious reasons, they couldn’t. Plus, she was probably in detox withdrawal from stopping her alcohol consumption cold turkey, and I guess there were a few liability issues to work out. At least she was with people who could handle her better than Courtney or I could.
Before Nan and I could start our plan, I had to clean up a few pieces of business. I contacted Flo to have a chat about my blog and was happy she remembered me. As I expected, she was all business and promised to make a market analysis of Limelight and get back to me.
“I’m very interested in helping you build your brand,” she remarked. Me? A brand? Fingers crossed.
I was concerned about facing Tabitha. I felt like I had failed her; there was no other way to think about it. Robert’s intentions were disturbing, and I had no idea how Tabitha would feel about that, considering the results she had hoped for. Which is why it was so curious to receive her text.
“Come 2 my house 2 get ready b4 penthouse party ! ;)”
She was going, for real? I couldn’t fathom the relationship she had with her business manager-slash-trustee-slash-uncle.
“C u @ 9 ? It’s bn 2 lng bathroom buddy !! :*(” That didn’t sound like someone who was angry with me.
“ZK sez hi. He’ll be there. ;)”
The mention of those initials sent quivers down my spine as I remembered our kiss.
Once off the PATH train, I headed downtown to Jess’s place, rang the buzzer, and ran upstairs.
“What the hell?” I heard a voice say from inside the apartment as I reached the door. And then a moment later, “Why didn’t you tell me she was coming?”
“Hey Lizzy,” Jess said, standing in the doorway. She was smiling as always, her pixie hair frazzled, the blue dye fading turquoise. Five sewing pins were sticking out of the collar of her work shirt and a swatch of fabric dangled from her hand. We hugged, careful to avoid the pins.