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Driving carefully from the residential area, turning left toward the expansive towers of the hospital that it seemed he hadn’t seen in forty years, he entered a parking ramp, where he found a place to leave his Porsche 912 near the Plymouth Voyager his wife had driven to the hospital. For a moment he leaned against his car to establish his balance, then walked as steadily as he could from the ramp to one of the many entrances to the hospital.

His mind was playing tricks on him. He felt unfamiliar with an institution that he’d visited almost daily for the past six months, as if he hadn’t been here for half a lifetime instead of just this morning. Pushing open a door, he walked along a corridor that he’d gone down a thousand times and yet seemed barely to remember. He reached a large open area in which chairs surrounded a grand piano that doctors sometimes played during lunch hour. Plants hung from gleaming mirrored walls and a ceiling four stories high.

Turning right, he forced himself along another corridor, this too familiar but only as if through a mist. He reached an elevator marked G, and while it swiftly rose, he endured a powerful pressure behind his ears. With his hands cupped to his head to reduce the pressure, he heard an increasing hum within his brain.

What’s happening to me?

His arms and legs now tingled so severely it seemed as if electricity stung him. The band around his chest squeezed tighter. His forehead felt cold, yet sweaty.

At the third floor, the elevator door opened. He lurched out, turned left down another corridor, and compelled himself not to waver. He even managed to quicken his pace.

Passing patients’ rooms, he reached a nurses’ station whose design seemed primitive compared to the type he’d seen in his nightmare.

“Mr. Morrell, how good of you to come back.” A blond nurse smiled.

David remembered her, and yet it didn’t seem from recent conversations, instead from long ago. “Come back?”

“We were hoping you’d give us a visit. How’s Matt doing?”

“What do you mean? That’s what I’m here to find out.”

“But you know he isn’t here. He left a week ago. He’s up in Bone Marrow.”

Oh, my God, David thought. I reached the wrong floor. I went to where Matt always used to get his treatment: the Pediatrics Ward.

From a child’s room, he heard the distinctive sound of a nurse gently paddling her hands on the chest of a cystic fibrosis patient, clearing fluid, helping constricted lungs to breathe.

“Of course,” David said. “I must have… Bone Marrow. I made a mistake.”

“I know what you mean. Matt’s been on this ward so often, I can see how you’d come back by habit.”

Disoriented, David surveyed the rooms along the corridor. It seemed that Matthew had stayed in every one of them at various times. In the last six months (forty years ago?), this ward had become a second home.

In one room, he recognized (again as if through a haze) a ten-year-old girl bald from chemotherapy. When first diagnosed, she’d been riddled with tumors, but treatment had managed to cure her. Nonetheless, the patient’s mother, unable to control her revulsion, had disowned her daughter, never once visiting, eventually divorcing her husband.

In another room, David saw an eight-year-old boy whose parents had considered his cancer an inconvenience to their routine. Every three weeks, on a Friday, they drove him to the front door of the hospital, let him out, and left while he found his way up to the Pediatrics Ward for chemotherapy. He stayed for the weekend, vomiting, the fear and loneliness in his eyes enough to make David want to strangle the parents, who drove back to the hospital on Monday and waited while a nurse brought the boy in a wheelchair down to the hospital entrance, where she helped him into the car.

But not us, David thought. Not us! Donna, Sarie, and I stayed with Matthew always, never letting him give up hope, never allowing him to feel lonely or succumb to despair. Taking shifts, and sometimes all three staying with him at once, they’d bolstered his spirits and let him know how much he was loved. They were his companions at all hours for his six months of treatment. Donna and David had probably seen Matt more than most parents saw their children, in snatches, an hour in the morning, an hour at night, for a lifetime.

Early in Matthew’s treatment, a doctor had asked about David’s work. “How’s your fiction going? Any new books?”

Restraining his frustration, because the doctor was trying to be friendly, David had answered, “My work? Since Matt got sick, I’ve stopped writing. Right now, as long as it takes, my job is my son.”

3

“Yes,” David said to the nurse. “I made a mistake. I’d better get up to the Bone Marrow Ward.”

“But you didn’t answer my question. How’s Matt doing? Is he okay?”

“The answer’s too complicated. It depends.”

“On…?”

“If you look forward or back.”

“What?”

“Right now, he’s doing well.”

“He’s one of our favorite patients, you know. He’s so brave. We love his sense of humor.”

“So do I. Believe me, so do I. For what it’s worth, I think you and the rest of the staff did a wonderful job.”

“Keep us posted.”

Yeah, David thought, but I hope the message isn’t the disaster of my nightmare.

“I’ll let you know. Right now I’d better get up to where I belong.”

To the Bone Marrow Ward.

Toward what David was becoming more convinced was a desperate chance for salvation.

4

The Bone Marrow Ward. Logical, simple, ingenious, and if your case isn’t in the right statistics, terrifying. You don’t go there to be treated unless there’s nowhere else to go.

Tumors are perversely fascinating in their capacity for evil. They may be the only organic substance that left unharmed and given nourishment lives forever. In laboratory conditions, they survive and survive. With Matt, the initial combination of chemical agents (each combination is called a protocol) proved ineffective. After several administrations of it, a second protocol was tried, and that too proved ineffective. Matt’s tumor became classified as resistant, an especially malignant life force. The third protocol showed results, however. The mass shrank 50 percent, and surgery (which would formerly have killed Matt, so large was the mass to start with) now became possible.

The surgeon explained that the operation would take eight hours. Matt would lose the diseased rib and maybe one rib to the top and bottom, depending on what the surgeon found. The principal risk was that the tumor had grown so close to the spine that in removing the tumor the surgeon might accidentally cut a nerve-or else the artery that supplies blood to the spinal cord-and Matt would be paralyzed.

“What are Matt’s chances of that happening?” Fear made the question a whisper.

“Chances?” the surgeon had responded. “I do my best. I can’t give odds. What happens to each patient happens to him one hundred percent.”

So Matt, with utter calmness, allowed himself to be prepared for surgery. The nurse who took his heartbeat and blood pressure readings was astonished by how relaxed Matt’s vital statistics made him seem. David, Donna, and Sarie walked beside Matt’s bed as he was wheeled toward the surgical area. Then the family was told to go to a waiting room.

5

The waiting room. A horror in itself. Plenty of televisions and magazines, but everyone stares at the floor.

An eight-hour operation, and the major risk is paralysis, but the surgeon is optimistic and says he’s going for total cure. So you know when three hours into the operation you get a message to meet with the surgeon, something’s horribly wrong-and when not one surgeon but three of them join you in a consultation room, you know that whatever’s wrong, it’s worse than you can imagine.