suffer.
So Pa decided not to pursue the matter. He said, with a forced casualness, âSo, whoâs coming with me to see Merv?â
Not me, I thought. Although I knew Merv, I hardly knew him well enough to visit him in intensive care.
âWell?â Pa said, jingling his keys. He still had not moved from his original spot in the hallway. âJohnny? Rosie? Are you coming, my love?â
Rosie said from the kitchen, âJohnny and I donât know him. Heâs your friend. You see him.â
Pa said, âBut Rosie, my love, the manâs at deathâs door. He needs all the support he can get. Heâs met you and Johnny. He knows you. He knows youâre my children. Iâm sure heâd like you to be there.â
Racking up soapy plates with a clatter, Rosie said, âDonât be ridiculous.â She scrubbed furiously at a frying-pan, rasping it with all of her strength. âI mean, letâs be honest, it wonât make any real difference to Johnny or me whether whatâs his name â Marv? â lives or dies. We hardly know him.â She banged a dish. âIf thereâs one thing I canât stand itâs that kind of hypocrisy.â
Pa flinched. He gripped his car keys and there was a moment of silence.
Then he said, âIs that what you think, Rosie? Is that really what you think?â He slowly shook his head. âWell, Iâm getting out of here,â he said, disgust in his voice. âAll of you, you all â¦â He did not finish his sentence. He walked out of the front door and made for his car.
âBrilliant, Rosie,â I said. âBloody brilliant.â
Rosie turned towards me and shouted, âGo with him! Donât let him go there alone! Canât you see that he needs someone to go with him? Go on,â she shouted, âget after him!â
She was right; and I snatched a jacket and ran out into the street and caught up with my father just as he was steeringthe car out of its parking slot. I opened the front passenger door and got in.
We drove along in silence.
The hospital was situated a few miles to the north, at the top of the hill overlooking the old harbour. It was a dark, cloudy afternoon. The leafing trees shook around in the wind and Rockport and its components â the oily canals, the bunched cranes and, north of the river, the housing towers with balconies flagged with drying clothes â jerked slowly by as we stopped and started.
Two miles and ten log-jammed minutes later, Pa still had not spoken. Usually, when Pa has been hurt by Rosie, he pours his heart out to me. âWhatâs the matter with that girl?â he asks helplessly. âSheâs got everything: sheâs smart, sheâs got a good job, and, to cap it all, sheâs beautiful!â He shakes his head. âShe doesnât mean the things she says, Johnny, not deep down. I know that. It breaks my heart to see her so unhappy. I just donât know what to do about it. Iâm at a loss. Thereâs something gnawing away at her and God help me I donât know what it is.â And off he goes, beating a path around the room. âIs it money? Howâs she doing for money? Maybe she needs some funds. Here,â he says, taking out a pen and cheque book, âI want you to give this to her.â
âPa, donât do that,â I say. I physically stop him from writing the cheque. âSheâs fine for money. You know itâs not money.â
âWhat is it, then? Johnny, all I know is that when she was a kid she was a little bundle of dynamite. Youâd have to see it to believe it. Do you know that she used to bring your mother and me breakfast in bed? She was just four and half years old.â I know what Pa is going to say next. He is going to say, She used to bring us boiled eggs with our faces drawn on them, can you imagine? âShe used to bring us boiled eggs with our faces drawn on
David Hamilton
Cornel West
John L. Campbell
April Zyon
Marcia Clark
R.T. Kaelin
Sommer Marsden
Ken Baker
Jane Haddam
Mari Carr