Here is the story as it appeared in INSIGHT MAGAZINE's 5-7-04 edition.
as told to Debra Wintsmith
Chrissie!” my father says softly, like he doesn’t want to
scare me. But even half asleep, I can hear the fear in his voice.
I don’t want to wake up. I want to dream it’s yesterday
morning, with the sun coming up bright over the mountain, and my mother waiting
for me to slip into her bed for a before-school visit.
No matter how early I get up, my mother’s always awake.
Awake waiting for me. She says she sleeps in the daytime while I’m at school. I
curl up beside her under the electric blanket, and we talk about what I’m going
to do that day. I can tell her stuff that would bore anyone else to tears, like
every single word Tray Knight said to me in the hallway. My mother is my best
friend.
I don’t tell her she’s my only friend, that because of her I
don’t really fit in. I think that would hurt her. But mothers aren’t in style
at our school. If you don’t have a major blowup with your mother every day, you
just aren’t cool.
The popular girls at school hang around in the restroom
between classes. They spread out their sweaters and books on the floor and sit
with their backs against the wall, dissing their mothers.
Ashley rules the girls’ room. Yesterday when I walked in,
she was saying, “My mother had hysterics! All because she went through my
dresser and found my sequined nail polish! You’d think I’d done something
illegal!”
Melissa sighed in sympathy. “I think my mother actually goes
through my purse.” A giggle.
I don’t know what she thinks I’ve got in there! She’s such a
snoop.”
Dawn suggested, “Maybe you ought to put something in there
just for her to find!”
“Like what?” shrieked Melissa through gales of laughter.
“You think I oughta put a—oh, hi, Christin.”
“How’s your mom?” Dawn ventured.
I stepped over the line of legs to the mirror and ran a
brush through my hair. “I think she’s better this week.”
“Oh, good.” The others had gone quiet. They stayed that way
until I left. It was their way of being kind.
“‘Bye!” they chorused as I stepped out the door.
The door shut and their voices burst out again.
I’m a teenager too, but I could never be like them. Their
mothers are their pet peeve. I grab every minute I can with mine. Because I
won’t have my mother much longer.
Daddy is shaking me gently, his voice close to my ear.
“Chrissie, honey, you have to wake up.”
It’s dark. The clock says 2:30 a.m. My heart clenches like a
fist. “Mom—”
“She’s taken a turn, Chrissie. The paramedics should be here
any minute.”
“No! No!” I shut my mouth tight, but inside I’m screaming.
No! Please, Jesus, not yet! Not tonight!
As I grab my coat, I think for a second that I screamed out
loud, because the room is filled with noise. Then I recognize the wail of the
siren.
I ride with Mother in the ambulance. She can’t talk to me
because of the life-support equipment, but as the van lurches around the
twisting hills toward town, her eyes never leave mine.
I don’t talk either. But our eyes say a million and one
things to each other. Remember when we
went up the Blue Ridge Parkway and we had to talk you out of hugging the bear?
Remember when you made me a birthday cake and all the frosting slid off?
Remember. Remember. Yes! Yes! Always and forever! Me too, chrissie, I remember
everything you ever told me. Even the tiniest little detail, I remember.
Always! Always!
Car lights play eerily against the black highway. Somewhere
behind us, going much slower, Daddy follows in the car.
I cry—tears that fall somewhere inside of me and don’t get
anything wet. Mother keeps looking into my eyes, and I know she sees me crying.
Remember what I told
you about Jesus? That He will take care of us no matter what?
Yes, Mother, I
remember. I remember how I prayed and prayed to Jesus to please make you well.
You told me I shouldn ‘t. That you were ready to go when Jesus called
you.
But not now!
The driver curses. How dare he use words like that with my
mother right here, fighting for her life! I look up and see past him. We’re on
the open highway, and a pickup truck is racing us.
I hold my mother’s hand against my heart and watch the
joyriders swinging toward us, crowding the rescue van. Our driver grips the
wheel and holds stubbornly on course.
Mile after mile we’re neck-and-neck with the pickup. Even
with the windows up and the siren going, I can hear the heavy pulsing of their
radio.
I want to scream, “Stop it! You’re going to kill my mother!”
But I say nothing. I don’t want Mother to know what’s happening.
I pray. Please, Lord,
help us stay on the highway. Don’t let us die. Please, don’t let Mother die.
I open my eyes, not realizing I shut them. Mother’s eyes are
looking into mine. Chrissie, Jesus knows
what is best. I’m ready to go.
But I’m not ready for
you to go! Not yet! Not now!
I don’t think I say it aloud, but I hear a voice speak
quietly beside me. It’s one of the paramedics. “Happens all the time, miss.
People gettin’ their thrills offa playin’ chicken with us.”
“Don’t they know it—it’s an emergency?”
“They don’ care.” His big hand squeezes my shoulder. “But
Jerry there, he kin drive with the best. He’ll get us where we’re goin’.”
I’m praying again. Please,
please help Jerry. Help Jerry drive.
I watch Jerry’s scarred hands clenching the steering wheel.
They hold steady as he presses the accelerator to the floor. I see the first
lights of town. The pickup edges back into its own lane and falls back at the
city limits.
I feel a slight pressure on my hand. Mother is reassuring me
that everything is OK. We glide into the emergency zone at the hospital. The glass
doors fly open, and orderlies rush out.
As they lift Mother’s stretcher, I stare at Jerry’s face.
It’s rough like his hands and his speech, but there are cheerful lines around
his eyes and mouth.
“Thanks, Jerry,” I say.
He nods. “Hope your mom does OK.”
I stand under the clear night sky, waiting for Daddy so we
can go inside together. An hour ago I would have been running after the
stretcher. They would have had to force me to stay outside in the waiting area.
But for some reason I feel peace now. Maybe it’s just relief that we weren’t
run off the road.
But no, it’s more. I realize that now, for the first time,
I’ve released my mother into God’s hands. Your
will be done.
If I lose my mother tonight, I know I’ll never be able to
replace her. But she will leave something I can take with me the rest of my
life. Remember! Yes, remember.
In the short time we’ve been given, we’ve forged a powerful
love. Other girls battle their mothers. It will take them years to forgive, to
accept, and to love each other. Mother and I have found a calm.
“Chrissie, are you OK?” Daddy comes toward me out of the dark
parking lot.
I slip my arm around his waist. “Yes, I’m OK,” I say, and
it’s the truth.
INSIGHT MAGAZINE'S
NOTE AT THE END OF THE STORY: This story won first prize in the general short
story category of our 1993 writing contest. This incident happened to a high
school dassmate, who told Debra, “God let me be with my mother another whole
year after that night.”
No comments:
Post a Comment