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Authors: Thierry Cohen

Still With Me (10 page)

BOOK: Still With Me
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“Are you telling me the truth?”

 

“Yes. Of course.” Jeremy paused. “I feel responsible, Victoria…”

“I don’t care what you feel! What did the doctors say?”

“I don’t know yet. We’re waiting to hear from the one taking care of him. Don’t get worked up.”

“Don’t get worked up? Are you serious? I’m gone a few hours and my son winds up in the hospital and you tell me not to get worked up.” Victoria started thinking out loud. “What can I do? I can’t come right away. I’m two hundred miles away, and I don’t have a car.”

“Find a way,” Jeremy said, thinking only of himself. “Simon’s going to need you.” As soon as he said this, he felt guilty for taking advantage of the situation.

“The next train is tomorrow morning. I…I don’t know what to do.”

Tomorrow? That word doesn’t mean anything to me anymore. I’m not going to see her. I’m going to lose her again
.

Jeremy wanted to beg her to come, but Victoria’s anxiety kept him quiet. What would she think of him if he whined?

“My son is in the hospital, and I’m stuck here. He’s going to ask for me,” she moaned.

 

“No, he’s going to sleep. If he wakes up, I’ll tell him you’re on your way.”

Victoria was quiet for a moment. Jeremy could hear her sigh. Or was she crying? Eventually, she regained her composure. “And Thomas, how did he react?”

“He was very brave.”

“Put him on.”

He handed the phone to his son.

Jeremy was happier after speaking with Victoria. And terribly disappointed by the idea of not seeing her.

Before hanging up, Thomas looked up at his father. “You know, Mom, it’s not Dad’s fault. It was an accident. Dad took really good care of us. You want to talk to him again?” From the look Thomas gave him, Jeremy knew Victoria had said no. Thomas hung up. He turned to Jeremy and shrugged his shoulders to show there was nothing he could do.

“She’s coming tomorrow,” Thomas said as consolation.

“She’s mad at me, isn’t she?”

Thomas lowered his eyes.

“I haven’t been very good to her lately, have I?”

The boy said nothing.

“Me, I’m a little lost. And you—what do you think?”

 

The child had to have an opinion of his own.

“You’re not very good and…you’re gone a lot.”

“I work too much?”

Thomas nodded. “You’re never there. And Mom says you don’t take care of her anymore.”

“You think she’s right?”

“Yeah, she’s right. And you don’t take care of us either.”

“Are you mad at me too?”

The child nodded.

“You know, I’m going to try and change. I promise.” Jeremy had barely finished making the promise before regretting it.

I’m stupid for giving him hope. The man I am seems to care only about leaving unhappiness in his wake. My children, my wife, my father, my mother

“I have to call Grandma and Grandpa,” he said to Thomas. “Do you have their number?”

The boy looked at him in surprise. “Yes, I have it. But…”

Seeing the look on Thomas’s face, Jeremy knew he was in for another disappointment. “But what?”

“Nothing…I’ll call them.” The child hadn’t looked up.

 

“Grandma? It’s Thomas…I’m at the hospital…No, no, here’s Dad. He’ll explain.” Thomas handed the cell phone to Jeremy.

“Mom?”

“Yes…What happened? Did something bad happen?”

Jeremy felt his heart tighten when he heard his mother’s voice. He described the incident and reassured her of Simon’s health.

“Why didn’t Victoria call me?” she asked more firmly.

“She’s not here. She’s at her parents’ house.”

“And she left
you
with the kids?” she said bitingly.

“We’re in a bit of a fight, I think…”

“You think?”

“But we’ll work it out. And you? How are you?”

“How am I? You’re worried? You’re interested today? Because you were afraid for your son? The ambulance, the hospital, the fear that eats away at your stomach…It’s traumatizing, isn’t it?”

“Yes, it is.”

“It’s the kind of anguish that reconnects us with reality. And the reality is you’ve forgotten your parents. Your
parents whom you haven’t spoken to in six years. And today you call me because you feel alone, desperate. Because you’re afraid.”

Jeremy was demolished. It was almost unbearable to hear his mother speak to him so harshly.

“Is Victoria going to be joining you?”

“Tomorrow.”

“So tell her to call me.”

“Mom, I wanted—”

But she had already hung up. The dry clack of the handset was like a slap on the face. Jeremy closed his eyes, ready to break down when his son spoke to him.

“She wasn’t happy?”

Jeremy, haggard, unable to reply, shrugged his shoulders.

“Mom says we’re always aware of our problems, even if we’d rather ignore them.”

“Yes…to the point of forgetting them. But you, you can give me your opinion. You can tell me everything.”

Thomas hesitated a moment, then replied in a voice filled with despair. “You never go see Grandma and Grandpa. You won’t talk to them on the phone. When we go visit, you’re never there. Sometimes Grandma cries when
we talk about you. Grandpa, he says he doesn’t have a son anymore. He took down all the photos of you. He doesn’t want us talking about you when he’s around. So if you want to patch things up, it’s going to be kind of hard. But it might work. Look at us. This morning I hated you, and now…now it’s better.”

Each of these words, delivered with sincerity by his son, upset Jeremy and made him start to cry. Thomas reached his small arms around his father and held him tightly. “It’s okay, Daddy, it’s okay.”

When the surgeon returned, the two of them were almost asleep. He looked like a doctor in a made-for-television movie: deliberate gaze, snappy walk, open coat, sleeves rolled back. He had the manners of a man without time to waste. A serious man, decisive with his patients, authoritative with his colleagues.

“Mr. Delègue?”

Jeremy looked up.

“Everything went fine. One of the cuts was ugly, but he’ll only have a small scar. He should stay overnight for observation. Where’s his mother? He’s asking for her.”

“She’ll be here tomorrow. But why keep him overnight?”

 

“For the head injury. He did lose consciousness, after all.”

Jeremy lowered his eyes to Thomas, watching him attentively. He expected a word of comfort for the child, but the surgeon said nothing.

“Can we sleep with him?” asked the boy.

“That’s not allowed.”

“Can we see him?” Thomas insisted firmly.

“Yes. But not too long. He needs rest,” the doctor said as he turned on his heels.

“What a jerk,” Thomas said as the surgeon walked away.

“Ha! You’re not supposed to say things like that,” Jeremy said to him.

“I talk like you. You say worse things sometimes.”

In the hospital room, Simon slept.

He opened his eyes, smiling. “Thomas, where are you?”

“Right next to you,” Jeremy answered. “So how are you, Son?”

“Oh, Daddy, did you see the tape on my arm?”

“It’s not tape, it’s a bandage,” Thomas quipped, smiling.

 

“No, it’s tape.” Simon’s voice was weak. He wanted to move around and argue more, but sleep started to win him over.

“Does it hurt?” Thomas asked.

“No, not anymore. Where’s Mommy?”

“She’s coming in a minute,” Jeremy reassured him, hoping the child would go to sleep before he caught on to the lie.

“When do we go home?”

“Oh, well, you have to stay here until tomorrow,” Jeremy answered, taking Simon’s hand.

“Alone?”

“No, we’ll wait until you go to sleep, and we’ll come back when you wake up.”

“Promise?”

“Yes, I promise,” said Jeremy, making a fist.

Simon looked at him with curiosity.

“Look, here’s what friends do when they swear the truth.” Jeremy took Simon’s hand, closed it into a fist, and tapped his knuckled against his son’s.

Simon smiled. Thomas stepped forward to repeat the gesture. They exchanged a knowing glance.

“We’re friends now, Daddy?” Simon asked.

“Yes, more than friends.”

 

Jeremy felt a gentle warmth wash over him. It corresponded to the strength of the invisible bond that united him and his sons deeply, one that sealed their fates more than words or circumstances ever could. The children needed him so they could grow up. They wanted to find a place in their father’s eyes. In his heart. And Jeremy knew from that moment forward his life would turn on more than just his relationship with Victoria. He had a family. He was responsible for it. The idea of not being able to assume responsibility for them in the days, the months, the years to follow—it enraged him.

A few minutes later, Simon fell asleep. Thomas and Jeremy sat beside him on the bed for a moment longer. Then Thomas closed his eyes and lay down next to his brother, exhausted by his emotions. Jeremy sat there watching them sleep calmly, united.

They’re mine. These are my sons, and I love them. But what kind of love is it? I remember once hearing a religious person say that man has three chances to make something of himself. First, with the love and support of his parents. If he doesn’t make it, his wife gives him another chance to become more than a careless, egotistical, immature man. If he fails, then his children are a last recourse. After that…he’s doomed. What have I done with my three chances? What have I done with the love I’ve been given? I’m an ungrateful son, an unworthy husband, and a bad father. If I don’t find a way of correcting my course now, then I’m lost. I’ll finish my days alone, hated by my own. Then I’ll be happy for some kind of amnesia to erase the memory of my mistakes. I have to act now and become the person I always was again, the person I am today
.

The telephone rang. Jeremy scrambled to pick up, glancing at the children. They still slept soundly, with tightly closed fists.

“Hello? Thomas?”

“It’s Jeremy.”

“What’s going on? Why are you talking like that?” Victoria asked nervously.

“I’m speaking quietly so I don’t wake them up.”

“Are you at home?”

“No, at the hospital. The doctor wanted Simon to stay the night, and Thomas fell asleep.”

“You told me it wasn’t serious,” Victoria cut in, dismayed.

Jeremy reported the conversation he had with the doctor, and Victoria calmed down.

 

“It would’ve been nice to talk to them,” she said.

“I miss you, you know.”

“Oh?” Her cynicism, an expression of her pain, upset Jeremy.

“Victoria, I have to talk to you.”

“Now’s not the time, Jeremy.”

He hesitated. She wouldn’t believe him, like Pierre. “I have to tell you…I’m having another bout of amnesia.”

She sighed, exasperated. “Please, Jeremy.”

“Yes, I know. Pierre told me where to get off too when I told him. That doesn’t change the fact that it’s happening again. For me, it’s the third time. I understand what’s happening between us, thanks to Pierre and Thomas and a letter I found in my desk. It’s not the amnesia that upsets me. It’s what I’m learning about my behavior. It’s like there are two men inside me: a jerk who doesn’t care about his wife and children, doesn’t want to see his parents, doesn’t think about anyone but himself…and another who is the total opposite. But this other person doesn’t exist except during periods of amnesia.”

“That’s all you learned, Jeremy? You’re right; there are two men inside you. The one I knew before and the one I met just recently.”

 

“You have to believe me, Victoria. I beg you. I’m going crazy.”

“You’ve already driven me crazy, Jeremy. I believed too many of your stories.”

“I’m sick, do you understand? Sick!” Jeremy almost shouted.

“I don’t doubt that. You are sick.”

“You’re not hearing me out. Is that really all that’s left of our love?”

“Don’t play the romantic, Jeremy. I realized that to keep from losing myself, I had to break off all communication. The children already lost their father. I want them to have a mother who’s sane.” Her voice was hardened. Nonetheless, Jeremy felt her struggling against her own doubt.

“It’s incredible. How could you come to that?” he moaned. “Even Thomas realized I was different today.”

“Thomas needs a father. Me, I’m not sure I need a husband.”

“You’re my last chance.”

“No,” she said wearily. “I don’t want to talk about it right now. Not on the telephone. Not after everything that’s happened.”

 

“Tomorrow will be too late.”

“The whole question is if it’s too late, Jeremy. Tell Thomas to call me when he wakes up. Good-bye.”

Jeremy hung up the phone, then leaned down and kissed Simon. He picked Thomas up and headed for the door. The last time he remembered feeling Thomas’s body next to his was when Thomas was a baby. He had experienced the same pleasure. A feeling of ownership mixed with pride and warmth.

Thomas opened his eyes and lifted his head to look at his father with heavy eyelids. His father kissed him.

“We’re going home.”

Thomas fell back asleep.

BOOK: Still With Me
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