Read The Weight of Heaven Online
Authors: Thrity Umrigar
Tags: #Americans - India, #Murder, #Psychological Fiction, #Married People, #India, #Family Life, #Crime, #Psychological, #Family & Relationships, #General, #Americans, #Bereavement, #Death; Grief; Bereavement, #Adoption, #Fiction
the moment of Frank’s own birth, that they had grown up together,
irreducible, and the prospect of losing his son was the prospect of
losing his own skin. There was no human language large enough
to hold such a loss. There was only sound. Like the howling of a
demented dog, the neighing of a horse with a broken leg, the squeal-Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 1 9 5
ing of a pig with a slit throat. But older, less specific than even that.
It was the sound of an orphaned universe. A wail, a rant, a moan, a
keening, that seemed to come from the very bowels of the earth.
“Frank,” Scott said finally. “You want me to pull over?”
“No,” he managed to gasp. “Go as fast as you can. I want to be
with my son.”
Scott ran three consecutive red lights as they approached the
hospital. He pulled up at the front door, and Pete jumped out of the
car with Frank. “This way,” Pete said and they walked the long
hallway that led to the children’s ICU.
The waiting room outside the unit was packed. His mother was
there, of course, and Bob and Anne and Ellie’s parents. Half of their
friends and neighbors were also there, and it seemed to Frank that
none of them dared to make eye contact with him as he went in
briefly to hug his mother. He felt his throat tighten with a resentment he knew he had no business feeling. Why were they all here?
He only wanted them to gather this way to celebrate happy occasions—Benny’s birthdays, his high school graduation, his college
graduation, his wedding day. He had not invited them to this event.
“Where’s Ellie?” he asked his mother, but Pete was already ushering him out of the room and through a set of enormous metal doors.
As soon as they entered, Frank noticed how low the lights were in
here and how quiet the unit was. A cold fear gripped him as they
walked down a short hallway toward Benny’s room.
He almost cried out when he saw Ellie, who was talking to a nurse
in the hallway. He had only left for Thailand five days ago, and he
was coming home to a different woman. She had shrunk. Gotten
older. There were lines on her face that had never been there before.
Her shoulders were bent at an angle of defeat. Her mouth curved
downward. But what killed him were her eyes. Magpie eyes, he’d
always called them, full of mischief and fun. The eyes that looked
at him now were friendly but dead. She looked at him with recognition, with gratitude, love even, but behind that look was another.
1 9 6 Th r i t y U m r i g a r
And it was that second look that scared him. That told him how
desperately sick his son really was.
He went up to her and kissed her cheek. “I’m here,” he said. He
wanted to say more but his voice broke. “I’m here, babe,” he finally
said. “We’re going to pull him out of this.”
She rested her cheek against his shoulder for a quick second.
Then she looked at him, her eyes searching his face. “I don’t want
you to freak out when you see him, okay? You promise?”
“I promise,” he said, and it was a good thing he did, because it took
every ounce of self-control not to cry out loud when he saw Benny in
the hospital bed, when he found his son’s tiny body under the city of
tubes and drains that ran across him. He heard the steady whoosh of
the ventilator and thought he’d never heard a more ominous sound.
But what really undid him was the rash on Benny’s hands, neck, and
face. When Ellie had told him about the rash over the phone, he had
pictured something delicate and subtle, like a purple lace handkerchief placed on Ben’s face. Nothing had prepared him for the brutality
of what he saw. This rash, these purple blotches, looked like an assault, like an invasion by a genocidal army. He bit down on his lower
lip as he looked at Benny’s hands and saw the blackened fingers. How
he had loved those hands. It was the first part of his son’s body he had
ever kissed, minutes after Benny had been placed in his arms for the
first time. He had loved the puffy rise of puppy fat on those hands
when Ben was a toddler and later, the smooth stretch of skin. He had
kissed those fingers individually and bunched up together. Now, he
picked up Benny’s limp hand and held it to his lips. And before he
could complete the gesture, he knew that this was one of the last times
he would ever touch his son’s alive, breathing body.
Beside him, Ellie made a sound, like the cry of a small animal. He
turned his stricken eyes to her, unable to prevent his last treacherous
thought from registering on his face. All his earlier resolutions of
striding into the hospital and bringing comfort to Ellie, of bending
down and whispering in Benny’s ears and asking him to fight,
fight
,
Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 1 9 7
left him now that he’d seen the terrible face of reality. He felt paralyzed, thankful that his legs were still holding him up. He looked
at Ellie, who obviously needed him, with something approaching
resentment. He was spent, hollowed out, in shock. The burden of
her expectations weighed heavily on him, as did the dismaying realization that he was not up to the challenge of comforting her, that he
would fail her on this count. He stood silently at the side of his son’s
bed, his eyes darting between the monitor and Benny’s bruised,
marked face. “Ben,” he whispered. “Benny. I’m here. I’m home,
Ben. And I won’t leave you now, not even for a minute.” Gingerly,
careful not to tug at one of the tubes, he stroked his son’s hair.
“Until a few hours ago, I couldn’t even touch him,” Ellie said in
a dead monotone. “He was still contagious, they said, so we had to
wear a mask. And they started all of us on antibiotics, too. Like I
care. Like I want to live if something happens to Ben.”
“Don’t say that,” he hissed furiously. “Nothing’s gonna happen
to him.” Out of the corner of his eye he saw that Scott had entered
the room. He watched as his brother put his arm around Ellie’s
shoulder. The simplicity of the gesture filled Frank with shame and
longing. Ellie’s been up for almost thirty-six hours, he reminded
himself. Eyeing the couch at the far end of the room, he said, “Ellie.
Why don’t you take a nap for a few minutes? I can take over now.”
She ignored him. “I didn’t know how much to tell you over the
phone,” she said. “Didn’t want to scare you. In any case, the rash
didn’t look this bad when I brought him in. It’s grown a lot mo—”
He knew what he had to do. “When was the doctor last in? I want
to talk to him. Maybe we can transfer him to a bigger hospital. The
fact that they can’t even get the fever under control is ridiculous.”
Scott turned to face Frank. “We’ve already been through all that,
Frankie,” he said quietly. “Ben’s actually getting top-notch care
here. And two, I don’t think it’s a good idea to transfer him anywhere in this condition. This is a pretty great hospital. You know
that.”
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He opened his mouth to protest, but Scott held his gaze, and
Frank was the first to look away. “So what do we do?” he mumbled,
unable to look at Ellie.
“We wait,” Scott said. His eyes were bright as he looked at Frank,
and when he spoke again his voice was gentle but firm. “And we do
whatever is right for Benny.”
At five that evening, Ellie suddenly fell asleep halfway through a
sentence. “She’s exhausted,” Scott mouthed to his brother. “Let’s let
her nap for a few hours. We can wait outside.”
He rose reluctantly, knowing that Ellie needed the sleep but reluctant to forfeit his place in Benny’s room for even a few minutes.
When they reached the door, he turned to Scott and whispered,
“You go ahead into the waiting room. I’m gonna just sit quietly by
Ben’s bed. I won’t wake Ellie up, I promise.”
He silently pulled up a stool and sat with his hand on his son’s
wrist. He stared at Ben’s ghastly face, looking for a sign, for the tiniest gesture, the slightest movement that would give him a reason to
keep hoping. But Benny’s eyes remained closed, his mouth forced
open by the clear plastic ventilator tube that was keeping him alive.
He kept staring at the beloved face behind the purple mask smothering it. Except for the gurgling of the ventilator, the room was silent.
Frank had been up for over thirty hours himself, and the undertow
of sleep tugged at him. He fought it off, forcing his eyes wide open,
moving his eyeballs from side to side. He felt himself drifting and,
for the first time since he’d received the terrible news, felt a strange
peace. He was home. He was in a darkened, quiet room with his son
and wife. And Benny was alive. They were in a bubble together,
adrift on a strange, dark island, surrounded by strange plastic sea
monsters. But they were together. And Benny was alive. That was
the main thing. They were all alive, even if a cold mechanical being
was drawing his son’s breaths for him. I could get used to this, he
thought, spending my days here keeping a bedside vigil. Dear God,
Th e We i g h t o f H e av e n 1 9 9
even this, these days of talking to and touching a son who could not
talk or touch back, would be better than not having Benny in the
world. I would settle for this if this were the best you have to offer.
You selfish bastard, he chided himself. Is this a life you would
wish for your son, this misery of being chained to a machine? He remembered what Scott had said—that they had to do whatever was
best for Benny. Please God, he prayed. Do not put me in that position. Don’t let that time come, ever. Do not ask of me what should
be asked of no man. Just let me walk out of this hospital with my
boy, and I’ll never ask you for another thing again.
Benny died a little after six in the morning the next day. They
were all gathered around his bed. Ellie and Frank sat on either side
of his bed, each of them holding his hand. In a low, quivering voice
Ellie sang, “Kisses Sweeter than Wine,” one of Benny’s favorite
songs. Next, she kissed his damp, fevered forehead and said, “It’s
okay, baby. You’ve been a real brave boy, but you don’t need to fight
anymore, okay? You can let go.”
Frank had wanted to stop her then, because even after the night
doctor had told them at two o’clock that morning that it was time
to bring the family in to say their good-byes, even after Dr. Brentwood had come in and told them that the latest lab test had shown
overwhelming sepsis, even after he, Frank, had left the room to go
call Scott to tell him to drive everybody back to the hospital, he had
clung to some strand of crazy hope, had held out for a miracle. He
wanted to tell Benny exactly the opposite of what Ellie was telling
him: instead of asking that he let go, he wanted to urge his boy to
fight, to wrestle with that dark demon, to rise from his deathbed and
assume his rightful place. You don’t belong in this stinking hospital
room, Ben, he had wanted to say. You belong in the Little League
baseball park and swimming at Seaflower Lake and going to school
at London Elementary. You belong in bed between your mom and
me on Sunday mornings and next to me in the car on Saturday
2 0 0 Th r i t y U m r i g a r
afternoons when I take you to baseball practice. You belong on the
beach at Hilton Head during the summers and on your little sled on
the hill behind our house in the winter.
He closed his eyes, almost smiling to himself at the thought of an
exuberant Benny flying down the hill on his blue sled last winter, his
blond hair glistening in the light of a wintry sun the color of weak
tea. While his eyes were still closed, he heard Ellie cry, “Oh, God,
Ben, no.” By the time he opened his eyes, his son was gone.
The room tilted, then straightened, then tilted again. Through
the tilt, he saw Ellie fling herself on Benny. Careful, he wanted to
say, but there were spiderwebs across his mouth and he couldn’t
speak. And now the webs were being spun across his eyes because
his eyes had become slits and he could only see half of the world.
Scott was saying something, but he could only hear every fifth word,
like a bad cell phone connection. He blinked, tried to focus on what
Ellie was saying to him, tried to see her full face, but it looked like
a Cubist painting—he could see her pained, open mouth, took in
the terror in her right eye, followed the path of a single tear. But he
couldn’t put it all together.
What finally broke the spell was Ellie’s hand. She reached across
Benny’s reclining body and took his hand in hers. “Frank,” she
moaned. “Frank, talk to me.”
He saw a funnel cloud of words leave his mouth. He noticed Ellie’s expressive face react and knew that he was saying all the right
things. And he was glad. Proud of himself and the comforting funnel
cloud that he was producing. Because inside,
inside
, he was gone.
Wandering through the punishing straits of his dry, acrid heart.
The disappointment was a new feeling. From the first day he had
met Ellie, he had always been proud of her. Ellie was one of those
people who excelled at whatever she did—she was an accomplished