Room_ A Novel - Emma Donoghue [93]
I want some, I really really want some, I can’t get to sleep without. I suck on Tooth that’s Ma, a bit of her anyway, her cells all brown and rotten and hard. Tooth hurted her or he was hurted but not anymore. Why is it better out than in? Ma said we’d be free but this doesn’t feel like free.
Grandma’s singing very quietly, I know that song but it sounds wrong. “ ‘The wheels on the bus go—’ ”
“No, thanks,” I say, and she stops.
• • •
Me and Ma in the sea, I’m tangled in her hair, I’m all knotted up and drowning—
Just a bad dream. That’s what Ma would say if she was here but she’s not.
I lie counting five fingers five fingers five toes five toes, I make them wave one by one. I try the talking in my head, Ma? Ma? Ma? I can’t hear her answering.
When it starts being lighter I put the duvet over my face to dark it. I think this must be what Gone feels like.
Persons are walking around whispering. “Jack? ” That’s Grandma near my ear so I curl away. “How are you doing?”
I remember manners. “Not a hundred percent today, thank you.” I’m mumbly because Tooth is stuck to my tongue.
When she’s gone I sit up and count my things in my Dora bag, my clothes and shoes and maple key and train and drawing square and rattle and glittery heart and crocodile and rock and monkeys and car and six books, the sixth is Dylan the Digger from the store.
Lots of hours later the waah waah means the phone. Grandma comes up. “That was Dr. Clay, your ma is stable. That sounds good, doesn’t it?”
It sounds like horses.
“Also, there’s blueberry pancakes for breakfast.”
I lie very still like I’m a skeleton. The duvet smells dusty.
Ding-dong ding-dong and she goes downstairs again.
Voices under me. I count my toes then my fingers then my teeth all over again. I get the right numbers every time but I’m not sure.
Grandma comes up again out of breath to say that my Grandpa’s here to say good-bye.
“Tome?”
“To all of us, he’s flying back to Australia. Get up now, Jack, it won’t do you any good to wallow.”
I don’t know what that is. “He wants me not born.”
“He wants what?”
“He said I shouldn’t be and then Ma wouldn’t have to be Ma.”
Grandma doesn’t say anything so I think she’s gone downstairs. I take my face out to see. She’s still here with her arms wrapped around her tight. “Never you mind that a-hole.”
“What’s a—? ”
“Just come on down and have a pancake.”
“I can’t.”
“Look at you,” says Grandma.
How do I do that?
“You’re breathing and walking and talking and sleeping without your Ma, aren’t you? So I bet you can eat without her too.”
I keep Tooth in my cheek for safe. I take a long time on the stairs.
In the kitchen, Grandpa the real one has purple on his mouth. His pancake is all in a puddle of syrup with more purples, they’re blueberries.
The plates are normal white but the glasses are wrong-shaped with corners. There’s a big bowl of sausages. I didn’t know I was hungry. I eat one sausage then two more.
Grandma says she doesn’t have the juice that’s pulp-free but I have to drink something or I’ll choke on my sausages. I drink the pulpy with the germs wiggling down my throat. The refrigerator is huge all full of boxes and bottles. The cabinets have so many foods in, Grandma has to go up steps to look in them all.
She says I should have a shower now but I pretend I don’t hear.
“What’s stable?” I ask Grandpa.
“Stable?” A tear comes out of his eye and he wipes it. “No better, no worse, I guess.” He puts his knife and his fork together on his plate.
No better no worse than what?
Tooth tastes all sour of juice. I go back upstairs to sleep.
• • •
“Sweetie,” says Grandma. “You are not spending another entire day in front of the goggle box.”
“Huh?”
She switches off the TV. “Dr. Clay was just on the phone about your developmental needs, I had to tell him we were playing Checkers.”
I blink and rub my eyes. Why she told him a lie? “Is Ma—?”
“She’s still stable, he says. Would you like to play checkers for real?”
“Your bits are for giants and they fall off.”
She sighs. “I keep telling you, they’re regular