At
the Last Minute
Martha Miller
2nd place
prizewinner
Dyed yellow, powdered cheeks, and a red kewpie doll
mouth—I’m betting she’s in her late sixties. Ironic. This
nurse who brings the critical information looks like a
clown. She scans the cold, windowless, waiting room. She
hasn’t seen me yet, and I want to hide—to just close my eyes
and let her pass me by. In three days, two others have died.
The nurses must take turns because a different messenger has
come each time.
Late last night a woman with gardenia white hair quietly
waited for news of her husband. Her son, a short and round
man in his forties, made a big fuss, and the messenger-nurse
seemed almost glad to give them the news. In the end, the
gardenia haired mother glared at her unruly child as if his
troublemaking in the waiting room caused her husband to die.
The old woman had been nice to me. She’d asked about Nora.
Maybe she thought I wanted to talk, which I did, but I
couldn’t talk about Nora without betraying her. I’d played
Judas when I brought her here three days ago. To the
standard question, what is your relationship to the patient?
I told the admitting nurse, we are sisters. I didn’t give
her a chance to turn me away. The stakes were too high, and
I couldn’t deal with those ‘family only’ rules in intensive
care. So I told them there, like the insurance man and the
woman who signed us up on the family plan for the motor
club, I’m her sister. To most, I suppose we looked like two
old women simply keeping house together. I discovered a long
time ago that others see what they want to see. Unless I
force the issue, people are usually more concerned with
their own lives than with mine. Nora used to say that
straights thought of lesbians only in terms of sex. We are
both in our fifties. Most believe that’s too old for sex. So
in a sense we are too old to be lesbians anyway.
The woman with white hair and her son are gone now. All that
remains are the sticky peelings of two tangerines left from
their dinner, scattered on the table next to a neatly folded
day-old newspaper.
Just twenty minutes ago, I’d been in Nora’s tiny room, with
its machines and wires, talking. I aimed the words at her
not knowing if she heard or if the force that makes all
things fleeting swallowed them up. I was talking about the
dogs, I think, when she moved restlessly, opened her eyes,
and looked right at me.
I held my breath waiting, but she said nothing. So finally I
said, Want something to drink?
She tried to smile, almost did smile.
I turned to reach for the plastic water pitcher, but I
hadn’t even touched it when a scream startled me. I couldn’t
figure out where it came from until I heard the pounding of
the nurse’s rubber soles. Then I realized that one of the
Nora’s machines had gone nuts.
She was awake. She wanted water, I told the nurses as they
rushed toward her. No one heard me. They ripped her blanket
off, and I felt someone touch my shoulder.
The words come in fragments from far away. Have to leave . .
. in the way . . . waiting room . . . will come for you.
I turned toward Nora a last time. Her eyes were still open
and seemed to be meeting mine. I waved a couple of fingers
and backed out the door.
. . .
Six months ago, Nora’s doctor had warned her that often
colon cancer didn’t respond to chemo, but I’d convinced her
to take a chance. The treatment, as bad as it was, gave her
some power, gave her something to do besides wait to die. As
it turned out, she could have saved herself the side
effects. But there was no way to know that outcome in
advance. All we had been given were numbers. The numbers
weren’t good, but they were a little better than zero.
She’s been in and out of the hospital four times since then.
I keep looking for meaning in this.
Three days ago, I was putting Nora’s bag in the car,
preparing for this trip. A south moving cloud slipped over
the sun and a patch of dark, an island of shadow drifted
across a lawn and over the some dogwood trees. What remained
was a soft spring rain. A bright shiver went through me;
peace and comfort are deceptive things that can be snatched
away in a hundred ugly ways.
The dogs were circling anxiously at my feet. They knew what
would happen when the suitcases came out. I knelt, scratched
their ears and spoke to them softly. Our dogs, two
beagle-like mutts, were strays that Nora had taken in as
puppies. They had been tiny things with almost every
parasite known to dog. I had been sitting at the kitchen
table balancing the checkbook when she’d brought the wicker
laundry basket through the back door.
Nora said, Before you say no, let me explain. I’m just going
to take them to the vet and get them on their feet. Then I
will find good homes for them.
She sat the basket next to me and I looked down. Two
puppies, one black and brown and white and the other just
brown and white looked up at me. They were nestled on what
I recognized as one of our good purple towels.
Nora reached into the basket and picked up the one with
three colors. She slipped it into my arms and said, Some
asshole dumped them in the park. I found them this morning
wet and cold and hungry.
The pup squirmed in my arms and managed to lick my chin.
Alright, I said. But let’s not name them. When you give a
puppy a name it is harder to give it away.
By the time we admitted that Buddy and Max were part of the
family, I had passed up at least two opportunities to give
them other homes. When they weren’t competing for our
attention, we were competing for theirs. They slept on our
bed and pretty much ran our lives.
After I put her suitcases in the car, I had to go back in
the house through the garage so I could clean the mud off
the dogs’ feet. They knew the routine and went to the throw
rug by the back door to wait for me. As I cleaned eight
muddy paws, I could see that Nora’s collection of empty
coffee cans had grown. It took up most of the space under
her workbench. I learned a long time ago that she sorted
through the things I threw away. Nora often said she wanted
to live simply and was regularly after me to throw out
weathered seasonal lawn decorations or the artificial
Christmas tree. But she was a sucker for a cast-off coffee
can. Nora was always trying to make something beautiful out
of what I thought of as junk.
On weekends while I watched a basketball game or read a
mystery, Nora worked on her little projects and sung to
herself. Her voice was musical and clear. I felt a sense of
peace when I heard her humming.
I tore my eyes from Nora’s stash of cans, and the dogs led
me through the back door. I found her sitting at the kitchen
table, her ball cap in place, wearing her well worn jeans,
and a leather belt cinched at the waist, fastened in a new
hole three inches past the last notch. Her hands were folded
on the table in front of her the way the nuns taught us to
wait for afternoon recess.
Don’t forget to call Billy, she said. Ask him to come by and
walk the dogs if you are going to be late getting home
tonight.
I will, I assured her. I would have to make sure my son
still had a key. When he lived with us, he’d lost more than
a few.
Tell him to make sure they have water. Her voice had gone
child-like and shaky. Checkered orange curtains tossed at
the open window over the sink—fresh air becomes essential in
a house full of sickness. From somewhere nearby an
unfamiliar bird sang a strange, persistent song. Rain,
lifting in the wind, sprayed against the screen like fine
surf.
I took her arm to help her stand, and she whimpered softly.
I said, I’ll call him later. When you’re settled in your
room.
After a slow walk to the car, she inched into the
passenger’s seat sitting with one leg tucked beneath her and
her arms folded across her chest. I started to buckle the
seat belt, and then changed my mind. She would be more
comfortable without it.
I’m sorry, she said when I started the car.
For what?
She shrugged. I’m too tired to fight anymore. The time has
come to cry uncle.
I touched her shoulder. Then I’ll fight for both of us.
A spark of life showed in her sunken eyes. She managed a
reassuring smile.
. . .
Since that day I’ve felt I would rather we were anywhere
else doing anything else than here, again. Nora would be the
first to remind me that that is a pattern. In fact, I’d been
saving my money to move to California when I met her, yet
seventeen years later I am at a hospital, a half-mile from
my home, our home, still in the Midwest.
Everything they tell you about life is a lie. I
didn’t know that until today. The things that matter are
always out of our control. We construct a life and make
choices. We compromise and adjust, and none of it matters.
In the end we learn that the most meaningful things are
gifts that we can’t keep.
. . .
When I’d first met Nora, Billy and I were recovering from a
messy divorce. Although I’d had a little thing with my
dorm-mate in college, that had been a long time ago. A
friend of mine, who thought we had a lot in common, had
introduced us. Nora seemed nice, if a little boring. I
thought we’d be friends. I wasn’t ready to start over—though
I planned to some day. I couldn’t see myself growing old
alone—I still can’t.
So Nora and I went to some movies and had a few dinners and
gradually started sleeping together. Okay, I had poor
boundaries. Or maybe I just had an itch. It wasn’t the
chills-up-your-spine type of sex that I always sought. It
was comfortable and tame. I told her, and told myself, that
it was just a casual something-or-other.
I remember lying in Nora’s bed after sex with her curled up
beside me, her fawn colored hair fanned across the pillow,
the bed a hopeless confusion of blankets and pillows. I
would stare out the window at the night sky. Smoky strands
of clouds would drift before the icy winter moon. If it were
Sunday I would get up in the middle of the night, dress and
go out in the cold. Nora drove me home before dawn because
Billy would soon be home from the weekly visit with his
father. When I was at home, I wanted to be with Nora. And
when I was with Nora, I remembered all the things I wanted
to do without her.
One night she had asked, Do you ever want to just be where
you are?
I said, When Billy is grown, when my car is paid for, I will
move to California. Then I will want to be where I am.
Nora knew who she was and where she wanted to be. She loved
her government job and even when it was hard she stayed with
it. My job at the bank was different. I never meant to work
there, let alone stay there. I had been on unemployment
after Billy was born. I wanted to stay home with my baby as
long as possible. Except when you’re on unemployment they
make you go for interviews, and when you’re offered work you
have to take it. So when Billy was two months old, I started
working again. One thing after another happened and I kept
working, deferring my dreams, feeling trapped. By the time I
met Nora, I’d been working twenty years at a job I never
really wanted in the first place.
Before Nora and I moved in together, we had this talk. I
told her that I wanted to leave the Midwest when Billy was
grown. I wanted to live near the ocean, and I wanted her to
share that dream. But she informed me that she was staying
here. Everything that made her happy was here. So when I
decided that Nora was the one, when we bought the house and
combined our households, I knew that I was staying—probably
forever. I saw it as a compromise. What Nora brought into my
life was stability. That enabled me to finish grad school
and finally change jobs. She helped me through some tough
stuff with Billy. Hell, she even got along with my
mother—better than I did. The two of them enjoyed talking
about me like I was this big problem they had to solve. They
talked about me in third person as if I wasn’t even there.
One thing Nora and I did agree on was the end.
Don’t ever put me in a home, Nora had said. When I get so
bad I can’t care for myself, if you love me you’ll help me
end it.
We’ll end it together then, I’d told her. We’ll have our own
little party.
I want ice cream and chocolate cake, she said. Maybe some
decent pot if we can score it.
But that was supposed to be down the line. That wasn’t now.
The death pact party was for when we were really old—when
we’d had enough of life.
. . .
Billy came up to see her this morning. No, that was
yesterday morning. Only one family member can go in her room
for ten minutes every hour. He’d brought her flowers and a
card.
Nora and my son have had a bumpy relationship. But yesterday
when Billy came out of her room he sat with me. His eyes
were red and puffy. Finally he said, They’ve got her so
drugged up. She didn’t even know me.
I touched his arm and said, She knows you.
I don’t think he believed me.
He asked, Are you coming home tonight?
I shook my head. I’m going to stay until she is better—until
she is out of ICU. I need to be here.
Then he said, I’ve decided to stay at the house. I can sleep
in my old room for a while. It’s easier than running back
and forth for the dogs. Besides they seem lonely.
Thanks, I croaked.
Do you need something to eat? Billy asked.
No, they’ve been ordering me a tray along with hers.
Can she eat?
No, not yet. But I am getting meals.
How about a change of clothes?
I looked down at my sweat pants and wrinkled T-shirt dumbly.
Suddenly Billy embraced me and held on tight for a long
time.
When he left all he said was, Get some rest, Mom.
I said, I will. What else have I got to do?
I should have asked him to call my mother. Nora’s brother
could wait for the time when she was closer to the end. But
my mother would say, Why didn’t you call? I couldn’t talk to
her about this just yet, but Billy could. I told myself I’d
ask him the next time he came up.
Family is a strange thing. I know gay people whose families
disowned them. And there are gays who never tell their
parents. I didn’t have to tell my mother, my sister did it
for me. Nora was one of those people whose family never
talked about it. She thought her parents probably knew.
Anyway, when we first bought the house I had this idea about
having them all to dinner. My mother was from the same small
town where Nora grew up. I thought they’d have something to
talk about. Nora thought it was a horrible idea, but I had
to have my way. I cooked a roast. After dinner we went into
the living room and our mothers sat there in an awkward
silence. That was the longest, most awkward afternoon of my
life. Some years later we were laughing about it, and then I
recalled that even when I was married I hadn’t attempted to
get my husband’s parents into the same room as mine.
Remembering that silly afternoon with our mothers, I am
smiling when I meet the eyes of the clown nurse coming
toward me. But it isn’t the nurse. It is Nora smiling back
at me. She’s wearing her favorite jeans. Her bangs fringe
her forehead, a tawny contrast to her clear green eyes. She
carries a pink paper plate. In her other hand she holds two
forks and folded party napkins.
You’re still here. She seems pleased.
I say, Of course. I’m waiting for you.
She says, Well, here you go then. Her raspy voice has an
appealing softness.
My heart thuds as she offers me the pink plate which
contains a wedge of chocolate cake and a single scoop of ice
cream.

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