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In the bedroom, undressed and ready for bed, he did what he hadn't done in years, though DeAnne did it every night. He knelt down beside the bed, the way he had done on his mission, the way he had done as a child. He poured out his heart and asked for mercy for his new baby. Let him live. Let him have a good life. If it's within the power of my priesthood to heal him, then let me heal him when I give him a blessing tomorrow. I don't want to lose him. I want all my children, this one as much as any of the others, and all the children yet unborn that you might have for us. Don't take him away from us. Whatever he needs, we'll give it, if we have it to give.
Later, lying in bed, it occurred to him that he might have been praying for the Lord to grant him and DeAnne sixty years of caring for an invalid child. That perhaps what was wrong with Zap was so severe that it would be cruel to keep him here if the Lord was willing to take him home. So he re-entered the prayer that he thought he had closed, and added the phrase that he had deliberately left out when he was on his knees: Thy will be done.
DeAnne had recovered enough to go home, but she didn't want to. "I've never left the hospital without my baby," she said.
"You'll see him every day," said Dr. Keese. "And so will Step. And so will your mother. But you're not on insurance, I understand, and this is going to eat up your savings. You need whatever money you have to take care of Jeremy."
She said nothing.
"Good," he said. "They'll have you ready to go at noon."
To fill the empty time, she went back to the book. She had forgotten to pack it, and yet it had turned out to be the only thing that could keep her mind off Jeremy. She could read about the family in the book and say, We may have problems, but at least we'll never be like them.
No, it was more than that. The book kept speaking to her, characters kept saying things that echoed in her heart. Like when the nice son in the story said something about how life is like a cliff that's eroding away and you spend your whole life just shoring it up. It was the nightmare of her life, the one that lived always at the back of her mind, and he had named it. Only it wasn't him, of course. It was the author. Tyler wrote those words for me, she thought, so I'd know that I wasn't alone going through these fearful days.
This last morning in the hospital, she reached the pa.s.sage where the mother in the book speaks of her "three lovely pregnancies" and how she counted down the months, waiting for something perfect to happen. "It seemed I was full of light," the mother said. "It was light and plans that filled me." DeAnne let the book fall onto the blanket and turned her face into the pillow and wept.
She must have cried herself to sleep, because when she next opened her eyes, Step was sitting there, leaning forward on the chair beside the bed, his chin resting on his hands, his elbows on his knees. He was looking at nothing, staring at the wall.
"h.e.l.lo," said DeAnne.
"Hi, Fish Lady," said Step. At once the somberness left him, and if she hadn't had that moment of watching him unawares, she would never have known that he was anything but bright and confident. "I understand the doctor wants to kick you out and send you home. And I've got to tell you that I hope you come."
"I will," she said. "But please not yet."
"DeAnne, you'll be up here at least twice a day to nurse him. I'll drive you here, or your mother will. But in between those times, you need to be back home."
She reached out for his hand. "Step, I don't want to leave without the baby."
"He's doing better all the time," said Step. "And we couldn't very well give him all these tests at home."
"I don't like what they're doing to him here," said DeAnne. "I don't like the way he's drugged all the time."
"I don't like it either," said Step. "But we're not doctors."
"They don't know everything," she said.
"But they know something," said Step. "And sleeping in a hospital bed isn't going to make you or me any wiser about what we ought to do. Please-you've spent too much time here alone."
"I hardly have any time alone," said DeAnne. "I think every sister in the Steuben 1 st Ward has been up here twice."
"At church this morning the bishop asked everybody to fast and pray for Zap next Sunday. The whole ward."
It filled DeAnne with emotion to hear that. They really weren't alone. And maybe with so many people fasting and praying, G.o.d would hear.
Or maybe not. Maybe it would be like in the book. Maybe things would always be just a little bit out of control, just out of reach.
Step reached down onto the floor. "You dropped your book," he said.
"I don't want to read it anymore," she said.
"Oh? I thought you liked it. Yesterday you even read me a pa.s.sage from it."
"She knows too much," said DeAnne. "It hurts too much."
"Fine, I'll put it up on the shelf here-"
"No," she said. "No, give it to me."
"So you are going to read it."
"No," she said. "I'm just going to hold it. Is that all right?"
He looked at her strangely.
"I'm not going crazy, Step. It just ... it's an anchor. It's another woman telling me she knows about things going wrong, and I just need to hold the book, OK? I mean at least it's not a Barbie doll or something."
"Fine," said Step. "I just wondered if this is going to become an icon to you. Like scripture. The fifth standard work?"
"Don't make fun," she said. "This is very hard for me, you know. I've always prided myself on making perfect babies. Now all I've got left that I make perfectly is my pie crusts."
"I wasn't making fun," he said, as he reached down and embraced her awkwardly "And he is a perfect baby DeAnne."
"You can't just deny it and make it go away," said DeAnne.
"He has the perfect body for the life G.o.d intends him to live. For the life he intends us to live."
G.o.d's plan. Nothing we can do about it. Might as well stop praying or trying or anything.
No, he doesn't really believe that, she realized. Because when we've talked about this sort of thing before, it was me who argued that G.o.d must plan all our lives or it wouldn't be fair, and he's the one who said, G.o.d doesn't have a plan for our lives, he just put us all into a world where no matter what our life is like, we can still discover how good and strong we are, or how weak we are, or how evil or cowardly. He's saying this about G.o.d's plan to make me feel better.
"I keep thinking," she said, "that we shouldn't have made love so soon after I used the spermicide the last time."
He shook his head. "It wasn't all that soon, DeAnne."
"You're supposed to wait longer. A week."
"DeAnne, the doctors don't even know what the problem is, let alone what caused it."
"And Bendectin-all these stories about Bendectin and birth defects--"
"In the National Enquirer, DeAnne, not in Scientific American or the Journal of the AMA."
"Step, I don't want to come home without my baby."
"But you will come home without him, DeAnne, because you know that's what's best for him, and best for you. And you always do what you know is right. That's who you are."
She thought about that for a while. "OK," she said. "Call for the nurse."
Later that afternoon, Step dropped by the pharmacy to pick up DeAnne's pain medication. While he was waiting for the pharmacist, he wandered over to the magazines. A woman was standing there, and he saw out of the corner of his eye that she glanced at him and stepped away. He scanned the covers of the newsmagazines, and then, out of sheer boredom, the professional wrestling fan magazines.
"You just can't give up, can you," said the woman.
Step glanced up, trying to see whom she was talking to. She was looking at him.
Did he even know her? She looked familiar, but he couldn't place her.
"At Kroger's, at the mall, I turn around and there you are. Can't you give me any peace?"
Step was baffled. "Excuse me, but I think you have me confused with somebody else."
"Wasn't giving up my job enough for you? Are you trying to hound me into suicide?" Her voice trembled; she sounded genuinely distraught. Whatever she imagined he was doing seemed real enough to her, though he could not think of why she would have fixated on him.
"Ma'am, n.o.body wants you to commit suicide."
"Then just stop it," she hissed.
Suddenly he made the connection. She hadn't chosen him out of madness; she really had given up her job because of him.
"Mrs. Jones," he said.
"You're a vile man," she said. "Whatever I did, I don't deserve to have you stalking me."
"I'm not, I swear it. This is the first time I've set eyes on you since-"
"Don't lie to me," she said contemptuously. "You every time. At the mall you laughed out loud at me."
"Mrs. Jones, how would I know you'd even be at Macy's? I'm here picking up a prescription for my wife."
"I won't go on with that tape hanging over my I won't. It's worse than blackmail, it's torture."
It sickened him to have her, Stevie's tormentor, complaining about torture. But he didn't want to argue with her. She was a closed chapter. "Listen, Mrs. Jones. I just brought my wife home from the hospital and our newborn baby is still there because n.o.body knows why he's having seizures but he's in intensive care at a hundred dollars an hour and I don't have insurance and the bank is foreclosing on our house in Indiana and you know something? I don't care about you. I'm not following you. I'm living my own life, and you go live yours and forget about me, because until this moment I had completely forgotten about you and I'd just as soon leave it that way"
He turned to go back to the pharmacist's counter. She s.n.a.t.c.hed at his sleeve. "Give me the tape," she said.
"I don't even remember where it is," Step said. "Look, Mrs. Jones, we both live in the same town. We're bound to end up in the same store or me same fast-food joint or the same movie every now and then, and it doesn't mean anything."
"Is that how you plan to defend yourself when I ask the court for a restraining order?" she said. "That's what my lawyer suggests."
"Right now I think my prescription is ready and my wife needs it. Have your lawyer write me a letter." If there was a lawyer.
He picked up the prescription, had the clerk put it on his account at the store, and left. He was half afraid that Mrs. Jones would follow him out of the store, chase him all the way home, and beat on his door, insisting that he had to stop following her. But when he returned home with the medication, the only people who knocked on the door were more Relief Society sisters, coming by to help encourage DeAnne about Zap. Whatever happens will be part of Heavenly Father's plan, they said. After they left, DeAnne couldn't help but voice her exasperation to Step and Vette. "Of course it'll be part of G.o.d's plan, but G.o.d hasn't exactly been famous for planning nice things for all of his children."
Even though she was annoyed, Step could see that their visit had been good for her. In familiar surroundings, some parts of her life seemed finally to be under control again. She was back to being Relief Society spiritual living teacher instead of a helpless mother trapped in a hospital surrounded by doctors who didn't know what they were doing with her baby and wouldn't admit it.
On Monday morning, DeAnne arranged for Mary Anne Lowe to come over and tend Robbie and Betsy so that Step could take Stevie to the psychiatrist while Vette took DeAnne to the hospital to nurse Zap.
"We've been taking him to Dr. Weeks for two months," said Step. "Nothing's getting better."
"I know," said DeAnne. "But these things take time."
"After two months, we deserve a progress report," said Step. "We ought to be getting at least a diagnosis. Something. I mean, we're going through the same thing with Zap, the doctors searching to try to find out what's wrong, but they at least keep us posted. They explain what they're doing. And they learn things about the baby every day-at least they learn what isn't wrong with him."
"Psychiatry isn't precise," said DeAnne.
"Exactly my point. The hospital bill is already getting up around six thousand dollars for Zap alone, and who knows how much longer he'll be in there? We're putting in ninety bucks a week to the shrink-almost four hundred a month, almost as much as we're paying in rent-and we don't know what we're getting."
"So you don't want to take him? You want to give up? Stop cold?"
"I want to leave him home today. I want to go in myself, talk to her, find out what she's been finding out."
DeAnne looked at him suspiciously. "I think you want to pick a fight with her. I think you want to get rid of her the way you got rid of Mrs. Jones."
"If you want, I'll take the tape recorder and let you hear everything that's said."
"No," said DeAnne. "You can handle it."
"I promise that I won't do anything to antagonize her," said Step. "I wouldn't want to make it harder for Lee to continue in the Church."
"Or for Stevie to continue seeing her," said DeAnne.
"If that's in Stevie's best interest," said Step.
DeAnne just stood there, looking at him.
"I'm glad you decided not to say it," said Step.
"Say what?" asked DeAnne.
"That you don't think I'm capable of fairly evaluating whether Stevie should continue or not."
"That's not what I was going to say."
"No, but it's what you were thinking."
"Well, you can't get mad at me for what I thought and didn't say!"
"I'm not mad at you. I'm just reminding you that in all our years of marriage, I've never snuck off and done something about our family that you were against. Have I?"
"No," she said.
"So maybe I deserve a little trust here. You're not the only parent Stevie has who loves him."
"That is so unfair," she said. "I never said that, I never thought it, I never would-"
"I actually go through every day doing pretty well, DeAnne. I dress myself now, I carry on whole conversations with strangers, and I almost never have to call home for help. I've even used a credit card without confusion, and the grocery store lets me cash checks as long as I have a permission slip from my mother."
"Are you trying to make me cry?" asked DeAnne. "Are you trying to make me feel guilty because this is the first time you've taken Stevie to Dr. Weeks and I worry that you'll do something or say something to-"