No answer. Intense scrutiny of puzzle.
“Is there something you have to tell me?”
Head shake.
“Benny.”
Silence.
“Is there something you have to show me?”
Long pause, then Benny got out of bed, found his book bag on the floor, rummaged through it for about an hour, withdrew a sealed envelope. Handed it to Sam wordlessly and got back in bed.
Sam looked at the envelope for a while before opening it. Not to prolong the suspense, just to put things off a few seconds longer. I sympathized.
Leaning in, I tried to read over his shoulder, but the type was too small. The letter wasn’t very long, one or two paragraphs, signed in ink. Sam sighed when he folded it and put it back in the envelope. “Okay. Tell me about this.”
Wordless and sullen, Benny clacked wooden puzzle pieces together hard.
“We’ve never talked about fighting before, not much, you and me. Were you angry at this boy, this-Doug? It’s okay to get mad at people, you know that. It’s what you do about-”
“He’s a poop head. He’s a dummy. He’s-” Benny looked up from the puzzle, right into Sam’s eyes. “He’s an asshole.”
“Hey, now-”
“He is.”
“Why?”
Benny wouldn’t answer.
“What did he do? Did he hit you first? That’s-”
“No.”
“Okay.”
“I hit him.”
“Okay. Why? Did he say something?”
“He said-he said-” Tears welled and spilled over. “He s-said…”
“What did he say?” Very gently, Sam folded Benny in his arms. I sidled close, leaning my flank against both of them.
“He said Mommy…”
“What?”
“Is a…”
“What?’
“Vegetable.”
I made a choking sound, the closest to a sob I could come. They didn’t hear me; Benny was crying and Sam was crooning consolation. They were a tangle of arms and pressed-together faces, and all I could do was shove my snout into the places I could find skin.
“All right, listen. That kid was wrong.” He lifted Benny’s chin so he could look at him. “And you were right-he’s an asshole.”
“I know.” Benny wiped his slimy face on the sheet. “I told you.”
“But we don’t use that word, right? Well, except us, you and me. On rare occasions. We can say it to each other, but nobody else. How about that?”
“Okay.” A smile broke through. How cool to have a secret dirty word with Dad. I wasn’t sure I approved.
“And we don’t hit people when they say stupid things. Because they’re allowed to, it’s not against the law. People can be as stupid as they want, and we just ignore them. We can say, ‘You’re wrong,’ or maybe, ‘You’re an idiot,’ but that’s it. We don’t hit ’em, we just ignore ’em. Right?”
“Okay.” But then Benny’s face crumpled again. “Is she?” he asked in a small voice, head down, playing with a button on Sam’s shirt. “Is Mommy a…”
“No, Ben, no. She’s not.”
“But she just lies there.”
“She’s asleep.”
“But what if she never gets up?”
“She will.”
“But what if she doesn’t? What if she stays like that forever? I wish she would come home! Why can’t she wake up? Why!”
“I think she will.” He took Benny’s shoulders before the tears could start again. “I really think she will, but it might take some more time.”
“How long?”
“I don’t know. But we’re her family, you and me-”
“And Aunt Delia.”
“And Aunt Delia, and all we can do is keep thinking about her, and praying for her, and going to see her, and telling her we love her. Because she can’t help it-you know she’d come back if she could, right? You know that, don’t you?”
“Yes.”
“She’s trying, but it’s very hard. She wants to be with us as much as we want her to be. We just have to keep waiting. And hoping, and not losing faith. And meanwhile, we’ve got each other.”
“I know.”
“You know.” Sam hugged him for a long time. “We’ll be okay,” he whispered over and over, until Benny’s body finally began to sag from sleepiness. “You and me, pal. We’ll be okay.”
So I knew what I had to do. And not tomorrow: tonight. No more stalling. I felt as if I’d woken up from an em barrassingly long nap. Why had I waited so long? Laziness, denial, cowardice-some retriever I’d been. But no more. Tonight I would begin the journey back. To myself. If I didn’t make it-and all the obstacles between me and Hope Springs had never looked so daunting-at least I’d have taken the chance. At least I’d have tried to put my family back together.
I stayed with Benny after he fell asleep, stretched out alongside him, my head on his shoulder. The sound of his heart and the rhythm of his breathing came right inside me, merged with my heart and breath. It was difficult to leave him, the hardest thing I’ve ever done. I didn’t want to wake him, so I didn’t kiss him good-bye. I put my warm nose in the hollow of his throat and breathed him in.
Downstairs, it was dead quiet. I found Sam by smell-on the sofa in the den, grasping something, looking down at it in his lap. I didn’t want to, but it was time to say good-bye to him, too.
When I jumped up next to him, he barely noticed, and his “Down” was so halfhearted, we both ignored it.
My picture. That was what he was holding.
Oh, Sam. Don’t be sad.
And then I saw something I’d never seen before. Sam crying.
It was worse than anything. I licked his cheek, and when he turned his face away I howled. Softly; more of a whine, a really tragic sound. It got his attention. He did something he never had before: He put both arms around me and buried his face in my neck.
And I raised up on my back legs and embraced him back. It was… divine. We’d never been so close, not since I changed. I’d have stayed there all night, but too soon Sam pulled himself together and pushed me away.
Incomplete again, bereft, I watched him dig a ratty Kleenex from his pocket and scrub his face. His crooked smile was the saddest thing I ever saw. He rarely talked to me, but now he said, “Funny dog. You’re a funny old dog. What’s up with you?” So many times I’d tried to answer that. Now I just shook my head. When he petted me, I closed my eyes and reveled in it, although my heart was cracking. Bye, Sam. Don’t worry anymore. I’m going to fix it. I love you so much.
The phone rang.
“Hello? Oh, hi, Monica.”
I almost left then. What would have happened if I had? I’ve often wondered.
“We got back about an hour ago, hour and a half. Fine. I mean, you know, it was the same. No, no change.”
Blah blah. I didn’t want to hear this.
“Listen-Benny didn’t say anything to you about a fight, did he? At school? When he was over there this afternoon, he didn’t… I didn’t think so. I wouldn’t have known myself if… No, he’s okay; he’s fine. Some kid named Doug. Apparently he said something-”
Don’t tell her! Don’t you dare tell her!
“Kid stuff, nothing really… Yeah. I know. Right, I’m sure he’s bottling up a lot of anger and frustration… Right. Right.”
Right, right. Shut up, Monica, nobody wants to hear your amateur child psychology.
Finally she got to the point. “A picnic?” Sam said, brightening a bit. “Sounds good, we’re free all weekend. Which is better for you? Sunday, then, fewer people than on Labor Day, yeah. Good. Sonoma, too? Great, she’ll love it.”
Thanks for thinking of me.
“Okay, you bring that. I can do-Right, drinks, snacks…”
More blah blah about the portable grill, whose cooler was bigger, did they want lemonade or pop or both. I made myself not imagine it, not romping around with Benny and the twins in some beautiful woodsy, meadowy place, some sylvan spot alive with squirrels and chipmunks, maybe a lake or a stream. Have a great time. Without me. In a negative way, self-pity is very motivating. So long. I slunk toward the door.