She’s fine, now.
She’s going to be fine.
I didn’t know that 24 hours ago.
***
Her fever broke in the car, at 5:45 a.m., a half-hour after I woke her father with a frantic whisper.
The small girl in the pink nightie printed with ballerina slippers chattered away, innocent of the knowledge that we headed were toward the hospital.
“Look, Mommy! The moon! It looks like a slice of apple! You love apples! Wanna slice of apple? Remember when we made a fruit salad and put apple slices in it, and Daddy loved it?”
I pressed my hand to her head, now so cool. A mere hour ago her body heat woke me up as she tossed restlessly beside me.
“Daddy,” I said, in a low voice from the backseat, “her fever broke. Let’s turn around.”
Blue eyes met my own dark ones in the rear-view mirror.
“Sure?” her father asked.
I nodded. I wanted to spare her another midnight visit to the ER.
***
I woke up at 9:30 a.m., her small body wrapped in a sheet next to me. I remembered that we agreed to leave for home Monday, both concerned enough to cut our visit one day short.
In the kitchen my grandmother-in-law packed bags of food for us.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “Sorry we have to leave early. But the fever … she’s had it since Friday.”
***
We waited for her to wake, she needed the rest. We’d be hitting the road late, with a seven-hour drive ahead of us, but she needed to sleep.
At 11 a.m. she cried out. I went to her.
She was screaming and bucking wildly in the bed, yelling “ouch! ouch!” and clutching her neck.
“Poo, tell mama where it hurts,” I whispered urgently. “Where does it hurt!”
She was covered in an ugly, red, raised rash. The blotches were hot to the touch. I could not calm her as she thrashed in my arms, still screaming with her eyes closed.
“Hospital,” I said to my husband. “Pick her up and let’s go. Now!”
***
“She’s not gonna do it,” the nurse said, grimly. “Put her over your lap, mom.”
I pulled my daughter’s underpants down and forced her body across my lap. Refusing to take a thermometer in her mouth, the nurses would have take her temperature rectally.
“I have to go potty!” my child screamed. “I have to pee!”
The number stopped blinking and I pulled her into my arms as she cried wretchedly. Her bladder let go all over my lap. She looked at me with a terrible mixture of adult emotion in her three-year-old eyes.
“I’m sorry, Mommy! Don’t be angry, Mommy! I’m so sorry!” she sobbed.
I held her tight as the word “meningitis” branded itself inside my closed eyelids. I prayed clumsily to Jesus, Mother Mary and my dead father.
“Please,” I begged. “Please.”
***
If you ask me how I am, I will tell you I am fine. Everything is fine, just fine. Like a suburban house, neat and tidy, my life appears.
But if you look a little too closely, you’ll see that the blinds are crooked and the lawn needs mowing.
I’m fine, I’ll tell you.
I won’t tell you that I am deeply frightened by the ambivalence I feel toward the boy growing inside me. I won’t tell you how my husband and I bicker and snap. I won’t tell you that some days I find myself shouting at my preschooler out of sheer frustration. I won’t tell you that some nights I feign morning sickness to sleep alone in the guest room, just to get eight hours of time to myself.
I won’t tell you about the dark horses loosed from their stables late last night as the wheels hummed against the blacktop, carrying us home. I won’t tell you about their obscene riders and the apocalyptic what-if what-if what-if drumbeat of their hooves.
I’m fine. We’re all going to be fine.
***
I believed my heart had been tested and emerged whole and solid, if battle-scarred. I believed I’d weathered grief and lived to tell the tale. I believed my heart is a muscle, strong and hardy and beating ceaselessly in my chest, ready to meet any task.
I believed that until I held my terrified child in my arms yesterday in an emergency room far from home, crooning to her desperately, uselessly, oblivious to the hot pools of her urine, stinking of terror, puddling around my shoes.
At that moment precicesly, I realized that my heart is nothing more than a papier-mache Valentine, precariously positioned beneath the crushing weight of not one, but now two, precious little souls.



{ 62 comments… read them below or add one }
I’m sorry, that sounds like a traumatic weekend. I’ve been looking for you all morning worried by your twitters. I’m glad you made it home.
Oh. My. Gosh.
Wow. This is so beautifully written. I’m just speechless.
Mrs.Chicken, I am so sorry you were so terrified. I am so relieved that you are back home and that the Poo is going to be ok. Get some rest.
Hug.
I do hope all the scariness is behind you and all is ok.
Steph
This reminds me of how I felt when I carried my son inside my womb. I was indifferent and even thought that I didn’t want this baby.
We were far from home and not knowing when we would be able to return.
However, we are home, have been for 3 years, and the little boy has turned 2 years old. I look back on those feelings and am so happy that I just let them be. They served their purpose and know new feelings have taken their place. Better feelings.
I’m so sorry you had to go through that. There is nothing more terrifying than not knowing what’s wrong with your child. I hope everything is calming down and you all can get some much needed rest.
I’m so glad that everything is better now and so sorry that you had to go through this. Hopefully, you can milk that “morning sickness” for all it’s worth.
You have been through so much in these last few months. I’m so sorry that yet another illness has blackened your door.
Hoping the spring brings more sunny days.
I think once we become a mother we will always want to take on our childrens’ pain, and in a way, we do. I suppose these times are what makes us appreciate how good we have it most of the time.
Glad she’s on the mend.
You really don’t deserve this stuff. Really.
This is so hard. Really, the hardest thing. I hear you. This broke my heart as well. Sending a big virtual hug. Have a good cry- you’ve earned it.
I’m so very sorry you’re all having such a hard time. Not much else I can add, but that.
The fact that you wrote this says an awful lot about how strong you are.
Oh honey, so sorry.
Glad she’s feeling better.
I promise there are infusions of incredible spirit healing and courage restoring moments on the other side of your current journey.
Your heart is stronger than you give it credit for. Babies aren’t easy and I think you’ll love your boy child eventually. Don’t feel bad because you don’t now. It took until my son was 3 months old (and finally quit screaming) for me to really start to enjoy him.
Truly an amazingly written story. Mothers’ hearts are so strong, but so fragile. I cried while reading your post, and send hugs your way.
We’re all human. It’s hard to swallow, but we’ve all been there.
Tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it, right?
xo
once again you leave me speechless.
sending nothing but love, hugs and an army of healthy bugs.
u deserve em.
I am so sorry you are going through such a tough time. Hugs and thoughts your way!
glad she’s ok, really glad.
Oh I feel you, and I’m so sorry. We just returned from a trip back home to NY where we spent two days in urgent care, doc’s offices and radiologists for what we were told was a sure case of bad pneumonia. Lucky for us, they were wrong. But the fevers…the 104 degree fevers that racked my little boy’s limp body….I know that fear fellow mommy. And I know the terror of helplessness in the midst of a gripping illness far from home.
So happy she’s ok.
Oh, you poor things. What a trauma filled weekend! Glad she’s better…you’ll be better, too, give yourself a break, you’ve been through a lot.
Oh baby. I am so sorry and poor Poo, sweet little thing.
But the truth is? You will be fine.
I KNOW how bad those trips are, and to have her so sick on top of it — it’s just awful. Glad you’re home and healing.
I’m just glad you’re back in one piece. And I hope you find some peace.
i think this may well be one of the most extraordinary things i’ve ever read.
honey, this is some wrench out your gut and pour it onto the paper sort of writing. it’s amazing.
and i’m very, very glad she’s ok. and you. you are too. you are.
*sigh*
It’s been a rough time. Please take care. Glad she is ok.
I’m so sorry I emailed you with such a trivial topic when you had such a traumatic weekend. I’m glad everything turned out okay.
The poor thing…
I remember taking my daughter to the ER last year – I try to forget the whole thing.
I know it’s scary – but it’ll be okay. And you WILL be fine, you just don’t know it yet . . .
I’m glad to hear she’s okay. It’s amazing how you don’t focus on “little things” when a little one is sick.
When my middle daughter was sick and in the hospital for three days, everything stopped for us and she was all that mattered. Thankfully, we had family who stepped in and took the other two girls so we didn’t need to worry about them for a few days.
I am so glad she is all right, I am so very sorry all of you had to go through this. Sending good thoughts and prayers your way.
You are some writer.
I’m so sorry for all you’ve been through lately. It sounds like one hell of a time.
My first visit to your blog. You are a wonderful writer. I hope that your daughter is much better now…
I’m so glad everything is o.k. . . . and so sorry you had to go through all of that.
When Owen was 10 months he starting running a fever that climbed daily . . . 101, 102, 103–to nearly 105. He grew increasingly lethargic and stopped having wet diapers. Finally they admitted him to the hospital. They did spinal taps, bone marrow draws, bone scans, countless blood tests. The doctors (all 4 of them) frequently began tossing around “leukemia” and I felt my heart shatter into a million pieces.
Thankfully it wasn’t leukemia . . . it was a long road, but he got better.
From that experience I know exactly what you described in your post–I knew had he not recovered, I too never would.
So relieved for you and Poo.
Nothing scarier than a sick child and a trip to the ER.
I’m relieved she is doing better.
Hugs to you.
And send me your addy. I need it.
Don’t make me stalk you.
Cuz I totally will.
This post is wrenching, heartbreaking and beautiful all at once.
I’m so glad the Poo is going to be OK. How terrifying for you all.
oh honey – poor you and poo… so glad she’s on the mend.. You keep getting that time alone. Boys totally don’t get how necessary it is!
I’m so glad to hear she’s doing well. I hope you’re feeling better, too.
Oh my God, what an awful experience, you poor thing. Best wishes to you and your babies.
Oh, gosh, I’m glad she is ok. Sounds like a scary trip to the ER.
I think we, women especially, are programmed to tell everyone we’re “fine”. When, really, we’re not.
Hoping you are feeling better too.
Heartbreaking indeed. And yet so beautifully written. Glad she’s feeling better. And yes, you — all of you — will be fine.
We all have tensions like that in our houses, and the guilt is huge. And moments like that remind us how valuable everyone is, but they do not make the pressures go away. However, honesty and talking about it do help. Saying “fine” makes things worse, I believe.
Beautiful post. Funny how our children make us stronger and yet more frail at the same time…
You don’t have to tell us, because we all have a lot of the same feelings. I’m so sorry you went through this. I’m hoping everyone is feeling better.
Oy Effing VEY, dude.
You’re killing me.
That last line? Fucking genius, Mrs. C.
Sigh. So glad she’s okay. Stay well.
Poor little Poo. And mama too.
I remember my second baby on the inside, looking at my first born and not being able to conceive of loving another child to that degree. She came and I did, then I did it again. The heart makes room; it just does.