It took only a few minutes for Hannah Klein’s assistant, Lori, to run the pregnancy test that confirmed my suspicions and settled my future. Steve’s and my final attempt, another intrauterine insemination (IUI, med-speak for an expensive “turkey baster”) with the last of his deposit, had failed. The end. The bitter end.
“Morgan,” Hannah declared, staring over her desk, her raspy New York voice boring through me like a drill, “given how this has all turned out, maybe you ought to just start considering adoption—if having a child still means that much to you.”
Hannah Klein was pushing seventy, a chain smoker who should have been dead a decade ago, and she unfailingly spoke the truth. Her gaze carried only synthetic solace, but I was probably her fifteenth patient of the day and maybe she was running low on empathy. Oddly, though, sitting there in her office, miserable, I felt strangely liberated. I adored the woman, a child of the Holocaust, with layers of steel like a samurai sword, but I also loved the thought of never again having to go through the humiliation of cowering in her straight-backed office chair, like a so-so student on probation waiting to receive my failing grade.
It was now time to come to grips with what I’d known in my heart for a long time. God had made me a theoretically functional reproductive machine that just wouldn’t kick over. Translation: no cysts, fibroids, polyps, no ovulatory abnorÂmalities. My uterus and Fallopian tubes were just fine, Steve’s sperm counts were okay, but no baby was swimming into life inside me.
Sometimes, however, reality asks too much. It’s not easy getting your mind around the idea that some part of your life is over, finally over. The baby part. To admit that it’s time to move on to Plan B, whatever that is. Such realizations can take a while, especially if you’ve been living with high-level hope, no matter how irrational.
“I frankly don’t know what else we can do,” she went on, projecting through my abyss of gloom. She was shuffling papers on her ash-strewn desk, white hair in a bun, fine-tuned grit in her voice. Upper West Side, a fifty-year fixture. She never wore perfume, but to me she always smelled faintly of roses mixed with smoke. Earthy. “Aside from trying in vitro.”
We’d already discussed that, but it was definitely the botÂtom level of Hell. Besides, I was running out of money, and spirit. And now, with Steve gone, the whole idea seemed moot anyway.
“So,” she concluded, “barring that, we’ve done everything possible, run every test there is, both on you and on your . . .”
“Steve,” I inserted into her pause. She seemed to delibÂerately block his name at crucial moments. Maybe she thought I could have done better. Maybe a nice solid dentist who owned a suit instead of some freelance photo jock who showed up for his sperm counts wearing khaki safari shirts. Well, let her deal with it.
“. . . and I can’t find anything. Sometimes, the body just won’t cooperate. We may never know why. You’ve got to face that. But still, adoption is always an option.”
Adoption. All along I’d told myself I didn’t have the courÂage, or the heart. Making movies is a full-time job, not leavÂing time to go filling out forms and jumping through hoops for years and years. And to cap it off, I was just two years short of the big four-oh and financially struggling—hardly an adoption agency’s profile of “ideal.”
But now, now I’d just discovered Carly Grove and the mirÂacle of Children of Light. So maybe there really could be a way to adopt a beautiful child with no hassles. Maybe it would simplify everything to the point I could actually pull it off. Could this be my Plan B? Then what if Steve came back? Could we be a family finally?
I wasn’t used to being that lucky. And I still wanted HanÂnah Klein’s thoughts, a reality test, which was why I pressed her on the point.
“Truthfully, do you think adopting is really a workable idea for somebody like me? Would I—?”
“Morgan, I know you’re making a film about the realities of the adoption process. We both realize it’s not easy.” She must have seen something needful in my eyes, because she continued on, adding detail, letting the well-known facts conÂvey the bad news. “As you’re well aware, finding a young, healthy, American baby nowadays is all but impossible. At the very least it can take years.” She was fiddling with some papers on her desk, avoiding my eyes. Then she stubbed out her cigarette in a gesture that seemed intended to gain time. “And even if you’re willing to take a baby that’s foreign-born, there still can be plenty of heartbreak. That’s just how it is.”
“I’d always thought so too,” I said. “It’s actually the unÂderlying motif of my picture. But today I had an incredible experience. I filmed an interview of a single woman, early forties, who just adopted a baby boy. It took less than three months and he’s blond and blue-eyed and perfect. I saw him, I held him, and I can assure you he’s as American as peach cobbler. The way she tells it, the whole adoption process was a snap. Zero hassles and red tape.”
“That’s most exceptional.” She peered at me dubiously. “Actually more like impossible. Frankly, I don’t believe it. This child must have been kidnapped or something. How old, exactly, was he when she got him?”
“I don’t know. Just a few weeks, I think.”
Her eyes bored in. “This woman, whoever she is, was very, very lucky. If what she says is true.”
“The organization that got the baby for her is called ChilÂdren of Light,” I went on. “That’s all I know, really. I think it’s up the Hudson somewhere, past the Cloisters. Have you ever heard of them?”
Dr. Hannah Klein, I knew, was pushing three score and ten, had traveled the world, seen virtually everything worth seeing. In younger years she was reputed to have had torrid liaisons with every notable European writer on the West Side. Her list of conquests read like an old New Yorker masthead. If only I looked half that great at her age. But whatever else, she was unflappable. Good news or bad, she took it and gave it with grace. Until this moment. Her eyes registered undisÂguised dismay.
“You can’t mean it. Not that place. All that so-called New Age . . . are you really sure you want to get involved in something like that?”
I found myself deeply confused. Were we talking about the same thing? Then I remembered Carly had said someÂthing about an infertility clinic.
“Frankly, nobody knows the first thing about that man,” Hannah raged on. “All you get is hearsay. He’s supposedly one of those alternative-medicine types, and a few people claim he’s had some success, but it’s all anecdotal. My own opinion is, it’s what real physicians call the ‘placebo effect.’ If a patient believes hard enough something will happen, some of the time it actually might. For God’s sake, I’m not even sure he’s board-certified. Do yourself a favor and stay away. Oftentimes, people like that do more harm than good.” Then her look turned inquisitive. “Did you say he’s providing children for adoption now? That’s peculiar. When did he start that?”
Was I hearing some kind of professional jealousy slipping out? Hannah Klein was definitely Old School to the core.
“He who?” I was trying to remember the name of the doctor Carly had mentioned. “You mean—”
“He says his name is . . . what? Goddard? Yes, Alex Goddard. He’s—”
My pager chirped, interrupting her, and she paused, clearly annoyed. I looked down to see a number I knew well. It had to be Lou Crenshaw, our aforementioned security guard. He’d been off today, but there was only one reason he would page me: some kind of news from Lenox Hill.
Maybe it was good news about Sarah! My hopes soared.
Or maybe it was bad. Please, dear God.
“I’m sorry, Dr. Klein. I’ve got to go. Right now. It could be a medical emergency.”
She nodded, then slid open the top drawer of her desk and handed me a list of adoption agencies. “All right, here, take this and look it over. I’ve dealt with some of them, letters of reference for patients like you.” She must have realized the insensitivity of that last quip, because she took my hand and squeezed it, the closest we’d ever come to intimacy. “Let me know if I can help you, Morgan. Really.”
Grasping the lifeless paper, I ached for Steve all over again. Times like this, you need some support. I finally glanced down at the list as I headed out. Sure enough, ChilÂdren of Light was nowhere to be seen.
Why not? I wondered. They’d found Kevin, a lovely blond baby boy, for Carly, a single woman, in no time at all. They
sounded like miracle-makers, and if there was ever a moment for miracles, this was it. Shouldn’t they at least have been given a footnote?
I wanted to stalk right back and demand to know the real reason she was so upset, but I truly didn’t want to waste a moment.
Lou had paged me from a pay phone—he didn’t actually have a cell phone of his own—and I recognized the number as belonging to the phone next to the Lenox Hill Hospital’s third-floor nurses’ station. When I tried it, however, it was busy, so I decided to just get in my car and drive there as fast as I could.
And as I battled the traffic down Broadway, I realized that by diverting my mind from my own trivial misery to the genuine tragedy of Sarah, I was actually getting my perspecÂtive back. That was one of the many things Sarah had done for me over the years.
All right. Sarah and Lou, who figure so largely in this, deserve a full-dress introduction, so obviously I should start by admitting I’d known them all my life. Lou was my mother’s half brother, three years younger than she was, who came along after my grandfather widowed my grandmother in a freak tractor rollover and she remarried a lifelong bacheÂlor neighbor. (I have old snapshots of them, and I can tell you they all were cheerless, beady-eyed American Gothics.) I’d arranged for David to hire Lou eight months earlier, not too long after I came to Applecore. At that time he’d just taken early retirement from the FBI, because of an event that shook us all up pretty seriously.
For some time now, Lou’s been a rumpled, Willy Loman figure, like a traveling salesman on the skids, shirts frayed at the collars, face tinted from a truckload of Early Times. Over the past fifteen years I’d watched his waist size travel from about thirty-three inches to thirty-seven, and I’d guess it’s been at least a decade since a barber asked him if he needed any off the top. Natalie Rose, his spirited, wiry wife of thirty-seven years, succumbed to ovarian cancer seven years ago last SepÂtember, and I know for a fact she was the one who bought his shirts, provided him with general maintenance.
My first memories of him were when he was a county sheriff in a little burg called Coleman, smack in the middle of Texas, some fifty-five long, dusty miles from the ranch where I grew up. When I was about fourteen, I remember he gave up on that and moved to Dallas, there to enter trainÂing for the FBI. He eventually ended up in New Orleans, and then, after Natalie Rose passed away and he more or less fell apart, he got transferred to New York, considered the elephant graveyard of an FBI career.
Probably the reason I saw him as much as I did as a kid was because of my cousin Sarah, his and Rose’s only child. She was six years younger than me, a lot when you’re kids, but we were very special to each other, had a kind of bonding that I’ve never really known with anybody since. We spent a lot of time staying at each other’s house, me the almost-grown-up, and truthfully, I loved her helplessly, like a little sister. I always wanted to think she needed me, which can be the most affirming feeling in the world. I do know I needed her.
She was now lying in a coma, and the way she got there was the tragedy of my life, and Lou’s. To begin with, though, let me say Sarah was a pretty blonde from the start, with sunÂshiny hair that defined her as perpetually optimistic—and who wouldn’t be, given the heads she always turned. (I was—am—blond too, though with eyes more gray than her turÂquoise blues, but for me blond’s always been, on balance, an affliction: Sexist film producers assume, dammit, that you’re a failed showgirl, or worse. I’ve actually dyed it brunette from time to time in hopes of being taken more seriously.) Sarah and I had always had our own special chemistry, like a comÂposite of opposites to make a complete, whole human being. Whereas I was the rational, left-brained slave of the concrete, she was a right-brained dweller in a world of what-might-be. For years and years, she seemed to live in a dream universe of her own making, one of imagination and fanciful states.
Once, when she was five, Lou hid in his woodworking shop for a month and made an elaborate cutaway dollhouse to give her at Christmas. But when I offered to help her find little dolls that would fit into it, she declared she only wanted angels to live there. So we spent the rest of the winter—I dropped everything—hunting down Christmas tree ornaments that looked like heavenly creatures. She’d swathe them in tinsel and sit them in balls of cotton she said were little clouds.
I always felt that just being around her opened my life to new dimensions, but her dream existence constantly drove Lou and Rose to distraction. I think it was one of the reasons he never got as close to her as he wanted, and his feelings about that were deep frustration, and hurt. He loved her so much, but he could never really find a common wavelength.
Finally she came down to earth enough to start college, and eventually she graduated from SMU in biology, then enrolled at Columbia for premed. By then she was interested in the workings of the brain, in altered states. I didn’t know if it was just more pursuit of fantasy, but at least she was going about it professionally.
Anyway, when Lou got transferred to New York, he was actually delighted, since it gave him a chance to be closer to her. We all managed to get together for family reunions pretty often, though Lou and Sarah were talking past each other half the time.
Then tragedy struck. She was just finishing her master’s, and had been accepted by Cornell Medical—Lou was burstÂing with pride—when he suggested they use her Christmas break to drive back down to Texas together, there to visit Rose’s grave. (I think he really wanted to show off his budÂding doctor-to-be to the family.) Sarah was driving when they crossed the state line into Louisiana and were side-swiped by a huge Mack eighteen-wheeler, which was in the process of jackknifing across a frozen patch of interstate. They were thrown into the path of an oncoming car, and when the blood and snow were cleared, a six-year-old girl in the other vehicle was dead.
The result was Sarah decided she’d taken a human life. Her own minor facial cuts—which Lou immediately had reÂpaired with plastic surgery—somehow evolved into a major disfigurement of her soul. All her mental eccentricities, which had been locked up somewhere when she started colÂlege, came back like a rush of demons loosed from some Pandora’s box deep in her psyche. She dropped out of school, and before long she was in the throes of a full-scale mental meltdown. She disappeared, and in the following two years Lou got exactly one card from her, postmarked in San FranÂcisco with no return address. He carried it with him at all times and we both studied it often, puzzling over the New Age astrological symbol on the front. The brief note announced she’d acquired “Divine Energy” and was living on a new plane of consciousness.
Then eight months ago, the State Department notified Lou she was missing in Guatemala. She’d overstayed her visa and nobody knew where she was.
So how did her “new plane of consciousness” land her in Central America? Was that part of the fantasy world she’d now returned to? Lou still worked downtown at 26 Federal Plaza, but he immediately took a leave of absence and, though he spoke not a syllable of Spanish, plunged down there to look for her.
He was there a month, following false leads, till he finally
ran into a Reverend Ben Jackson, late of a self-styled ProtÂestant ministry in Mississippi, who was one of the ardent new Evangelicals swarming over Central America. The man mentioned that some chicle harvesters in the northwest Peten Department of Guatemala had found a young woman in an old dugout canoe on the Guatemala side of the wide Usumacinta River, near a tributary called the Rio Tigre, lodged in amongst overhanging trees. She’d been struck on the head and presumably set adrift somewhere upriver, left for dead. She was now in a coma, resting at Jackson’s “Jesus es el Hombre” clinic, also located deep in the northwest Peten rain forest. He had no idea who she was.
Lou rented a car and drove there, almost a day on unpaved roads. It was Sarah.
Thus she was no longer missing; she was now the apparent victim of an attempted murder. However, rather than being helpful, the local policia appeared annoyed she’d been found, thereby reopening the matter. A blond gringa was out hiking somewhere she had no business being in the first place and tripped and hit her head on something. Where’s the crime?
Lou brought her back to New York, using a medevac plane supplied by the State Department, which, wanting no more CIA-type scandals of American nationals being murdered in Guatemala, cooperated with great dispatch.
After that, he needed a job that would afford him time flexibility, so he could be at her bedside as much as possible. David was looking for a security head, and I realized it would be a perfect match. Since we didn’t really need a full-time person, Lou could spend a lot of hours at Lenox Hill, watchÂing over Sarah.
She was just lying there now, no sign of consciousness, her body being kept alive with IV I’d go by to visit her as much as I could, and almost as bad as seeing the comatose Sarah was seeing the grief in Lou’s eyes. He would sit there at the hospital every day, sometimes several hours a day, fingering an old engraved locket that carried her high-school graduation picture, just rubbing it through his fingers like a rosary. We always made allowances when he wanted to take time off during one of our shooting schedules, figuring maybe he was helping her. . . .
As I turned east, to go crosstown, I thought again about Sarah’s condition. She and I looked a lot alike, dense blond hair for one thing, but to see her now you’d scarcely know it, since hers had been clipped down to nothing by the hosÂpital. Her cheekbones, however, were still strong, a quality now exaggerated by her emaciated state, and her eyes, which I had not seen in years, were a deep languid, turquoise blue. But seeing her lying there inert, being kept alive with tubes and liquids, wearing pressure pants to help circulate blood through her legs, you’d scarcely realize she’d been a strikÂingly beautiful woman before the accident.
What’s worse, from what I knew, the horrific brain trauÂmas that bring on a coma don’t automatically go away when you regain consciousness. If the coma is the result of a head injury, and if it lasts more than a few days, the chances of regaining all your mental functions are up for grabs. Lou once said there’s a scale of eight stages to full recovery. PeoÂple who have short comas can sometimes come out of them and go through those stages quickly—from initial eye moveÂment to full mental faculties. Others, who’ve been under for months or longer can require years to come back. Sometimes they can only blink their eyes to answer questions; sometimes they babble on incessantly. They can talk sense, or they can talk nonsense, incoherent fantasies, even strings of numbers. The brain is a complex, unpredictable thing. . .
I always thought about this as I took the elevator up to Lenox Hill’s third floor. The room where they kept Sarah was painted a pale, sterile blue, and made even more deÂpressing by stark fluorescent lights. Everything was chrome and baked-on enamel, including the instruments whose CRT screens reported her bodily functions. None of the instruÂments, however, had ever shown the brain activity associated with consciousness.
Lou was there when I walked in. He had a kind of wildness in his eyes, maybe what you get when you mix hope with despair. We hugged each other and he said, “She had a moÂment, Morgy. She knew me. I’m sure she did.”
Then he told me in detail what had happened. A nurse passing Sarah’s room had happened to notice an unexpected flickering on one of her monitors. She’d immediately inÂformed the nurses’ station, where instructions included Lou’s home number.
He’d grabbed a cab and raced there. When he got to her room, he pushed his way past the Caribbean nurses and bent over her, the first time he had hoped a conversation with her would be anything but a monologue.
“Honey, can you hear me?”
There was no sign, save the faint flicker of an eyelid.
It was enough. His own pulse rocketed.
“Where’s the damned doctor?”
While the physician was being summoned, he had a chance to study her. Yes, there definitely was some moveÂment behind her eyelids. And her regular breathing had beÂcome less measured, as though she were fighting to overcome her autonomic nervous system and challenge life on her own.
Finally an overworked Pakistani intern arrived. He proÂceeded to fiddle with the monitors, doing something Lou did not understand. Then without warning—and certainly attribÂutable to nothing the physician did—Sarah opened her eyes.
Lou, who had not seen those eyes for several years, caught himself feasting on their rich, aquatic blue. He looked into them, but they did not look back. They were focused on infinity, adrift in a lost sea of their own making. They stared at him a moment, then vanished again behind her eyelids.
He told me all this and then his voice trailed off, his deÂspair returning. . . .
“Lou, it’s a start. Whatever happens is bound to be slow. But this could be the beginning. . . .”
We both knew what I was saying was perilously close to wishful thinking, but nobody in the room was under oath. For the moment, though, she was back in her coma, as though nothing had changed.
I waited around until eight o’clock, when I finally conÂvinced myself that being there was not doing anybody any good. Lou, I later learned, stayed on till well past eleven, when they finally had to send security to evict him.
Okay, I’ve been holding out on the most important detail. The truth is, I hardly knew what to make of it. At one point when I was bending over Sarah’s seemingly unconscious face, her eyes had clicked open for just a fleeting moment, startling me the way those horror movies do when the “un-dead” suddenly come alive. Lou was in his chair and didn’t see it, didn’t notice me jump.
The last thing I wanted to do was tell him about it, and I was still shivering as I shoved my key into the Toyota’s igÂnition and headed for home. She’d looked directly into my eyes, a flicker of recognition, and then came the fear. She sort of moved her mouth, trying to speak, but all that came was a silent scream, after which her eyes went blank as death and closed again.
She knew me, I was sure of it, but she had looked through me and seen a reminder of some horror now locked deep in her soul.