Stephen Bums - The Wait
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The Wait
by Stephen L. Bums
Illustration by Janet Aulisio
The copy of People magazine on Alicias lap was standard waiting room fare, dog-eared and four months out of date. It had been open to the same place for several minutes, far longer than it would take anyone to read the single simply-worded paragraph captioning the two-page photo spread.
Is this your first time, dear?
Alicia blinked, then looked uncertainly at the woman sitting next to her. Excuse me?
The woman was what some of her friends would call a foxy granny. A trim and well-maintained late fifties, maybe even older, with long moonlight gray hair cascading over her shoulders. She was casually dressed in jeans, sandals, and a loose forest green silk blouse. Her long fingers worked a crochet hook with almost mechanical precision, pulling fine blue cotton thread from a bag at her feet and turning it into tighdy woven fabric.
She smiled, revealing a lifetimes worth of laugh lines around her eyes. I asked if this was your first time.
Alicia tried to make herself get with the program, and managed to produce an unconvincing smile. Uh huh. First time.
I thought so. Youve already been in for the amnio?
Her smile thinned. Yeah, and boy wasnt it fun?
And now youre waiting.
Thats right, Alicia agreed in a leaden tone. Im waiting.
She didnt really want to be there. Wouldnt have been, either, except that she didnt have much choice in the matter. Jacob Isaac Goldman, the owner of, creative force behind, and absolute authority over Goldman Architectural Design Associates had come down to her workroom bearing two fresh hot Kona coffeesher favorite kind. Hed made himself at home by sitting on one of her workbenches, and given her coffee and hearty congratulations on what he referred to as the blessed event.
J.I. was what she and everyone at GADA called him, and he was a terrific boss. Alicia was the firms Chief Nerd. That was even what hed had painted on her door in real gold leaf after shed called herself that one time. Her job was to keep GADAs multitude of computers running at peak efficiency, printers and plotters grinding out the paper, net connections stable, and to manage software installation and upgrades. A penny-pinching, elbow-jogging, computer-hating neoluddite like her previous boss could make a task like that an absolute misery.
J.I. made it the best job shed ever had. GADA was a great place to work. Nice people, the hottest new equipment, one hell of a dental plan. The bennies were grade A all the way.
Except that one had strings attached.
It used to take several weeks, the woman said. The waiting, I mean. Before that, this stuff wasnt even possible.
Progress marches on, I guess, Alicia replied glumly. Sometimes it marched right over top of you.
So youre what, almost into your second trimester?
Alicia frowned down at her squarish, fireplug body. I didnt think it showed.
The woman laughed. I had three, and Im here with my daughter Penny, whos on her third. Thats helped make me pretty good at reading the signs that say baby on board. She lowered her voice as if confiding a secret. Besides, youre being here gives me a pretty fair idea of how far along you are.
Yeah, I guess it would. Alicia glanced at her watch once again. Fifteen or so minutes to go. The waiting was getting to her, but she wasnt ready to deal with what would happen when it ended.
You seem kind of nervous. You shouldnt be. Theres really nothing to worry about.
That was just how J.I. had put it. GADAs health plan would pick up the tab for everything. After the baby was born she could take extended maternity leave. Or, he hoped since she was so dam indispensable, come back part or full time for a substantial pay premium. Come back with the baby in tow, of course. Bassinets were nothing new in the GADA offices, and she would also have free use of the first class daycare center right there in the building. Any help she needed managing both a job and a baby, all she had to do was ask.
GADA was a small enough firm for everyone to have a pretty clear understanding of her situation, the boss included. This was his gentle way of acknowledging her single parent status, and letting her know he would do everything he could to accommodate it.
There was, he repeated, nothing to worry about. She hadnt been worried.
Then.
Im not worried, Alicia said, trying to sound more confident than she felt. Just nervous.
Theres nothing to it. Even if a problem is found in the genescan, the therapy isnt that much different than another amniocentesis.
I know.
Is there a The woman hesitated a moment, even her crochet hook halting mid-stitch. Is there a special problem you think they might find?
Before Alicia could answer that, the woman continued on in a rush. Im not trying to be nosy, its just that Ive seen what they can do. In my daughter Pennys case theyre checking for Tourettes and Downs. Penny is fine, and so is her older brother Jimmy, but her younger brother Ricky has to live in a group home. The Tourettes is on Hals side. Hals her husband, and has a very mild case thats being treated with medication. Pennys first, Olivia, was normal. Her second, Donny, tested positive for Downs, had in-utero gene therapy, and came out just fine.
Im glad. Alicia shook her head. No, nothing like thatat least that I know of. The only reason Im here is because its a rule where I work.
They had just about finished up the Konas when J.I. had sighed, his smile fading. He looked Alicia in the eye, his expression turning somber. Youve maybe heard that I have a son who is institutionalized, he said in a soft, toneless voice.
I guess I might have, she admitted evasively.
Well, its true. He was Mandy and my second child, and his name is Leonard. We call him Lenny, but his name should really be Lesch-Nyhan Syndrome. Thats the name of the disease he has, and pretty much what he is. First, hes severely mentally retarded.
Alicia waited while J.I. paused for a sip of coffee, knowing from his face and posture that there was more to come. Worse.
J.I. shrugged. That wouldnt be so bad; he could have a life with that. But with LNS thats the least of his troubles. Hes in such constant physical pain that five times a day they have to give him injections of enough painkiller to knock down an elephant. Even still, he hurts.
Im sorry, Alicia said, feeling the raw but tightly controlled pain radiating from him while he told this.
God should be sorry. His shoulders slumped and he regarded her with haunted eyes. Ah, I dont mean that. But theres worse yet. Because of the LNS he suffers from an extreme form of something called autophagia. What that means is he bites and chews on himself. Unless hes restrained he gnaws on his own arms and fingers like a dog with a bone, would take them right down to the bone if we let him. He has to wear a plastic thing in his mouth, not only to keep him from doing that, but also to stop him from biting his own lips off.
Alicia could only stare back at him, unable to imagine living with such a terrible thing, and being able to tell about it so calmly.
He probably wont live much longer, and God willing, he wont. Eight years of pure unadulterated hell his life has been. Eight years of dumb drugged whimpering misery.
She opened her mouth to say something, anything, then closed it. What could she say?
J.I. flashed her a weary smile. I didnt come down here to visit and tell you all this to make you feel bad, or to scare you. I tell it so youll understand a rule I have, one that applies to you now. See, what caused Lennys condition was a mutation in a single X chromosome. The one bad rivet which made the temple of his body an uninhabitable ruin. Mandy and I had no idea that such a terrible thing could happen to a child of ours, that our love could create such tragedy. Our first child, our daughter Hannah, was just fine.
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