The Best Sister
The days had seemed like they would never pass, but they had passed all the same, and it was Tuesday. I was in the waiting room with Hemi beside me; the same place I’d been since I’d kissed Karen in a curtained cubicle in pre-op, had seen her with the IV in her arm.
“Hey,” she’d told me. “I just thought of something. We totally should’ve asked Dr. Feingold to save my tumor for me. I could keep it in a jar. It could be like a little pet.”
“You forget,” I’d said, doing my best to smile. “The building has a strict no-tumors policy. Besides, what if we have company over, and somebody thinks it’s gefilte fish?”
Her face had twisted at that. “Oh, man. Gag me. I have nausea, you know.”
I’d squeezed her hand and said, “See you soon. Minus the passenger.”
“Yep. Because I need that like a hole in the head. Oh, wait.”
I’d choked out a laugh and kissed her, and then they’d wheeled her away and I’d come out here and tried not to think about what was happening, and what was going to happen. What I was going to hear. But when I’d tried to go back into the neutral zone where I’d been living for so long, I couldn’t get there.
The minutes ticked by, one eternal second after another, until they’d turned into hours. I sat in an armchair that should have been comfortable, except that nothing could possibly be comfortable now, and waited. Because that was what you did in a waiting room.
My mind tried to skitter down into panic, and I began to count the petals on the flowers in the huge framed watercolor opposite in a desperate attempt to reverse it, or at least to stop it. That wasn’t going to help. I needed to stay calm. For myself, and for Karen. When Karen opened her eyes again, she was going to see a sister who was smiling, who was telling her that everything was going to be all right, and who could make her believe it.
Surely it would be true.
I yanked my mind back to the flowers again. Nineteen. Twenty. Twenty-one.
“All right?”
I dragged my gaze to Hemi, and he must have seen what I was trying so hard to hide, because he was closing his laptop and setting it down beside him.
“It’s going to be all right,” he told me gently. One big hand smoothed over my hair, his lips brushed my forehead, and that was almost worse. I was going to cry after all if he kept doing that. I was going to lose it.
I pushed myself back from him. “I know. I know, because Dr. Feingold is the best. I’m all right. Really.” My hands were cold. Shaking. I pressed them together for warmth, for stability, like a desperate prayer.
How could two hours take this long? I looked at my watch. It hadn’t been two hours. It had been three. I battled the fear back once more, picked up a magazine, turned its pages without seeing a word, then set it down and went back to counting petals.
“I’ll go get you a cup of coffee,” Hemi said, and I nodded. Not that I cared.
That was why he was in the little anteroom, though, when Dr. Feingold came out at last, the green scrubs covering him from cap to toes. Not looking worried, and not smiling, either. Looking perfectly…neutral. But something in his face…
My legs trembled as I stood up and forced myself to walk to him. And if the minutes I’d waited had been long, this walk was a hundred miles.
“It went reasonably well,” he said, and my legs began shaking so badly, my knees were actually knocking together. My arms had gone around myself, and even my lips were trembling, my teeth wanting to chatter, the cold fear grabbing at my heart and lungs. I couldn’t get my breath. And still I waited.
“I’m still thinking we’re probably all right,” Dr. Feingold said. “But I’m sorry, Hope. It’s not quite as clear-cut as I could have wished. We’ll have to wait for the results.”
He was looking around now. Looking for Hemi, who was finally there, his arm going around me, holding me up.
“The biopsy is on its way to the path lab,” Dr. Feingold said. “No point in talking until there’s something to talk about, except to say that we got it out.”
“How long?” Hemi asked.
“Tomorrow,” the doctor said. “If it’s fast.” He exchanged a look with Hemi, and I knew what that look meant. That Hemi would manage, somehow, for it to be fast. So I would know. So I could cope, and help Karen cope, too.
But for now, all we could do was wait.
It wasn’t good, that long morning waiting with Hope for Karen’s surgery to be over. And the day following it was worse. Waiting, and wondering. About what the outcome would be for Karen, and what it would do to Hope if it wasn’t good.
If I’d thought my heart had been ripped out before, I hadn’t known the half of it, because now, that heart had been wrung out and squeezed dry. I did my best to work, to take my mind off it, but I still found myself with heaps of time to contemplate exactly why I’d always avoided getting emotionally involved. Because it hurt like hell.
We waited, and then we waited some more. All night in the critical care unit, because Hope wouldn’t leave, other than for brief fifteen-minute visits with her sister, and a dinner and breakfast I managed to persuade her into in the hospital cafeteria. She didn’t want to talk, but she seemed to want me there, so I stayed and held her hand, just as Eugene had told me to do. And when she finally fell asleep out of sheer exhaustion—I held her then, too. The only thing worse than being there, helpless to do anything but that, would have been not being there. So I stayed.