Read Happy Family Online

Authors: Tracy Barone

Happy Family (4 page)

C
ici is in the dream room.

There was blood. So much blood on her thighs and on the floor as the nurses lifted her onto the gurney. They were packing things inside of her to get it to stop and all she could say was “Solomon,
dov'è
Solomon?” She felt cold and light-headed and then sleep.

Cici dreams of Rapallo; huddled under the tent of Papa's arms on the hill. Looking down at the town, the
processione
wending through the city ways, heading toward the sea. Watching the huge gold cross rise up in the arm of one strong man, pass through hands and dip down into the harness of another strong man. There are the bright colors of people's clothes and the
festoni,
the winking of lit candles the women and children carry and will put out to sea. The last man bearing the cross walks slowly into the ocean. Papa's fingers, dyed with the stain he used to retouch a countess's piano, comb the hair away from her face. He hums a moony song, does his crooked dance, and carries her home. The warmth of Papa's body next to hers, reading until she is too sleepy to understand words, just the licorice tone of his voice.

She dreams of reindeer.

“What do you see,
cara
?” The empty clothesline, stones with moss growing in the cracks. “You see him there? With grass between his teeth?” “A reindeer?” Papa laughs. “It's your pony!” “Is he coming, Papa? Is he coming for my birthday?”

Running to the window, looking.
Torta di noce
with five candles on the table, handmade gifts. Opening the crinkly paper to find a white fur elephant with a red velvet collar. Mama saying, “
Buon compleanno,
Carlottina.” Running to the window, looking. No Papa to play monster-chase when the dinner dishes are washed. Running to the window, looking. No
compleanno
call, Papa's not home; day turning to night turning into day. Mama scrubbing the bathtub Papa uses to make his special drink in, then he takes the bottles with him on trips. Genny not letting her stop for an orange soda after school. Her wanting that soda so much, her tears, pounding Genny with her fists when she carries her up the path to their house. Running to the window, looking. Past Mama and a man in a black suit with a white collar who holds a Bible. Screaming, “I hate Papa. I hate Papa!” Sitting in the dark of her closet, holding the elephant, waiting to be punished. The knock. Mama's mouth pulled down at the corners like it does when she's angry, only she's not angry. Mama going down on her knees, “Do you understand what I am saying, Carlottina? It means we won't see Papa again, not ever.” Mama's mouth keeps moving, but Carlottina is thinking about her pony. If Papa is in heaven, how will she get him? What if the pony is hungry and all alone, trying to find her?

  

When Sol arrives at the hospital, he's told that his wife needed emergency surgery and is now in intensive care. By the time he learns exactly what the emergency was, and the remedy, he is standing over an incubator the size of a large breadbox, staring at the tiny, intubated form they say is his son. He puts his hand on the clear plastic; the fan of his fingers obscures the infant's body. The shape of the incubator reminds him of a dog carrier, or an iron lung. There must be noise in the room but Sol hears none of it. He expects to feel something great, and yet all he feels is a small heat on his hand. He wants to see Cici, to touch her. He wants to charge into the recovery room like a husband who is overcome by the notion that he could have lost his wife. He wants to behave like a man who knows he's about to lose his son.

Sol cannot bear to look at the baby, and he cannot bear to look away. He is a doctor, trained in life and death, and yet he's never experienced the crossing over—having to hold a patient's hand at the moment of death. Telling a man's wife, his child, that he did all he could do and his all was not enough. Leave that to the surgeons with their God complexes. Yet here he is, holding this child the only way he can, a thin shield the only thing and everything between them. Without seeming to move Sol, a nurse opens the incubator and takes the tube out of the baby's mouth. Disencumbered, he looks so peaceful, he could be perfect. Sol thinks he hears the nurse say, “I'm sorry.” There's a terrible moment where neither of them knows what to do. Shut the incubator? Wrap him up in a receiving blanket and transport him somewhere, wherever they take dead babies? They do an awkward shuffle. Now he hears the definitive cries of newborns; someone running water. Sol leans over the open container; brushing his hand across the infant's curled-up fingers that make a fist the size of a penny. They're already cool against the gush of warm air. “She's starting to come to,” he hears Dr. Dubin say.

Before Cici realizes where she is and that her throat is so sore from being intubated it's hard to speak, she's trying to say,
“Dov'è il mio cavallino?”

Cici swats the oxygen mask that's on her face. Someone's hands put an ice chip in her mouth. When she focuses enough to feel the crashing pain in her head, to understand that it's not limited to her upper portions and seems to be everywhere at the same time, she's waving her arms and using whatever voice she has to call out for her baby.

If Sol had arrived at the hospital just five minutes later, he would have raced directly to Cici's bedside to console and support her. But he catches Dubin before the doctor's had a chance to tell Cici. As much as Sol hates being the bearer of horrible news, as much as he's frightened about what this will do to his wife, he couldn't live with his cowardice if he let another doctor say what he is going to have to say now. He strokes her hand over the IV catheter. She struggles to sit up when he says, in response to the question she's been asking the ICU nurse over and over, “We lost him. We lost the baby.” She blinks and shakes her head. “My baby, I must see my baby.” It is clear that Cici will not rest until he honors her request, and, despite this not being protocol, Sol talks Dubin into allowing the nurse to get their son ready to bring to his mother like any other newborn. He stops her; it is his burden to bear, this small, heavy thing. Sol cannot look at Cici's face as she pulls back the blanket and clasps the baby to her chest in anguish. But he hears the deep guttural moan she makes, like a wounded animal, and then the great
O
of a wail that is the sound of all hope and joy being extinguished. It is a sound he will never forget. When the nurse gives her more medication, Sol stays with her. He talks softly and strokes her head as she slips in and out of consciousness. He exists within this vacuum for as long as they'll let him: five minutes per hour, per hospital regulations.

Sol gets to know every inch of the waiting room. It looks the same as the one at St. Vincent's except he's never had to wait there, looking at the happy faces of a family who have just learned whether it's a girl or a boy. When he's called into intensive care for the last time that evening, Cici is sleeping. He looks at the space between her parted lips; he can't begin to describe why that gap fills him with both dread and longing.

When Sol gets home, he realizes he hasn't had anything to eat since his morning roll. That feels like years ago. Now that Sol's away from the hospital, his brain goes into overdrive. He feels like he did the night before a final exam: too hyper to sleep, brain whirring through notes, charts, definitions. As in
placenta previa:
implantation of the placenta over or near the internal opening in the cervix, through which the baby must pass to be born.

Sol's drawn to the simplicity of bread. If it were Wonder Bread, it would be better, as that was verboten in his mother's house and thus a great goyish delicacy. But Cici buys bread only at the local bakery. He cuts two slices off the loaf and closes it back up in its bag with its red twisty. He puts the bread in the toaster and depresses the button, takes the butter out of the fridge, opens a drawer and grabs a butter knife. Dubin didn't need to be condescending, giving a lengthy explanation of the differences between total and partial placenta previa. He talked to Sol like he was a technician, not a physician of equal stature. Goddamned surgeons.

Nobody needed to hand-hold him. Once Dubin said they couldn't stanch Cici's bleeding, there were only two possible outcomes. When Sol heard she was alive, he didn't dwell on what had had to be done in order to keep her alive. He didn't need justifications, he needed to see her, right then, right there. Now, while he's listening for the pop of the toaster, he replays it all. The logic of the C-section, the medical necessity of a hysterectomy—anything to stop the bleeding, to save the mother; it's always the mother first and that's the way he'd want it, he'd insist. The mother. They'd told him every part of “the mother” they'd cut out, listed a scrum of side effects and postoperative risks—hair loss stood out, for some reason. Cici's beautiful blond hair, he can't imagine.

The toast pops up, still pale. He presses the lever down again. Sol hates surgeons the way he hates lawyers. There was something smug beneath Dubin's concern. The way he tossed out
cesarean hysterectomy
like a towel he'd used to wipe himself off with between tennis sets. How dare Dubin declare that discussions with Sol's wife regarding the ramifications of her surgery were best left to the attending physician. As if Dubin knew Cici, as if he were better equipped to soften the blow than Sol. Too emotionally involved—that's what Dubin had said. Of course Sol's emotionally involved. It's his wife. He wasn't going to let them say,
Sorry, Mrs. Matzner, your
baby died and oh, by the way, we had to remove your uterus.
Cici had barely had a moment to absorb today's loss; to immediately follow that with the news that she could never have any more children would be too devastating in her fragile state. So Sol played the “professional courtesy” card and prevailed on Dubin to allow Cici some time to recover before she was told about the hysterectomy. He double-checked to make sure this instruction was noted on Cici's chart—Sol had been around hospitals long enough to know you can't be too careful, can't follow up enough. He'd spoken to the head nurse and found out which nurses were on the next day and talked to them personally about how to handle Cici:
She will wake up and have questions about the pain, the stitches—they had to make ugly vertical and horizontal cuts—and the bandages. She'll be frightened and forget her English.
He'll be there first thing in the morning to help her through it, answer her questions.

Sol is pulled from his thoughts by a waft of acrid smoke. Nothing works anymore, nothing's made of quality, this piece-of-shit toaster. Now he's sounding like his father and that makes him so angry that, without knowing it, he's squeezed the now-burned toast in his fist. It rains black crumbs when he opens his hand.

Sol will be vigilant this time. He watches the minute hand on his Bulova—a present from his parents when he graduated from Yale. When the golden toast rises, the Bulova says it's been three minutes and two seconds. Their son lived for two minutes and forty-nine seconds—less time than it takes to hard-boil an egg; less time than it took Sol to make and eat his two pieces of toast.

On his way to the bedroom, Sol stops outside the baby's room. The door's ajar; the phonograph makes a whirring noise and is hot when Sol switches it off. He has the impulse to clean out the nursery so there's nothing left when Cici gets home. He'd enjoy the busywork, but is that what she would want? What's worse, to have all vestiges of baby gone without a trace or to come back to things exactly as they were before? Sol can't afford to make a mistake at this point—better to do nothing than do the wrong thing.

The bag. Cookie must have taken Cici's overnight bag with them to the hospital because it wasn't in the kitchen. Why didn't he listen to her? Would it have made any difference? Sol reminds himself to call Cookie first thing and tell her not to come in. There's so much to take care of: he'll have to call work, make arrangements with his partner; he needs to reschedule the man about the septic tank, find a neighborhood kid to mow the lawn. Lists usually bolster Sol, but he's beyond easy comfort. His legs are suddenly so heavy they threaten to buckle from exhaustion and he barely makes it to the bed. There's a lump underneath his back—he's lying on Cici's fur elephant. He pulls it out and it smells achingly of her. He pictures Cici's yearning eyes looking up at him, asking for their baby. He had promised her he would give her everything; it is too cruel, too painful that he's now helpless to give her the one thing she most desires. He folds his arms over the elephant's trunk and collapses into dreamless sleep.

S
olomon, when do they say we can start again, when we can make another baby?” Cici's pulled off her oxygen mask and is looking up at Sol. It's her second day in intensive care and her voice is weak.
“Quando?”
she asks. Her innocence cuts Sol and suddenly he can't respond with rehearsed words. He takes a deep breath, like a swimmer who knows he's going to be underwater for a long time, and tells her the truth. “Sweetheart,” he says, stroking her hair, fighting to keep his own voice strong, “I am so sorry.”

Cici refuses the shot to dry up her milk and the medications Sol and Dr. Dubin try to get her to take for her confused hormones. She's moved down to the maternity ward, and whenever a baby cries, she starts to lactate. She falls into fits of weeping that threaten her stitches. She barely eats. She clutches at Sol's neck one moment and then talks about how they'll have a baby girl next, he'll see. “Give her time. Time and the Lord's love can heal all wounds, physical, emotional, spiritual,” the hospital chaplain tells Sol. Days pass in the hospital and all Sol can hang on to is things will be better once Cici is home, in her own surroundings. She will adjust. Time, it appears, is all he can give her.

When Sol makes it back to their house, the front lawn is spattered with newspapers and the air inside is hot and smells of garbage. Mail litters the hallway. Sol gathers and organizes, settling into the den to pay bills. How did it get to be the week before Labor Day? It's that last-gasp-of-summer, when families pack up coolers and kids and go to the Jersey Shore or Fire Island. The house seems to groan with neglect, and it's not the only thing groaning. Sol can hear the muzzled Jew inside of him saying,
Bury your child, for Christ's sake, it's time already.
He'd spoken to the hospital chaplain about a funeral but didn't want to go ahead with arrangements until Cici was well enough to attend.
It's disrespectful;
the voice turns into his father growling at him when he asks if they can wait a day for Grandma Minnie's funeral. Sol doesn't want to miss capture the flag at summer camp. “I don't care if you have to miss the president's bar mitzvah, you don't question the word of God. When He says bury, you bury. You think I'm tough? I'm nothing compared to God. I'll die, but Him? You have to answer to Him forever.”

But now it's become clear that Cici won't be up for a funeral even if he waited another week, when she'll be released from the hospital. So he makes arrangements for the plot and a service. The procedural part is easy, but no one wants the task of calling family to invite them to a funeral. Moot point here. In his fantasy, Sol has a family like the Cleavers—people who resolve disagreements with handshakes and promises they keep. Family members who swoop in bearing starchy foods and know better than to ask you every two seconds how you're doing. The family you want to get rid of until you're alone and realize how much better you felt when they were around. Sol can't allow himself to indulge in this kind of illusion, because then he'll get in touch with the rage he feels. In reality, Sol's parents disowned him when he married Cici. As if they had ever owned him. No question, he's better off without them and their narrow-minded bullshit in his life.

The story of how and why Sol was cut off from his parents is fodder for a joke: “Did you hear the one about the Jew who converts to Catholicism in order to marry the Italian bombshell?” But Sol prefers to think about the how-we-met part. Mainly because it makes him seem more adventurous, more heroic, than he actually is.

Sol met Carlotta D'Ameri because he was lost. He was in Milan attending a radiology conference, got confused, and stumbled into the Sierra Milano—a yearly textile convention housed in the same building. To escape the crowds of well-heeled Italians, Sol dipped into a booth with rolls of leather on display. It smelled of tobacco and tannin and then, suddenly, a deep, plummy scent, like fig or pomegranate. Sol saw a young woman, dressed in white, laughing and waving her hand at something a man in a suit had just said. She laughed like she smelled. Sol wanted to make her laugh like that. All he could think to do was offer her his hand. “My name is Solomon. Dr. Sol Matzner.” He points to the
Dr.
before his name on the identification card around his neck. “Apparently, I'm lost.”

“Carlotta D'Ameri,” she said, pointing to her solar plexus and then reaching for the map he'd forgotten he was clutching in his hand. Their first touch came with a spark of static, a minor electric shock that caused them to recoil at the same time.

A frowning man, apparently the woman's boss, appeared and spoke to her in a tone that made it clear she needed to get back to work. Sol did everything short of charades to indicate that he was lost and looking for help. “Marco D'Ameri.” The frowning man said his name as though he were concluding a conversation, not beginning one, and directed Sol toward an exit sign.

Sol mingled with his fellow radiologists for a short time and then went back to Carlotta's booth on his lunch break. Later, after his conference ended, he snuck her out of the Sierra Milano and across the street to a sandwich bar. She ate prosciutto and finished with cherry gelato she made him taste off her spoon and, later, her lips, when she turned her head so the kiss intended for her cheek became the real thing. When Sol went back to his hotel room, he smelled her perfume on his shirt, or maybe it was just memory enveloping him, making him want to reexperience every detail of her. Sol felt sick, a desirous, can't-eat kind of sick. He had to see this girl again. He had to know everything about her.

Sol extended his stay in Milano and was undaunted by Carlotta's warning that her family would not approve of her dating anyone who wasn't Italian. He could handle Marco D'Ameri; he was an MD, top of his class at Harvard, an all-around stand-up guy. At least, this was the argument Sol made to Cici's stepfather in the cavelike darkness of his library. Marco D'Ameri poured him a tumbler full of brown liquor. Without understanding a word of Marco D'Ameri's terse, rapid-fire Italian, Sol understood exactly what he was saying.

It was 1959, and Sol was no stranger to anti-Semitism. Although they hadn't lost family in the Holocaust, Sol's parents adopted the “never forget” mentality of survivors. Sol, however, was pragmatic about religion. What was the point in arguing about God when you could never prove or disprove His existence? And while his parents assumed that he'd marry a Jewish girl, religion was the last thing Sol thought about when it came to women. He would never have guessed that it would become one of the major issues of his life.

It should have been easy for Sol to return to America and forget about an eighteen-year-old Italian girl with a fascist stepfather. He'd known her for only a few days, and he wasn't a thrill-of-the-chase kind of guy. He pursued women in a haphazard, unfocused way; if they said yes, Sol just didn't say no. But Carlotta D'Ameri was different. She vexed him. He might have been able to dismiss her as a limited, if beautiful, distraction, but her innocence was spiked with a sensuousness that made him feel off balance. The very act of his wanting her said yes, and while it made him feel out of control, he wanted to say yes again.

Upon his return to the States, Sol took on more hours at work in order to negotiate more vacation time to get back to Milano to see Cici. From their first cherry-laced kiss, the connection was strongly physical. The language barrier intensified the need for touch, and Cici moaned, she sighed, she giggled. To her, it was all play; she wanted to explore, to discover, to wander in their sexuality like a garden. She'd nip and lick his nipples, ask him to roll a cold bottle of wine up and down her back and over her calves to see if it felt good-cold or bad-cold.

Sol was overwhelmed at first. Thrown off by her contradictions—a girl who was scared to get into an old elevator because it creaked but would defy her parents and sneak into a near stranger's hotel room? A girl who wept if she thought her hair looked bad but who had not an ounce of self-consciousness about her naked body? A virgin who was rapacious, so open to anything pleasurable as long as they avoided the Vatican's dreaded “penetration” that it made him feel prudish by comparison. Cici would surrender completely to him, to his touch; “Tell me,” she would say and he would look into her eyes and tell her to come, and she would, again and again. It made him feel like the most powerful man on earth.

If Sol was shy, Cici was encouraging. She told him she loved his feet and that his red pubic hair was like the Olympic flame over his big “generals.” She laughed when anything struck her as funny, often something he said or did. When they were again in the thrall of geography instead of each other, Sol worried that the novelty would wear off and she'd wake up one morning and say, “What was I thinking?” When she didn't, when distance only intensified their yearning, Sol saw
Fortunella
and
La Dolce Vita
six times each and developed intense cravings for risotto. During their long separations they wrote near incoherent letters back and forth, and on occasion he could telephone Cici at her cousin Paulo's for a few expensive but tender minutes.

Sol didn't tell his colleagues at work about Cici but had every intention of marrying her as soon as possible. His time frame accelerated because it became harder and harder for him to leave Italy, and he spent more and more time when he was apart from her thinking about how he could lose her. Sol had made Cici tell him about her other boyfriends: the altar boy, the Moto Guzzi guy in high school who felt her up; an artist friend of cousin Paulo's who took her to see Piero Manzoni's work and showed her how to give a hand job. Sol couldn't bear the thought of another man going where he'd gone or, worse, where he'd yet to go. Sol wanted to wake up in the morning and smell her hair on his pillow. He was tired of waiting. He had to do something to placate her parents.

Both Sol and Cici were certain that her stepfather would never allow them to marry. And Cici couldn't bear the thought of causing her mother pain. Catholicism was a borrowed dress Cici had worn for so long, it conformed to her curves. It was what she knew, thrust upon her by Marco D'Ameri. He would lecture the girls on the value of developing the habit of worship. By participating in the external rituals, he said, they would foster internal belief, which was but a step away from the carrot of all carrots: faith. Regardless of the depth of her faith, one thing was certain: she had to be married in a Roman Catholic church.

Sol had converted without telling her, sure that Cici's family would accept him as a Catholic. If he'd stayed a Jew, Sol wonders now, would she still have married him? Would she have said,
To hell with my anti-Semitic fascist family, I'm taking the radiologist
? Then he would have been able to call his parents. Or not. They might have reacted the same way because he'd married a shiksa. Regardless, his conversion was the ultimate expression of his love, the sign that Cici needed in order to leave her mother, her sisters, and her country for him.

It took eight months for Sol to become immersed in Catholicism, which required believers to embrace strange, mystical views such as resurrection, virgin birth, and accepting Jesus Christ as the Son of God. Sol was trained to think rationally, and these notions defied reason. Sol had long felt that, great writers and thinkers aside, believers were, in general, stupider than nonbelievers. It followed that Jewish intellectuals were superior to non-Jewish intellectuals. But Christian writers had a profound understanding of human behavior, much better than the nihilism that was popular when Sol was in college; Nietzsche and Marx were depressing. But there was something about the Roman Catholic Church that appealed to the last bastion of his nonpracticing Jewishness—his liberalism. It strove to rise above ethnic differences, attempted egalitarianism.

If Sol had told his parents he was converting, at best they'd have seen it as a complete betrayal of them. At worst, it would have sent his mother into the hospital with a nervous collapse—something that hadn't happened since after Sol was born, precipitated by the constant criticism of her live-in mother-in-law and her belief that her baby was ugly and needed to be taken out facedown in the baby carriage. She reminded anyone who'd listen that she was too young to be a mother and how having Solomon (“Red hair's not from my side of the family”) had almost killed her. If he ever showed anger toward his mother she would lash out at him and then dissolve into tears, precipitating an apology and reinforcing his fear that his actions could cause her to break down again. From an early age, Sol was taught to proceed with caution in matters of bad news. He hadn't discussed his personal life with his mother since he was stood up for the prom; he was waiting for the right time. Of course there was never a right time, and the longer he waited, the easier it was to put off.

Sol was aware that he fit the stereotype of the self-hating Jew. He would never deny that he was Jewish, but he didn't offer up the information either. Why should he? He considered himself an American first and foremost. He liked cultural aspects of being a Jew, things like rugelach and Lenny Bruce. But he cringed at his family's brand of Judaism; his mother treated going to temple like a competitive sport, Grandma Minnie kept the Passover carp in the bathtub, and the family's favorite game was Who's Jewish, as in “Did you know that Abraham Lincoln was one-quarter Jewish?” He loathed how his father made him glue down their Pontiac's hubcaps so they couldn't be stolen and guess how much his steak would have cost in a restaurant. The Judaism Sol learned in Hebrew school wasn't any better. His teacher, a bald man who wore a Moshe Dayan eye patch, steered all lessons to the Holocaust, and constantly discussed how the Nazis had made lampshades and soap out of Jews.

In Bridgeport, Connecticut, Sol's father, Bernard Matzner, was considered a natty dresser; he wore rum getups, and people in the neighborhood called him Flash. He had an abiding faith in DMSO ointment—a remedy for joint ailments of horses—proclaiming it a wonder drug. Sol had to rub the stinky stuff on his chest for colds, slather it on cuts and bruises, even gargle with it for a sore throat. In sixth grade, Sol broke down the chemicals in DMSO and proved that it had no effect on humans. The project won the state science fair but did nothing to convince Bernard Matzner, even when his son brought home a blue ribbon and a check for twenty-five dollars. Sol's father believed the Chosen Son should lay off the science experiments and spend time in his women's-wear shop learning the physics of how to fold a sweater so it didn't crease.

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