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"Good Lord!" Wyman said. "What do you
think you're doing?"
Blood, I suppose, was running down my arm. It looked like paste to
me.
"Are you crazy?" my doctor asked me.
That didn't seem a very professional question. And frankly, I thought
it was up to Wyman to tell me. He was the diagnostician, after all; he
was the one so certain I was improving.
The maintenance crews were mowing the grass, and the humming of their
work mixed with the click inside my head, so I stopped listening to the
doctor. I was taken back to the hospital in an ambulance, even though
all I needed was a few stitches. I had just wanted to get my point
across. What was so wrong about that? There it was, every bit of who I
was: blood, panic, sorrow. Did I have to spell it out for him?
I was observed by internists and a psych team for forty-eight hours,
during which time I made certain to be extremely pleasant. I could do
that whenever I wanted to. I'd learned how in high school. The me
you want me to be, the girl who knows how to listen. It didn't take long
before the nurses were confiding in me about their love lives, just as
my friends had in high school. The dietitian took a special liking to
me. Her mother was dying; she closed the door so she could cry in front
of me. I didn't tell her about my own history, my mother running to her
car, my dear grandmother crying in her sleep.
But all the time I was in the psych ward, I might as well have been
made of ice. That first crying jag I'd had was surely an anomaly. In the
ward, I looked in the distance for mountains, but there were only meshed
windows, tall cabbage palms. The things I was most aware of were the
things I was unable to see: geraniums in pots along the windowsill, gray
and black checkers set out on drab boards, the mouths of the nurses as
they spoke to me, lips so icy white they seemed frozen.
When they released meprogress, again!I took a cab home. I found
Giselle pacing at the door, ravenous. This time Nina had forgotten her,
so I fed the poor creature tuna fish from the can and a saucerful of
milk. My diagnosis was panic disorder and depression, and I couldn't
agree more. Trauma-induced, they told me. Well, yes, that was true. Only
the trauma hadn't happened here in Florida, and it had nothing to do
with lightning.
When I let the cat out in the yard I could feel the change in the
atmosphere. It was the oddest thing. It was as though I were a cloud
instead of a human being. I knew it would start raining minutes before
it did. I could feel the charged atoms in the air, and I was quick to
call Giselle in before her coat got matted and wet. While I was getting
into bed there was a lightning strike nearly five miles away. The strike
split a pine tree in two and started a fire that burned several houses
down to ash. It was summer lightning, the kind that appears without
thunder, without a sign. But I didn't need anyone to tell me about it.
It was the one thing I could feel deep inside.
From The Ice Queen, pages 3-31 of the hardcover edition. Copyright © 2005 by Alice Hoffman. Reproduced with the permission of Little, Brown & Co.
At times, our own light goes out, and is rekindled by a spark from another person.
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