One
who flew into the coo coo’s nest
Richi looked
scared, slinking along the hallway wall to the locked door beyond which freedom
waited. He pretended to be a visitor, though the big nurse wasn't fooled,
shooing him back as she might a fly.
``He's
already tried that four times today,'' she said after stopping us as we started
to leave. ``But it's all right. We understand how lonely people get. He's
luckier than most. He gets visitors like you.''
She stared
straight at me and licked her lips, smearing the bright lipstick a little with
her tongue. Her eyes studied me like a butcher studying a cow before slaughter,
debating which part would sell best ground, and which part she'd like to take
home for an evening meal of her own.
I was scared,
too. Ever since I was a kid I'd been coming to places like this, nut houses
where one or another of my relations wound up. It ran in the family. Grandma's
father had died in a place like this. I was also nervous about leaving Pete
outside in the hall, our one rich relation who was growing rapidly impatient
with this side of the family. We've always been a pain to him, an embarrasing
element which he indured for his wife's sake.
``I'm glad
you think we're helping him,'' I said and tried to move away, but the nurse's
sharp red nails dug into my arm, holding me back.
``Are you his
so?'' she asked.
``His
nephew,'' I said with a shake of my head.
The nurse did
not enquire after Susan's relationship to Richi. I think she presumed Susan to
be my sister. We looked enough alike for that and her eyes said something to me
that increased my anxiety, her eyes asking that I come back, soon and often.
``You're a
real good nephew,'' the nurse said, and squeezed my arm, and then, very
reluctantly, let loose my arm, signalling for the guard to let us out.
Richi stood
back a few steps, his head down, his eyes closes, his hands shaking at his
sides. His brother had called and said we'd find the man here at Bergen Pines.
``I couldn't
put up with him anymore,'' Albie had said on the telephone. ``All he kept
talking about was killing himself.''
``Good bye,
Richi,'' I said.
Richi did not
move, except to shake his head, the salt and peper hair like that of an old
man's.
``Say good
bye, Richi,'' the nurse said, nudging him with her nail.
``Good bye,
Richi,'' Richi said.
It was an old
joke. One not funny even when Richi used to deliver it in a humorous way, part
of his overall less than funny sense of humor he carried around on his back
with his carpenter tools.
Only the
nurse laughed, and was still laughing even after the guard had opened and
closed the door. I heard her cackle even as we hurried away, that cackle dying
with the echoes of our step, and we charged out into the empty lobby where Pete
should have been.