in the hospital.â
âWhat?â I exclaimed. âWhy? Is she all right?â
âShe thought the kitchen chair was the toilet,â she said. âThis morning, she mistook the kitchen chair for the toilet.â
That was hardly something to put somebody in the hospital for. When I was eight years old, my parents were having a dinner party. I was fast asleep and got up and peed in the kitchen trash can. They didnât put me in the hospital for that. âWhat else, Sylvia? Surely there is more to it.â
âThen she couldnât remember who I was,â she said. Her voice cracked, giving away more emotion than I would guess she wanted to. âAnd she didnât know who she wasâ¦so I called the doctor. He said to take her to the hospital.â
For the life of me I couldnât figure out why she hadnât told me this right away. But thatâs Sylvia for you. If she had told me as soon as she saw me, she would probably have been too emotional. Asking me about the biography gave her a chance to even out her emotions.
âI was wondering if you could go by and see her. We have no family. Except for each other,â Sylvia said.
And that pretty much said it all. Sylvia was all Wilma had, but, more important at the moment, Wilma was all Sylvia had.
âI donât want her to get too lonely. I canât stay there all the time, you know. Could you go by with the kids this afternoon? Sheâs at Wisteria General. She loves your children,â she said.
âWell, of course. My gosh, Sylvia. You donât even have to ask. Have you called Father Bingham? Iâm sure heâll send the nuns over to visit as well. Everybody in New Kassel loves Wilma. She wonât be alone.â
âWould you call him for me?â
âSure,â I said.
With that Sylvia walked away. She and Wilma were all that was left of their family. They had had an older brother who was long dead, and he had had two children who were both dead now too. I suppose he had had grandchildren, but I didnât think that they lived anywhere in Missouri, much less New Kassel.
I wasted no time in phoning Father Bingham, who in turn was as surprised as I was and said heâd be right over. I rounded up my kids and headed out to Wisteria General.
Hospitals can be places of great joy but also so depressing that you feel your spirit sink to your toes as soon as you enter the building. It just depends on your reason for being there. A birth or a surgery that saves a life, and you think the hospital is the greatest place ever. But that same building can turn into a dark vortex, sucking the life right out of you if youâre not there for a happy event.
Wilma lay in a hospital bed with one of those generic blue-mint gowns on, looking totally out of place and devoid of identity. I knew it was Wilma but it wasnât Wilma. I left Rachel in charge of Mary and Matthew in the waiting room, something I shouldnât have done because Mary will push her older sister to the limit of adolescent patience, but what else was I to do? They wouldnât let the kids come back to the room. It wasnât officially visiting hours.
I reached out to touch Wilmaâs arm and she jumped before I even made contact. She opened her eyes and looked around the room, finally resting her questioning gaze on to me. Her hair was down, long and silver, wrapping itself around oxygen tubes and IV lines.
âWilma?â I asked.
âDid you bring me something to drink?â she asked.
She thought I was a nurse.
âWilma, do you know who I am?â
Her blank stare answered the question for me. Tears welled up in my eyes and a lump instantly grew in the back of my throat. She was afraid, I could tell. She wasnât afraid because she didnât know me. She was afraid because somehow she knew she should have known me and didnât.
âItâs Torie,â I said.
âTorie,â she repeated
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