floor, which only complicated the situation. âStupid dog!â
At that point Joan jumped in, trying to calm poor Mochaâand meâand mopped up the mess on the tile. âGo sit down, Scott. Iâve got it.â
But the dog didnât get treated any worse than Joan, Taylor, and Grantâor the rude car insurance agent I cursed out after he wouldnât listen to my side of the problem.
âThat stupid son of a bitch!â Iâd mutter loudly, usually after a conversation hadnât gone well or Iâd had difficulty communicating with someone.
After Iâd calmed down, Joan told me this was one bad habit that hadnât changed since my injury, joking that she wished it had. Although Iâd been largely nicer and more compassionate since the accident, she said, I was just as short-tempered and even more intense than before the accident. She said we couldnât be sure, though, if it was me or the pain medication.
I wasnât immediately cognizant about the reasons for these outbursts, but thinking about them afterward, I realized I was feeling tortured about being lost within myself, not knowing if I was ever going to feel right again. The new Scott was battling with the shadow of the old Scott, whom I pictured as lost somewhere in the crevices of my gray matter. I was supposed to be getting better, but I felt I was actually getting worse in the sense that I still had no memories. Not a single one had come back as the doctors had promised. Meanwhile, I could sense my family was waiting, desperately hoping that the memories would return along with the man they had once counted on, the man Joan described as âthe rock, â who seemed to have disappeared into thin air.
The old Scott, Joan said, was a guy who knew what he wanted and would speak his mind, loudly, when the mood struck him, which tended to intimidate people, partly because of his size. I wanted to hear more about this man, whom Joan described as an âalpha male.â
âWhatâs an alpha male?â I asked.
âWatch the way people react to Tony Soprano,â she said, knowing that The Sopranos was still one of my favorite shows.
Telling me to disregard the Mafia ties, extramarital affairs, and violent problem-solving tactics he often employed, she explained that Tony and I had been uncannily similar in terms of our language and mannerisms and our approach to running the household, even down to buying the same car, a Chevy Suburban. In one episode Tony said something like âIt may be 2003 outside, but itâs still 1950 in this house.â Joan said that was true for us too in the old-school way we lived: Iâd always brought in most of the money, sheâd made decisions about where the kids went to school, and weâd never let Grant and his girlfriend lie kissing on the family room couch.
She also said that although Iâd retained Tonyâs strong family loyalty, I seemed much more sensitive and emotional these days. She didnât seem to be making a judgment about it, but I still wasnât sure I liked the feminine sound of that. Iâd heard men on TV say, âQuit acting like a girl,â or âYouâre crying like a woman,â and yet thatâs what I was doing. I wanted to be more like what my impression of a man was, the strong rescuer who put his fist down and solved everyoneâs problems. But at this point I couldnât even solve my own problems, so I guessed there wasnât much I could do about that. I was slowly coming to grips with the possibility that the old Scott wasnât going to reappear, and this was just the way things were going to be.
Chapter 7
W HEN JOAN TOOK ME to see neuro-ophthalmologist Thomas McPhee, we were hoping to get a more specific diagnosis for my partial loss of vision and, ideally, a cure.
âIs my sight going to return?â I asked him. âOr can I expect to wake up someday and all the vision will be
John Sandford
Moira J. Moore
Jennifer Donnelly
Affinity Konar
Oliver Queen
Jacqueline Winspear
Angela Conrad, Kathleen Hesser Skrzypczak
Jim Crace
Carole Mortimer
Brenda Trim, Tami Julka