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Authors: Andre Dubus

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BOOK: Broken Vessels
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While the state trooper was cutting and we were talking, I saw Luis Santiago on a stretcher. People were putting him into an ambulance. Lying in the ambulance and watching Luis I knew something terrible had happened and I said to the trooper:
Did that guy die?
I do not remember what the trooper said, but I knew then that Luis was either dead or soon would be. Then I went by ambulance to a clinic in Wilmington where Dr. Wayne Sharaf saved my life, and my wife Peggy and my son Jeb were there, then an ambulance took me to Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, where they operated on me for twelve hours.

Luis Santiago said what were probably his last words on earth to me:
Por favor, señor, please help, no hablo Ingles
. This was around one o'clock in the morning of 23 July 1986. I was driving north on Route 93, going from Boston to my home in Haverhill, Massachusetts. The highway has four lanes and I was driving in the third. That stretch of road is straight and the visibility on 23 July was very good, so when I saw the Santiagos' car I did not have to apply the brakes or make any other sudden motions. It was ahead of me, stopped in the third lane, its tail lights darkened. I slowed my car. To the right of the Santiagos' car, in the breakdown lane, a car was parked and, behind it, a woman stood talking into the emergency call box. Her back was to me. I was driving a standard shift Subaru, and I shifted down to third, then second, and drove to the left, into the speed lane, so I could pass the left side of the Santiagos' car and look into it for a driver, and see whether or not the driver was hurt. There were no cars behind me. Luz Santiago stood beside the car, at the door to the driver's side, and her forehead was bleeding and she was crying. I drove to the left side of the road and parked near the guard rail and turned on my emergency blinker lights. Because of the guard rail, part of my car was still in the speed lane. I left the car and walked back to Luz Santiago. She was still crying and bleeding and she asked me to help her. She said:
There's a motorcycle under my car
.

I looked down. Dark liquid flowed from under her engine and formed a pool on the highway, and I imagined a motorcycle under there and a man dead and crushed between the motorcycle and the engine and I knew I would have to look at him. Then, for the first time, I saw Luis Santiago. He came from the passenger's side, circling the rear of the car, and walked up to me and Luz, standing beside the driver's door and the pool of what I believed was blood on the pavement. Later I learned that it was oil from the crankcase and the abandoned motorcycle Luz had run over was no longer under her car. Luis was Luz's brother and he was young and I believe his chest and shoulders were broad. He stopped short of Luz, so that she stood between us. That is when he spoke to me, mostly in his native tongue, learned in Puerto Rico.

I do not remember what I said to him, or to Luz. But I know what I was feeling, thinking: first I had to get Luz off the highway and lie her down and raise her legs and cover her with my jacket, for I believed she was in danger of shock. Then I would leave Luis with Luz and return to her car and look under its engine at the crushed man. We left her car and walked across the speed lane to the left side of the highway. We did not have to hurry. No cars were coming. We walked in column: I was in front, Luz was behind me, and Luis was in the rear. At the side of the road we stopped. I saw headlights coming north, toward us. We were not in danger then. If we had known the car was going to swerve toward us, we could have stepped over the guard rail. I waved at the headlights, the driver, my raised arms crossing in front of my face. I wanted the driver to stop and help us. I wanted the driver to be with me when I looked under Luz's car. We were standing abreast, looking at the car. I was on the right, near the guard rail; Luz was in the middle, and Luis stood on her left. I was still waving at the car when it came too fast to Luz's car and the driver swerved left, into the speed lane, toward my Subaru's blinking emergency lights, and toward us. Then I was lying on the car's trunk and asking someone:
What happened?

Only Luis Santiago knows. While I was in Massachusetts General Hospital my wife told me that Luz Santiago told our lawyer I had pushed her away from the car. I knew it was true. Maybe because my left thigh was the only part of my two legs that did not break, and because the car broke my right hip. When the car hit us, Luis was facing its passenger side, Luz was between its headlights, and I was facing the driver. In the hospital I assumed that I had grabbed Luz with my left hand and jerked and threw her behind me and to my right, onto the side of the highway. That motion would have turned my body enough to the left to protect my left thigh, and expose my right hip to the car. But I do not think the patterns of my wounds told me I had pushed Luz. I knew, from the first moments in the stationary ambulance, that a car struck me because I was standing where I should have been; and, some time later, in the hospital, I knew I had chosen to stand there, rather than leap toward the guard rail.

On 17 September 1986 I left the hospital and came home. In December, Dr. Wayne Sharaf talked to me on the phone. He is young, and he told me I was the first person whose life he had saved, when he worked on me at the clinic in Wilmington. Then he said that, after working on me, he worked on Luz Santiago, and she told him I had pushed her away from the car. I thanked him for saving my life and telling me what Luz had told him. I said:
Now I can never be angry at myself for stopping that night
. He said:
Don't ever be. You saved that woman's life
. Perhaps not. She may have survived, as I have. I am forever a cripple, but I am alive, and I am a father and a husband, and in 1987 I am sitting in the sunlight of June and writing this.

1987

S
KETCHES AT
H
OME

10 December 1986

S
O MANY OF
the nurses did this so frequently that I believe they are taught to do it. You ask for something: a pitcher of iced water, a cup of juice. The nurse is friendly, even affectionate: Sure, Andre; can I get you anything else? She leaves. Her return is usually not quick. She has other patients. Then she comes into the room, and to your bed. I always thought of it as the room, and only sometimes my bed. She places the pitcher or the cup of juice on the wheeled table beside the bed. There is another affectionate exchange: she announces your beverage or apologizes for taking so long and you thank her, and you mean it too. She is friendly and competent and you could not get through the hours without her — you could survive, but it would be terrible — and you are more thirsty than you ever were outside the hospital, save after a long workout in hot weather. She leaves. You reach for the pitcher or cup and do not touch it. You roll toward the table and extend your arm; if you are in traction you cannot truly roll; you just turn a bit. You still cannot touch the plastic pitcher or paper cup. With one hand you hold the table and pull it toward you, then turn it this way or that until its angle brings your drink closer. Finally you can touch the side of the vessel, carefully turn it in a series of partial circles until it is within range. Then you hold it and pour from it or bring it to your lips. This is also true of the small paper container that holds your pills. The nurses place them, too, just out of reach. Not every time, but enough of the time, enough. Hospital challenge.

Today is the tenth of December, nineteen eighty-six. Exactly twenty-five years ago I finished the first draft of a novella called
One Face in the Morning
; I was a first lieutenant, executive officer of the Marine Detachment aboard the carrier
USS Ranger
. Today at home in a hospital bed I phoned the Phoenix Bookstore in Haverhill and spoke to my friend, Jack Herlihy, who is the store's co-owner. I asked him to order Thomas McGuane's book of stories; he already had it at the store. We bantered for a while, then he said someone had just come in and was fondling one of my books and wanted to tell me hello. It was the doctor who treated me at the hospital in Wilmington, north of Boston and a short distance south of the place on Route 93 where, on 23 July, the car hit me and Mr. Santiago, who died soon afterward, that night. They worked on me at Wilmington and that is where my wife, Peggy, and my son, Jeb, first saw me. On the phone, the doctor told me they saved my life at Wilmington, then sent me to Massachusetts General. So in my December bed at home I asked him what I was like: Was I bleeding a lot? Screaming? I was not bleeding so much, he said, but I was in shock and they put inflatable pants on me. I said I remembered the sound of them, but nothing else. He said they were to bring up my blood pressure; it was the shock I was in. And no, I wasn't screaming. I was talking. I told them a lot about the accident. (Shock kept me for a while from pain; I do not remember when the one left, and the other moved in.) The doctor said on the phone: The other fellow passed on, as you know. But you saved the woman's life. I asked him if I told him that in the clinic at Wilmington. No, he said, it came out in the wash later on. She told me. I was with her all night. (It was her brother the car killed. He was visiting her from Puerto Rico. On the highway, standing beside their car that had struck an abandoned motorcycle, he said to me:
Señor, por favor, please help, no hablo Ingles
. That is all he said to me.) I told the doctor the woman had told my lawyer someone pulled her out of the way; she could not remember who. I had suspected and hoped I had done it: she stood between her brother and me and he was in line with the passenger side of the car that hit us, so he was near the center of the road; I was in front of the driver's side and near the edge of the road; when the car hit us, she was on the ground beside the road. No, the doctor said, that night she said you pulled her out of the way. So you saved a life that night. I said: So did you. Yes, he said. I told him I would like to buy him a drink. I had never, I said, bought a drink for anyone who had saved my life. I told him at Massachusetts General a male nurse and a doctor had saved my life one night when an artery burst in my lower left leg, before it was amputated, but I was in the hospital for a long time after that and could not buy them a drink. Then I told him why I had wanted to be the one who had saved the woman: because now that I was certain, I could never be angry at myself for stopping and going out on the highway to them, and their car. Yes, the doctor said, I know.

12 December 1986

Yesterday, 11 December, Cadence became four years and six months old. A week ago she came home from play school after dark, as she often does these short December days. I lay in my hospital bed in the small library at the west end of the house. At the other end I could hear Peggy and Cadence talking. Nearly always Cadence comes into the house talking. She said: “I'm going to watch Disaney.”

There was something not childish about the way she said it. I imagined her taking off her coat as she spoke. She came down the hall to talk to me. At home we only let her watch
Sesame Street, Mister Rogers
, VCR cartoons. That night we had no cartoon for her because the woman who runs play school had told her about Disney. At six o'clock she climbed onto my bed and I turned on the television with remote control, and with another control switch raised the head of the bed so Cadence could see the screen above my right foot in its cast; the entire leg was in a cast, and covered by a green camouflage-covered poncho liner a Marine major gave me. First Mickey Mouse was on the screen. Cadence lay touching my side, her head on my shoulder; my arm was around her.

But they were showing
Davy Crockett
with Fess Parker. Cadence said: This isn't Disaney. I explained to her why it was Disney, and told her I did not understand why they were showing it at six o'clock, when kids would be watching. Often Cadence cries suddenly when she is disappointed but she did not.
Crockett
was boring, but we watched it anyway, and soon she was restless and talking. Now and then she voiced her objection to Davy Crockett in general. But she was calm and when Crockett ended she climbed down from the raised head of the bed, which she likes to do, then went to talk to Peggy in the kitchen.

I was not calm. It has been a week now, almost to the hour, but I still recall it with sorrow. This is not a sad memory for me because Cadence did not enjoy something on television. No: it is because in her voice that day I heard something for the first time. When she said in the kitchen across the house from me
I'm going to watch Disaney
, her tone was different. It was not one of those common to her: excitement, delight, happy anticipation. It was an announcement, and its tone, though high-pitched, was that of an adult at the end of a day saying:
I'm going to take a long shower or I'm going to have a martini or We're going out to dinner
. So remembering, I am sad, thinking of all the disappointments and betrayals and horrors waiting for her out there, after her happy instincts and announcements as a grown woman.

One night in the hospital I was lying with the light off, and I needed something. Maybe morphine or juice or water. I was about to press the button for a nurse when down the hall an old woman began to scream. She did not stop and the screams did not diminish in volume; they had the energy of her pain. I did not press the button. I thought: you cannot ask for something when someone else is in pain. Then I thought: But there is always someone suffering, so I should never ask for anything. And at once I knew a saint would take that idea and run with it, would live that way. I waited until the nurse cared for the woman and she stopped screaming, then I pressed the button.

2 January 1987

I call them the terrors but they are not bad. I returned home from the hospital on 17 September and a few days later they began, and they have stayed. Every day at sundown I become afraid. Now on 2 January 1987 I have been afraid throughout the day, and this has been going on for over a week. The road that night comes back to me, the lights of the car, the hospital. I see Luz Santiago sitting beside the road while the car hits her brother and me. I of course did not see her; I threw her there; witnesses say that is where she was.

BOOK: Broken Vessels
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