I got the
call just after I landed in London. It was Anna and her voice was shaking.
“Hank, there’s
been an accident,” she told me quietly.
I could
barely hear her. Putting my fingertips against my exposed ear to block out as
much sound as possible, I asked, “Anna? Say that again. What’s wrong?”
“There was
an accident,” she said. “Audrey’s been in an accident.”
I couldn’t take
another step. I stopped dead in the middle of sitting area of the gate. Passengers
filed around me, pulling their roller luggage and muttering under their breaths
about the prig who’d clogged the exit in his shock.
“It was bad,
Hank,” she said. “She lost her legs. They were just gone. And they could barely
keep her alive. Just barely. They’re not sure they can work with anything.”
I couldn’t
speak. “What, uh, what-”
“It was a
car accident,” she said. “A pile up. She was crushed in her car.”
Sitting in
the waiting room, after a thirteen hour return flight, leaning my elbows on my
knees and staring down at the speckled white tile, the only prayer I said was, “I
need her. Please, God, I need her.”
I’d arrived
fifteen hours into a twenty-hour surgery. Still wearing my tailored suit and
having forgotten to so much as loosen my tie, it didn’t even dawn on me to eat.
Over the
phone as I boarded my plane, Anna told me that the doctors had an experimental
option they could try, but it was risky. With no time for details, with no hope
for her recovery otherwise, I told Anna to sign whatever she had to sign to get
Audrey the treatment. Anything. The cost didn’t matter. I’d sell the house, get
another job or five, and beg for money from anyone, everyone.
Of course,
sitting there for hours, having no more information on the treatment or her
condition, I allowed my mind to flip through the infinite possibilities of how
our lives could change forever.
What if she
were deformed? What if her face had been warped by fire or the impact of the
steering wheel? What if she were no longer exquisitely beautiful or even at all
familiar?
It didn’t
matter. It couldn’t matter.
She’d lost
her legs. So we’d have to change the house. I could have ramps built, get her a
badass wheelchair, help train her when they gave her mechanical legs, because
she’d want to jog again. It was her therapy, her connection to the world around
her. She could get that back.
What if we
couldn’t have kids? That was why we’d gotten married—to have children together.
But that
wasn’t true. I married her because I loved her. It was a testament, a statement,
an act that was proof of my devotion to her soul. There were no conditions on
it. I had married her, not our
future, not our potential, not our possibilities. Her.
And she was
alive. Even if all of her hopes and dreams were crushed out of her, I would
change my course and trod a new path with her. Just as long as she was with me.
But what if
it failed? What if I lost her?
I couldn’t.
I’d have to
call her parents, her siblings, her friends. I’d have to pick out a casket,
pick out an outfit, give them a photo so they’d know how to paint her face. I’d
have to say goodbye to a body, not to her. And not even her whole body. Parts
of her.
I put my
head in my hands, letting out a shaky but quiet sob.
Putting her
in a hole in some strange park where there were only other strange, cold bodies.
I couldn’t.
I would go
mad from having to drive away from her, all I’d known of her, all I’d felt from
her, all I’d used to connect to that bright, warm soul of hers.
Our bed. I’d
have to sleep alone in it. We’d bought it together. It had only been ours. And
I couldn’t sleep without her in it.
Just the
other night, I was having trouble sleeping—tossing and turning from the anxiety
of my big trip to London—and she’d turned on her bedside lamp, climbed on top
of me and pulled off her nightshirt.
Thirty
minutes later, we were both sleeping soundly.
Never again?
Was that it? Was that strong, responsive body of hers beginning its decay?
I wiped my
face, looking over at Anna as she stared
ahead at nothing.
When a nurse
came out, Anna was on her feet and jogging toward her.
We’d agreed
on that—she would keep the doctors and nurses at a distance to get their
updates on the surgery. Because I didn’t want to know. I didn’t want the
blow-by-blow, the ups-and-downs of whatever procedures they were performing. I
just wanted to know if she made it once it was all over.
Anna
returned, her gait relaxed but swift.
I knew all I
needed to know with that and Anna sat down silently, giving me no details.
Audrey wasn’t
dead. She wasn’t dead.
I bowed my
head again, trying not to think about the grief in our friends’ voices when I
called them with the outcome—Audrey was gone, Audrey lost her legs, Audrey isn’t
the same Audrey.
Regardless,
all of that would be true in some way. Trauma like this, it changes people.
But, in her core, she’d be Audrey and I’d find a way to reach that again. She’d
need to be held—a lot. And she’d want to sleep on my chest or with a hand on my
ribs. On any bad day, I could count on her needing me close. It would always
soothe her hurting heart to sit in the cove of my arm and feel my random kisses
on her scalp as we watched sitcoms.
I looked
over at Anna, Audrey’s older sister, and I saw a brunette replica of my blonde
wife. Would it always hurt for me to see Anna if Audrey’s face was horrifically
warped? Would it always hurt Audrey to see her?
It didn’t
matter. With the lights off, with Audrey in bed beside me laughing, it wouldn’t
matter.
I needed
Audrey. Her heart, her wisdom, her love for me. Unwavering. Unabashed. Unreal.
Shoes came
squeaking toward us.
It wasn’t a
nurse, but a doctor—a surgeon.
This time, I
was on my feet and ready. But not. Not at all. Never ready.
“Mr.
Webster,” he said, putting his hand out for me to shake.
“Yes, sir,” I
said, looking into his wrinkled yet strangely youthful face and relaxing.
He seemed
optimistic, even excited.
“It was a
complete success,” he told me.
Anna slapped
her hand over her mouth in her relief.
“What was?” I
asked. “What does that mean? Can she walk? Is she whole? What does that mean
for her?”
The doctor
glanced at Anna with a bit of confusion.
“He didn’t
want the details,” Anna informed him quietly, hesitantly.
Something
was wrong. They were about to tell me something I wouldn’t be happy to hear.
“Well, Mr.
Webster, we acted very, very quickly,” he said. “Audrey, she didn’t have time.
Not even a minute to spare. The injuries were so extensive that she was
bleeding everywhere and we couldn’t stop it. We had to act very, very quickly,
and, fortunately, things aligned and we had an opportunity no one has ever
seized before. We had a team of specialists, scientists and it was flawless.
Truly an advancement that will help so many. So, so many. Starting with Audrey.”
I waited,
glancing at Anna and then back at the doctor.
“Why does it
seem like something bad has happened?” I asked. “She’s okay, right? You don’t
think it would be a ‘success’ if she died, right?”
“No, not at
all,” he said, glancing at Anna and giving her a bit of a scolding with his
eyes.
Likely, he
thought he’d be coming out to a celebration, not a difficult discussion, and
our handling of the situation had dampened his triumph.
“Mr.
Webster, your wife’s body had been broken beyond recovery,” he said. “There was
absolutely no saving her without this particular procedure.”
“Just tell
me,” I finally snapped.
“Your wife
has been given an entirely new body,” he said.
I stared at
him blankly, unable to process his words.
“Mr.
Webster?”
“Hank?” Anna
asked.
“So she’s
fine,” I said. “She can walk and run and we can travel and maybe have kids,
right? I mean, they wouldn’t genetically be Audrey’s, but they’d be ours. She’s
okay.”
The doctor
glanced at Anna again, pressing his lips together.
“What?” I
asked. “Is it an older body? That’s fine. As long as she’s not a six year-old.”
“Mr.
Webster, she was given the body of the genetic match for her heart and her
brain.”
“You
transplanted her heart and her brain?” I asked, my voice rising.
“Yes,” he
said. “We were only concerned about finding a genetic match so that the new
body wouldn’t reject her organs—the organs that make Audrey Audrey.”
“So, okay,” I
said. “Why are you acting like I’m about to freak out?”
“It was the
body of a twenty-nine year-old man,” he said.
I just
stared at him.
“It’s just a
body, Mr. Webster,” he said. “Her brain is female and it will regulate the
hormones released, so the physique may become more feminized, but-”
“What about
a sex change?” Anna asked.
“The
physiology is very, very fragile and will be for some time,” he said. “Choosing
any additional trauma would be reckless. Surgeries and hormone treatments would
do more damage. This is a miracle. If she wakes up and knows who she is, with
memories intact, with her relationships in her mental grasp, then she can go on
to live a very healthy even rich life.”
But Anna
went on. “Her relationship with Hank is the most important thing to her. That
connection, that physical intimacy—it’s how she feels connected to him. It’s
important.”
“She’ll have
it,” I said quietly. “Whatever she wants. We’ll figure it out.”
Anna looked
up at me, stunned.
“She’s alive,”
I said. “The body is strong and healthy. She’s alive. It’s still her.”
“That’s what
we’re hoping, yes,” he said.
She’d been
in a car accident, been in excruciating pain, had likely been so close to death
that her body giving out would have been a huge relief, yet she would awake in
a strange body with my reassurance being the only thing that would comfort her.
It was just
a body. He was right. It was only a body. It would still be her in there and
she would need me.
“She’s going
to have a hell of a lot to deal with when she wakes up,” I said.
“Yes,” the
doctor said gently. “But we will be ready with physical therapists, emotional
counselors, all kinds of specialists to make this adjustment with as much
support as possible.”
“And when
will she wake up?” I asked.
“We’re going
to keep her isolated because her immune system has been repressed so that the
body will better accept the new organs,” he said. “But she’ll be able to hear
you. And there will be gloves in the curtains so you can hold her hand in a
way.”
“Okay,” I said.
“Where is she?”
She was on
an upper floor of the hospital in her own large room with clear plastic
curtains surrounding her bed, as if she had a communicable disease, when, actually,
it was us. The mildest cold virus could kill her.
But was she
a her anymore?
The form on
the bed was male. He was young, he was thin but muscular, with dark brown,
smooth skin, and strong hands. As I neared, I saw that he had a square jaw,
full lips, a wide nose and perfectly curly eyelashes. It all fit together,
though, and he wasn’t ugly.
She?
It wasn’t
her. It couldn’t be.
With my hand
over my mouth, I just stared at the form asleep on the bed with large bandages
wrapped around the skull and more bandages taped to the chest.
Her mind and
heart were in there.
And for
days, as I sat at that bedside, staring at that young man’s body, I had time to
imagine how badly she would need me when she woke to this. She would want my
touch, my embrace, my kiss. She would need to believe I desired her—if not her
body then her comfort from my closeness.
Could I? My
God, could I?
And what
would people think?
If I walked
down the street, holding the hand of this man’s body—only my wife feeling it—would
people think I was cheating on Audrey? That I was gay? That I was some kind of
perverse reprobate?
What would
my parents think? What would my parents’ friends think? What would people at
church think? Would I have to wear some kind of explanatory t-shirt? And what
would it say?
My Wife Had Her Brain Transplanted?
I’m Straight But My Wife’s A New Man?
Don’t Look at Us Like That or My Wife Will
Kick Your Ass?
But after
all of that, after all of that energy spent on hoping to make others
understand, I realized it didn’t matter and the ideal t-shirt only required two
words.
F*** Off.
They didn’t
have to understand, they didn’t have to approve, they didn’t have a say. At the
end of the day, we’d lock the doors on the world and have each other.
I didn’t
marry her body. I married her soul. If that was in there, then that was where
my heart was safe.
I chose her.
I wanted her. I could have her.
We would
figure out the details.
One day,
when I arrived, they told me they had moved her to another room. I’d have to
take a special shower and then put on the clothing they provided along with a
mask before I could enter her room directly from that shower stall.
After days
of watching the still, serene form in the bed, the doctors cut back on the
sedation and her eyelids fluttered and opened, in search of something.
The search ended
when her gaze settled on me.
I sat on the
edge of the bed, already holding her hand.
“Hey, baby,”
I said.
“Hank?” she
asked weakly, startling herself with the strangeness of her voice.
“It’s okay,”
I said, calming her. “Things will seem strange for a while, but it’s okay. We’ll
be okay.”
She smiled
weakly, the full lips parting slightly to show straight white teeth.
“I have a
headache,” she said. “Am I hungover? Did I have fun? Did I finally beat you at
drunk arm wrestling?”
I laughed. “No,
but I’m sure you’ll beat at me arm wrestling no matter what from now on.”
She examined
me for a moment and then looked around at all of the machines and tubes and
then she looked over my weird outfit.
“What
happened?” she asked.
“You were in
an accident,” I told her.
“Are you
okay?” she asked.
That was so
her. Always checking on me first.
“You look
tired,” she said. “Are you hungry?”
“I’m fine,
Audrey,” I said, putting my gloved hand on her stubbled, warm cheek. “I’m good.
I’m really, really good. Now. Finally.”
And I bowed
my head to hide my tearful eyes.
It was her.
She was in there. It was really her.
The rest was
just details. Insignificant yet miraculous details.
She squeezed
my hand, seeming instantly peaceful when I smoothed my thumb over her rough
knuckles.
My touch
could reach her heart and warm her soul. She’d want more and I’d give it.
She was her,
and we were us, and I was lucky. Lucky as hell.
KJeffries
051515