Free Read Novels Online Home

Every Note Played by Lisa Genova (9)

CHAPTER NINE

Karina is carrying a foil-covered plate of pierogi in one hand, a $50 bottle of red wine in the other, and several months of unrelenting guilt down Commonwealth Avenue. It’s a gunmetal-gray November morning, raining hard, and she has no hands for an umbrella and four more blocks. She picks up her pace, almost running, and the wind whips the hood off her head. Damn it. She has no available hand to pull it back on.

The weather hits her like an assault, and since she’s the only pedestrian in sight, the attack feels personal. Raindrops pummel the aluminum foil like machine-gun fire. The bitter-cold wind stings her face raw. Rain soaks through her socks, pants, and hair, chilling her skin like a punishment. She blames Richard. She wouldn’t be subjected to this misery if he hadn’t provoked her. Of course, she reacted. Just as she always did. It’s as if she were programmed to respond to him, an unthinking and immediate ouch to his pinch.

It was already raining when she left the safety of her house, and she knew she wouldn’t likely find a parking space within four blocks. She could’ve waited another day. Tomorrow’s weather forecast is cold but clear. But she made the pierogi last night, and she needs to make at least this one thing between Richard and her right, clean up her side of the street, deliver her penance, and be done. Carpe diem. Weather be damned.

Focused on the numbers on the door and the promise of shelter, she barely registers the FOR SALE sign planted in the minuscule square patch of front lawn as she races past it. Out of breath and shoulders hugging her ears at the top of the stairs, she presses the doorbell and waits. Her hands, wet and lacking circulation and painfully cold, are aching to let go of her peace offerings and find comfort inside her coat pockets. Without a greeting or question as to who’s there, she’s buzzed inside.

When she reaches Richard’s unit, the door is ajar. She knocks as she edges the door open a bit more to be heard. “Hello?”

“Come on in!” a man’s voice, not Richard’s, hollers from somewhere inside. “We’ll be done in a minute!”

Karina enters, steps out of her shoes at the door, and returns to the kitchen, the scene of the crime. The lights are on. The room smells of coffee. The kitchen island and counters are wiped clean and are bare but for three glasses filled to the top with what looks to be vanilla milk shake, a tall straw standing erect in each. There’s no noise, no sign of anyone. She sets the wine and pierogi down on the counter, removes her raincoat, and drapes it over one of the barstools. She waits, not knowing whether to sit or stand, growing increasingly uneasy. Maybe she should find a piece of paper and pen, write a note, and leave.

Her attention wanders to the living room and screeches to a sudden stop, stunned. A wheelchair. A wheelchair unlike any other she’s ever seen. The tipped headrest and seat resemble a dentist’s chair. The two strapped footrests remind her of the stirrups on a gynecologist’s exam table. There are six wheels and shock absorbers and a joystick affixed to one of the arms. This is not a chair for a broken leg. It looks futuristic and barbaric. Cold rainwater drains from her hairline, trickling down her neck. She shivers.

The chair is positioned next to Richard’s piano. She looks again, and the piano is as unfamiliar and formidable as the wheelchair. An inner chill more penetrating than the rain on her skin drips down her spine. The key cover is shut. The music rack is bare. The bench is pushed in. She approaches Richard’s Steinway as if she were trespassing on sacred ground, her mind still disbelieving the incongruity of the sight before her. She hesitates, gathering courage, then slides her index finger along its lid, clearing a thick layer of fine dust, revealing a snail trail of the piano’s glossy black finish.

“Hi.”

She spins around, heart pounding, as if she were a criminal caught in an illicit act. Richard is standing behind a bald man with black-rimmed glasses.

“I’m Bill.” He wields an energetic wide smile, extending his hand to hers. “Richard’s home health aide.”

“Karina.” She shakes his hand.

“Okay, well, that’s it for me. Gotta run,” Bill says. “Melanie will be here for lunch, Rob or Kevin for dinner and bed. You’ve got three shakes in the kitchen. You all good?”

Richard nods. Bill checks something on Richard’s iPhone, worn on his chest and attached to a lanyard hung around his neck like a conference badge.

“Okay, my friend. Call us if you need us. See you in the morning.”

Richard stares at Karina as Bill leaves and says nothing. His hair is wet, combed, and parted too severely and neatly to the side. He looks like a young boy on school-picture day. He’s clean shaven, his face gaunt. His black sweater and jeans hang on him, long and baggy, as if they belonged to a big brother or were borrowed from Bill. Unsettled by the wheelchair, the abandoned piano, Richard’s emaciated appearance and prolonged silence, Karina forgets why she’s here and begins to wonder if he can speak at all.

He notices her apology on the counter.

“Pierogi,” she says. “I’m sure the wine is below your standards, but it’s the thought that counts.”

“Thank you.”

He walks into the kitchen, and that’s when she notices. His arms don’t swing. They sag from his shoulders, still, lifeless. And both hands look wrong, inhuman. The fingers of his right hand are stick straight, flattened. The other hand is fixed in a grotesquely curled claw. He positions himself in front of one of the milk shakes, lowers his head to the straw, and sips.

His arms are completely paralyzed. He watches her absorb this information. She smiles, trying to mask her real reaction, a trench coat wrapped around her naked horror.

“Want to have a seat?” He returns to the living room. “I don’t recommend that one.” He nods at the wheelchair.

The melody in his voice is gone. Every syllable is the same note, softer in volume, and slow, as if each monotone word is being dredged through molasses.

“You can still walk,” she says, confused.

“Ah. That’s my future. You have to order the chair before you need it or I guess you end up getting it six months after you die. I told Bill they might as well deliver my coffin, too.”

He laughs, but the sound of his amusement quickly turns into something else, a runaway choking wheeze, sounding nasty and villainous, gripping him tighter and tighter around the throat as if it aims to kill him. She sits a few feet in front of him, watching, a silent bystander, holding her own breath and strangely paralyzed, not knowing what to do. His final wheeze ejaculates a gob of spittle that lands on the face of his iPhone. She pretends not to notice as it oozes down the screen.

She looks away, over her shoulder, back at the piano and the wheelchair. Richard’s past and future. She thinks of all the time he used to fill learning, practicing, memorizing, perfecting—nine to ten hours and more a day. She looks back at Richard, at his useless hands. What on earth does he do all day now?

“Once you need that, how will you ever leave your apartment?” He’s on the fourth floor of a 150-year-old brownstone. No elevators. No ramps.

“I won’t.”

He’ll be trapped inside this apartment, locked inside his body, a Russian nesting doll. She suddenly remembers the FOR SALE sign out front.

“So you’re moving.”

“Trying. I can’t afford a new place until this one sells. Even to rent. Keeping me alive is already an expensive project. Might not be worth the investment. Don’t expect any more alimony checks.”

“No. Of course.”

She goes silent. The checking-account balance, her meager piano-lesson income, the monthly bills. She begins doing math, mostly subtraction, equations that scare her and can’t be entirely solved right now in her head.

“How’s Grace?”

“Richard, she doesn’t know. She doesn’t know any of this. I didn’t realize you would change so much so fast. You have to tell her what’s going on.”

“I know. I was going to. Many times. I just kept putting it off. Then my voice. I sound like a robot. I don’t want to call and scare her.”

“Write her an email.” Karina’s stomach cringes, and her eyes widen, embarrassed. His hands. He can’t type.

“I have speech-recognition software and toes. I can still email. But she doesn’t return my emails about school and the weather. I couldn’t stand it if I wrote her about this and she didn’t reply.”

Given what Grace knows and doesn’t know, it’s not surprising she took sides. Loyal to her mother, Grace hasn’t spoken to her father in over a year. Karina can’t help but enjoy the victory in this allegiance and has done nothing to encourage an end to his daughter’s cold war. Karina looks down at the floor, at her damp socks.

“I didn’t want to drop this bomb on her while she was at school. I thought it could wait—”

“For the coffin to get here?” Karina asks, transforming her shame to blame, an alchemy she’s long mastered.

“Until she was home for Thanksgiving. To tell her in person. And I know this is dumb, but I think I thought if I didn’t tell people I had ALS, maybe I really didn’t have it.”

Four months ago, she couldn’t tell if he had ALS by looking at him. But now, it’s unmistakable. How could he be in such crazy denial? Her heart tightens as she imagines Grace absorbing the news, this view of her father for the first time, this threat to everyone’s well-being.

“She’s not coming home for Thanksgiving. She’s got a boyfriend. Matt. His parents live in Chicago. She’s staying out there for the long weekend. We won’t see her until Christmas.”

Just over a month away. Only a few weeks. Richard looks past Karina to the wheelchair behind her. His eyes well up, and he blinks repeatedly, working hard to keep his tears contained.

“Can you tell her for me?”

She considers his request and him, sitting opposite her, so vulnerable, a fragile bird with no wings. He’s lost his arms. He’s losing his voice. He’s going to lose his legs. His life. She should pity him, this flightless, dying bird. But she doesn’t. He’s not a bird. He’s Richard. She feels her posture harden, a familiar numbness.

“No.”

Her reply is cruel, but she can find no other, and the thickening silence between them is pressing on her walled-off heart, begging her to reconsider. She crosses her arms, steeling her resolve. She feels his eyes on her as she stands.

“I have to go.”

“Okay. Before you do?”

She looks at him, trying not to see him.

“Would you scratch the top of my head? Please?”

She takes a breath, crosses the impossible distance between them, sits on the couch next to him, and scratches his head.

“Oh my God, thank you. A little harder. All over, please.”

She uses both hands. Her nails are unmanicured, but they’re hard and strong, and she rakes them all over his head, messing up his neatly combed schoolboy hairstyle. After a good scrubbing, she stops and checks on him. His eyes are closed, and a deeply satisfied closed-lipped smile is stretched across his thin face. It’s been a long time since she’s touched him, since she gave him any kind of pleasure. Without her permission, a sweet memory massages an unhardened piece of her heart.

“I have to go now. You okay?” She stands.

Richard opens his eyes. They’re glossy. He blinks, and a couple of tears escape, spilling down his face. He can’t wipe them.

“I’m okay.”

She hesitates but then grabs her raincoat, slips into her wet shoes, and leaves without another word. As she’s descending the stairs, she thinks of the many times she’s left Richard—walking away in the middle of innumerable arguments; storming out in the middle of dinner, deserting him in a restaurant, leaving him to take a cab home alone; the last time she was here, marching out of his apartment after breaking his bottle of wine; leaving the courthouse on the day the judge declared their marriage irretrievably broken, the dissolution no-fault, the divorce absolute. As she walks out the front door, fixing her hood onto her head, shoving her hands into the cozy safety of her coat pockets, she remembers walking down the courthouse steps, scared that it was she who was irretrievably broken, knowing there was plenty of fault to this failure, and daring to admit that she might be as much to blame for it all as he was.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Jenika Snow, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Hope Falls: Crazy Thing (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Kylie Gilmore

Cocky Director: Max Cocker (Cocker Brothers, The Cocky Series Book 15) by Faleena Hopkins

The Duke's Bride: Regency Romance (Regency Brides Book 1) by Joanne Wadsworth

Save Me, Sinners: A Dark MFM Menage Romance by Jess Bentley

Bride of the Beast by Adrienne Basso

Sassy Ever After: Tortured Mate (Kindle Worlds Novella) (The Mate Series Book 3) by Sheri Lyn

Kilted at the Altar (Clash of the Tartans Book 2) by Anna Markland, Dragonblade Publishing

Holiday In the Hamptons by Sarah Morgan

Betrayals by Carla Neggers

Triple Talons by Ophelia Bell

Billionaire's Second Chance (An Alpha Billionaire Second Chance Romance Love Story) by Claire Adams

Two Firefighters Next Door: A Bad Boy MFM Romance by Jay S. Wilder

Paranormal Dating Agency: Claimed by Her Polar Bears (Kindle Worlds Novella) (Claimed Mates Book 4) by Kate Richards

Destination Wedding Date: a sweet contemporary beach romance (Paradise Island Book 1) by Evie Jordan

Lip Service - GOOGLE by Virna DePaul

Dragon Proposing (Torch Lake Shifters Book 2) by Sloane Meyers

BRICK (Lords of Carnage MC) by Daphne Loveling

Winter's Storm by Gracie Meadows

Royal Mate (Misty Woods Dragons) by Juniper Hart

Saved by a Dragon (No Such Things as Dragons Book 1) by Lauren Lively