Ellie
Ignoring the looks from the people I whiz by, I fly around the corner to the Intensive Care Unit. My hand trembles as I press the button repeatedly to open the double doors. At an ant’s pace, they break free.
The room numbers are on little blue panels hanging from each doorway. I try desperately not to run around the curved hallway until I find the one I’m searching for.
“I’m sorry, Miss. Can I help you?” A nurse stands from behind a counter. “Visiting hours are over.”
“My father is Bill Pagan. Room 12E. The hospital called …”
I blink back tears, finding a small amount of relief when Ford’s hand steadies me. “Can we see him? Even if it’s just for a few minutes?” he asks.
She nods. “12E is right down there. I’ll let the doctor know you’re here.”
“Thank you,” I say, but I’m not sure she hears me considering I’m already halfway to the room.
The monitors chirp steadily, the room dark and cool, as we enter. He lies on a bed, a tube sticking out of his nose. With each haggard breath he takes, machines glow and blip all around him.
“Oh, my God,” I breathe, dropping my purse on a chair. I try to make sense of the numbers glowing from the various instruments around him, but they all sort of meld together.
Dad’s eyes are closed.
I step to the bed and take his hand in mine. It’s cold and limp and it takes everything in me not to fall to the floor on my knees and weep.
“Daddy?” I say softly. “Can you hear me?”
His breaths turn into a cough, but he doesn’t open his eyes.
“It’s me. Ellie. Squeeze my hand if you can hear me.”
I wait, silently pleading with him to give me some sort of indication that he can hear me. Placing my other one on top of his, I wait for some sign that he’s still here.
The noise of a curtain being pulled sounds behind me. I don’t turn around, but hear Ford greeting a doctor. In a few seconds, she appears on the other side of the bed.
“You’re Ellie, correct?” she asks.
She has short, curly, red hair and bright green eyes. A stethoscope is around her neck and a chart in her hand.
“Yes.”
“I’m Dr. Issac.”
“What happened to him?” I ask, my voice starting to break. Ford is at my side in a second flat, but lets me do the talking for which I’m grateful. “How did this happen?”
“According to the report, your father fell in his front yard this evening. A neighbor called for an ambulance, and he was rushed here.”
“What were you doing?” I ask, blinking back tears as I see him looking so lifeless in the bed. “Why didn’t you call me?”
“Your father had some trauma to his abdomen. A couple of broken ribs and a lacerated kidney.”
I squeeze his hand as I look at the doctor. “How long does that take to heal? I’ll … I’ll move him in with me,” I sniffle. “I’ll make sure he does exactly what he’s supposed to.”
The look she gives me pierces me to the core. It’s one of those smiles that tells you she’s trying to warm you up for the pain she’s about to deliver. Like the alcohol swab before the injection, she’s preparing to destroy me.
I grab Ford’s arm.
“Did you know your father has cancer, Ms. Pagan?”
“He did,” I say, confidently. “He’s been in remission for a while now.”
Dr. Issac looks at Ford, then back to me again. “It’s in his lungs and lymph nodes, and by what I read in his chart, his liver too.”
“What?” I breathe, swaying back and forth. “That can’t be true.”
“There’s a report from his oncologist in his file dated six months ago. Maybe you didn’t know, but your father certainly was aware.”
“Is aware. He certainly is aware,” I correct her.
She takes a deep breath and changes her line of sight to Ford. “His injuries are pretty severe for anyone. But adding his age and health to the mix, I’m afraid I don’t have a very good outlook on Mr. Pagan’s condition.”
“Define that more conclusively,” Ford asks.
She braces herself. “I don’t have a lot of hope he will make it out of Intensive Care.”
I hear the sob that escapes my soul. It echoes off the walls of the dimly lit room, no match for the pain I’m feeling.
Scrambling to the top of the bed, I lay my head next to his. He smells weird, not like my dad. Not the scent that has comforted me since I was a baby.
“Daddy,” I cry, throwing an arm over his chest.
There are so many things I want to say, so much I want him to know and be told, but I can’t find the words. They’re hung up somewhere between my brain and my lips.
The sound of his laugh as I tangle my fishing line up in the trees trickles through my mind. The feel of his hand on my leg as he bandages a little scrape I’m sure is going to kill me after a bicycle wreck is as real as if it were happening. I can smell the scent of his famous deer jerky and see the smile that would accompany his, “Good morning, darlin’,” when he’d wake me up for school.
The tears are relentless, dripping down my face and onto his neck. I wind my fist in his hospital gown as if it somehow will keep him here with me.
“Please don’t leave me,” I whisper in his ear. “Not yet. I’m not ready.”
I hear Ford’s voice intermingled with the doctor’s as I cry silently. I don’t care what they’re saying or what it even means. None of it matters. I’ve heard all I need to hear.
Ford’s hand rests on the small of my back. “Do you want me to give you a minute?”
“Stay. Please,” I sniffle.
“Absolutely.”
He gives me a gentle pat and then moves to the corner into a stiff plastic chair. I swipe a tissue off the bedside table and try to clean the snot off my face, one hand still holding my father’s.
“Why didn’t you tell me?” I ask him, fighting the tears. “If you knew you were sick, why didn’t you let me know?”
He looks so peaceful, so much so, in fact, that I’m not sure he’s even here.
“Ellie.”
“Ellie.”
My hand moves and I jump. “Daddy!”
His head is turned to the side facing me. Ford is reclining in the chair in the corner. He fell asleep an hour or so ago, right before I must’ve dozed off.
“How are you, pumpkin?” he garbles.
“I’m fine. How are you? Do you hurt anywhere? Do you need anything?” I ask, searching his face for any sign of pain.
He doesn’t answer me, just tries to squeeze my hand. It’s a weak attempt, especially for a man that once had the strength of Bill Pagan.
“I saw Ford lying over there,” he says, trying to nod towards the corner.
“He’s worried about you.”
“He came to see me today.”
I kind of laugh, wondering how out of it he is. “You haven’t been asleep that long.”
“I know that,” he sighs. His head pops back on his pillow and he winces.
I stand and help him get situated, but end up tangling myself up in his lines. He tries to laugh but can’t quite make it happen.
“The doctor told me you have cancer,” I say. “She said you knew it.”
“I did.”
“But why didn’t you tell me?”
“What were you going to do about it?”
“I could’ve helped you!”
“There is no helping me,” he whispers. “I’m ready to go, honey. I just wanted to stick around long enough to make sure you were in good hands.”
I glance at Ford. He has a ball cap pulled down over his eyes, his feet hanging off the edge of the chair.
“I hope I am,” I say softly.
His oxygen gets knocked off and the alarm begins to sound. I fasten it back under his nose again, and he takes a few long, deep breaths.
He closes his eyes, resting from the exertion of talking to me. I take his hand again and squeeze it, glad that it’s a little warmer this time.
“Ellie,” he whispers.
“Yes, Daddy?”
“Do you remember the time I took you camping? And that big storm rolled in out of nowhere.”
“It about blew our tent into the trees,” I recall. “Our cooler was toast. Everything was soaked.”
“Yes.” He takes a minute before he speaks again. “That was one of the worst storms I’d ever seen in my life. I didn’t tell you that, of course, but I was pretty scared. I just held on to you and figured as long as I kept you with me, we could replace everything else.”
“And we had to,” I laugh softly. “Even my pink fishing pole was gone.”
He reaches for my free hand. I scoop it up with mine and hold them as he struggles to talk and breathe. I want to tell him to relax, to sleep it off and we’ll resume it later, but I can see it’s important for him to continue.
“I want you to always remember that,” he says. His eyes open and he looks at me, the greens of his irises as clear as a mountain stream. “And I want you to remember what happened when the rain stopped.”
“The double rainbow.”
His chest rises and falls harshly as the greens of his eyes start to dim. “There’s always a rainbow, Ellie. Wait for the rainbow.”
His eyes flutter close and his hands go limp. I stand at his bedside, tears streaming down my face, and watch him slip away.
“No!” I cry. “Not yet. Please, don’t leave me. I have something to tell you. Please! It’s important,” I sob.
One eye opens just a crack. “What’s that?” His words are a rasp, barely audible through the heaviness of his breath.
“I’m pregnant. You’re going to be a grandpa,” I sniffle.
The struggle to open his eyes is painfully visible, but he does it. His deep, dark eyes look at me. It takes them a second to focus on my face, but when they do, I see a look in them I wish I could capture for an eternity.
“You are?” he asks. “A baby?”
“A baby, Daddy. I’m having a baby.”
Tears flow down my face like an overflowing river. He smiles, a small curve of his lips that I know takes an effort to make. “Little pumpkin … So happy, Ellie …”
He gives in, his eyes fluttering closed, the alarms buzzing all around.
I feel Ford’s hand clamp over mine as my body heaves. The buzzers now wailing, they shatter the silence of the night.
“Daddy,” I say. “Daddy!”
The corner of his lip turns to the heavens as he sucks in what becomes his final breath.
“Daddy!”
I’m shoved out of the way by the flurry of doctors and nurses swarming in. They talk to me, explain why I have to step out like I don’t already know. I let them push me into the hall as I watch through the glass as my father lies quietly on the hospital bed.
Ford’s hand is on the small of my back as I watch as they do what they can.
“Don’t leave me,” I choke out, my body racking as the sobs come faster than I can keep up with. “Don’t leave me, Daddy.”
My palms are pressed against the window as I watch, hope, beg for some sign that he’s still with me. Even as I pray that somehow a miracle will send him back to me, I know the truth: he’s already gone.