part of all. For when it comes, she is gone, and sometimes I wonder whether she and
I will ever love again.
"There's no one there, Allie," I say, trying to fend off the inevitable. She doesn't
believe me.
"They're staring at me."
"No," I whisper while shaking my head. "You can't see them?"
"No," I say, and she thinks for a moment.
"Well, they're right there," she says, pushing me away, "and they're staring at me."
With that, she begins to talk to herself, and moments later, when I try to comfort
her, she flinches with wide eyes.
"Who are you?" she cries with panic in her voice, her face becoming whiter. "What
are you doing here?" There is fear growing inside her, and I hurt, for there is nothing
I can do. She moves farther from me, backing away, her hands in a defensive
position, and then she says the most heartbreaking words of all.
"Go away! Stay away from me!" she screams. She is pushing the gnomes away from
her, terrified, now oblivious of my presence. I stand and cross the room to her bed. I
am weak now, my legs ache, and there is a strange pain in my side. I don't know
where it comes from. It is a struggle to press the button to call the nurses, for my
fingers are throbbing and seem frozen together, but I finally succeed. They will be
here soon now, I know, and I wait for them. While I wait, I stare at my wife.
Twenty...
Thirty seconds pass, and I continue to stare, my eyes missing nothing, remembering
the moments we just shared together. But in all that time she does not look back,
and I am haunted by the visions of her struggling with unseen enemies.
I sit by the bedside with an aching back and start to cry as I pick up the notebook.
Allie does not notice. I understand, for her mind is gone.
A couple of pages fall to the floor, and I bend over to pick them up. I am tired
now, so I sit, alone and apart from my wife. And when the nurses come in they see
two people they must comfort. A woman shaking in fear from demons in her mind,
and the old man who loves her more deeply than life itself, crying softly in the
corner, his face in his hands.
I spend the rest of the evening alone in my room. My door is partially open and I
see people walk by, some strangers, some friends, and if I concentrate, I can hear
them talking about families, jobs, and visits to parks. Ordinary conversations,
nothing more, but I find that I envy them and the ease of their communication.
Another deadly sin, I know, but sometimes I can't help it.
Dr. Barnwell is here, too, speaking with one of the nurses, and I wonder who is ill
enough to warrant such a visit at this hour. He works too much, I tell him. Spend the
time with your family, I say, they won't be around forever. But he doesn't listen to
me.
He cares for his patients, he says, and must come here when called. He says he has
no choice, but this makes him a man torn by contradiction. He wants to be a doctor
completely devoted to his patients and a man completely devoted to his family. He
cannot be both, for there aren't enough hours, but he has yet to learn this. I
wonder, as his voice fades into the background, which he will choose or whether,
sadly, the choice will be made for him.
I sit by the window in an easy chair and I think about today. It was happy and sad,
wonderful and heart‐wrenching. My conflicting emotions keep me silent for many
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