[A little vignette about Helen, after the operation, and her loss of memory.]
Chopsticks
This is a story that has been left out of the Helen collection
of stories, about a famous violinist, Helen, who is discovered to have total amnesia after brain
surgery.
Helen is the foster-mother of three girls (one of whom is away at college, and does not figure in this story), and the biological
mother of one little boy, the youngest child.
Just before the surgery, she had begun to teach the girls the
violin. (An older, college-age girl,
Elly, the daughter of a friend, who had lived with Helen at one time, was an accomplished violist, and had joined the other kids for
lessons.) Right after the surgery, they
had tried to give Helen a violin, just to see whether any of her violin skills
remained, and that had triggered a violent negative reaction, and Helen had
sworn never to touch a violin again, because she thought the main instigator—Amy
Salvatori—had ulterior motives.
In this segment, the characters are Erin and Alison, the foster-children,
James, Helen’s little boy; Elly, a family friend; Jeannie, another family
friend; Maryssa Brooks, Helen’s partner (with whom she had successfully fallen
back in love), Sita, another family friend, and Sita’s nephew, Suresh.
At the time this story begins, Maryssa, Helen and the children were still living in Maryssa’s
family home, in the Primrose neighborhood.
Maryssa worked part-time at the library in Newberry. One afternoon, when Maryssa came back from
work, Helen had been looking at the piano.
Maryssa’s heart had leaped up (because everyone wanted to urge Helen to
ease back into musical activities).
“Shall I show you
something?” Maryssa had asked. Helen had
nodded, her eyes lighting up. She liked
Maryssa, and Maryssa was grateful for that.
Maryssa sat down and played Chopsticks,
something the old Helen had forbidden her to do on the new piano. But this Helen didn’t care. Pretty soon Helen was playing Chopsticks as well as Maryssa. “Come play it any time you like,” Maryssa
invited.
“You want to see
if I can play other stuff,” Helen accused.
“Oh, I don’t
care,” said Maryssa. Unlike Amy, she managed
to convince Helen. “I was teaching
myself; now we can do it together!”
“Yeah, we’ll
surprise everybody!”
Maryssa’s family
had a cook and a maid, and the cook tended to prepare things that Maryssa had
eaten for years, based on ancient French recipes, which looked very suspicious
to Helen. Helen, who could only recall
the basic meat-and-potatoes fare of her childhood, couldn’t be easily made to
eat the Brooks family diet.
Helen related
well to Elly, and the Brooks cook and Maryssa conscripted Elly to take Helen
out to the grocery store, and bring home whatever she would like to eat. So Helen and Elly went out to the grocery
store in Helen’s van (which Helen has forgotten about).
They went in, and
Helen looked around at the shelves with considerable interest.
“So, what would
you like to eat?” asks Elly.
“Oh, I don’t know;
what have you got?” replies Helen, thinking they were about to have lunch right
there.
“No, I mean, what
shall we buy, to take home and get Bridget to fix?”
A thoughtful look
came into Helen’s eye.
“Hmm. I really like those hamburgers,” she said softly.
“Can we make hamburgers in the house?”
“Sure! Okay,” she said, leading the way to where the
hamburger patties were on display. “What
else?” She efficiently snagged some
rolls to go with it, and cheese and pickles.
“Hot dogs?”
“Fine.”
Soon the cart was
piled high with soda, ice cream, and the wherewithal to make grilled-cheese
sandwiches, popped corn, pizza and smores.
“You sure like a
lot of junk food,” Elly said, looking over the cart a little doubtfully. “How about salad?”
“I hate salad,”
Helen said. Elly looked at her
reproachfully, and she said, okay a little salad would be all right.
“What about
chicken?” She liked that, she said. She liked roasted chicken, with a lot of
garlic. That was the first sign of
something in line with Helen’s adult tastes that Elly could remember. As far as she could tell, some inhibitions
that seem to have made Helen a sweet-natured child had been removed. Elly mourned for the Helen who had been
shaped by those experiences. It had been
the fire of sorrow and grief that had forged the Helen they all loved. If it had been those bitter experiences that
had been inadvertently removed, what was left, presumably, was the raw
material, the dull, untempered base metal that the universe had started with,
to make its masterpiece that had been Helen.
“Are you getting
tired?” Helen wanted to know. She liked
Elly, and she was concerned about her.
The universal concern for others that had driven Helen was now
restricted to just a few individuals.
“No, I’m great; Helen,
you are taking your diabetes pills,
right?”
“Oh yes,” she
said, wincing. “Every night, at supper.”
“Good.”
“They taste
horrible!”
“Even better. You know
they’re good for you, then.” Helen
nodded, wide-eyed.
Helen was acutely
embarrassed when Elly paid for the food.
“I should pay for it,” she said, red-faced, “but I don’t have money
right now.” It broke Elly’s heart to see
the shifty-eyed teenager in the 40-year old body.
“We’ll find a way
for you to make money,” she promised.
Helen related best
to Elly and Trish, and a little less to Sita, and Lalitha (Sita’s older sister). She adored the children, and was partial to
little Jeannie, who was thoroughly amused by the development, though Peggy made
Jeannie feel guilty about enjoying others’ misfortunes. “The poor woman has lost her memory, for
heaven’s sake! How can you laugh about
such a thing?”
“But she’s so funny!” Jeannie cried. “She wants me to take her to the mall! That’s hilarious!”
“So take her! Take Erin, too.”
“Oh, good
call! I’ll say yes, if Erin can come
along!”
It took a few days to clean up the new house they were planning to rent. Helen helped Maryssa, and Suresh, an engineering student, to re-wire the house according to code. There was a lot of painting that was needed, and soon, the house was looking spic and span. They began to move Helen's, Maryssa's, and the children's things in, which took a while.
Helen could not teach the music class she had been teaching up to when the surgery took place. Helen could not continue the violin lessons she had been giving Erin, Alison and James, and actually Elly, too. But now, Elly had to take it over.
Helen watched
bemused as Elly took over teaching the children the violin. It was awkward to lead the lessons with Helen
watching, but she did it. Helen could
hardly believe how well the kids played, especially Erin. “Do it again!” she said over and over,
listening to simple tunes like the Twinkles,[1]
until the children were bored to tears.
But it was an education for her, and they had to let her watch. Elly hoped she would ask to be taught, but
she never did. Everyone could see that
she loved music. She went up to watch
Lalitha do the classes at the community college at least once a week, hiding out in the hall. (This was the music appreciation course that
Helen had been teaching, and which Lalitha had to take over.) Unlike the old Helen, this new Helen was full of energy,
eager to work.
She worked a
couple of days at the instrument factory, learning laboriously from
scratch. But she learned by watching,
and was very quickly handy with a spokeshave and a chisel.
Finally, the
weekend of Halloween, the piano was moved ceremonially in by professional
movers, and that signified the end of the move.
Everybody had helped, including Matt and Jess, (Maryssa’s brother and
sister-in-Law,) and Lalitha was happy to see the pleasure in Helen’s face. The children were delighted with their rooms,
and instead of the extra rooms Helen had wanted to create (before the amnesia,
of course), the attic had been finished and wired for electricity, and Erin was
moved there, with the understanding that when the weather became cold, she
would come down to the warmer floors.
Helen was polled
about every detail of decoration of the room she would share with Maryssa—the
color of the walls (light yellow), the curtains (blue), the bed (anything, as long
as it was “comf’table, and roomy for two.”)
They had kept the old rugs; without Helen’s help, they gave up the idea
of replacing the rugs, or restoring the hardwood floors. Sita, who had often said she loved to hear
the piano being played, was invited especially for Helen’s celebratory
performance of chopsticks. Helen glowed
at their applause.
One day, Erin was talking to Maryssa, alone in the
kitchen. Maryssa was asking her whether
she had made a lot of friends in school.
“Auntie Maryssa?”
“Yes sweetheart?”
Maryssa sounded so sweet, more like an older friend, than a parent.
“Mom …”
“What did you say, Erin?”
Erin’s eyes filled with tears, and they poured down her
face.
“What if Mom never gets any better?”
Maryssa took a deep breath.
How could she explain to Erin that she had given up hope? There was no what if; Maryssa had come to realize—or at least to believe— that
Helen’s memory was gone for good. Her
memory would never return, and furthermore, her mental capacity had been
permanently impaired. It was a miracle
she was functioning so well. Anyone else
would have become a gibbering idiot.
Erin could see all this in her guarded expression. Erin collapsed lifelessly, her legs turned to
jelly. If Aunt Maryssa had come to that
conclusion, then there was nothing more to be said. Erin knew her mother would never be normal
again.
While Maryssa was able to look on the positive side, on the
fact that Helen was alive, vital, in good spirits, for the most part, and
reasonably healthy, the child Erin could only see her loss. To be fair, she thought of it as Helen’s loss. Perhaps Erin had a perception of the
importance and the genius of Helen that vastly surpassed the understanding of most others,
including Maryssa herself. Maryssa’s
attitude towards Helen was based on her human qualities, while Erin also knew
her true worth as a teacher and a musician.
Erin had listened with pleasure to Helen’s recordings of organ music,
and in her instinctive feel for musicality, had been convinced that Helen was
on the way to being a phenomenon at the organ.
But nothing was left.
“You mustn’t be like this,” Maryssa told her, her eyes full
of sorrow and concern. “She depends on
you, Erin. If you don’t believe in her,
how will the little ones deal with it?”
“But you even
don’t believe!”
“Of course I
believe in her!”
“No, you don’t! You
think she’ll be this way forever!”
“She might not be the way she was, but she improves, doesn’t
she? She’s learning things every
day! Isn’t she?”
But Erin would not be comforted, and it was the first time
Maryssa had to deal with a sobbing Erin.
She took her to her room, without alerting Helen to the problem. There she held Erin until she had finished
crying. Maryssa was fond of Erin, and it
was painful to have held her while she wept, and painful to regard her now, the
life gone out of her, defeated, hopeless.
“I wish you would cheer up,” she said, sniffing a little. Maybe she depended on Erin for moral support
more than she realized. Child psychology
was something she was learning slowly, and she worried about how to handle Erin
in the least destructive way. Feeling
sad, herself, she wondered whether it would aggravate things further if she
allowed herself a little cry. While she
was considering, a little tear managed to escape. She wiped it away, with the natural grace
that imbued all her movements. “I’m
happy I can do something for her,
after being … such a helpless person since mother died,” she continued, more to
herself than to Erin. “But people expect
so much from Helen and me,” she said, her sniffs becoming louder. The soft brown eyes appealed to Erin
helplessly. “Look at all the help I
need! Everybody’s here, looking after
Helen, but—they’re really looking
after me, because I’m still a baby, a child, in a grown woman’s body!”
She stopped abruptly, aware that she was causing more
consternation in Erin. But her words had
had some effect, possibly not the best
effect, but Erin was moved, all the same.
“You’re doing great,” said Erin, softly.
“You’re a good girl,” Maryssa sighed. “I can depend on you, I know. Maybe you’re right, maybe I’m wrong. Maybe she will get better. I’m not very religious, but I pray,
sometimes, you know?” Erin nodded. “I say: God—I know it isn’t fair, because
it’s for me, but … if anyone can do it, it’s Helen!” Erin put her hand on Maryssa’s arm in a
gentle touch of love and friendship.
“That’s my prayer,” she said, her voice fading out. “And I thank him that she’s happy. If she stopped being happy … it would be very
hard for me.” Unintentionally, she made
Erin feel very small. But that was part
of growing up. It was her first
realization that others made bigger sacrifices than she did, and the lesson
wasn’t lost on her.
One weekend, Amy
came to visit. (Helen and Amy had
patched up their disagreements, and Helen was very fond of Amy’s little
foster-daughter, Ruth.)
Amy noticed that
Helen was squinting. She found out who
Helen’s doctor was, and insisted that Helen have a full check-up.
Her weight was
just a little less than at the large (post-surgery) checkup, her blood sugar was more or less
under control, her reflexes were fine, but her vision was poor.
“You need new
lenses,” he said, musingly. “Still, not
too bad. Goodness, what have you been
doing to these?”
“They keep getting
dirty,” said Helen, “so the kids and I keep washing them!”
“See, this dull
area right in the center?”
“Yes?”
“You’ve been
wiping them with paper towels!”
“Oh. Is that bad for it?”
The doctor
nodded. Just soft cloth, he told
her. They were sent away to the
eye-doctor. The glasses were not too
expensive, and Helen selected a very conservative style of glasses,
wire-rimmed, which wrapped around the ear, because of all the woodwork she was
doing.
The look on her
face told the story. “It’s so clear!”
she exclaimed. “I can see!”
Helen went about
the next few days inspecting everything closely, making little exclamations of
surprise. Amy and David and the little
girl finished their business and headed home again, leaving Helen to reacquaint
herself with the joys of 20/20 vision. A
lot of her discovery took place out in the yard, while Lita, the dog, watched
with what appeared to be amusement.
Certainly she had a grin on her face that suggested it.
Helen played the
guitar often. Elly, home for Saturday
afternoon, listened without appearing to be studying her too closely. Helen was trying to work out the harmonies
for a song Allie had been singing. The
music teacher at the Quaker school was new, a middle-aged woman from Georgia
who seemed to know scores of old songs, and Allie was picking them up, and
singing them about the house. The kids
were playing out in front, today, and Helen was seated on the steps with her
guitar.
Erin came to sit
near Elly. “She’s so awkward, the way
she holds that guitar!” she giggled softly.
Helen, hunched over the guitar, immersed in trying out this chord and
that, could not hear them. “At least
she’s trying,” Erin said with a note of resignation.
“Before, she would
have just played the song. Right off.”
“Yeah, before,” Erin said, and Elly glanced at
her, hearing the frustration in her voice.
Erin sighed with a catch, almost like a sob.
“You ready?” asked
Elly, feeling strange. This was
uncharacteristic of Erin. The kid had
never been bitter about anything in her life, and there could have been so many
things that could have made her that way.
Elly wanted to get started on the lesson, before Erin’s mood worsened.
“How can we begin
with that going on?” she asked with a
smile that made her look like an old cynical woman. “Shall I tell her to go outside?”
Elly stared. “Just tell her we’re starting! You know
she comes over and listens! What’s wrong with you today?”
“I’m fine, Elly, no need to get all
upset! I’ll go tell her, okay?”
Erin’s face was
dark, and Elly could see that it hurt the kid to argue with her. She was taking the whole thing with Helen
very hard. But somehow she had to keep a
good relationship with her, because Erin needed the practice. In the absence of Helen’s teaching skill,
Elly had to keep Erin at it. Because Erin promised to be the greatest
violinist of them all. Already,
skill-wise, the kid was flawless. She
was as good as Elly, she knew, and she had no illusions about her own ability:
she was destined for greatness, but as a violist—which she determinedly was—she
would never be the celebrity Helen had been, and Erin surely would be.
When Erin spoke to
Helen, it was affectionately. Helen
immediately put away her guitar, and came towards the corner where they had
their lessons. She murmured something
about getting Allie and James, and headed to the front door, to call out in her
high soprano, all the way down to the little circle where they were
playing. Erin shared a look with Elly
and giggled. She was at the age when the
weird things Helen did embarrassed her.
Soon they were
doing their routine exercises, with Helen watching patiently. Her attention wandered, but they knew she
wouldn’t leave until at least James was done.
James was learning a new piece he had asked to be taught, and which Elly
had got for him from the music store.
The music store took all her extra cash, because the kids were
insatiable in their thirst for sheet-music.
Elly was determined to dig through Helen’s personal music library, which
they had not yet done.
“Good work,
Jamie! You’ve been practicing!”
“Naw,” said he
with a sly grin, “It’s getting easy. I
just played it once, on Tuesday!”
“You’ll never be a
great violinist that way, kid,” Elly reproached. “See how good Erin is?”
James just grinned
at her. He knew better than to get into
an argument with Elly. He was done. At one time, he would stay and listen to
Allie, but now he wanted to play. They
let him go after he had put away his violin.
Allie did
beautifully. There was some magic in the
house that made all the children take to the violin like ducks to water, Elly
thought. Then it was just her and Erin,
and they played a duet, wishing Helen could play the orchestra reduction of the
accompaniment for them. Elly was saving
up for a music-minus-two for the piece, after which they could play it as
though they were playing with a complete orchestra.
“I wish I had a
violin.” Helen sighed. “It looks so
easy!”
“But …” began
Erin, picking up her jaw, her eyes wide.
“Oh, we’ll get you
one, if you want to try,” said Elly quickly, before Erin could stick her foot
in her mouth. Helen had managed to
forget that she had been a violinist, and had sworn never to touch one again.
Helen, of course,
had a number of violins, including several original seventeenth and
eighteenth-century instruments given to her by Pat Wallace. Elly went to the attic and brought down her
own violin, one that Helen herself had made, witnessed by a little H in the back of the peg-box. Erin held her breath, while Elly tuned the
violin up, and Helen watched, fascinated.
When Elly was done, she reached for the instrument awkwardly, her large
hands hungry for it.
It took a long
while to make her comfortable with the violin under her chin, and Erin’s
excitement quietly faded. There would be
no miracles that afternoon. She watched,
expressionlessly, managing to maintain a minimal interest in the
proceedings. Elly taught her the basic
notes, and Helen did no better than any talented child would have done. She could get the left hand and the right to
go the way she wanted no better than if she had never laid hands on a violin in
her life. Worse, her guitar fingering
was getting in the way of her violin fingering.
Erin switched her
attention to Elly. How infinitely
patient she was! Erin’s eyes shone, as
she imagined herself in Elly’s place, dealing with Helen, trying to suppress
the frustration she felt.
“Oh!” Elly
exclaimed with disappointment, at one point, “You almost had it!” She smiled
apologetically, and let the disappointment slowly leach out of her expression.
Elly stopped after
half an hour, though Helen begged for more.
“I feel as though I’m just about to get it!” she exclaimed, her face
glowing. “It’s just like playing guitar! It is!”
Elly nodded and
smiled, shrugging non-committally, and Erin knew what it cost her to allow even
the slightest comparison between the two skills. But after that half hour, Elly needed to
recuperate, and Helen had to be left wanting more.
Erin told everyone
at dinner, while Helen had stepped out to check on Lita, that Helen had started
the violin. Immediately Maryssa’s eyes
lit up. “How’d it go?” she asked the two
girls. (Elly had stayed for dinner.) Elly began to say cautiously that it would
take a while, but Erin had jumped in, cheerfully saying that it was a disaster. “She can just about play a scale,” she
said. “It’s chopsticks, all over
again!” That got everyone laughing,
except Elly, who tried to signal that they should be quiet. They heard steps lightly running up the
stairs.
Erin’s face
changed in a moment to dismay. “Was she
there? Did she hear me?” Elly slowly nodded, her grim smile leaving no
doubt about her opinion of the younger girl.
“It was a joke! Just a joke!”
“I know,” said
Elly, “and she should know, too. Finish
eating, kids.”
“Shall I go up and
see?” asked Maryssa. They all looked up
to Elly, now, in tacit recognition of her inheritance of a kind of stewardship
over Helen and her children. Maryssa was
the undisputed authority over the children for most things, but for matters of
music and education, Elly and Lalitha were the ones they looked to. And for certain matters pertaining to Helen,
though Maryssa need not have asked her.
Elly only shrugged. “She hasn’t
finished eating,” Maryssa said thoughtfully.
“I’ll go,” said
Erin.
“Don’t you like
how I play chopsticks?” asked Helen sorrowfully, coming straight to the point.
“I love how you
play chopsticks,” Erin said, apologetically.
“I just meant that … it would, like, take you a long time to learn the
violin, just like, …” she swallowed, “… it’s taking you to learn … the piano.”
“I’ll never be as
good as you, sweetheart,” Helen said, and it was too much for Erin. She buried her face in Helen’s shoulder and
wept, in high, soft keening notes, the sound of bitter regret and remorse. “Don’t cry, now, sweetheart, … I should have
come straight to dinner! … I thought —I guess I knew— that you kids were making
fun of my violin-playing.” She
sniffed. “I’m such a great big kid …” Helen said mournfully, “… I ought
to be able to take a little fun at my expense.”
Erin calmed
herself with a great effort.
“I’ll go look,”
she said, her face a mess. “I didn’t
finish eating either. And the stew is
real good!” Helen smiled affectionately.
Erin took a
reconnoiter, and reported that the coast was clear. They had all gone somewhere. Helen and Erin finished their supper in
companiable silence.
Erin was proud to
be asked to help Helen practice on Monday evening. “Finish all your homework, and then I’ll be
ready,” Helen said, eagerly. Erin
agreed, equally excited.
With great
patience, she taught Helen something she would like, a song she could play with
just the notes she knew. In later years
she would say that it was one of the most rewarding moments of her life, as her
foster-mother played the tune with good intonation and rather wonderful
tone. The corner had definitely been
turned!
Once Helen got the
hang of playing with good tone, she wanted to play more and more, and always
popular tunes, light classics, and folk-songs.
Try as they might to get her to read music and play the classics, even the
little tunes that James and Allie were playing, she preferred to learn them by
ear, and play them in her own way, with her own —often awkward— fingering, and
not looking at the notes. It was as
though she had a deep-seated dislike of reading music, though she could easily sing from music.
“It’s what she likes,” Elly concluded. “If there was a song she wanted to learn to
play badly enough, she’d get it from the music, I’ll bet,” she said. But, after Elly adjusted her fingering, she
would play along with the kids, her expression blissfully content.
“This isn’t hard
at all,” she said to them. “I mean,” she
quickly corrected herself, being an amateur psychologist, now, “it’s hard, but I’m getting it pretty
well.” James gave her the evil eye, and
Allie bit her tongue, and Erin nodded, wooden-faced. Elly alone agreed with fair enthusiasm. To be honest, she was learning the physical part of violin-playing moderately
easily. She had the strength and the
control of her big, strong hands, even if hardly a vestige of her old skill
remained with her.
Twice, already,
they had gone to concerts of the Impromptu, to hear Erin do her stuff. As always, Helen sat ramrod straight, looking
over the shoulders of the people in front of her, eager to see everything. They had stopped telling her about her career
in the past, to make it easier for her to bear her handicap. She had forgotten that she had been the
founding conductor of the ensemble, and was, in fact, the owner of the building
in which they performed and rehearsed.
No comments:
Post a Comment