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7 October 15 2001 bluetyger main issue 7 intro editorial about this magazine Edmund Wu photos John W. Gardner HandMade in America Coldwater Fall Fair Creemore Ontario Falldown Way Past Midnight |
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| Editor: William J. Gibson email to the editor Made in Canada |
Way Past Midnight- William J. Gibson -I look at my hands by electric light. They are becoming the dry wrinkled hands of an old office man. Not yet my father's hands Not my mother's which became deflated as she almost made it to 80. The wrinkles deep, her skin on her wrists paper thin so fragile when they took the blood tests. She would bruise like they had used a coal shovel on her We should grow old in a big old house surrounded by grandchildren not in the white sheets of the fucking hospitals I hate the thought of it. sitting beside her as her breathing in the coma shuddering slowing more work for each breath I sat in the ugly metal and vinyl padded chair my hand under the sheet holding her leg below the knee her good leg not the left with the stroke twisted ankle feeling the warmth of her in my hand and the shudders of her breathing growing harder and slower and slowing to nothing her mouth still open the IV pump with saline and the other line morphine I listened and listened for another breath then I walked around to look at her face half turned from me my hand brushing her hair still brown, just a line or two of grey then I sat back down in the chair and put my hand back on her leg below the knee and felt her warmth and it was quiet, January quiet then I got ready to go find a nurse to check for a pulse, a heartbeat, and to find neither sound, just the shell still, three days short of her 80th birthday, and then to tell me that my mother was dead officially and then the doctor who I had never seen before came to tell me that my mother was dead officially for the second time the doctor a young woman younger than me following her training having put on the doctor face with emotion tucked away explained to me that my mother had passed away I said, "I know. I was there." The nurses on the floor looked at me as I waited for my sister to arrive they looked at my face my hands spread out held high holding the metal doorframe of the room so that the building would not explode the metal was cool and had no wrinkles. Contents - image and poem - Copyright (C) 2001 William J. Gibson. None of the material contained herein may be reproduced or stored in any form without prior written consent from the author. Send inquiries or comments to bluetyger editor: William J. Gibson |