FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA, 1972
I did manage to die a natural death
in the battle of Khe Sanh in the spring of 1968. I was killed by
artillery fire near the end of that bitter siege, just before
Operation Pegasus reached the base in April.
I was next born into a family of teachers in
Tuscaloosa, Alabama. We lived in a house near a large pond where
the geese came for the winter. My grandparents, my mother’s
parents, lived right down the road.
In 1972, when I was four years old, we moved to
Fairfax, Virginia. My father became superintendent of schools. I
remember being sad to leave the geese and my grandparents, my
grandfather Joseph especially, who loved airplanes as much as I
did.
I shared a bedroom with two brothers, and I had the
luck of being the eldest that time, so I got to set the tone for
how much and how hard we beat each other up. One of them I had
served with in the Great War, and the other was a fresh new soul.
He was so hyperactive as to be a blur at the dinner table, but he
was remarkably inventive, especially when it came to
firecrackers.
My mother had been my first-grade teacher in my
life immediately before, and I had loved her for her story voice
and her juice and cookies. She read science-fiction novels and grew
prizewinning dahlias, and she was a wonderful mother, one of my
very best. When she scratched my back or told us stories at night,
that’s what I thought: You are one of my very best.
A sort of miraculous thing happened a few months
after we moved to Virginia. We were sitting in church, all five of
us. I remember my youngest brother was still a baby. I was staring
at my small loafers, which dangled about a foot and a half off the
floor. I paged through the prayer book and read some of the parts
in Latin. This is typically the juncture in my lives where I start
to remember and process my old lives at a rapid clip. I didn’t
remember about knowing Latin until we started at that church,
because our old prayer books in Alabama didn’t have the
Latin.
There was a big space on the pew next to me, and on
the other side of that space was an older woman, about fifty, and
an even older woman on the other side of her. I thought by the way
they sat together that it was her mother. I looked at her
carefully. She had gray hair and a dark blue dress with a little
belt. She had stockings and practical, round-toed brown shoes. She
was a bit square-looking, and I remember being drawn by the web of
veins on the back of her hand, how they were blue and how much they
stuck out. I wanted to touch one, to feel if it was soft or not. I
moved a little closer to her.
My baby brother, Raymond, started making screeching
sounds, and the lady turned her head. I expected her to get the
frustrated look that people with gray hair in church often got when
babies started crying, but she didn’t. Her face was pink and not
frustrated.
And suddenly I realized I knew her. I was only just
getting to the age of recognizing people from older lives, but I
had already started a couple of years before having my dreams about
Sophia.
It felt as though there was an explosion going on
inside my head in very slow motion. She turned back to the front of
the church, and I desperately wanted to see her for longer. My
mother hustled to the end of our row with Raymond in her arms and
went out the back of the church to let Raymond do his yelling
outside with the cars and the birds. I slid closer to the lady. I
was practically in her armpit by the time she looked at me.
I remember my four-year-old astonishment. It was
Sophia. Her eyes were watery and sad, and her skin was loose and
speckly, but it was her. I thought of her when I had last seen her,
when she was Constance. She was so young and pretty then, and now
she wasn’t, but I knew she was the same. Amid the astonishment was
also confusion, and it took me a few minutes to figure out what was
wrong. Thinking back to myself a few years before when I was a
grown-up doctor, before I died, I remembered expecting that either
she would be very old and still be Constance or she would be very
young—like me or even younger—and somebody new. I didn’t think she
was supposed to be a person in the middle who I was pretty sure
wasn’t Constance.
Are you still Constance? I wondered
doubtfully. It was actually easier for me to identify that she was
Sophia than to ascertain if she was still being Constance or not,
but I was pretty sure she wasn’t. So I tried to figure out how it
happened. As good as my memory is, it is hard to make great use of
it amid the disorder of a surprised four-year-old mind.
When you are four it’s easy to forget where your
body is and is supposed to be. As I was determinedly calculating, I
had slid myself against her. When I realized how much of myself I
had pressed into her, I looked up and saw she was still looking at
me. If I was confused, so was she. If I was calculating, so was
she. At the time I thought it was maybe because she knew me in some
way, but I think it more likely she was just confused to have an
unknown four-year-old worming his way into her armpit.
She was confused, but she accepted my presence. She
put her arm around me. I realized my father was craning his neck
toward us, looking confused as well. I saw her nod to him as if to
say it was fine.
She squeezed me, and I felt myself relaxing into
her. She put her hand over my round stomach.
I felt some disappointment. I was certainly aware
of it. But because of my physical joy to be near her, I experienced
it in an almost dutiful manner, for the sake of my previous older
self and my future older self. That was something that always
started early with me—a wordless feeling of loyalty to my old
selves. Sophia was supposed to be young like me this time and not
old and big, and I needed to figure out why.
“I guess you must have died young last time,” I
told her in her rib.
Of course there was disappointment. But I was four
and she was holding me, and when you are four, the pleasure of the
body is hard to puncture with the displeasure of the mind.
I touched the vein on her hand, which was indeed so
soft it disappeared under my fingertip.
WE WENT TO the church in Fairfax for another year
or so. I would find Sophia and scurry to sit with her every time.
My parents called her my special friend and once invited her over
for lemonade after church, and she said thank you but no, she had
to take her mother home.
Eventually Molly, my mother, got tired of what she
said were the sexist sermons at that church. She found a hippie
church in Arlington where the priest sang his sermons accompanied
by an acoustic guitar. I recall there were a lot of songs from
Godspell. I actually preferred the new service, but I was
miserable not to see Sophia. I think my father was frankly
relieved. He thought my attachment to her was weird. When I made a
fuss about finding out her telephone number and calling her, I did
not get much adult assistance. I called her Sophia, but when it
came to looking up her number in the fat phone book, I realized I
didn’t know her actual name.
I took the bus to the old church when I was nine,
but she wasn’t there. I did it every Sunday for two months, but she
didn’t go there anymore. I didn’t see her again until 1985, when I
was seventeen.
My maternal grandfather, Joseph, from our old
street in Alabama, was dying. Molly, my mother, decided to put him
in hospice close to where we lived. She’d already lost her mother
suddenly to a heart attack, and she wanted to be able to take care
of him. I went with her to see him. I wasn’t as much moved by my
feelings toward him as by my mother’s feelings toward him. Her
grief was thick all over the house. I remember thinking to myself,
It’s all right. It’s not that big a deal. You’ll get another
one. And yet somehow, even though it was the kind of thing I
told myself all the time, it didn’t seem exactly right. As long as
I had been around, as much as I carried with me, I wanted to think
I knew better than Molly, but I really didn’t. I didn’t know
anything about love compared to Molly.
I kept thinking about Laura in the playground in
Georgia, being ordinary for her mother. I was struck by it in a sad
way, and I wasn’t even sure why. I hadn’t thought much about
playing a role in anybody else’s life. I was so eager to play
myself every time; the others were just rotating through the bit
parts. Because they forgot and I remembered. That’s what I figured.
They would be lost soon enough, and I would keep going. The best I
could do was hold on to them after they forgot themselves.
Not that I didn’t do my duty; I did. I made sure my
mothers, all but the few who left me or died before I grew up, had
food and basic comforts. I made sure they were looked after when
they were sick or old. The money I stockpiled I used for them more
than anyone. But I didn’t think too much harder than that. In a
life like mine, you get a lot of mothers, and you lose a lot, too.
You don’t so much appreciate the getting, but you mind the losing.
After the first few losses I learned how to weather them better.
One mother out of many was what I always told myself.
But I saw in my mother’s grief how she loved her
father. She didn’t love him because he was her father, she loved
him. She loved the kindnesses he had done her, the times
they spent together. There was nothing abstract in the way she
loved him or any of us. You can get a new one, is what I
thought, but I guess in a deeper way, I knew she couldn’t.
THE SECOND TIME I visited hospice, I inadvertently
peered into a room a few doors down from Joseph’s and saw a
deteriorated lady propped up in a bed. I walked about twenty more
steps before I realized I knew her. I retraced my steps and looked
at her from the doorway. It was Sophia. Never had I seen her like
this. She was the same as she was in our old church but older and
sick. After I’d said good-bye to my grandfather, I went back to her
room.
I sat with her for a while. I held her hand. She
opened her eyes and looked at me. They were rheumy. I knew they
were Constance’s eyes and Sophia’s eyes, but I resisted seeing them
that way. Some part of me was staring down a big grief, and I
didn’t know what to do about it. I had the strangest sensation of
lifting up and away, until everything on the ground got smaller and
smaller and I could see the big patterns instead of the small,
troubling pieces.
You won’t be like this for long. You’ll be young
and strong again soon, I was saying to her over and over in my
head. It wasn’t for her sake but for mine.
I visited her twice more and sat with her and
talked to her about all kinds of things. I think I might have done
all the talking, but I also think she was happy to have me. An
irritable orderly told me she asked every day, several times, if I
was coming back. She had no children or grandchildren, he told me.
I was about the only one who came.
One of the days she seemed more alert, and she kept
looking at me in an odd way.
“Do you remember me?” I asked her.
She looked at me carefully. “I remember there was
someone with your name.”
“Do you?”
“From a long time ago.”
“Someone you knew?”
“Not really knew, no. I was waiting for him. My
mother said I was foolish, and I was.”
“What do you mean?”
“I was a girl in Kansas City, before my father died
and we moved east. We had a nice time then. Lots of parties and
plans. I was a romantic soul, but my mother said I enjoyed my
imagination more than any of the real boys. And that was a
disappointment to her.”
I could see, now, the loneliness that wasn’t just
from being old, and the reality of her began to sink in. All those
years when I was trying to find Constance, picturing her getting
old across an ocean, she was growing up like me, a couple of
hundred miles away. I thought of Snappy the pigeon. I couldn’t find
her because she was dead.
I hadn’t understood the full tragedy. I was a
teenager, as selfish as a two-year-old, and there’s no getting
around that. I had always wished she would come back with me, and
she had. At least she had tried. I was waiting for her and she was
close by, waiting for me. In her way, she remembered.
Sophia’s old eyes were watching me, and I hid my
face from her. She didn’t even know all we’d lost. “He was waiting
for you, too,” I said. I had disappointed her.
“I was always foolish,” she said.
I stayed there as long as I could, my thoughts
churning. I stayed until they kicked me out, sometime after ten
that night.
I came back the next morning, and I told her about
the old things. I held her hand for hours, and I told her about our
ride through the desert. I told her about the Great War and her
being a lady of Hastonbury Hall and how it had been turned into a
hospital and she had taken care of me there. I called her Sophia
and told her I loved her. I always had. She was asleep by then, but
I needed her to know. I was scared I would lose her for good this
time.
BY THE END of the third visit, I knew what I was
going to do.
“Don’t worry,” I told her. “I’m coming, too. We’ll
come back together.” That’s what she’d wanted to do before, when
she was Constance, but I’d said no. This time we’d do it. This time
it was her life that was spent and mine that was young and
promising. I was the one who could see to the other side. That made
it easier.
“This is going to be our chance,” I said to
her.
I was sorry to give up such a life. I was
especially sorry for it because of my mother, Molly. She would lose
her father and her son in one short stretch, and I knew—or at least
I would have known if I let myself think about it—that it would be
devastating to her. But I had a strategy for weathering the losses,
and it didn’t involve a lot of thinking.
I wished I could tell Molly that it was what I
wanted, and that I would come back soon. I wished I could make her
know it was all right. But another voice inside my head had a
different idea. She loves you, it said. She doesn’t want
to lose you, and it’s not all right.
I knew in my heart it was so, but I managed to
ignore it. I was young and stupid, and in a big hurry to get to
Sophia again. How else could I have done it? It’s amazing the
things we take for granted.
There was a big part of me that resisted Molly’s
love. I even had the effrontery to think I succeeded in it. It was
hard enough to cling to one person from life to life. It was hard
enough to have one person you loved forget you every time. Maybe
Ben was capable of holding on to the love of an infinite number of
people, but I could barely hold on to one.
I went to an infamous corner in D.C. on a winter
night before my eighteenth birthday. I don’t think of that night
very often, but I confess I do think about what happened the night
before. It was the first time in a very long time I thought enough
about a mother’s feelings to try to say good-bye to her. I won’t
attempt to describe the things she said or the way I felt. As
Whitman wrote, they scorn the best I can do to relate them.
I’m not very good at living meaningful lives, but I
try to make my deaths meaningful, when I can. I try to use them to
benefit some person or cause in some small way, but that time I was
too young and in too much of a hurry to think of a way to do
it—other than scaring the shit out of a few drug addicts.
I went to this place near D Street, I think it was,
near the 9:30 Club, where I used to go to hear music sometimes. I
found my way to a room off an alley where the addicts went. Not the
happy pot smokers but the serious users. I brought enough cash to
make an impression. I found my druggie Virgil, a desperate woman in
her thirties with an arm that told the tale. I promised I’d buy for
her if she found me the best, strongest stuff. She had the idea it
was habitual with me, and I didn’t correct her. It was her needle,
her excitement, her fingers tying the band around my arm.
That was the only time I ever took heroin, and it
will be my last. I guess dying of it is no way to start. Maybe I
angered fate by doing it. It wasn’t suicide, but it was about the
closest I’ve gotten. It was cheating, a way to avoid it on a
technicality. I’d hoped my sheer fervency to reunite with Sophia
would get me back fast, and thankfully it did. It wasn’t death I
wanted. That much was clear to me in my dying moment. I wanted life
very badly.
But when nature offers you one of her true gifts,
there’s a special punishment for those who throw it away. I did
come back again, but if you believe in these things, it probably
explains the mother I was dealt in my subsequent life.