There were only two cars in the lot. I pulled up next to his. I opened the door. The interior
lights came on. Augustus sat in the driver’s seat, covered in his own vomit, his hands
pressed to his belly where the G-tube went in. “Hi,” he mumbled.
“Oh, God, Augustus, we have to get you to a hospital.”
“Please just look at it.” I gagged from the smell but bent forward to inspect the place
above his belly button where they’d surgically installed the tube.
The skin of his abdomen
was warm and bright red.
“Gus, I think something’s infected. I can’t fix this. Why are you here? Why aren’t
you at home?” He puked, without even the energy to turn his mouth away from his lap.
“Oh, sweetie,” I said.
“I wanted to buy a pack of cigarettes,” he mumbled. “I lost my pack. Or they took it
away from me. I don’t know. They said they’d get me another one, but I wanted . . . to do
it myself. Do one little thing myself.”
He was staring straight ahead. Quietly, I pulled out my phone and glanced down to
dial 911.
“I’m sorry,” I told him.
Nine-one-one, what is your emergency? “Hi, I’m at the
Speedway at Eighty-sixth and Ditch, and I need an ambulance.
The great love of my life
has a malfunctioning G-tube.”
He looked up at me. It was horrible. I could hardly look at him. The Augustus Waters of
the crooked smiles and unsmoked cigarettes was gone, replaced by this desperate
humiliated creature sitting there beneath me.
“This is it. I can’t even not smoke anymore.”
“Gus, I love you.”
“Where is my chance to be somebody’s Peter Van Houten?” He hit the steering wheel
weakly, the car honking as he cried. He leaned his head back, looking up. “I hate myself I
hate myself I hate this I hate this I disgust myself I hate it I hate it I hate it just let me
fucking die.”
According to
the conventions of the genre, Augustus Waters kept his sense of humor
till the end, did not for a moment waiver in his courage, and his spirit soared like an
indomitable eagle until the world itself could not contain his joyous soul.
But this was the truth, a pitiful boy who desperately wanted not to be pitiful,
screaming and crying, poisoned by an infected G-tube that kept him alive,
but not alive
enough.
I wiped his chin and grabbed his face in my hands and knelt down close to him so
that I could see his eyes, which still lived. “I’m sorry. I wish it was like that movie, with
the Persians and the Spartans.”
“Me too,” he said.
“But it isn’t,” I said.
“I know,” he said.
“There are no bad guys.”
“Yeah.”
“Even cancer isn’t a bad guy really: Cancer just wants to be alive.”
“Yeah.”
“You’re okay,” I told him. I could hear the sirens.
“Okay,” he said. He was losing consciousness.
“Gus, you have to promise not to try this again. I’ll get you cigarettes, okay?” He
looked at me. His eyes swam in their sockets. “You have to promise.”
He nodded a little and then his eyes closed, his head swiveling on his neck.
“Gus,” I said. “Stay with me.”
“Read me something,” he said as the goddamned ambulance roared right past us. So
while I waited for them to turn around and find us, I recited the
only poem I could bring to
mind, “The Red Wheelbarrow” by William Carlos Williams.
so much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
glazed with rain
water
beside the white
chickens.
Williams was a doctor. It seemed to me like a doctor’s poem. The poem was over, but
the ambulance was still driving away from us, so I kept writing it.
* * *
And so much depends,
I told Augustus, upon a blue sky cut open by the branches of the
trees above. So much depends upon the transparent G-tube erupting from the gut of the
blue-lipped boy. So much depends upon this observer of the universe.
Half conscious, he glanced over at me and mumbled, “And you say you don’t write