Authors: Allie Pleiter
The art of lumps and gauze
“M
AGS
!” Diane lets every ounce of her alarm play out in her voice. Who needs a mirror when your best friend gives your new stitches a response like that?
Will guides me to the couch as if the removal of his arm might mean my instantaneous death. Gallant and guilty make a great combinationâI haven't been this fawned over since my sixteenth birthday when, instead of going to my party, I had to have my appendix removed.
I lean my head back against the sofa while Will hands off pills, ice bags and other medical goodies to Diane. He's issuing orders, actually; as he places each item in Diane's hands, he spouts off the precise directions I heard earlier from the E.R. doctor. I don't bother telling him Diane's a nurseâthis scene
is far too amusing and I could really use the distraction. My head feels as though it's been filled with a delightful combination of cement and exploding firecrackers. Diane shoots me a wink while Will puts the four ice bags he bought me at the hospital pharmacy into my freezer.
Four.
Really. Do I look that bad?
All this attention is flattering to a point, but I swear the man's blood pressure has gone up forty percent. He actually yelled at the triage nurse because he thought I wasn't being seen fast enough. Come onâfifty minutes in an urban E.R. is actually rather speedy for your basic nonlethal injury. I attempt assurance. “I'm going to be fine, Will.”
“No, you won't,” Will replies, looking at me like I'mâ¦like I'mâ¦well, maybe I don't want to finish that sentence.
Disfigured for life
comes to mind. He's peering at me analytically. “If that bleeding starts up again⦔
“Diane's a nurse, you know,” I confess, because I've decided I hurt too much to be entertained. “I'm in expert hands here. She's going to spend the night and everything.” The really strong painkillers they gave me at the hospital are starting to wear off and I want my new prescriptions
now
but don't want to try stuffing a pill into this face with
him
watching.
“You're sure you'll be all right?” he says, sounding doubtful. “You don't need anything?”
I need to change into pajamas, to choke down my pain pills and to curl up in a ball. I can't do that with you watching, your lordship.
“Fibe.” I say, re
lapsing into swollen-face speech for his benefit. “I'm tired and I just need sleeb and bills.”
“Pardon?”
“Sleep and pills,” Diane says, taking his elbow and pulling him toward my kitchen. “She needs to take her medication and sleep everything off. Will, you said your name was, right?”
“William Grey”
The third,
my brain adds through the fog.
“Yes, well, the third, but I hardly see how that's relevant at the moment.”
Aw, I didn't say that out loud, did I? Pills, where are those pills?
“Okay, William Grey III, give me a phone number where I can call you later tonight and I'll give you a full update once she's had a few hours sleep. You've been a perfect hero this afternoon and I'm sure Maggie will talk to you as soon as she feels up to it.”
I sink back into my couch and pull up the afghan my aunt made me. I want to be surrounded by soft, fuzzy things. I want someone to make the aches and pains go away and let me sleep. Face it: even though it's August and I'm twenty-eight, I want to be tucked in under the covers.
I hear Diane usher Will out the door with no less than three more promises to call if my condition should deteriorate in any way.
I shut my eyes until she perches next to me on the couch with a glass of water, a straw, and a handful of pills. “Come on now, time for Maggie to head off to the pain-free place.”
She swaps out my ice pack as I down my pills, wincing as she gets another look at me. “Could you stob that?” I mutter.
“You're
sure
you didn't break your nose? They did X-rays?”
“Twice. Will insisted they check again.”
“Cute and caring. I'm glad I have his home phone number.”
“Diannne⦔ I growl. “You do
not
get to hit on my loan officer.”
Diane sits back. “He's that guy?
That
man was the aloof, stuffy banker who denied your loan? Whoa, maybe you needed a conk on the head. He's gorgeous!”
Â
Near as I can tell, I faded out at around 9:00 p.m. It's just after midnight now and I just woke up, bleary-eyed, sore and very thirsty. Diane somehow got me into pajamas and moved me to my bed, but I don't remember any of that. I grab my bathrobe and stumble out into the living room.
Diane's on the couch, fast asleep, with the TV playing softly on one of those classic movie channels. The screen shows a beat-up boxer getting a you-gotta-get-back-in-there speech from his baseball-capped, gum-chewing manager. One look at our prizefighter reminds me it might be time to brave the bathroom mirror.
I pad toward the kitchen for something to drink. I ignore the three bottles of Gatorade Will brought, opting for a diet soda instead. Gently fizzing
bubbles might feel nice. Plus, I can use a straw without feeling like I'm a fourth grader home sick from school.
I catch a glimpse of myself in the microwave window. Wow. I might want to take a few deep breathsâor prayers or maybe another painkillerâbefore I try anything as accurate as a mirror.
Inhale. Pop the can top. Exhale. Insert straw. Inhale, head toward the bathroom, exhale. Inhale, go into the bathroom, exhale. Inhale, reach for the light switchâ¦
Howl. Yep, that's the word for it. I'm howling.
I look
hideous.
Absolutely hideous. The prizefighter on TVâblood and allâcould beat me in a beauty contest. My cheeks are so puffy I look like I should be gathering acorns for winter. And I haven't even dared to lift the bandages yet. The disturbing colors around those bandage edges are enough to set the room spinning. “Ohâ¦oooâ¦I'm awwwfuuulllâ¦.”
Diane comes stumbling into the room, panicked right out of dead sleep, gasping, “What? Mags! Are youâ¦oh.”
“I'm hid-e-ous!” I should have thought more before giving into a good cry. Those tears sting. I half fall, half slump against Diane, who is just awake enough to catch me.
“You're injured, not hideous,” she says, yawning.
“I'm purple. I'm lumpy and puffy. You can't even tell where my eyebrows are!” My
S
's are still
slurred by the sheer size of my upper lip. My face is a Technicolor collage of bumps and gauze.
“It's not that bad.”
“Are you kidding? Have you looked at me? Even the circus wouldn't hire me.”
Diane shoots me a look. “It's not that bad, Mags. In three days you'll just look like you took a nasty hit.”
I scowl as best I can. “I
did
take a nasty hit. A really nasty hit. And I was an innocent bystander!”
“Will feels terrible about what happened. The guy called three times and is stopping by tomorrow. I wouldn't be surprised if this apartment has more flowers than a funeral parlor by noon.” She looks at me in that conniving way of hers. “Hey, how many guys on a rugby team, anyway?”
“Stop capitalizing on myâ¦my⦔ I risk another glance in the mirror looking for the right noun. “Awww⦔ I touch the only part of my face that doesn't look purpleâa spot down near my right earâand cry harder.
Diane grabs my hand and swats the light switch off. “It's clear we should avoid mirrors for at least twenty-four hours. You're due for more ice and medication. And I want you to eat something.” Oh, no. She's got her nurse voice on now. All arguing will be pointlessâthis woman's a professional.
“Okay. I don't know how I'm going to chew, though.”
Diane deposits me at my kitchen table and heads toward the fridge. “Already thought of that. I
stopped at the market on my way over. Applesauce, yogurt or ice cream?”
I attempt to raise one eyebrow. “What do
you
think?”
“I figured. Coffee ice cream it is. I'll let you off the nutritional hook for six more hours. Come morning, you're back on real food.”
“Yes, ma'am.”
While she scoops, I attempt to take stock of my present situation. “Let's see. I'm down at least three days of work, since I doubt I'll resemble a member of the human race until Wednesday. I'm down a couple of hundred dollars of medical expensesâ¦.”
“Nope.”
“What?”
“Will told me he gave the hospital his credit card and told the pharmacy to send all bills to him at the bank.”
This bothers me. I'm an adult, with my own credit card and my own health insuranceâpaltry as it is. I don't need British foreign aid. “I'm injured, not destitute.”
“Suit yourself. You're up an A, though.”
“Huh?”
“You got an A on your paper and I'm pretty sure Will never even read it.”
Diane puts a bowl of coffee ice cream down in front of me with one hand and my class paper with the other. There's a giant red A on the top.
Next to a smear of mud and several drops of blood.
I'd laugh if I didn't think it would hurt so much.
What rhymes with caffeine?
L
ots of things look better in the dawn of a new day.
I am not one of them.
We're putting that aside, thank you, and attempting some form of deportment for my cascade of visitors today. Starting with who else but my parents. Thank goodness for Diane, she held them off for almost a full day. I'm sure that took major negotiations. But they'll be here today to check in on their little darling.
Followed, you can be certain, by a gaggle of brothers and sisters and maybe even a few nephews dying to see if Auntie Mags is as gross-looking as everybody says.
I tried viewing my face as a piece of artwork this morning. I walked calmly into my bathroom, which I've filled with colorful mosaic pieces so that you
hardly notice the boring white porcelain tile and fixtures.
See yourself as just another wildly colored mosaic,
I told myself.
Enjoy the riot of color for the energy it brings. Use your artistic side to appreciate the shades of purple and amber, get creative with the application of gauze, explore your interesting profile.
Well, I didn't really think it would work, either, but it was worth a shot. Color usually cheers me up, but it's hard to find the right lipstick shade to go with contusion. Is it realistic to consider using under-eye concealer on two-thirds of your face? Do drop earrings or studs go better with stitches? When I asked Diane, she threatened to hide my painkillers and make me go cold turkey onto Tylenol. I'm dressed, though, so that ought to count for something. I'm glad it's only August, because it may take months for me to be able to manage a turtleneck sweater over this mess.
I've arranged myself on the couch, attempting a graceful posture, when Diane lets in the parental brigade.
Mom drops her purse on my kitchen counter and makes no attempt to soften her look of utter horror when she sees her precious baby girl. “Margaret Mary Black! Sweet mercy, but you look just awful!”
My dad shoots me a look of serious concern as he settles into his favorite chair at my place, a big, overstuffed wingback I found at a secondhand store on Broadway. The old chair groans under his
weight and I get the feeling he'd groan too, if Mom weren't moaning enough already.
“Thanks for reminding me how bad I look, Mom.” Guess what? I'm going to spend the whole day watching people's mouths drop open. My own by-invitation-only pity party. Ooo, big fun. “I actually feel better than I look,” I offer, not really sure that it's true.
“I should hope so,” Mom nearly gasps. She scuttles over to the couch and grabs my hands. “Why didn't you call me right away?”
Because I knew you'd get like this. Because you'd probably be calling around for plastic surgeons when all I really need is painkillers and ice bags. Because I'm twenty-eight, not four. Take your pick.
“Diane's a nurse, Mom.”
“And I'm your
mother.
” Mom would argue
mother
outranks everyone. The president of the United States could be waiting to award me the Nobel Peace Prize and Mom would still demand to go first. She's inspecting me now, lips pursed, making that infernal
tsk-tsk
noise mothers make. My dad stares at my purple-fringed curtains. He's probably thinking how nicely I match the decor today. “My poor baby,” Mom coos, “my poor wounded baby.”
I'm trying to crawl toward normalcy here. “Poor baby” is not what I need. I need a cover stick the size of Puget Sound, because I probably
am
as purple as my curtains. I need an adorable hat with a brim that extends clear down to my elbow, and a
pair of dark glasses large enough for King Kong. And I could really use a triple-raspberry white-chocolate latte.
Starting with the latte.
I know most coffee junkies are purists, but me, I love all the flavors and toppings we Americans have added into the coffee business. Makes it more like dessert, but with the added bonus of a jolt to your bloodstream. Speaking of jolts, you can mix codeine and caffeine, can't you? I mean, they rhyme and all.
You can imagine my gratitude when, after two hours of family histrionics, Will Grey arrives with precisely that beverage. How'd he know? Who cares. You don't think he noticed that I actually grabbed at the drink with both hands, do you? It only took me three sips to notice that there was a large bouquet of flowers in his other hand. “From Sumners,” Will quickly explains, as if it might be unsuitable to even suggest they came from him. “I stood over him myself while he paid for them. I'd have had him come up here, but somehow I wasn't sure you'd welcome the company.”
“After my family,” I reply, “the Marine Corps would be a respite.” I push aside the pile of throw pillows on my brocade couch so there's room for him to sit down. “They're lovely, thanks. Tell Sumners I'll forgive him if he works on his aim.”
“That's just the thing,” Will says, rubbing his chin. “Art's the best shot on the team.”
“I don't think I'll back you up on that one.” I feel
the hot coffee work its blissful charm on my bloodstream. After so much ice, the heat feels cleansing. The blend of smooth milk, sharp coffee, silky foam and luxurious flavorsânot to mention the vital caffeine factorârevives me. I close my eyes and sigh.
Will picks up a milk-glass vase I had sitting on my coffee table and sets the flowers in it. “I'll give you one thing, Maggie Black, you're in the right business.”
“Stopping flying objects with my face?” Hey, I
can
raise one eyebrow (useful sarcasm tool, you know). I couldn't manage that yesterday.
“No, coffee. I've never seen anyone enjoy it quite so much.” You know, Will's a much nicer guy than I gave him credit for. There's a natural calm about him. A solidness that I don't think I can put down simply to British understatement. Today, here, he's different. Something in between the suit-clad banker and the mud-spattered rugby player. Reserved, but with a hint of fun peeking through. He sits back down on the couch and I notice how the blue of his eyes changes in different lights. They're more blue than gray this morning. “So,” he says gently, “how are you feeling?”
“Swollen. Sore. Like I might want to stay far away from any rugby friends of yours.”
Will laughs. “Oh, you should see Art. He's nearly folded over with guilt. It was a laugh, watching such a big lad try to explain it all to the tiny lady at the flower shop. He could barely bring himself to say what he'd done. Enormously funny, until⦔
“Until⦔
“Until I had him write
Margaret Black
on the card, at which our tiny shop lady turned into a dragon. It seems⦔
“You went to GreenThings on Thirty-Sixth, didn't you?” How could I have missed that on the card? No wonder I liked the arrangement so much. “Will, that's where I work.”
“Yes, well, I know that.
Now.
Your Mrsâ¦.”
“Chang, Nancy Chang. And I'll just bet she let your buddy Art have it.” Oh, I would have given anything to see tiny Nancy Chang telling off enormous Art Sumnersâin high-velocity Chinese, no doubt. When that woman gets her dander up, you don't even need a translator to know you're in deep, deep trouble.
Will pinches the bridge of his nose again, laughing softly, obviously reliving the scene. “Yes, well I doubt he will recover from his tongue-lashing anytime soon. He was positively beet-red by the time I dragged him out of the store. I was already planning to bring you some coffee, but she nearly marched us around the corner herself. She made Art memorize and recite your favorite drink before she'd let him leave the store.
Now I'm laughing, even though it hurts. “I was wondering how you'd managed to show up with my favorite drink. I don't recall there being a blank for that on those hundreds of bank forms you made me fill out. Thanks for the coffee, by the way,” I say, suddenly re
membering my manners, “and thanks for the A, too. I was only kidding about that, you know.”
“No, you weren't.” He counters, his eyes sparkling for a moment before adopting a more professional tone. “And I'll advise you that such a stunt will only work once with me. You'll
earn
every other A you get in my class. And you'll turn in every assignment on time,” his voice suddenly softens again, “although I will grant a limited number of injury-related extensions.”
I nod, only because I can't figure this guy out. One minute he's my hero, fawning all over me. The next he's a taskmaster, cracking his tutorial whip.
“So,” he continues, producing a piece of paper from his pocket and unfolding it on the coffee table for me to read, “I've adapted this week's homework assignment to suit yourâ¦limited capabilities.”
I attempt to sit up. “My capacities are not limited, they're just under heavy medication right now.”
“Three words,” Will declares, pointing to the heading on the top of the page. “Your assignment is to identify the three words your ideal customer uses if asked to describe you in ten seconds or less.”
There's a tidy little homework sheet, with bullet points and examples and all, complete with three blanks at the bottom of the page for me to fill in my three words.
Three words. I had to fill out twelve forms and now I'm learning about business by coming up with three words?
“That seems a bit simplistic, if you don't mind my saying so.”
Will looks like he was expecting that. “Often, the simplest concepts are the hardest to grasp. This exercise gets to the very heart of your brand and the loyalty you want to build in your customers. âNail this,' as you would say, and it drives everything else that comes after it.”
“Three words. Well, with the surprising bonus of free time I have this weekend, I ought to be able to drum up three words by Wednesday.”
Will smiles. He does have a very nice smile. Dignified, but still genuine. Top drawer all the way. “I thought it would suit the circumstances. We'll see you Wednesday, then?” He plants his hands on his knees as if to get up.
“Going so soon?” I blurt out before I can even think. Now where did that come from? Granted, he's far nicer company than a gaggle of hovering siblings, but it's not as though I'm itching to spend time with the guy. I don't even know if he goes to church. I don't know if he takes cream or sugar. I don't know a lot of things about this guy.
So there's no reason for me to be craving conversation with my friendly neighborhood banker. I've gotten more apology than I'll ever need from both him and his gigantic orb-lobbing friend. I need my rest, right?
After a pause that could mean a host of thingsâfrom “I've got better things to do on a Saturday than chat with wounded clients” to “actually, I'd really
rather not go,”âWill says, “Well, I should be going.”
I'm not going to discuss what that pause does to my imagination. I'm not going to discuss anything in my present medicated state. I mean, really, I harbor warm feelings toward
anyone
who brings me coffee.