Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
but it turns out that Wednesday
is Gram and Gramps’ last dinner with us
before they return to Vermont
and I’m supposed to come straight home
after seeing Zena
I beg
offer to get up early
for a farewell breakfast
tell Dad and YiaYia I’ll be back
in time for dessert
but there is no getting out of this one
Samnang can come here
Dad says
when I explain the pizza plans
I think on that
but say
never mind
it’s okay
Wednesday I take the bus to the Newall Center
since Samnang has a gymnastics team meeting
and will be late
Zena’s not in her room
so I grab the letter board I prefer
not the one hanging from her chair
and an aide tells me she’s waiting
in the library downstairs
where she is
but so is another woman
leafing through a magazine
Zena spells that it’s
o-k
but I feel strange
without privacy
I read Zena a mermaid poem
by Kim Addonizio
from the point of view of a mother
watching
dreaming about
and thinking of
her fifteen-year-old daughter
I say I was searching for mermaid poems
but more than the mermaid
I really liked the metaphor
of the girl’s face as a lure
that pulls the mother
from her darkness
next I read aloud the one
by Naomi Shihab Nye
about the mother who tells the daughter
you know you’re going to die
if you can no longer make a fist
I look at Zena’s hands
clenched immobile atop her always folded arms
and tell her
you’re fine—you’ve got good fists
I tell her I like the line in this poem about
the girl grown up
still lying in the backseat as an adult
behind her questions
I tell Zena I chose these poems
because they had a mother and a daughter
one poem from each perspective
and in each the mother or the daughter
is the other’s lifeline in a way
and because of her window poem
about the family posing for a photograph
and because of meeting her daughter on Sunday
but then the woman across the room
the woman who’s been leafing through magazines
startles us by saying
I had two sons—
if I’d had a daughter
she’d come see me
I nod, say
well . . .
and ask Zena if she’d like to write a poem
about being a mother or a daughter
or a mermaid or whatever
and Zena looks up
and I ask the woman with the magazine
if she wants a piece of paper
to try a poem, too
but she says
no, no
I just have sons
and even though I explain
that she can write a poem
about her sons
or about being a mother
or being a daughter
she still says
no
I just have sons
I ask Zena if she wants to use
the computer attached to the chair
but she insists on the letter board
so I go down the list of colors
and start spelling Zena’s poem
which doesn’t have a title yet
letter by letter
word by word
Zena spells
like this poem was just
sitting in her head:
my stroke beached me like a whale on hot sand
come home! my daughter called and called
but I couldn’t answer and finally she swam away
by the time I could look up to talk
and tell her to lean over my face
so I could feel the tickle of her hair
she no longer felt like my daughter
come back! I called and called
but she swam away
with my sister
it takes several minutes
staring at Zena’s words
for me to comment
Sarah was raised by your sister?
Zena looks up
and I try to grasp
Zena’s losses
movement, speech, her child
I ask how old Sarah was
when Zena had her stroke—
she looks up at 6
I suck in my breath
try to imagine Sarah growing up
with her mother in the care center
what about your husband? Sarah’s father?
I dare ask
l-e-f-t
she spells
2 m-o-n-t-h-s a-f-t-e-r
I try to hold my tongue
but can’t help saying
jerk!
and Zena looks up
but it’s great that Sarah comes to see you
I say
n-o-t o-f-t-e-n
Zena spells
then adds
m-o-s-t-l-y o-n-l-i-n-e
online?
well, that’s good! isn’t it?
and as I recite the colors and letters
Zena spells
s-e-q-u-e-l
s-h-e s-w-a-m b-a-c-k
w-i-t-h f-a-c-e-b-o-o-k
and this cracks me up
and Zena looks up
five times in a row
then the woman with the magazine
says her younger son was on a swim team
and won a medal in the backstroke