Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
well, that’s good
I say
breathing again
relaxing my shoulders
Dad says radiation will start just after Thanksgiving
that it will be five times a week for seven weeks
and that after those seven weeks
she’ll start taking tamoxifen
and her body will need to adjust
nothing unusual
Dad says
I raise my eyebrows
but I hold my tongue—
this whole year has been nothing but
unusual
how does this happen to someone who runs?
I say
and wears sunscreen
and doesn’t eat much meat?
it’s not fair
cancer is never fair
he says
but lots of women are survivors, Em
he says Mom will be fine but may be tired
from the radiation
and she’ll need lots of help
emotional and physical—
YiaYia’s help
Toby’s help
Dad’s help
when he can be there
and especially
my help
she counts on you, Em
he says
too much, I think
but don’t say
I pause on some bumped-up concrete where
a tree root has cracked open the sidewalk
like a wound
how is she today?
I say
but we have to move down the sidewalk
when a leaf blower starts
okay, kind of deflated
resigned, maybe
he says
we both know
she’s going crazy
without her running
then Dad says
I’m sorry, Em
but it looks like you and Toby
should just finish the school year here
even if I have to go back to Japan sooner
which, you know, I probably will
maybe in winter
I take a deep breath
and stare across
a long sloping yard
dotted with Canada geese
and I’m thinking
what if
I
went back with Dad . . .
but then I think of Zena’s poem
of her daughter
swimming off with her sister
and how if I went back with Dad
wouldn’t that be like
abandoning Mom?
I tell Dad
don’t worry
I’ll help Mom get back on her feet
he says
thanks, Em
I know you will
we walk back to the house
but before checking in with Mom
I tell him I need to go for a run
I put on some sweats
and dash back outside
to get my head in order
so I don’t blurt
the wrong words to Mom
I don’t even stretch
just start running
and right away I’m aware
I don’t have enough layers
for this frigid New England air
I launch into a sprint
bolt down my usual route
then keep going straight
where I’d usually loop right
pushing, pumping, straining
as if I want
to feel a muscle tear
when I slow my pace finally
I try to list what this all really means
1. my mother still needs treatment
2. Dad won’t be with us much
3. I’m staying in Massachusetts for a full school year
4. I won’t get back to Japan until way after
the one-year anniversary of the quake
as I reach mile three
I’m relieved the list is only
four points long
that I can start to mull or stress
as YiaYia might say
on just those four points
my body finally warms
and I even have to walk
awhile to cool down
when I reach YiaYia’s
at dusk
my mother’s in an armchair
with a lap desk and her computer
which she closes when I sit
down on the edge of the bed
cancer sucks
I say
sure does
she says
but I’m not alone, Em
about 12% of women in this country
will get breast cancer
and this is all standard treatment
precautionary, okay?
I nod, encouraged to see
that glint of determination
returning
then she says
I love that I can always count on you, Em
and though it’s meant as praise
it feels like a weight
transferred
strapped
to my back
Mom gazes out the window
to tree limbs bathed in streetlight
and sighs
I wish we were in Japan
she says
I miss my running routes, my students . . .
I can get enough America when I’m in Japan
but I can’t get enough Japan when I’m here
and this year, of all times, to have to leave . . .
I want to agree
add my own rant to hers
but instead I say
yeah, but we’ll get back home soon enough
and you’ll run those same routes
probably faster
she looks away
purses her lips
and I know she’s fighting tears
and I need to change the subject