My mother was admitted to the hospital in my hometown where she still lived. A call from her doctor meant that I had to fly out immediately. The advantage -- perhaps the only advantage -- of traveling as much as I do is elite status on airlines. After a quick phone call and burning a substantial number of accumulated miles, I managed to make it from California to Connecticut only about 10 hours after I first spoke with her doctor. She had stabilized by the time I arrived. She had fallen, yet again, but this time she had suffered a severe concussion. I took up a vigil at her bedside, reassuring her whenever she awoke that she'd be alright, keeping an eye on the hospital staff, and in general serving as her advocate for care when she could not.
On day two, I guess I had fallen asleep in the recliner next to her bed. With the change of shift, a new aide arrived to check my mother's vitals. When she came into the room, she must have startled me awake.
"Charles," she inquired?
Not sure where I was for a moment, I stared blankly back at her face for a moment. "Debbie," I asked, hesitantly, though I was sure of the answer even through the fog that enveloped my mind?
Thirty-some years later, I recognized her face, though I could not believe it. She had been my first real girlfriend, spanning the last year of middle school and first year of high school. I had been completely infatuated with her. She broke up with me at the end of freshman year and we'd never really talked again. I knew she had become one of the "popular" girls at school, with all that entailed. We had never progressed beyond some pretty serious necking, but rumor had it that she soon moved far past that with numerous other guys. I had always regretted being the "good guy" who had respected her perhaps more than was warranted. All this, along with the heartbreak of how she had ended the relationship, all came back to me in a flash as I sat there rubbing my eyes and trying to collect myself at my mother's bedside.
She took up her responsibilities. She had always been a favorite of my parents, so she warmed to my mother, expressing concern and her joy at seeing her again -- despite the unfortunate circumstances, and so on. All the while, her eyes darted in my direction. I had aged well, though I might have wished for a shower, a shave, and a clean shirt at least for such a reunion.
Debbie had also kept her shape. She had obviously gained some weight since our high school years, some in good places, some in more unfortunate places. But she still looked good for a woman of her age. At the same time, I sensed that she had had a hard life. She looked worn, with a few too many wrinkles. Here she was working as a nurse's aide, a hard, physically demanding job, at an age when many of my wealthier friends were already looking forward to retirement. She certainly had not realized the potential that I, at least, saw in her back in the day.
After she had finished her care for my Mom, I excused myself and followed her out to the hallway.
"Thanks," I said. "I'm a little concerned about her," pointing back toward the room.
"I expect she'll be fine," she responded. "The concussion should clear eventually. The bigger worry is that she keeps falling." Catching herself, however, she reminded herself, if not me, "But I'm no doctor. You'll have to talk to her physician. My supervisor would already reprimand me for the diagnosis I just gave you," she said with a sad shrug of her shoulders.
"You look great," I said, even if it wasn't entirely true.
"You too," she said, this time with a hint of a smile. "I heard you live in California, the land of money, sunshine, and beaches." There was a wistful look in her eye.
"Yes," I replied. "Over twenty-four years now, ever since I completed my Ph.D." I knew that last bit was probably both a bit of a brag and perhaps a minor dig -- but I couldn't resist.
"Oh, what do you do with that Ph.D.," she asked?
"I teach Economics," I said, toning it down and rolling it back a bit. I had long ago learned that it was a conversation killer with those outside of academia when I described myself as a Professor of Economics at Stanford.
"How about you? How are you," I inquired, leaning in a bit?
"Me," she asked, apparently surprised I'd be interested? Pausing for a moment, and taking a deep breath, she blurted out "Three times divorced, each a lousy fool of a husband who left me deeper in debt than the last. I have a way, I guess, of finding scoundrels who take what they want and leave the rest." Her eyes met mine in a sort of defiant way, suggesting both embarrassment at what she had just admitted but at the same time daring me to think less of her -- which I never would, of course, if she had only known the corner of my heart, deep inside, that she still occupied. First loves are reputed to never quite go away, and I was quickly realizing that mine had not certainly not.
"I have to get to work," she said, again somewhat sadly.
"OK, good to see you," I said as I returned to my mother's bedside to continue my vigil. Sad how lives turn out, I thought, how paths taken cannot be untaken, how choices made cannot be unmade. Nor could I help but wonder how my life might have turned out if we had stayed together as I had so desperately wanted as wounded and rejected teenager.