staring into the glass. Thereâs a gold coin in the bottom. We want to get it out, but donât know how.
I fall four times, knees and elbows smacking cold linoleum, before I get one right. No one has ever called me a fast learner.
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3.
For most of my life before the Hospital, I was an orphan. As a baby, I was left on the steps of Brigham and Womenâs Hospital in Boston, in the winter. A nurse found me wrapped in a white T-shirt and rolling around in a cardboard supermarket box, the kind of thing you put oranges in. I was in the early stages of frostbite.
From my first group home I remember: sleeping on mattresses with springs that time had turned flat and hard; a hole in the staircase that was a portal for winged roaches; sandwiches made of Wonder Bread and grape jelly; a communal bathroom with snot green walls and a ceiling dotted with mold. In this bathroom, all the sinks dripped. In this bathroom, I found tampons, heavy with water and blood, clogging the shower drain. The light was always flickering off, usually when someone was in the shower. The girls at the home started spreading rumors about a ghost in the bathroom, when we all knew the ghost could be any one of us.
This was in Roxbury. Back then I dreamed of the countryside: fields with mazes of tall grass, graceful rivers, climbing trees. Nearby there was an overgrown lot surrounded by a chain-link fence, and sometimes I would slip through a hole in the fence and walk through the dead grass, ignoring the shattered glass and the shadows of crumbling buildings, pretending I was free.
Once a fire alarm tore open our night. Eighteen girls raced down the staircase, led by our overnight counselor, a woman who wore white knee socks with sandals and her hair in a thick braid. Eighteen girls scattered across the front lawn. Some had thought to pull on shoes and some, like me, had just run. It was September and already there was a sharp chill in the air. I could feel a splinter settling into the arch of my foot. I stood on one leg. The night was dark and still. A grease fire had ignited in the kitchen. We watched smoke blacken the windows as we waited for the howl of the sirens, waited to be saved.
The kitchen was scorched long before a fire truck came, an early lesson in exactly how much the outside world cared about us.
I didnât know anything about my real mother until the sickness. That was the second thing that brought me to the Hospital.
During the sickness, a company called Last Rites was formed. For a fee, they got the dying whatever they wanted. The first person they kissed. A vintage arcade game. A jar of sand from a foreign beach. In the early days of August, I got a call from a Last Rites representative who said my aunt wanted to see me. When I told them I didnât have an aunt, didnât have any family at all, they said I did. Her name was Christina. My motherâs sister. She was at Mass General. If I ever wanted to see her, this was my chance.
I was exhausted. I hadnât been sleeping. The nights were a long scream of emergency. Iâd started seeing orange spots in the air, small discs that slid through the streams of dust and light in my apartmentâa symptom, I was increasingly sure, of something incurable. The T was closed. There were no taxis or buses. I hadnât been outside in days, surviving on soup cups and lime Jell-O and getting stoned on cough syrup. My apartment felt like a tomb, the door a sealâwould I ever get out? The representativeâs voice had a hypnotic effect on me. I couldnât tell if it was a man or a woman speaking. They told me to wait ten minutes and then go outside.
The street was scattered with flyers warning people to stay in their homes and refuse contact with the sick. There was a drawing of a man peering out a window, one arm around a woman, the other around a child. Some flyers lay in the gutter, the paper a black pulp.
On the corner an aluminum trash can had been