Jodi Picoult - Change of heart
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- Название:Change of heart
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Change of heart: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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But when she wordlessly held out a blanket that I usually kept on the couch, one with fuzzy fleece inside, I stepped into it and forgot all my questions. Instead, I buried my face against her neck. "Oh, Mags," she soothed. "It's going to be all right."
I shook my head. "It was awful. Every time I blink, I can see it, like it's still happening." I drew in a shuddering breath. "It's stupid, isn't it?
Up till the last minute, I was expecting a miracle. Like in the courtroom.
That he'd slip out of the noose, or-I don't know-fly away or something."
"Here, sit down," my mother said, leading me into the kitchen. "Real life doesn't work that way. It's like you said, to the reporters-"
"You saw me?" I glanced up.
"On television. Every channel, Maggie. Even CNN." Her face glowed.
"Four people already called me to say you were brilliant."
I suddenly remembered sitting in my parents' kitchen when I was in college, unable to decide on a career. My mother had sat down, propped her elbows on the table. What do you love to do? she had asked.
Read, I'd told her. And argue.
She had smiled broadly. Maggie, my love, you were meant to become a lawyer.
I buried my face in my hands. "I was an idiot. Rufus is going to fire me.
"Why? Because you said what nobody has the guts to say? The hardest thing in the world is believing someone can change. It's always easier to go along with the way things are than to admit that you might have been wrong in the first place."
She turned to me, holding out a steaming, fragrant bowl. I could smell rosemary, pepper, celery. "I made you soup. From scratch."
"You made me soup from scratch?"
My mother rolled her eyes. "Okay, I bought soup someone else made from scratch."
When I smiled a little, she touched my cheek. "Maggie," she said,
"eat."
Later that afternoon, while my mother did the dishes and cleaned up in my kitchen, and with Oliver curled up at my side, I fell asleep on the living room couch. I dreamed that I was walking in the dark in my favorite
Stuart Weitzman heels, but they were hurting me. I glanced down to discover I was not walking on grass, but on a ground that looked like tempered glass after it's been shattered, like the cracked, parched landscape of a desert. My heels kept getting stuck in the crevasses, and finally
I had to stop to pull one free.
When I did, a clod of earth overturned, and beneath it was light, the purest, most liquid lava form of it. I kicked at another piece of the ground with my heel, and more beams spilled outward and upward. I poked holes, and rays shined up. I danced, and the world became illuminated, so bright that I had to shade my eyes; so bright that I could not keep them from filling with tears.
June
This, I had told Claire, the night before the surgery, is how they'll transplant the heart:
You'll be brought into the operating room and given general anesthesia.
Grape, she'd said. She liked it way better than bubble gum, although the root beer wasn't bad.
You'll be prepped and draped, I told her. Your sternum will be opened with a saw.
Won't that hurt?
Of course not, I said. You'll be fast asleep.
I knew the procedure as well as any cardiac resident; I'd studied it that carefully, and that long. What comes next? Claire had asked.
Sutures-stitches-get sewn into the aorta, the superior vena cava, and the inferior vena cava. Catheters are placed. Then you're put on the heart-lung machine.
What's that?
It works so you don't have to. It drains blue blood from the two cava, and returns red blood through the cannula in the aorta.
Cannula's a cool zvord. I like how it sounds on my tongue.
I skipped over the part about how her heart would be removed: the inferior and superior vena cava divided, then the aorta.
Keep going.
His heart (no need to say whose) is flushed with cardioplegia solution.
It sounds like something you use to wax a car.
Well, you'd better hope not. It's chock-full of nutrients and oxygen, and keeps the heart from beating as it warms up.
And after that?
Then the new heart goes to its new home, I had said, and I'd tapped her chest. First, the left atriums get sewn together. Then the inferior vena cava, then the superior vena cava, then the pulmonary artery, and finally, the aorta. When all the connections are set, the cross clamp on your aorta is removed, warm blood starts flowing into the coronaries, and...
Wait, let me guess: the heart starts beating.
Now, hours later, Claire beamed up at me from her hospital gurney. As the parent of a minor, I was allowed to accompany her to the OR, gowned and suited, while she was put under anesthesia.
I sat down on the stool provided by a nurse, amid the gleaming instruments, the shining lights. I tried to pick out the familiar face of the surgeon from his kind eyes, above the mask.
"Mom," Claire said, reaching for my hand.
"I'm right here."
"I don't hate you."
"I know, baby."
The anesthesiologist fitted the mask to Claire's face. "I want you to start counting for me, hon. Backward, from ten."
"Ten," Claire said, looking into my eyes. "Nine. Eight."
Her lids dropped, half-mast. "Seven," she said, but her lips went slack on the last syllable.
"You can give her a kiss if you want. Mom," said a nurse.
I brushed my paper mask against the soft bow of Claire's cheek. "Come back to me," I whispered.
M | C HAEL
Three days after Shay's death, and two after his funeral, I returned to the prison cemetery. The headstones formed a small field, each one marked with a number. Shay's grave didn't have one yet; it was only a small raw plot of earth. And yet, it was the only one with a visitor. Sitting on the ground, her legs crossed, was Grace Bourne.
I waved as she got to her feet. "Father," she said. "It's good to see you."
"You, too." I came closer, smiled.
"That was a nice service you did the other day." She looked down at the ground. "I know it didn't seem like I was listening, but I was."
At Shay's funeral, I hadn't read from the Bible at all. I hadn't read from the Gospel of Thomas, either. I had created my own gospel, the good news about Shay Bourne, and spoke it from the heart to the few people who'd been present: Grace, Maggie, Alma the nurse.
June Nealon had not come; she was at the hospital with her daughter, who was recovering from the heart transplant. She'd sent a spray of lilies to lay on Shay's grave; they were still here, wilting.
Maggie had told me that Claire's doctor had been thrilled with the outcome of the operation, that the heart had started beating like a jackrabbit.
Claire would be leaving the hospital by the end of the week.
"You heard about the transplant?" I said.
Grace nodded. "I know that wherever he is, he's happy about that."
She dusted off her skirt. "Well, I was on my way out. I have to get back to Maine for a seven o'clock shift."
Shay that I would look after Grace, but to be honest, I think he wanted to be sure she'd be looking after me as well. Somehow, Shay had known that without the Church, I'd need a family, too.
I sat down, in the same spot where Grace had been. I sighed, leaned forward, and waited.
The problem was, I wasn't sure what I was waiting for. It had been three days since Shay's death. He had told me he was coming back-a resurrection-but he had also told me that he'd murdered Kurt Nealon intentionally, and I couldn't hold the two thoughts side by side in my mind.
I didn't know if I was supposed to be on the lookout for an angel, like Mary Magdalene had seen, to tell me that Shay had left this tomb. I didn't know if he'd mailed me a letter that I could expect to receive later that afternoon. I was waiting, I suppose, for a sign.
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