Part Seven

“Who’s there?” asked Merrill.

“It’s me, Elijah. I’m your friend.”

“I have friends?” He unlocked the door, and his face was etched with worry. “Come in here, where they can’t hear you.”

I stepped inside, wondering what new paranoia was worming its way through his brain.

He closed the door quietly, locking it behind him with fumbling fingers. “Do you know where my house is?”

I gestured around at his room. “This is your home, Merrill.”

“This place?” He looked at me with wide eyes. “I don’t live here. I live in a house! I need to get back there, or the neighbors’ll start complaining.”

“There’s nothing for anyone to complain about.”

“Have you seen the snow out there?” He shuffled to the window, pulling open a gap in the slats of the blinds. “I need to get home and shovel the walks, and these people won’t let me.”

“Your son is shoveling the walks,” I assured him, though it wasn’t true. His family had sold his old house to help pay for Merrill’s care—augmented secretly by my own payments. It was the least I could do. But I’d learned over the years that any talk of selling his house worried him, even more than not knowing where his house was; there was a link somewhere, buried in his mind, that tied him to the idea of his home more strongly than to the home itself. It was the work, I think, not the bricks or the mortar, but the effort he’d put into maintaining them. As long as he thought someone was taking care of it, he’d eventually forget about the whole thing. Until another snowstorm brought the memory gasping to the surface.

I sat down, hoping the sight of me relaxing would help him to relax as well. “How have you been, Merrill?”

“They won’t tell me anything in here, and they won’t let me leave.” He looked at me with a mix of suspicion and embarrassment. “Did you say you’re my son?”

“I’m your friend, Merrill. My name’s Elijah.”

“Then who’s my son?”

“Your son is named David.”

“And he’s taking care of my house?” He could get so fixated on things.

“Of course he is. Have a seat, Merrill. Tell me about your day.”

He looked at the door and whispered loudly, “Do you think you could get me out of here?”

I sighed, but nodded. “Not out of the building, Merrill, you know that, but I can take you for a walk around the halls.”

“I don’t want to walk around the halls,” he said bitterly. “I don’t even know what this place is.”

“You live here.” I stood up. “Let’s go for a walk.”

“And good riddance.” He started fumbling with his jacket—not a heavy coat, like he’d need outside; I didn’t even think he had one. I took the light jacket from him and draped it over my arm.

“Let me hold that for you.” I opened the door and closed it again behind him as he shuffled out into the hall.

“I hate this place,” he said, brushing past the red vase on his hallway shelf. He looked at me with a sudden twinkle in his eye, as if the simple act of passing through the door had changed his mood. “Too many old people.” He chuckled, and I laughed with him. We walked down the hall, slowly but smoothly, and waited at the elevator. “Where are we going again?”

“Just down to the lobby for a walk around the halls.”

“You should have left your coat in my room,” he said, pointing at his jacket on my arm.

“I don’t mind carrying it.”

The foyer was busy, at least for this place. A handful of families sat here and there on couches and chairs, chatting with their mothers and grandmothers, old men and women in wheelchairs and walkers, with oxygen tanks, plastic cannulas draped over ears and faces like translucent alien jewelry. Merrill’s face brightened when he saw the foyer, and that recognition was as sad to me, in its way, as the confusion he’d had in his room—not because I didn’t want him to be happy, but because of the speed with which he moved from one emotion to the other. He hated this place, and he wanted to get out, and after one door and one hall and one elevator, he’d forgotten it all. He was here in a place that he recognized, and it didn’t matter that he hated it because that glimmer of recognition overshadowed every other emotion. Here was something he remembered, somewhere he’d been before, and just like that, he was happy. He smiled and waved to someone he’d probably never met, and I walked behind him with the jacket he’d forgotten.

“Does this place have a restroom?” he asked, and I pointed him toward a door in the wall. He shuffled in, and I sat down to wait. A young man was sitting on the couch across from me, someone I thought I recognized, but I couldn’t be sure. Thin, maybe seventeen years old, with a ragged mop of dark black hair. He was alone, with a dead, emotionless expression, and I remembered Rosie’s concern for others, the way she’d sought me out in the grocery store, and I leaned forward.

“Here for a grandparent?” I asked.

He looked at me, his face unreadable. “Kind of.”

“Kind of a grandfather, or kind of a grandmother?”

“Friend of a friend.”

I nodded. “I suppose you could say the same for me.”

He said nothing and turned back to staring into space. I thought about Rosie again, and the way she’d talked to me, and the buried pain in this boy’s face. I spoke again. “Are you okay?”

He looked at me with a new expression—not an emotion but a calculation, as if he were trying to figure out who this intrusive stranger was and why said stranger thought it was okay to ask such probing questions out of nowhere. It occurred to me how dangerous my question was, not physically but socially, for the most likely response was almost guaranteed to be an attack: he’d ask what my problem was, or tell me to stop bothering him, or simply get up and leave. I waited, trying to form some kind of defense or explanation, but he simply watched me, saying nothing. After a moment he glanced over my shoulder, nodding at the restroom.

“Who’s your friend?”

“Just some guy,” I said, surprised by the question. “I met him about twenty years ago, right before the Alzheimer’s. It’s not really Alzheimer’s, actually, but it’s close enough. He was a good man, and I liked him.”

“And now you still visit him.”

“It’s the least I can do.”

The young man’s eyebrow went up, just slightly—the first hint of emotion he’d displayed. “I’m sure you could do a lot less if you put your mind to it.”

It was a joke, of sorts, and I chuckled, but more at the joke’s sudden appearance than at its meaning. It made me feel suddenly dark, like a chill wind had blown through the foyer. “You’d be surprised how little of my mind there is,” I said, shaking my head. “Another few years and I’ll end up like Merrill, more than likely, just a . . . hollow man. An organic machine, going through the motions.”

“So is it worth it?”

For the second time in our short conversation, his question stopped me cold. I looked at the boy in surprise. “Is what worth it?”

“Coming here,” he said. “Caring about a man who doesn’t care about you—who couldn’t care about you if he tried. Making connections with people who are only going to disappear.”

I wondered what had happened to this boy to jade him so thoroughly, but then I shook my head. We were sitting in a rest home, surrounded by the last brittle gasps of a hundred dying lives. If he knew one of them, if he’d watched them fade from a vibrant human being to a distant, shuffling figure—if he’d listened as an old, familiar voice forgot his name—that was all the answer I needed. He was broken, because life had broken him. I recognized this boy, because I recognized that broken expression every time I looked in a mirror.

I looked down at my belt, at my keys clipped securely to my lanyard, and I saw myself in Merrill’s room. In Merrill’s life. Who would visit me when I finally lost it all? Who would help me pick up all the pieces of my shattered mind and console me when it snowed and I remembered some distant, unshoveled sidewalk? Who would knock on my door and call himself my friend?

Rosie had spoken to me in the grocery store. She saw me once, for half a second, and she remembered and she looked for me and she found me again, weeks later, and she offered to help.

The restroom opened, and Merrill came out, and I knew that I was already gone from his memory. I could walk out the door right in front of him and he wouldn’t even know he’d been left. I looked at the boy, but he was already looking away, staring at the wall. I stood and turned toward Merrill.

“All set?”

“Well, look who’s here,” he said brightly, his standard phrase when he reacted to someone who obviously knew him, to hide the fact that he didn’t know them back.

I held out his coat. “You still want to go for a walk?”

“I can’t go for a walk. Have you seen the snow outside?”

“There’s certainly a lot of it.”

He stared out the front door, deeply concerned about something. “Who do you think shovels all that stuff?”

“They have a man they pay to do it,” I said, taking him by the elbow. I have touched so few people in my life, almost none of them living. I pulled my hand away with a sudden rush of guilt.

“Do I live here?” he asked softly.

“You do. Would you like to go back to your room?”

“Do you know the way there?”

“I do.” I gestured toward the elevator, and we started walking.

It was the least I could do.