1

CONCEPTION

Jake lay staring up at me by the river, lying there, grinning ear to ear like a boy with a secret. “Hey cousin,” I said, “what’s buzzin?” Jake yelled back at me, his voice distorted and strained. He stiffened his arms and legs and yelled again. My first cousin Melanie had adopted Jake as an infant. She was sitting ten feet upstream and I looked over at her for help: “He’s hard to understand,” she said, “but if you listen carefully, he has a lot to say.” I knelt on the smooth rocks and put my ear near his mouth.

He spoke again, arching his back. It sounded like, “I have to pee.” I pulled my head back, “You have to pee?” Jake rocked his body side to side, excited. “All right then,” I said. I called to my husband, knee deep in the river, “Dan! Jake needs to pee!” I smiled down at my cousin, “I don’t see you for five years and the first thing you say to me is ‘I have to pee’?” He laughed, rocking back and forth. Dan splashed to the shore, “I gotcha, buddy.” Dan rolled Jake onto his arm and, lifting him up, pointed him towards the reeds. Jake yelled something at me. His mother translated, “Jake says no peeking!” I yelled back at Jake, “Not peeking!”

At nine years old Jake was maybe three feet long, and very thin, with stiff blond hair and lazy blue eyes. His body was limp from cerebral palsy; he couldn’t stand or hold up his head. His speech was thick, but consistent, like a dialect. Once I caught onto his speech patterns, he was chatty and engaging. “My mom is trying to get me to use the bathroom,” he said. “She gives me a quarter every time I don’t pee my pants. But it’s hard for me, so she gives me a nickel if I can get most of it in the toilet and just have a little spot on my pants.”

“That sounds like a money maker right there.”

I love my family. I have fifty-two first cousins, each with an average of six kids. It’s hard to foster family tensions with so many bodies looking alike, so many humans growing so fast. We come from the Intermountain West, Mormon Country: wide streets and narrow paths. I am no longer active in the church, but with a last name like Ellsworth, I enjoy a cultural affiliation with my religion; faith and family are synonymous and my worldview remains awash with that hallmark Mormon optimism.

My life, however, was taking a very different path. I was thirty-seven, childless, enjoying a career as a classical musician, and the first ever in my family to get divorced in her twenties. I considered myself a pioneer in this regard. I was recently remarried to a lapsed Lutheran from South Dakota. He loved and accepted my family as his own and, except for our wildly differing doctrines, I felt at home in Dan’s congregation, sitting in his hometown church, watching him sing in the choir.

Dan and I were hosting my family reunion at our lodge in the Adirondacks, an old YMCA camp with a big field stone fireplace, bunk rooms, and a twenty-three-foot dining room table. It was rare for my family to gather so far east, but the lodge was big enough to hold everyone and in close proximity to the Mormon Mecca: Palmyra, New York, the birthplace of our faith. Jake and I were enjoying some quality time with our loved ones. We lay on our backs, watching the clouds while Jake shared with me his adoption story. “When I was born, I had cerebral palsy and my birth mom couldn’t take care of me, so one of the doctors in the hospital called my Dad, and my Dad says he knew right then I was his son. He told my Mom, ‘Our son is lying in a hospital in Seattle and I am going to get him.’ He got in the car right then and drove six hundred miles to pick me up.” There was pride in Jake’s voice. He belonged to someone.

Jake was four the first time we met. I was on a road trip and stopped to visit Melanie and her family on their little farm in Idaho. The kids were outside chasing chickens when I pulled up, Jake screaming with excitement. I had to smile as Melanie’s husband, Max, grabbed his tiny son by the waist and dove with him head-first under a bush after a chicken, just like any other kid. These are good people. I wasn’t like them, but I was proud to belong to them.

* * *

I had met Dan two years earlier on an online dating service. My brother helped me with my profile: solidly non-smoker but not particular about age, race, religion, or income. Dan and I spoke on the phone and he told me he was an FBI agent. I said, “Well, that’s hot. Are you sure you want to go with that? Have you tried race car driver or astronaut?” He laughed, “I’m going with it.” I met him the next night for dinner. He was serious-looking and clean shaven, with a military buzz cut. I stared at him, trying to reconcile his strange appearance with the fact that he seemed so familiar. I felt like saying, “Oh, it’s you! Thank god!” But we’d never met. He asked me about my family and what it was like growing up in Northern California. He asked about my big life choices, what my music career meant to me and, after dessert, he asked if I would walk with him through Times Square. I said, “Sure, I’ll show you where I work.” I took him through the stage door of the broadway show I was currently playing. I showed him the orchestra pit and costume rooms. It was Sunday night, so we had the place to ourselves, talking as we walked, the acoustic of our voices changing as we walked onto the stage. We stood there for a few minutes looking out into the dark, empty seats. Taking my hand, he gently kissed me. It was wonderful. I closed my eyes and my head dropped slowly onto his shoulder. I rested there, surrounded, feeling quietly terrified, lost and happy in the middle of our embrace. His slow breathing brought me back and I took his arm as he walked me home.

For our next outing, Dan invited me to a sentencing. What does one wear to a sentencing? “It’s not the most conventional date, but,” he said, “you might find it interesting.” Why not?

Dan sat in front with the prosecution and I sat behind him, staring at his shoulders beneath his wrinkled grey suit. Dan was living on a boat in the Hudson River at the time, directly across from my apartment in Hell’s Kitchen, so his dress clothes were all a little wrinkled and had a sort of musty boat smell. The case involved a child kidnapping, and the judge spoke harshly and at length to the convict before pronouncing the sentence. The court adjourned and the mother came up to Dan, crying, hugging and thanking him for saving her child. I had never seen a mother’s look like that before. I got chills.

After, I invited him for a ride up the Palisades on my motorbike. He climbed on behind me, put his arms around my waist, his helmet tipping slightly right of mine. I accelerated out of the rest area, shifting fast, and was in fourth by the time we merged with traffic. Dan was hiding his weight, leaning when I leaned, turning when I turned, bracing his feet on the pegs when I braked so there was no pressure from him as the front shock compressed. His face shield clicked against the back of my helmet and I started blushing. Oh, Ann, really?

* * *

But the moment of truth soon arrived, the moment when my partner wanted to hang out with me, but I wanted to practice without being interrupted. Dan invited me to come over to the boat. I said, “I wish I could but I have some work to do, maybe another time.” He said, “Come practice out here, I promise I won’t bother you.” I went out and set up in the forward cabin. I could see him on the dock working on a project, walking back and forth, sawing and drilling things. For two and a half hours he did not speak or look at me. No solicitous waves, winks, or annoying, “Can I get you anything?” When I was done, I packed up and walked out onto the dock. He put his drill down and smiled, “How was it for you?” I laughed, blushing, “I like it.” He pulled me to him, “Me, too.” We made out in the afterglow of our compatibility.

Around that time, I was traveling to Austria for a week on a study grant and Dan invited himself to come with me. This was huge for me, to travel together to Vienna, my musical Mecca. But he came with me and he stayed with me. He listened with me, watched with me, and gasped with me in the thin air of high art. Ears to Mahler, eyes to Klimt, we dressed in duvets for days and days, the horizontal, sideways view. “You are my choice,” said the moist lower lip of his kisses. “I choose you.”

Communication under these circumstances is the stuff of life: nonverbal, rich in meaning, short on specifics and ripe with promises never made. I lay there with him, still with love, unable to discern my feet from his, two now four, nesting alone in their own close meeting. I was floating in the thought that there might be nothing else to life but this moment when a shadow flicked across my conscience, and I heard myself whisper aloud, “If I get pregnant, I’m keeping the baby.” Wait, what? Is this you trying to be responsible? Because as family planning goes, it’s a little short on planning. Oh my God! It was your mother voice! You’re mothering! Dan interrupted my self-talk with a compelling, nonverbal confirmation that not only was he was fine with me getting pregnant, he thought it was an awesome idea. I did not get pregnant but for the first time in my life, I conceived of myself as a mother. It was huge for me and an opening into imagining having children.

We got engaged shortly after our trip. My brother was concerned: “He’s a great guy, Ann, but I just don’t see it.” Nobody could see it; everybody thought it was going too fast. “Where’s the magic? Why him?” I said, “He makes me feel like a woman.” My brother, bearded, 6’3” and 200 pounds, laughed and said, “He makes ME feel like a woman. Not good enough!” I sighed, “I’ll tell you but you can’t tell anyone. Promise!” John held up his pinky for pinky swear. I blushed, “. . . he sings to me.” John’s jaw hit the floor. “No way.” I nodded, “He sings to me. Country music songs.” My brother took a deep breath and sat back in his chair. “Marry him.” I do.

Dan and I bought the lodge and invited our families to the Adirondacks for a week of canoeing, barbecue, and roof repair. Then one day after breakfast, Dan told everyone to leave their plates on the table. “We’re going to the waterfall.” And with all our loved ones near, Dan and I eloped, right there at the edge of the falls. His sister, a Lutheran minister, made it legal.

Flying back to the city, I thought to myself, It doesn’t get any better than this. And I was right. It didn’t. It was September 9, 2001.

* * *

After 9/11, Dan’s work went into overdrive. Months of twenty-hour work days, relocations, and just as things finally started settling down, the Marine Corps called wanting Dan to come back in. He was an officer before joining the Bureau, and an expert in the coordination of close air support for ground troops.

* * *

We were separated for almost two years. When Dan finally came home we had to get to know each other again. We held hands a lot, didn’t talk about the past and spoke softly about the future. These things take time. Three years passed.

* * *

The 2005 reunion was held at Fish Lake in southern Utah. Dan and I had started talking, still softly, about starting a family. Ours was a second marriage for both of us and we were both heavily into our careers. I had never felt strongly about having kids and certainly not my own—with such a large family, there were certainly enough Ann molecules on the planet. Independent of the reproductive imperative, we asked ourselves what having children was really about. In the end we agreed: having a family was about giving something to someone else.

Jake was twelve now and handsome, giving rides to his cousins on the back of his new bright red electric wheelchair. “Jake!” I called out, “Sweet ride, cousin!” He motored over to me, spinning around, showing off his wheelies, talking me through the specs. I asked Jake about his trip to Ecuador, where his parents, Melanie and Max, ran a program organizing college students to volunteer in the orphanages. Jake struggled as he spoke, “Ecuador was fun but also intense. I love the kids but it makes me sad. I mean, I have the one thing they really want: parents. I don’t think we can really know what it’s like not to have parents.” I turned away from him and pretended I was looking at something far away, blinking to keep my tears back. I nodded, “That’s a tough one.” Jake was quiet.

That night after the barbecue, Dan and I sat on a bluff overlooking the picnic area. I told Dan about my talk with Jake. “He can’t sit or stand, can’t feed himself, and he’s watching these kids out there playing soccer feeling sorry for them because he has parents and they don’t.” Dan took my hand and we sat for a while. Above us the sky was turning pink and grey, that southwestern sky, so big it rounds the horizon. Below us, a water balloon fight was in high gear. “We should step up,” Dan said. “The need is there.” I felt a chill. My head tipped back and, looking up, I felt I might slip off this earth and fall into the vacuous universe. And in that moment, on that quiet bluff, an adoption was conceived.