23.
Final Night, First Morning
Before sitting down with Dr. Wade, Holley told Bond to wait outside the
door    because she hadn’t  wanted  him to  hear    what    she feared  was very    bad
news.   But sensing this,   Bond    had lingered    outside the door    and caught
some     of  Dr.     Wade’s  words.  Enough  of  them    to  understand  the     real
situation.  To  understand  that    his father  was not,    in  fact,   coming  back.
Ever.
Bond    ran into    the room    and up  to  my  bed.    Sobbing,    he  kissed  my
forehead    and rubbed  my  shoulders.  Then    he  pulled  up  my  eyelids and
said,   directly    into    my  empty,  unfocused   eyes,   “You’re going   to  be  okay,
Daddy.  You’re  going   to  be  okay.”  He  kept    on  repeating   it, again   and
again,  believing,  in  his child’s way,    that    if  he  said    it  enough  times,  surely
he  would   make    it  true.
Meanwhile,   in  a   room    down    the     hall,   Holley  stared  into    space,
absorbing   Dr. Wade’s  words   as  best    she could.
Finally,    she said,   “I  guess   that    means   I   should  call    Eben    at  college and
have    him come    back.”
Dr. Wade    didn’t  deliberate  on  the question.
“Yes,   I   think   that    would   be  the right   thing   to  do.”
Holley  walked  over    to  the conference  room’s  large   picture window,
which    looked  out     on  the     storm-soaked    but     brightening     Virginia
mountains,  took    out her cell    phone,  and dialed  Eben’s  number.
As  she did so, Sylvia  stood   up  from    her chair.
“Holley,    wait    a   minute,”    she said.   “Let    me  just    go  in  there   one more
time.”
Sylvia  went    into    the ICU room    and stood   by  the bed next    to  Bond,   as
he  sat silently    rubbing my  hand.   Sylvia  put her hand    on  my  arm and
stroked it  gently. As  it  had been    all week,   my  head    was turned  slightly    to
one side.   For a   week,   everyone    had been    looking at  my  face,   rather  than
