Read Bringing in Finn Online

Authors: Sara Connell

Bringing in Finn (29 page)

BOOK: Bringing in Finn
12.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
“That sounds like Alan,” I said.
“After every donation, he would run through the office and gave a high five to the entire staff at the clinic.”
“I'm sure they hoped he'd washed his hands,” I said.
“Do you want to hear this?” Bill said. I nodded.
“He made the victory lap every time he gave a donation—I mean, he really hammed it up. On his fourth cycle, though, the doctor came out and stood in the doorway during Alan's run. He was afraid he'd gone too far and was going to get himself and Cindy
kicked out of the practice, but he had to do something to take the pressure off. I could relate. When I saw that guy looking beaten today, heard his wife all cranky and scared, I wanted to do something. I remembered how I felt at the beginning. A high-five lap isn't me, but a salute seemed fitting. I raised my hand and lifted my chin and nodded to him—in solidarity.”
I turned in my seat so I could see Bill's face. Even in profile, I felt as if I could see both the scars and the gifts of our journey. We'd vowed repeatedly through the past six years to let what we faced bring us closer. If what we experienced was going to change us, we would look for ways for it to strengthen, not distance, us. Looking at the square of his jaw, his hands holding the wheel capably and confidently, I felt proud of him. Proud of us.
 
The day of
our transfer, three days later, dawned warm and bright. Bill, my mother, and I went to RMI together.
Carli had called the day after retrieval to tell us we had three strong embryos. Our procedure was scheduled for Tuesday at noon. This time, my mother brought her own liter bottle of Evian and chugged the water with devotion as we sat in the waiting room.
The procedure area was calmer than it had been when we'd come for retrieval, and Tracey ushered us to the first patient area, which we'd come to think of as our own. Rachel had rolled in an extra chair so the three of us could sit together. Bill stepped outside the curtain while my mother changed into her gown and paper cap and I pulled scrubs over my clothes and shoes. Dr. Colaum allowed me into the room again.
The procedure room was soothing and tranquil, the institutional white walls and medical equipment fading into the soft glow when Tracey dimmed the lights. Carli appeared in the square window in the door to ask my mother to state her name. Her blonde hair was
pulled into a ponytail, and her nails were painted pink. When she saw me, she waved.
“Are you sure we're doing two?” Dr. Colaum asked, winking at my mother. “We have three great-looking embryos.”
“Two,” I said firmly, honoring my promise to Bill and my dad. We'd already filled out paperwork to have the remaining embryo frozen and stored in the RMI lab.
“Ready,” Dr. Colaum said. Her pink cheeks and light hair beneath the blue surgical cap gave her the look of Mrs. Claus.
“Transferring two embryos,” she said as she wove the tube up through my mother's cervix into the uterus. I heard a flick and saw the embryos rocket into the uterus. My mother let out a “wow” as we watched the display on-screen. I never tired of this moment.
The RMI team left the room. My mother and I waited again, in silence at first; then I sang the lullaby chant I'd sung after my first transfers, while we imagined the little life/lives searching for a spot to implant.
My mother held her bladder until Tracey came to relieve her and escort us outside. Bill drove the car around to the front of the building. We offered my mother the front seat and suggested she put her feet up on the dashboard to maintain an inverted position for the drive back into the city—the same way I had done on our first cycle, when I became pregnant with the twins.
“I'll stand on my head if it increases our chance of pregnancy,” my mother said. “I'm going to go right back to your house and into bed. This time, we're not taking any chances.”
 
Two of my
mother's friends drove from D.C. to Chicago to entertain her the following week. They were interested in Frank Lloyd Wright houses and stopped in Ohio to visit a few properties along the way. On Friday, they drove with her to RMI to take the first
blood test, and then drove west, to Oak Park, to take a Frank Lloyd Wright house tour there. After the tour, my mother tracked down the walking labyrinth she'd read about at Grace Episcopal Church, a gothic structure on the corner of Lake Street and Forrest Place. Her friends decided to find a café and have an iced tea while she walked to the church. Happy to be alone, she told me, she placed her feet at the start of the labyrinth.
“I cleared my mind and asked to truly surrender. But I couldn't. The most honest thing I could do was say that I wanted this pregnancy with my whole heart, being, and soul—wanted it desperately, in fact, which is exactly what's not advised in any spiritual practice, no matter what religion or philosophy you read. I decided to walk the labyrinth anyway and asked it to tell me whatever I needed to know.”
She kept her mind poised on the sounds around her, the step of her foot on the grass, the wheels of a car on the road nearby. She tried to push away all thoughts and remain calm as she followed the winding path. When she reached the grassy center, she stopped.
“I planted my feet in the ground and waited. When a few minutes went by and I didn't feel or hear anything, I started to cry. I thought for sure I would feel some direction, some sign, once I reached the middle. I looked around to make sure I was alone, and then began talking.
“We've done everything we could do,” she said to the labyrinth, the surrounding trees, and the sky. “My uterus is strong. The embryos were transferred. We've come all this way.'”
Then, she said, a calm feeling came over her, as if a great wind had stopped blowing, leaving her ears and skin still tingling from its force.
“I heard something,” my mother said, saying the words slowly, watching my face for my reaction. “Not out loud, like regular speech, but inside my head.”
“What did it say?” I asked, remembering the day in my bedroom with the Great Mother.

You're right where I asked you to be,”
my mother said. “That's what I heard.
“I wanted to hear,
You're pregnant
or receive some kind of affirmation or sign to that effect,” she continued. “But I was gobsmacked that I heard anything, actually. It was an incredible moment.”
I thought again of that day on my bedroom floor after the twins died. I hadn't heard what I'd wanted to hear, either. And yet what I had heard had resonated with me as real and sustained me many times over these long three years.
“That's my experience of those kinds of messages, too,” I said.
“I guess the Universe wants us to wait and find out like everyone else, at the pregnancy test,” my mother said.
The sky had grown dark outside the window of the guest room where my mother and I had been snuggled on the bed. The moon was full and cast white light into the room. I turned to look out the window and attempted to bat away a thought that had been lurking as my mother recounted her experience in the labyrinth, and probably ever since she had made the offer to be our surrogate.
Maybe the whole purpose of her vision was for us to get to this place, a place of love and appreciation for each other, of unimagined intimacy and closeness. If that was the purpose, it should be enough, I told myself. Bill and I would survive. Even though we wanted deeply to be parents, we didn't need a baby to live a complete life. I told this to myself, but I didn't fully believe it.
Just like my mother at the labyrinth, I could not totally surrender my desire. I shrugged and smiled at her, and we went downstairs to see if Bill wanted help with dinner.
 
On the morning
of the official pregnancy test, I drove my mother to Dr. Colaum's. Bill had a preproduction meeting for his next shoot and would be in a suburb of Chicago for most of the day.
“It's probably better that I'm not there,” he said. “I'm so jumpy.”
My mother didn't look anxious. She held a small water bottle in one hand and a banana in the other. There was no trace of uncertainty. My heart pumped hard as we turned onto Ridge Road and pulled into the RMI parking lot.
I turned away as a new nurse on staff administered the blood test. I restrained myself from double-checking the vial to ensure she'd accurately marked my mother's name and date of birth, our phone number. In the last regular IVF cycle we'd done, I'd had nothing to eat or drink before the blood test and had been shaking so forcibly that even Tracey had had trouble getting any blood out of my vein. I looked to see if my mother was having any difficulty and realized my own hands were shaking.
“Cell phone or landline?” Rachel asked me, not needing to go over any other protocol for the day.
“Cell,” I told her and rushed out of the office with my mother, my hands and body still trembling a bit.
It was only ten o'clock. I hadn't scheduled any work for the day, and we had hours before the results would be in.
“Let's go to Jerry's,” my mother suggested. Jerry's was a hipster lunch place in Wicker Park that I'd taken her to once before.
I had practice waiting for pregnancy tests, I told myself. This was just one more. I'd committed myself to walking through this day with calmness and courage. But I grew more anxious each mile south that we drove. It was as if a giant clock were ticking in my ear, slowly counting down the minutes before someone from RMI called. My throat and breath felt tight and I fought back tears. I parked the car and brushed the corners of my eyes. My heart
fluttered the way it had after the twins died. The sensation was not comforting.
We walked through a few boutiques, and I ran my hands numbly over the clothes, commenting on one or two dresses my mother held up.
“It's going to be okay, Sara,” she said, pulling my arm into the curve of her elbow. I knew ultimately it would be. I repeated what I had so many times to myself on the day of these tests: Bill and I could keep trying. We could pursue other options. We would not live or die by the results. And yet I felt the steel wire of that tightrope, plummeting space on either side.
We walked toward Jerry's. The sun had reached its height and the day was warm, seventy degrees with a breeze. Most of the tables were full of people eating avant-garde sandwiches and salads out in the sun.
My mother stopped me by my arm again a few feet from the entrance. “I have a good feeling, Sara,” she said.
I did not have any feeling aside from mounting anxiety. I had refused to be hopeful about any pregnancy symptoms my mother might feel, not wanting to repeat the false expectations from the previous cycle. Whatever would be would be when Tracey or Rachel or the whole RMI team called with the results.
I knew in some part of my brain that a positive pregnancy test did not mean we would for sure have a baby. But I also knew a positive test was the only chance we had of having one now, and in the moment, every mental faculty I had was focused on the results of that test.
When our lunch arrived, I pushed the food around my plate, poking cucumber slices with my fork. My mother seemed to be relishing her turkey Reuben, eating the sandwich in long, savoring bites. I had no idea how she could be so calm. She glanced at a tray being delivered to a table next to us.
“Those sweet-potato fries look good,” my mother said. “Will you have some if I get us an order?”
“I don't feel hungry,” I said.
“Well, I am having a lovely lunch,” my mother said. “I am feeling extra hungry today. Ravenous, in fact.” She pulled a piece of turkey from the sandwich and took a large bite. Ignoring my silence, she continued the conversation in monologue.
“Maybe because of all the activity of the transfer,” she said, staring me in the eye. “Or maybe because I feel so pregnant.”
“Mom!” I said again. I could not believe she was being so flip.
“I'm trying to hold on to my sanity here,” I said.
“Then trust me,” she said. “This is going to be good.”
My cell phone screen lit up. RMI's number.
“Oh, god,” I said. “It's them.”
“Pick up!” my mother said, dropping her sandwich onto her plate.
“Not here,” I said, glancing around at the crowded tables, hearing the clinking of utensils on ceramic plates. I picked up the phone and asked Tracey if we could call her right back.
“I'll call you,” she said, her voice giving away nothing. “Five minutes?”
I flagged our waitress for our check. My mother and I half-ran to the car. I tapped Bill's number into the screen of my phone.
“Sweetie,” I said, breathing hard, “Tracey is calling us in about two minutes. Can you take the call?”
“Conference me in,” he said.
My mother and I loaded ourselves into my car. There was a lot of street noise, so I pulled into a convenience store parking lot, hoping for a quieter spot. Before we had a chance to park, my phone screen lit up again. I looked at the dilapidated fence with peeling wood and the Dumpster on the side of the convenience store—not the desired ambience for this potentially epic moment.
I answered and asked Tracey to wait while I conferenced Bill in.
As we waited for Bill to pick up, I focused my ears on the RMI line, trying to discern if Tracey was alone.
“I'm here,” Bill said. He sounded wired.
“And your mother's on the line, too?” Tracey asked. Her voice came through clear. No background noise at RMI. Just Tracey. My shoulders threatened to collapse forward. I checked that the car was in park. My hands were shaking again.
“I'm here, Tracey,” my mother said. I put the phone on speaker and placed it on the seat next to my mother's thigh. I wanted to hold her hand but also keep mine free in case I felt the need to leap from the car.
BOOK: Bringing in Finn
12.16Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Flame Trees of Thika by Elspeth Huxley
Sins of the Mother by Victoria Christopher Murray
A Seditious Affair by K.J. Charles
Breakthrough by Michael Grumley
Scandal in Copper Lake by Marilyn Pappano
My Miserable Life by F. L. Block
Don't Believe a Word by Patricia MacDonald
A Wayward Game by Pandora Witzmann