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of the lower cabinets had food, only pots and pans and cleaning supplies. He looked up at the counter and saw the edge of a bag of something. He lifted his arm, tried turning his body to lift it higher, but he couldn’t reach the bag on the counter. He slid along the floor to the refrigerator, which he could reach and open. He looked up and saw the container with his dinner that his mom had put away last night. He imagined it filled with beans and rice and a savory sauce. His stomach grumbled. Opening a lower drawer inside, he found an apple and some cheese. He closed the door, leaned against the wall, and ate the apple. It was a green apple, and the sour-sweet taste made him pucker. But it was delicious, the tastiest apple he’d ever eaten. He ate all of it, even almost all of the core. Then he unwrapped a Kraft single cheese slice and ate it. He did that with nine more individually wrapped slices.

      Marko sat on the floor surrounded by his apple core and cheese wrappers. He wasn’t able to reach high enough to throw his trash into the garbage can, so he made a small pile of the refuse against the base of the can.

      Marko didn’t feel full, but he didn’t feel so hungry anymore either. From where he sat on the kitchen floor, he couldn’t see anything over the high walls. The house was dark and quiet. He listened for noises. He heard the sound of a plane in the distance, then a car passing by on the street outside, then another car. Under all of that was something else, a little hum he couldn’t place. No birds were singing yet, not a hint of sun. Marko had never been afraid of the dark, but there was something spooky about dark and quiet put together. It was like the quiet made the darkness even darker. He closed his eyes and continued to pay attention to the sounds—sounds that confirmed he was not alone in the world. There were other people all around, all the time.

      Just then, Marko heard his mom stirring in her room. She must be getting up for her very early morning yoga and meditation. Suddenly, he was scared. He didn’t want her to find him like this in the kitchen. Hearing her approach, he wished he could disappear into the floor. He put his hand over his face and closed his eyes. Light pushed through.

      “Marko?”

      He opened his eyes and blinked against the brightened room.

      “Honey, are you okay?” She walked to him and crouched down. She pulled his hand from his face. He opened his eyes. He couldn’t think of anything to say. She looked at the pile of trash. He watched her face. A line formed between her eyes, and the corners of her mouth turned down. Then her eyes brightened and she smiled.

      “I see you had some breakfast,” she said, and tousled his hair. She threw the trash away and picked him up.

      Marko didn’t go back to school that day or the next day. Then he didn’t go back to school at all, because he would be starting a new school. During the days, his mom had to go to work. She would come home for lunch to feed him and take him to the bathroom, but then she would leave again. The rest of the time, he was alone in the apartment.

       11. January 5, 2015: Cambridge, MA

      Over the American commercial holidays, which Kali decided not to celebrate so formally now that Zach was gone, she actually missed going to her shrink. She was starting to understand why people paid so much money to have someone listen for an hour each week to their secrets and stories about their troubled lives. It was nice to have an objective stranger there to witness it, one with whom no reciprocation was required. On her first visit back, after exchanging pleasantries about the American commercial holidays, the shrink asked Kali about the time of Marko’s birth.

      “Tell me about what happened after Marko was born.”

      After Marko was born, Kali lived in the neonatal intensive care unit. The NICU. She was the only mother who wouldn’t leave. They gave her a nametag to wear around her neck: Kali, Marko’s mother. All the parents wore nametags like this, as if they were at a party. And like any good party, there was also alcohol. Kali became used to smelling alcohol on the breath of the other parents. She knew it as the smell of other people’s grief.

      Kali became synesthetic some nights, intoxicated by sleeplessness. She could have sworn that she heard the pink lungs praying. The pulpy interiors, shiny under plastic wrap, hummed little lullabies. The sounds of the ventilators and respirators and various monitors were slimy against her skin—a very specific patch of skin on her middle back. She began to scratch it regularly to relieve the sensation of slime.

      “You have a chronic itch there, on your back. You scratch at it all the time.” It was one of the NICU nurses.

      Kali hadn’t heard her coming. She told her it wasn’t really an itch. She was a night shift nurse; Kali had seen her before and never spoken to her. Her eyes were kind. Somehow, she understood what Kali meant. She said, “Oh, I know. It’s an irritation almost, down beneath the skin. Right? Like on your spine?”

      Kali remembered saying something pathetic like, “I don’t have a backbone. I feel so weak all the time, so crumpled.” The nurse spent some time reassuring her, which Kali hated and loved at the same time. She tended to do that, fish for reassurance or compliments, and then feel like she was going to throw up when she got them because of how contrived they were. How ingenuine. So the nurse told Kali how strong she was for being able to be there with Marko and blah blah blah. But then, Kali recalled, she said something interesting. The nurse wondered why people associate strength with the backbone in the first place. And, she had gone on, why is love associated with the heart? She said hearts are the strongest, most active organs in the body. Backbones hold everything up with flexibility and buoyancy, like love. So it should be the other way around!

      Backbone = Love

      Heart = Strength

      The nurse talked to Kali about her chronic itch. She told Kali about a woman who had a chronic itch on her head and how, in her sleep, she would scratch and scratch it. The woman could control her scratching during the day while she was awake. But at night when she slept, she scratched the side of her head in her sleep. Every morning, she woke up with blood on her pillow and a fresh wound on her head. She went in for tests. Everything was normal; only there was this circle on her scalp where skin was replaced by scab.

      So the lady tried everything from bandaging her head to wearing hats to bed, but she always found a way to get at it in her sleep. One morning, she woke up and found a greenish fluid on her pillow. She pressed some gauze to her head and went to the doctor. The doctor called an ambulance—it turned out she’d scratched clear through her skull into her brain and the greenish stuff was brain fluid.

      Kali didn’t believe it. Nobody could scratch a hole through bone. But then the nurse told her how it happened. The woman had been scratching the spot so long, re-opening the wound so often that bacteria had surely gotten in there. This could have led to an infection that softened the skull, allowing her to gradually scratch through.

      Kali thought about this: Brains and bodies work together, inseparably. The brain is not an autonomous organ. The body is actually as much a part of the brain as the fingers are the hand.

      Likewise, the itch is inseparable from the scratch. The itch-scratch reflex activates higher levels of your brain than the spinal-cord-level reflex that makes you pull your hand away from a flame. And no doctor or scientist has been able to figure it out. There’s no specific nerve fiber responsible. The nurse thought it was because the brain and the body are one organism. A distress signal from the brain produces a deep itch in the body.

      Which means the body produces thoughts. Different parts think different thoughts.

      Kali had looked at Marko: his chest tube, his urinary catheter, his pulse oximeter, his nasal cannula. Every part of his body was cut into—a tiny bundle of violated skin. The thoughts his body made would be too much for a baby. Too much for his mother. As though reading Kali’s mind, the nurse said: “He’s on enough morphine to not feel any of that. Enough not to think.”

       12. January 5, 2015: Cambridge, MA

      There were three things that Marko’s mom told him never to do:

      1.

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