There's a voice. Far away. Far away, but I'm floating. Floating on a very calm sea.
"Can you hear me? Open your eyes if you hear me?"
Everything's a blur, and my throat's raw. It burns, and that's all I can think of.
I feel a finger pinching my left earlobe. "John? Wake up, John!"
Open eyes reveal blurry light, indistinct moving forms. "How do you feel now?"
I try to talk but my throat! It's like a lava flow...then I feel ice pass my lips and I chew.
"Better," I croak. Someone wipes my eyes and things are clear again.
A surgeon walks into my cubby and looks at my chart, then he looks at me and walks over.
"Captain Anders? How're you feeling?"
I shake my head. "Not sure."
"Know where you are?"
"Not exactly where I'd like to be."
He chuckles. "Where would that be?"
"Back on my bike."
"Oh?"
"Back on my trip."
"Where to?"
"Everywhere."
"That sounds like a good trip. Okay, John, it looks like you're going to get off easy this time. Couple of isolated tumors, one was kinda big but it hadn't perforated the colon. Cells are, well, let's call it Stage I, and no nodes are involved. I think we got it all, and we did a simple resection so no colostomy bag for you."
"No kidding?"
"Yup. Generally speaking this is the way things'll go. Your oncologist will keep an eye on your labs for a while, maybe we'll do another colonoscopy in six months, but the good news is no chemo, no radiation. You'll be on a very restricted diet while things heal down there, but you ought to be back on the loose in a couple of months. You okay?"
I was crying. I mean crying like a baby, and the doc put his hand on my shoulder. It's hard to relate this kind of emotional upheaval if you haven't experienced anything like it before, but it's kind of like you've been led up to the steps to the gallows and they've just slipped the noose around your neck. The lever is pulled and you feel yourself falling – then the rope breaks and you land in red Cadillac convertible full of naked women. Life is sweet, life is limitlessly good again as the Caddie hurtles off into the sunset. In Sam's case no doubt one of those girls would be impaled on his pecker while he ate out the other, but to me it felt like nothing less than an epiphany.
"So, I'm going to..."
"Yup, you sure are. This is about as good as it gets, John, and I don't get to give many people news as good as this. Now, if you feel up to it, I'll go get those people waiting for you up to speed, and maybe we can get one or two back here to see you..."
Hell, I was still crying when the girls got back to recovery.
+++++
And I was home five days later, still on a bland liquid diet, still as confused as I had been about Rhea and Deborah, but something vast, vast and limitless as an ocean had happened to me in the hours after that procedure. I was in effect 'born again' – not in a religious sense but in my desire to experience life as I never had before. I wanted to live, to love, to see everything I possibly could and experience all the nitty-gritty aspects of reality I'd spend a lifetime avoiding. Sure, I know it sounds trite – and perhaps it was – but I was suddenly, and for the first time in my life, quite in love with the idea of being alive.
You can take waking up tomorrow morning for granted just so long.
+++++
Sam's was another story, however. He was always alive – in the truest sense of the word, out there everyday pushing the envelope of his existence to the very limits of his imagination. About a week after I got out of the misery ward he wanted to come over, telling me he needed to talk about life and love and, of course, motorcycles for a while. He seemed a little too excited, and I felt 'something was up'.
He'd given up his Porsche during the divorce and had settled in with a worthy substitute, a '69 Aston Martin DBS, deep metallic blue-gray with slate leather. I shuddered to think of the upkeep, but admired his willingness to embark on any path that led him towards wretched excess, and this latest car was certainly a testament to that willingness. Surely, I thought, he'd had to hire a full-time mechanic just to keep the the thing running, but I had to admit the car attracted all kinds of attention.
We sat out on the little flagstone patio in my backyard, deep in late afternoon shade, and he toyed with a beer while I looked at the goop I was supposed to be drinking. I'd have killed for a glass of orange juice, but that wasn't on the approved list just yet.
"What do you want to do about the motorcycles?" Sam asked, getting right to the point as he finished his first beer.
"What do you mean, what do I want to do?"
"Are you done with the trip?"
"Not unless the doctors tell me I can't travel anymore."
He smiled. "You mean it? You want to carry on?"
"Fuck yeah," I said, grinning.
"Well, that's a load off," he said, smiling his old smile, the same smile I'd first admired as a freshman in college.