Louise Read online




  LOUISE: AMENDED

  to my family

  Published by Black Balloon Publishing

  www.blackballoonpublishing.com

  Copyright © 2012 by Louise Krug

  All rights reserved

  LOUISE: AMENDED eBook: 978-1-936787-04-3

  Black Balloon Publishing titles are distributed to the trade by

  Consortium Book Sales and Distribution

  Phone: 800-283-3572 / SAN 631-760X

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011938591

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  FIRST EDITION

  LOUISE: AMENDED

  A MEMOIR

  LOUISE KRUG

  BLACK BALLOON PUBLISHING BROOKLYN

  CONTENTS

  Part One: The Incident

  Documents

  Part Two: The Surgeries

  Part Three: The Treatment

  Epilogue

  PART ONE:

  THE INCIDENT

  CHAPTER ONE

  Two weeks before it happened, my boyfriend Claude hooked me up with the West Coast editor of Us magazine. The editor said she might have some work for me. Britney Spears and her husband Kevin Federline were rumored to be on their way to Santa Barbara. Could I meet a reporter from the magazine, Evan, at the Four Seasons resort in one hour?

  I wore a red dress. I’d coated my long, blond hair with a silicone sheen, and worn the heels everyone was wearing that year: pointy, naked on the sides, ankle straps. Evan said Wow when I walked up to him in the lobby. He gave me my mission as we sat at the hotel bar: Follow Britney around for two days, gather any information I could, and don’t get caught. I would be paid $300 a day, $500 a day on weekends, to answer a list of questions. Was she pregnant? Did she smoke? What did she eat? Any cellulite? etc. Evan had been covering Britney for years and couldn’t get too close without being recognized. I was a pretty girl with an unknown face—not unusual for the Four Seasons resort in Santa Barbara. I would not stand out.

  Evan and I stood on the lawn beneath the lit window of her suite. We could see the blue light from a TV.

  “They’re probably fucking. See you tomorrow,” he said.

  Early the next morning I was back at the hotel with everything Evan had told me to bring: a few changes of clothes to minimize recognition; sunglasses and a bikini; a notepad and pen. I was more nervous than I’d ever been. I coached myself during the drive there. I wanted to hear it said out loud, that this was really happening. That I had gotten this chance.

  I was twenty-two. I’d just moved to Santa Barbara from Kansas. This opportunity was as big as I’d known how to dream at the time.

  I went to the salon where Britney had received a pedicure the afternoon before. I got one too, and pretended to be a starstruck fan. I pumped the manicurist for insights. Instead I got talked into an expensive eyebrow wax.

  I overheard someone say that Britney was at a nearby wig shop, so I ran there, slowed down at the door, and walked casually inside. She was trying a few on: a red bob with bangs; a black Elvira wig that went halfway down her back. Later I found myself sneaking into the resort pool and stretching out on a towel several cabanas away. She was tanning and, I noted, fanning herself with a little red Kabbalah book. My triumph was to be seated one table over at lunch. I watched her eat a salad with ranch dressing, smoke many cigarettes, and drink six lemonades. I watched a waiter ask her to please put a shirt over her bikini top. I watched her talk on the phone and belch loudly. Evan ran back and forth across the street on the sidewalk giving me a thumb’s up.

  I had Claude meet me at the Four Seasons restaurant for a $200 dinner we couldn’t afford, hoping Britney would show up. She didn’t. The next morning I sat on a bench and watched the bellboys load up her white Lexus, telling myself to ask a question, any question, to run up and tug on her ponytail to see if it came off. I couldn’t speak or move.

  That afternoon I typed up all of my notes and emailed them to the magazine editor. I never got paid but my name is there, in the February 7, 2005 edition of Us magazine, tiny, practically invisible, at the end.

  If I believed in God, I might say that what happened next saved me from a trivial life of empty goals and frivolous dreams. But I don’t believe in God, so there goes that.

  CHAPTER TWO

  A nurse calls my name from the waiting list. My right leg is completely numb. Claude has to help me out of my chair. I shakily tell her my symptoms, even though she can plainly see what is wrong:

  1) Leg drags behind me

  2) Hand cannot lift a cup to my lips

  3) Eyes won’t look at the same thing at the same time

  While recounting these problems I begin to cry and cannot stop, even after she cradles me for a second, after she lifts me onto a bed to wait for the doctor. This isn’t supposed to be happening, I think. I’ve only been in California for two months. Right now I’m supposed to be at my first day of work, as a reporter for a local paper, my first job out of college. For the interview I’d bought a form-fitting striped pantsuit and crocodile stilettos. On the way to the interview I’d stopped for a latte and a business magazine and felt smart and adult. My answers had come out of my mouth like someone had pressed a button. The editor had sports analogies for me. He wanted a reporter who would hit home runs and catch fly balls with the sun shining in their eyes. I said I could. I’d spent a hundred dollars on makeup and learned how to apply it on a department store stool and it had obviously been worth it.

  Obviously.

  The doctor starts giving me reflex tests, tapping my knees with a little hammer. I can see that my right side is not reacting as it should. He tells the nurse to order an MRI. I tell myself I will soon be out of this emergency room and on my way to work. After all, it is a sunny Monday in California. Nothing bad can happen here, the weather is too good, the people, too rich.

  CHAPTER THREE

  The night before it happens they are at a movie premiere. Claude is a reporter for a local paper and has been assigned to cover the Santa Barbara Film Festival. Louise has a reporting job as well—she will cover gardens, weddings, and pets for another publication—but her job doesn’t start until the next day.

  The theater is outdoors with roaming spotlights and palm trees. Louise is tall with long, blond hair and big eyes. Claude wears gel in his hair and leaves his shirt mostly unbuttoned. People look at them. They like to be photographed together. Their refrigerator is covered with pictures that fall down every time someone walks by.

  The movie ends and as they walk up the aisle, Louise falls on a woman behind her. Claude helps Louise out of the way so the annoyed woman can get by. Louise takes off a spiky shoe and stares at her toes. She has bought a new outfit for the occasion, tight black pants and a sleeveless, lacy top.

  “I can’t feel anything,” she says.

  On the way to the parking garage Louise drags her right foot as if a child were hanging on her leg. People stare. Claude thinks it is a bit much.

  They agree that she must have sat the wrong way during the movie. Claude needs to write his review of the premiere and file before dawn. They drive back to their apartment, eat a frozen pizza, and try not to think too much.

  In the morning Louise is too dizzy to stand. The noise of the shower is so loud against the plastic curtain she cannot go inside. She hangs on the towel rack, and Claude tries to hold her up so the rod doesn’t snap. On the way to the emergency room Louise is crying that the sound of horns and tires against pavement is killing her, but the windows are already rolled up. He pulls her against his chest, and covers her ear with one hand as he drives.

  •

  Claude is anxious. He is anxious about Louise and anxious about work. He writes for the Montecito paper, covering neighborhood-watch programs, charity functions, and clubhouse rules. Hi
s boss, who used to be in the pornography business, is his best friend’s father. He trusts Claude to tell him which letters to the editor are worthy of a response. Most concern the lack of good security guards in the village. Montecito is a tiny village near Santa Barbara where only the very rich can afford to live. It is on the coast with gated mansions and golf carts. The inventor of Beanie Babies lives there, as do Oprah and Michael Douglas. Couples sit in restaurant gardens with their big dogs and drink tequila served on beds of ice. Personal chefs and nutritionists keep their insides clean. The women wear gold, ropy jewelry with giant stones that absorb the sun. The paper is free, available in metal containers around the town, by the bakery or gelato shop.

  They have been sitting in the ER for hours with no word. Louise keeps telling him to go. His boss is waiting. It is a good job, she says.

  •

  My uncle Charlie is here. He lives close by, and the rest of my family is a plane ride away. The nurses had said the MRI results would take hours, so I told Claude he could go to work, that I’d feel more carefree without him here.

  I didn’t think he’d believe me.

  My uncle is wearing a dove-colored suit. His smooth blue tie is cool to the touch. He covers his nose at the smell of the hospital, at the odor coming from the other side of the curtain where someone is screaming. “Let’s get out of here,” he says, looking around for an exit.

  We are called into the doctor’s office. The doctor turns off the lights and shows us the MRI results on a lit screen. He points to a marble-sized white spot at the base of my brain, near the neck. The white spot is blood, he says.

  This is sounding familiar. When I was nine a blood vessel burst in the pons region of my brain stem, but there had been few side effects, and the blood had reabsorbed after a couple of months. The doctor says it has happened again, and this time it is more severe. The blood is putting pressure on the pons, which controls functions like breathing and swallowing. The reason I have not died is that the cavernous angioma has only bled a little bit. Not enough to stop my functions totally. Everything may reabsorb again, he says. Who knows, I could wake up tomorrow and feel all better. He refers me to a team of doctors in a Los Angeles hospital, which is more equipped to deal with this kind of thing. For now, he says, I should just go home. He gives me some painkillers from his pocket.

  Uncle Charlie and I go to the hospital cafeteria before we leave. We make fun of the doctor. We eat sticky carrot salad and turkey on whole wheat. My uncle calls my father, and I call my mother, who says she will board the first plane. I tell her not to worry, but she says she is my mother, of course she is coming. My uncle drives me home in his elegant car and I feel calm. From the pills, mostly.

  •

  Claude is stuck in late-morning traffic on the highway. He watches the ocean and thinks about how much he likes Louise, and how much he hopes that whatever’s wrong with her isn’t serious, because he has never helped anyone through anything, not really. Most people haven’t, he guesses. He wonders if he will know what to do when the time comes, and if it will be enough.

  •

  The next day everything is worse. I try to get ready for work in a white skirt and a silky top that glows like lava, but the numbness has spread to my right hand and I can’t button anything. I go back to bed and lie down. Claude is still sleeping. I cannot miss another day of work. I cannot spend another day at the ER when I’m supposed to be outside on the sand with a tape recorder, covering Japanese teenagers out surfing for the first time. Or in the farmers’ market, trailing Spaniards and Germans, asking them what they think of American hot dogs. Delicious, yes? We are all Californian now!

  An ambulance takes me to Los Angeles.

  •

  This has been manageable until the ambulance. It was manageable yesterday with my uncle in the cafeteria, and at home, with Claude. But now a man puts a tube in my nose and tells me to breathe in. Now I know it is serious. Now I know something very wrong is going on.

  I don’t want to tell the nurses in LA about the double vision because this makes my case sound much worse than I want it to be. I pretend my left eye has not turned inward. I pretend the right side of my body does not feel full of sand. I pretend this is not me, that this is happening to someone else, and it almost works. When a nurse inserts a needle into my right arm I almost don’t feel it.

  The doctor sweeps into the room. He says the cavernous angioma must be cut out of my brain immediately. The operation, called a craniotomy, is very dangerous, but the lesion cannot be shrunk by radiation, or the pons will suffer. It cannot be cut out by a gamma knife, because the slightest error could kill me. And it cannot be left alone because chances are it will bleed again—no one knows how much or when. Another bleed could be fatal. Surgery is the only option. The neurosurgeon will be back in town in two days. I must wait, here, in the hospital.

  I become hysterical. The nurse injects me with a tranquilizer that makes me claw at my skin, and I try to leave the room, dragging all of my tubes along. Nurses hold me down.

  My mother arrives and gets into bed with me, smelling like plane. She is small and fits well. Her name is Janet and she lives in Kansas. She wears practical clothes, leather sandals with socks, jeans, and T-shirts. She is the publisher of the town newspaper and is the boss of some people. When I was growing up, she was one of the best players on our town’s tennis team. She has a boyfriend. She leaves the hot, dim room to find a wet washcloth for my face.

  By the time Claude arrives it has been dark for a long time. It is an hour and a half from Montecito to Los Angeles. He apologizes. The newspaper, he explains. The traffic. He’s so sorry.

  •

  For two days my mother and I watch the mounted hospital TV. Finally, the neurosurgeon we’ve been waiting for returns from a conference in Sweden. He says he cannot perform the craniotomy, at least not right away. He wants to consult some other specialists. Mom and I think he’s stalling, covering his ass, afraid of lawsuits. I am told to wait for a phone call. It will take about a week.

  Claude picks us up outside the hospital and waits with the engine running. I am in a wheelchair. Claude has brought sunglasses because the bright sunlight hurts my eyes and face. The engine sounds like a drill inside my skull so my mother puts soundproof headphones over my ears. I do not know if my mother and Claude talk or not. They have only met a few times. I don’t know much of anything right now, only that we are driving out of Los Angeles and along the coast back to our apartment in Santa Barbara, and that every minute it is getting worse.

  CHAPTER FOUR

  I was on the student newspaper at the University of Kansas before any of this happened. I liked journalism, though I was bad at it. Careless. As a reporter, I wrote stories on athletes volunteering at soup kitchens and fashion trends like the Brazilian bikini wax and low-rise jeans. I quoted my roommates instead of talking to strangers like I was supposed to. I rarely took the extra step to look up a word in a dictionary or check a calendar. I was used to getting by on my looks. I was used to not having to care too much.

  The paper came out at midnight, and every morning the journalism professor who oversaw the operation would pin a copy on a bulletin board in the newsroom. He would have marked every mistake with a red pen; the really bad ones in green. Ones that meant libel! were underlined in black. Sometimes “good” was written by someone’s byline. I loved that moment, when we crowded around the bulletin board to see what kind of job we had done. I liked getting chips at the vending machine and sharing cigarettes with everyone out back by the dumpster, laughing about something, usually something someone had done while drunk.

  I went to lots of staff parties, and there was lots of drinking, and lots of regrettable sex. We did what people do when they work together day after day, barely out of their teenage years—stupid things. I stole another girl’s boyfriend at least once, and wore a fringed leather jacket everywhere. We made up group dances at bars after late-night copy-editing shifts. After concerts I’d crowd
in tiny backstage rooms with shaggy band members, and as we all smoked pot, I’d scribble quotes on gum wrappers from my purse. I threw lots of parties, themed, usually. Expected ones, like disco and white trash. The best was prom, where everyone wore their old dress or tux. Mine was light blue stiff taffeta with a full bubble skirt. I was the kind of girl other girls only pretended to like.

  I grew up in the Midwest, restless, thinking I was meant for something different. Something better. We all did.

  CHAPTER FIVE

  Claude knows Louise from the student paper. They work together in a small stone building in the center of campus. After flirting with him for months, Louise finally invites him over for dinner. She’s sexy and bronze from a spring break trip to Jamaica, where she says she broke up with her boyfriend, an older guy named Davy, who has a band and no job. Claude likes Louise, but does not want to send a message that he will be an easy, obedient boyfriend like all the others. Louise knows guys love her, he can tell from watching her sail around the newsroom, looking back to see which guys she imagines are watching her hips. He’s heard things about her, that she dumps guys after two months and drinks whiskey out of a red plastic cup, and that all the professors in the journalism school think she’s a slacker who comes to class hung over with a giant bottle of water and writes “filler” stories with pretty art that land on the front page. Claude saw Louise with her last boyfriend, once, in the grocery store—she’d been talking on the phone while he trailed behind her, not objecting when she tossed a bunch of dried fruit and gluten-free cookies into the cart.

  “Maybe I’ll come,” Claude tells Louise. “Won’t know for sure until the last minute.”

  Louise shares a soggy bungalow with two friends, and when Claude walks in, half an hour late, it smells like incense and floor cleaner and her roommates are not there. Louise is making sushi, and the rolls are big and lumpy. Claude paces the kitchen, talking on his cell phone, and Louise continues to assemble the meal alone, slicing and arranging, probably waiting for him to help her or tell her how pretty she looks. She’s evidently used to guys who walk right up and cup her small face in their hands. Claude tries not to watch her. He tells himself, Don’t touch.