A BITTER LESSON Perhaps no one has ever paid more dearly or was ever pun- ished more severely for a moment's childish disobedience, than myself and my two younger sisters. My youngest sister, Lowain, now fifteen, and the next young- est, now seventeen, that is Tanya, and myself, I am eighteen and called Ilona, were until two years ago, three very happy normal young girls, on an island of very happy, beautiful people. Then one day, in a moment of adventurous misbehavior, the three of us decided to swim out to an area that had been forbidden to us by our father. In one swift moment, our merry laughter was pierced by the horror-filled scream of my younger sister, who had fallen slight- ly behind us. I turned in the water just in time to see her struggling figure being pulled down followed by the huge fin of the devil shark. Suddenly there was another fin, and another. I cried out for my other sister, but she was not in sight. As I started to dive in search of them, the clear blue water had already become cloudy, and in my eagerness to find them, I had not looked behind me, or even considered the danger to myself. Just that suddenly, there was a biting tearing pain in my leg, and in the instant before I passed out, I knew that one of the giant devils had gotten me. When I regained full consciousness, many days later, my mother was at my side, gently stroking my forehead. Her face was lined with grief and worry. As I turned my head about the room there was no sign of my sisters, and I was sure that they were dead. My mother assured me that they were not -- but later I was to learn that perhaps it would have been better if they were. I became conscious of a kind of numbness in my left arm, and right leg, although I could feel them there, I couldn't move them. As I turned my eyes down toward my arm, my mother swiftly placed her hand over my eyes, and I knew in that instant that my arm was gone. When my mother removed her hand, I could see in her eyes more suffering than I felt for myself. She fought desperate- ly to hold back the tears, as I pressed her hand in the only one I had left, and assured her that it was all right. Again I tried to move my leg, and then realized that it was also gone. The doctor had come over from the big island, and although he and my mother both assured me that my sisters were alive, neither of them would tell me if they had also been maimed as I had. I only knew that Lowain had been take to the home of a friend, and that Tanya had been taken to the big island for some kind of special care. I was told that I would be able to see them, as soon as I was able to get about. This gave me an incentive to try and get up and finally stand on my remaining leg, as quickly as possible. Within a week or so, I had become somewhat accustomed to having only one arm. I would lie for hours, staring down at the large bandaged stump, and try to remember how it felt to move it about. Sometimes I would forget, and try to reach for something, for it felt for all the world as if it were still there. And so when the day came to remove the final bandages, I was able to accept the fact that my arm was gone-- that there only remained a tiny stump, and that that was the way it would be for the rest of my life. I even ventured at was, moving it about, trying it out. The day they removed the bandage from my leg stump, however, had a much more serious effect. As I sat staring down at my one full brown leg, so perfect and alive, and then looked at the futile little stump that had once been its mate, I seemed to realize for the first time that I was a cripple-- that I had only one leg and one arm, that I would never again be able to run and play and swim as everyone else on the island did, and that every- one would always stare at me and feel sorry for me and suddenly I felt very sorry for myself, and for the first time since it happened, I cried my heart out. After that, I seemed to lose all incentive, all hope for the future. My father had made two crutches for me, one with a strap to go over my armless shoulder. My parents implored me at the doctor's instructions, to try and stand, but I refused. It was then that the doctor decided I should see my younger sister. My father, as he was very clever with such things, had fashioned a wheelchair for her. This was all I knew of her condi- tion, the fact that she was in a chair, unable to walk. At first they felt that the shock of seeing her might be injurious to my recovery. Now, however, they felt, knowing how we loved each other, that seeing her might inspire me into standing. My father pushed her quietly into my room, and when I turned my head and saw her tiny figure seated in the large wheelchair, my heart was torn apart. Both of her arms, and both of her legs were gone, she was completely limbless. There remained only tiny stumps for all her limbs, about the same size and not unlike mine. "Please, Ilona, dear, please try to stand," she pleaded. "As you can see, I cannot. They had to amputate both of my arms and both legs." She went on quietly, "It really isn't so bad, but I will need your help now, and when she returns, for she is the-- worst-- of any of us, I think." "What-- what is it," I asked, thinking surely there could be nothing worse than losing both arms and legs, and already ashamed of myself for my actions. "Tanya's legs were not injured, but -- but she lost both arms completely, right at the shoulder," Lowain went on, barely able to control her voice. "She has no stumps at all, such as we do, with which to do things." "Oh, God," I cried, "I'm so sorry. How will she be able to stand it, she loved to weave, and use her hands so. But why isn't she here?" "She's on the big island, at what they call a rehabilitation center. They are teaching her to use her feet for hands, and also to-- to see with them. For she also lost-- lost her sight-- when her head struck a rock, and will never regain it. So you see how badly we need you." When Tanya returned to the island, totally blind and arm- less, she wanted desperately to see us. She gently ran her tiny toes over our faces and hair, her blind eyes staring straight ahead, trying to recall what we looked like. Lowain was seated on the ground at her feet, when she slipped her tiny foot out of their thonged sandals that she always wore, and raised it toward Lowain's face. She gave a little cry when she felt my sister's arm stump, and when her toes gently caressed the second one, Lowain softly kissed her foot. [also appears in "Fragments"]