I walked into Room 658 on the pediatric floor of the red-bricked hospital. The child is obviously ill. Eyes are clouded, lethargy dominates. Parents share tired, worried expressions. "Hi, I am Mrs. Dahl. I am a reading teacher and the nurse's station said you might be interested in having your child read to." Surprised expressions and then weary half-smiles. "Sure, that would be nice." I lay three or four age-appropriate books in front of the child and a tiny, fevered finger points to a bright cover.
I never ask about the illness. Let the weary children and parents have a moment's reprieve from the nightmare. There are people enough to agitate the waters of worry.
I read the title and open the front cover. Once the story begins I can feel child and adult alike pulled into the melodic rhythm of the text and the beautiful accompanying illustrations. Soon there are smiles - even giggles, and looks of delighted surprise from exhausted parents' eyes. And for those golden, brief, priceless moments, there are no beeping machines, no IV tethers, and no grim prognoses. There is only the magic of the written word and the visual splendor of artful illustrations.
When we have finished and I whisper, "The End," I hand the book to the child, see the gratitude on the face of the parent, and smile brightly, hoping to wordlessly convey HOPE.
And occasionally as I walk out the door, I hear the flip of a page and a childish voice retelling the story, just as I had read it to them moments before. I smile to myself because I know that child has entered The Portal where the written word has transported them to an island of peace.