Five Days

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Five Days Page 33

by Douglas Kennedy


  Was I flirting with him? Of course. But I also knew that, for the foreseeable, all I could do was keep running.

  * * *

  I was running when I saw him. Running down a corridor of the radiography unit, having just X-rayed a fifty-nine-year-old construction worker whose left leg had been trapped under a falling steel beam (it was a mess). I had an ultrasound to do on a young mother (seventeen years old) with a suspected ectopic pregnancy. That was three minutes from now. Life in our unit is very much a time-and-motion study, an endless attempt to keep to the very tight schedule we work under, punctuated by emergency cases like the poor man who’d just arrived with a limb that had been virtually pulverized. But three minutes meant time for a much-needed coffee, though not enough time to run back to the staff room and use the very decent Nespresso machine that the six of us in radiography all chipped in $35 each to buy. So I stopped at the vending machine in the hallway that runs between the X-ray, ultrasound, and scanning suites. The public waiting room is also just off this corridor, which means you often run into patients and their families in front of the vending machines. Given how little time I had – and how slow that coffee machine was – I sighed an inward groan when I saw a man putting money in its slot. From a distance I could see he was in his fifties, gray-haired, old-style glasses, a zip-up golf jacket in a mid-blue fabric. Hearing my hurried footsteps he looked up. And that’s when I caught sight of Richard Copeland.

  He blanched at first sight of me. Looking beyond shocked. Mortified. I too was stopped in my tracks. I immediately took in just how much he had returned to looking like the man I first met that Friday at the hotel check-in. Only now the chatty charm he had displayed from the outset had been replaced by an aura of world-weariness, of resignation. As befits a man who had lost so much. Most especially his son. He met my stunned gaze for a moment, then turned away.

  ‘Hello, Richard,’ I said.

  He said nothing.

  ‘What brings you to my corner of the world?’ I asked.

  ‘My wife. She needs a scan. Some spinal thing. Nothing life threatening. More a curvature thing. They had a space here before Midcoast in Brunswick. So . . .’

  I glanced down at the chart I held in my hand. A chart listing my next five appointments before lunch break. Muriel Copeland was not listed there. Sometimes there is a God.

  Richard saw me check my chart.

  ‘Don’t worry,’ he said, ‘she’s having the scan done now.’

  ‘I hope she’ll be OK. How are you?’

  He gave me the most cursory of shrugs, then looked up at me again, taking me in this time.

  ‘You look wonderful,’ he finally said.

  ‘Thank you,’ I said. ‘I was so horrified and saddened to hear about Billy.’

  He bit down on his lower lip and bent his head again. Then, in a near whisper:

  ‘Thank you.’

  ‘I don’t know how you cope with such a terrible—’

  ‘I don’t talk about that anymore.’

  His tone was abrupt, like a door slammed shut.

  ‘Sorry,’ I said.

  ‘I heard you’re no longer living in Damariscotta.’

  ‘And where did you hear that?’

  ‘It’s a small state.’

  Silence. Then he said:

  ‘I made a mistake. A big mistake.’

  ‘So it goes.’

  ‘I think about it all the time.’

  ‘So do I.’

  Silence.

  His coffee finished dispensing. He let the cup sit there.

  ‘So you live in Portland now?’ he asked.

  ‘That’s right.’

  ‘Are you happy?’

  ‘Happier.’

  Silence. I checked my watch. I said:

  ‘My next patient awaits me. So . . .’

  ‘I’ve never stopped—’

  I held up my hand.

  ‘That’s the past tense.’

  Silence. He hung his head.

  ‘I wish you well, Richard.’

  And I walked away.

  I ran when I got home that night. I ran the next morning. I ran and ran and ran. Six days a week, five miles a day. Rarely heading out in the evening – unless the old distress was creeping in. Always up before dawn. Always heading across Casco Bay, careening my way through assorted neighborhoods, encircling the Portland lighthouse, saluting that septuagenarian fellow jogger with a quick wave, then pushing my way towards home.

  Home.

  The realtor called me last week, informing me the owners of the apartment – a retired couple who now live most of the time in Florida – needed to sell the place. And they needed a fast sale. As in, they would be willing to accept $190,000 if I was willing to close on the sale within two months.

  ‘Let me think about that,’ I said.

  I called Lucy. She called a man named Russell Drake in Brunswick who organized mortgages. Money was cheap right now, he explained. Around $75 a month repayment per $1,000 borrowed. So if I was to borrow $150,000 dollars for a period of twenty-five years, I’d be paying $1,350 dollars a month . . . just a bit more than what I was paying right now for rent. And yes, the sum borrowed would be the equivalent of two and a half years of my salary at the hospital, so several banks would be most pleased to offer me a mortgage. ‘You’ll probably have a bunch of suitors – which means we can negotiate the finer points to your advantage. And yes, I think a two-month closing is perfectly doable. So shall we meet within the next day or so and get the ball rolling?’

  I called the realtor back and said:

  ‘One sixty-five is what I can pay. If the sellers accept that, we can close within the time frame they want.’

  The offer was accepted the next morning.

  Home.

  The apartment no longer would be someone else’s property in which I was loitering for a spell. It would be mine – and a place for Ben and Sally to return to in the years to come before it became theirs. The place you ‘return to’ inevitably becomes the place you ‘come into’. As my father used to say, the farce of life is grounded in one terrible truth: we are all just passing through.

  * * *

  Home.

  On the morning that I was to sign my divorce agreement I did my post-dawn run, then came home and showered and changed into a suit – the one suit I own. The black suit I wore at my father’s funeral. The suit I should have augmented with another suit by now. But since I never wear suits . . .

  There was absolutely no need to put on these funereal clothes – except that something within me told me I should mark the occasion formally. Even though my lawyer said that she could mail or courier the papers to me at home or work, I told her I would come by her office and sign them myself.

  And if you are signing a legally binding document that is about to end a two-decade relationship – and one which has taken up half my life – dressing formally for the occasion seems only appropriate.

  Amanda Montgomery’s office was a ten-minute drive across Casco Bridge in an old warehouse building in South Portland. A quasi-funky, quasi-gentrified area. Amanda was a large, relentlessly cheerful woman around my age. She worked alone – only employing a receptionist who doubled as her bookkeeper, secretary and general major-domo. She made a point throughout the divorce of trying to keep the process as non-disputative as possible in order to keep the cost reasonable. She coolly stood down Dan’s initial belligerence. Once he saw sense (and it was his lawyer who – according to Amanda – got him to lose his anger and realize that we were offering him a very good deal), it was simply a matter of ‘the usual legal and state bureaucracy – and a considerable amount of tedious paperwork’.

  Here I was today, on time for our prearranged morning meeting, being offered coffee by her assistant before being ushered into Amanda’s office.

  ‘My, you’re dressed up,’ she said as I came in. Her office had a big old-fashioned wooden desk. A big high-back swivel chair, also very much a throwback to the 1930s, a pair of overstuffe
d armchairs for clients. A small conference table, covered with documents. Amanda was dressed in a similarly somber suit, and explained she was due in court in an hour ‘to try to stop my client from being eviscerated by his soon-to-be ex-wife. Your ex doesn’t know how lucky he was that you were not interested in the sort of scorched-earth divorce I am trying to quell right now. Then again, did he ever know how lucky he was?’

  ‘You’d have to ask him that,’ I said quietly.

  ‘Somehow I don’t think that opportunity’s ever going to arise. Anyway, you have a job to go to, and I have a courtroom fistfight to go to. So all we have to do now is sign the papers and they will get shipped back to the court for official judicial signature. Then they will go up to Augusta where the actual Final Decree is issued.’

  I nodded, saying nothing. I could see Amanda studying me.

  ‘You OK, Laura?’

  ‘You mean, am I having second thoughts?’

  ‘That has, in my experience, happened . . . though, most of the time, six months later, the client was back here again.’

  ‘I’ve never had second thoughts from the moment I decided to end the marriage.’

  ‘I always knew that. But I am still bound – not by law, but by my own set of rules – to ask that question before a client signs the papers and things are all but writ in stone.’

  ‘I wish I had second thoughts.’

  ‘It’s a terrible moment, even if it’s the right decision. The death of—’

  ‘Hope,’ I heard myself saying. ‘The death of hope.’

  I blinked and felt tears. Amanda said:

  ‘I’ve sat here and seen the toughest businessmen in the state – real cutthroat bastards – sobbing their eyes out before signing the papers. One guy – I can’t tell you who he is or what he does, because you’d know his name – old schoolfriend of mine which is how I got the case . . . he actually spent almost half an hour just staring at the document before I gently told him that his wife was categorical about the fact that the marriage was over. “I’m afraid you have to sign the papers.” But he kept shaking his head, all disbelief. The death of hope. You got that one right. But when one hope dies—’

  ‘It really dies,’ I said, cutting her off before she could talk about new hopes, new dawns, buds sprouting from barren land, sunlight always following the darkest of nights.

  ‘Sorry, did I say the wrong thing?’ Amanda asked.

  ‘No. I believe in hope as much as the next fool. I just know that disappointment is such an equal part of the equation.’

  ‘Well, they’re counterweights, aren’t they? And you are, in essence, signing off on disappointment this morning.’

  ‘And signing on for what?’

  ‘Whatever you do or find next in your life. Which could be wonderful or terrible or just plain banal or a mixture of all of the above. But whatever arises, even if you make the worst decision or choice imaginable, it will all be driven by one basic thing – hope. Which is the one commodity we all desperately want to hang onto. And that’s my sermon for the morning,’ she said with a smile. ‘Shall we get this done?’

  She ushered me over to the conference table – and a legal document. I’d already read the draft some weeks ago and then the final fine-tuned version just last week.

  ‘Nothing’s changed in the interim,’ she said. ‘But if you’d like to read it through again . . .’

  ‘No need.’

  She proffered a pen. She flipped through the document to a signature page right at the end of it all. I looked down and saw that Dan had gotten there before me – as his tightly knotted signature adorned the line above his printed name.

  ‘The other side did the deed yesterday afternoon. Then his lawyer dropped the papers in here yesterday evening on his way to a hockey game. Very Maine, eh?’

  The pen was shaking in my hand. Why is it that your body so often tells you things that your mind is trying to dodge?

  I steadied my hand. Signing the divorce agreement took two seconds. Then I pushed the document away. I wiped my eyes. I took a deep becalming breath. I sat there, knowing I had to move. Amanda put a hand on my shoulder.

  ‘Are you all right?’

  ‘Not really. But . . .’

  ‘What are you going to do now?’ she asked.

  ‘What everyone else does. I’m going to go to work.’

  * * *

  I saw the cancer immediately. It was right there in front of me. A cancer called despair.

  The patient was a woman who was exactly my age. Born three months after me. A native Mainer, she told me. ‘Not from away’, but someone who went away to a ‘pretty good college’ in the Pacific northwest and ‘an even better’ law school in Boston, and was groomed for big things in a big ‘white shoe’ Beacon Hill law firm. She married a hotshot financial whizz kid and they lived far too well. ‘Life in the fast lane.’ Then he got caught on an insider trading scam, and his legal fees wiped them out, and she never made it beyond associate in that ultra-prestigious, ultra-WASP law firm (where she was just one of three lawyers without an Ivy League degree) because of her husband’s conviction and seven years in a Club Fed sentence. After all that, she had nine months where she was out of work. Then a friend of her dad’s found her a job in one of the bigger law firms here in Portland. Coming back to Maine wasn’t what she really wanted. But having a soon-to-be ex-husband in prison for financial fraud wasn’t helping her employment prospects, and it was a prestigious outfit ‘as Maine firms go’. Even though she was finding a lot of the contractual work she’d been given to do this side of boring (‘Hell, I’m a born litigator’), she was making enough to live in that condo development off the Old Port, and—

  ‘By the way, my name is Caroline and I’m nervous as shit.’

  I told her my name and explained, in my usual professionally calm voice, the scanning procedure and how, outside of the needle in her arm—

  ‘I hate needles.’

  ‘A small momentary prick and then it’s done.’

  ‘And I’m not ten years old and you don’t have to promise me a lollipop at the end.’

  ‘We do have them if you really want one.’

  ‘That’s your way of telling me I’m a bitch, right? Paul always says that. Says when I get into one of these manic moods I am fucking impossible.’

  ‘A scan is always stressful.’

  ‘And you are Miss Zen-o-rama.’

  If only you knew, if only you knew.

  ‘I know how worried you must be now,’ I continued. ‘But—’

  ‘But what? I have a lump in my left breast, a very big lump near a very important lymph node. And though my doctor wanted me to have a mammogram I insisted on a CT scan – because with a CT scan you can see how seriously the cancer has metastasized. So you’re now telling me what? To try to stay calm and focussed and centered and all that New Age shit? Did my doctor tell you I’m four months’ pregnant?’

  ‘It’s there on your chart, yes.’

  ‘But what she didn’t tell you is that this is the first pregnancy that I have been able to carry beyond the initial trimester. I fell pregnant twice while married. Boom. Two miscarriages at eight and eleven weeks respectively. Now I’m pregnant again – at forty-three. An unmarried mother. Not that my firm knows anything about this yet. If I can hold onto the baby – if my body shows me a little grace this time – I am going to probably find myself professionally demoted. Especially if the father of the baby – who happens to be a partner in the same firm – leaves his wife for me. Which I don’t think he’ll do. Which is pulling him apart and pulling me apart. Because we love each other. Because we’re so right for each other. And because I feel that, yet again, life has dealt me the shittiest hand imaginable, even though I know it was my choice to get involved with him, my choice to fall in love with him, my choice to get pregnant by him – a very deliberate choice, I should add, but you probably figured that out by now. And I bet all this is being taken down on a hidden microphone and is going to be used
against me.’

  ‘Fear not,’ I said, helping her onto the bier and strapping her down. ‘Anything you say here stays here.’

  ‘So you’re my father confessor, right?’

  I swabbed her arm with an antiseptic wipe.

  ‘Here comes the needle.’

  Her entire body stiffened – always a sign in my professional experience of someone who expects the pain to be deservedly painful. The needle slipped in. I taped it down. I explained that the whole procedure would last ten, fifteen minutes at most.

  ‘I know it’s cancer,’ she said. ‘I’ve been on the Internet. Crawling all over the Mayo Clinic’s website. From non-stop self-examination I know that it has all the telltale signs of a malignant tumor.’

  ‘As I’ve often told so many people I see here, stay off the Internet when it comes to lumps and growths and blood being passed.’

  ‘But you’ve got to understand – my entire adult life has been about things being taken away from me. My husband. Our home. Two wonderful babies. And now, given how the cards keep falling for me, at best I am going to lose a breast and probably the child when they put me on a huge course of chemotherapy. Given my age this will be the last time I ever get pregnant. And—’

  ‘Aren’t we getting a little ahead of ourselves here?’

  ‘I’m going to die.’

  ‘Did your doctor indicate that?’

  ‘She did what all you people in the medical world do – commit to nothing until you have the actual death warrant in your hand.’

  ‘And your boyfriend – Paul, right? What does he say about all this?’

  ‘He came with me today.’

  ‘That’s good.’

  ‘Before I came in here he told me how much he loved me.’

  ‘That’s even better.’

  ‘The thing is, he’ll never leave his wife. He’s told me recently that, yes, he would move in with me when the pregnancy started to show. But he knows what that will do to his standing at the firm. And his wife is the niece of the senior partner.’

  ‘But it is, nonetheless, love?’

  I could see she was crying.

 

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