CHAPTER SIX
DEAN
…WRONG.
Something is wrong. I know it in my bones, feel it the way an animal senses danger before an attack.
Liv has been gone almost all afternoon, and aside from a few texts that she’s “still here,” I don’t know what’s going on.
For Nicholas and Bella’s sakes, I keep their routine the same—after Bella’s gymnastics class, we pick Nicholas up from school, and I explain that Mom had an appointment, so I’m taking over for the afternoon. We head home for a snack, then play outside before I start dinner and the kids settle down to watch cartoons.
Close to six, the front door opens. I drop the spoon I’m holding and go to meet Liv. She’s unwinding the scarf from around her neck. Her face is pale as paper, lines of fatigue bracketing her eyes and mouth.
“Sorry that took so long,” she says.
My heart starts beating too fast. “What happened?”
“Dr. Nolan wanted me to have a mammogram,” Liv explains, shrugging out of her coat. “Then the radiologist wanted me to have an ultrasound.”
“Why?”
“Something about my breasts having a lot of tissue.” Liv shakes her head and moves past me to the living room. Her voice lightens when she says, “Hey, it’s my two little hedgehogs.”
“Mommy,” Bella yells, pushing to her feet and rushing toward Liv.
Nicholas follows at a more sedate pace to hug her. I smother my burning need to know as Liv asks the kids about their days at school, but when she passes me to go into the kitchen, I grab her arm.
“Tell me,” I say.
“Later,” she whispers, glancing back at the kids.
“Now.”
“Hey, Mom, you have to sign this permission slip for our field trip to see
The Wizard of Oz
.” Nicholas comes into the kitchen, waving a crumpled piece of paper.
Liv pulls her arm from my grasp and turns to our son. Frustration floods my chest. I struggle to get through the next couple of hours as a flurry of activity follows—Nicholas and Bella both showing Liv their schoolwork, Bella complaining that she doesn’t want to take a bath, Nicholas asking what’s for dessert.
Liv, as usual, handles everything with calm self-assurance, and after a spaghetti dinner, she gives Bella a peach-scented bubble bath while Nicholas and I make brownies from a boxed mix for dessert. The kids eat happily, then run around like monkeys as Liv and I cajole them into bed.
Finally, their lights are out. I follow Liv into the bedroom, my fear spiking anew.
“What?” I ask, more sharply than I’d intended. “Tell me everything.”
“There’s an obvious lump, as you know.” Liv sits on the bed and sighs. “The radiologist couldn’t read the mammogram results because my breasts are too
dense
, so he did an ultrasound. Then he said that because of the way the lump looks and feels, he wants to do a biopsy.”
My vision darkens at the edges. A
biopsy?
I can’t repeat the word aloud. Liv looks at the floor. Silence stretches between us, brittle and thin.
“He sent the reports to Dr. Nolan, and they’re going to let me know tomorrow when they can schedule it. The radiologist said they’d try to do it quickly, so I don’t have to wait.”
Silence again. I approach her, reaching out to tuck a lock of hair behind her ear. I hate that she had to spend all afternoon at the doctor’s getting tests that will lead to a fucking biopsy of her breast. And I hate that I wasn’t with her.
“I wish you’d called me,” I tell her, trying to keep my voice even. “I could have gone with you.”
“No. You had the kids, and… well, I’m sure it’s nothing anyway. They’re just doing the tests as a precaution, which I guess is a good thing.”
It doesn’t sound good, though. Nothing about this sounds
good
.
“Come on.” I tilt my head toward the door. “Let’s go watch a bad TV show and eat all the junk food we hide from the kids.”
Liv shakes her head. “I’m really tired. I’m just going to read for a while and go to bed.”
She pushes to her feet and goes into the bathroom. I pace from one end of the room to the other. When Liv comes out, my gaze goes to her breasts beneath her purple nightgown, their gorgeous weight and fullness rounding the thin fabric, the valley of her cleavage revealed by the V neckline.
A
biopsy? A needle sticking into her breast to draw out… what?
I drag my eyes up to Liv’s face. She’s watching me, as if she noticed me looking. She pulls on her robe.
“Are you going to do some work?” she asks with forced casualness.
“Uh, yeah. Sure.”
I don’t know what to say. I don’t know what to
do.
I back toward the door as Liv takes the quilt off the bed and starts to fluff up the pillows.
“I guess I’ll go up to my office,” I finally say.
“Okay. I’ll be asleep by the time you come to bed.”
I walk toward her, reaching out to grasp her shoulders. Whatever the hell is going on right now, I’m not giving up our good-night kiss. I lower my head and press my lips against hers, feeling her fingers curl around my arms as she leans into me. For an instant, the tightness in my chest eases, but then Liv pulls away.
“Good night,” she says, sliding her hand across my jaw. “I love you.”
“I love you too. Get a good night’s sleep.”
She settles into bed as I leave the bedroom. Though I’m not sure it’s a good idea, I go to my office and do some Internet searching about breast lumps. Some of what I read is reassuring—most lumps are not cause for concern—but the word
cancer
appears in every article.
I turn away from the screen, my chest tight. There’s no way. Liv is young, healthy, low risk. There’s just no fucking way she could—
I stop that thought. It’s a black, suffocating pit I can’t even look at.
I force my mind to my latest paper about the construction of medieval cathedrals. Work has always been a way for me to stop thinking about everything else, to focus on architectural plans and building structures.
But this time, the words on the screen swim in front of my eyes, and I can’t make my brain grasp a coherent idea. It seems so useless, so stupid, to be studying thousand-year-old cathedrals when my wife just spent the afternoon getting
diagnostic testing
done.
Fear cuts through me, so fast it almost catches me off guard. Like it’s been waiting to attack.
Nothing.
It’s nothing. Liv is right—the doctors are doing the tests as a precaution. Not because they think something is wrong.
And I hate myself for thinking there is.
November 18
Two days ago, I was reviewing the new World Heritage departmental criteria as if it were important. The day before that, I’d chaired a meeting about the new curriculum, the admissions criteria, the field study programs. And the day before that, I’d turned in the final draft of an article for the
Medieval Journal of Archeology.
I’d talked to students, read their papers, lectured about Latin paleography.
Suddenly, forty-eight hours later, the only really
important
parts of my life are my wife and children. The only meeting that matters is the one with the doctor. The only research I care about is the report that will tell me Liv is fine. The only lecture I want to hear is the doctor telling us to have a good weekend as she walks us to the door.
Liv is in the kitchen the morning after the tests, her head bent as she checks her cell phone.
“Morning.” I brush my lips across her forehead. “Kids still sleeping?”
She nods, pushing a tumble of hair away from her face. “I’ve been up since three. Couldn’t sleep. I emailed Dr. Nolan twice about the biopsy, but she probably won’t get back to me until the office opens. She told me yesterday that even if this is a benign tumor, I should see a specialist anyway.”
Cold spreads through me. It takes me a second to realize why. Liv just said,
“Even if this is a benign tumor…”
Which implies it might not be. I don’t want her admitting that. I don’t want her even
knowing
it.
“Liv.”
She looks up from her phone. Shadows smudge the area under her eyes. I put my hands on the sides of her warm neck. Her pulse beats against my palm.
“Don’t be…” I stop and start again. “
Try
not to be scared.”
Her lips compress. “How can I not be scared, Dean? One minute you’re fondling my breasts, and the next minute I’m getting them flattened between plates and scheduling a biopsy.”
She pulls away from me, tossing her phone onto the counter. Tension laces her shoulders.
“I’ve been wishing you hadn’t even found the damned thing,” she snaps. “How stupid is that? As if you not finding it would somehow make it
not real
.”
An irrational surge of guilt hits me. “I just wish it wasn’t there.”
She turns, lifting her hands. “But it is.”
There’s nothing I can say. It’s
there.
I felt it. I fucking
found
it. Something alien invading my wife.
Liv’s cell phone rings. She grabs it, her skin draining of color at the sight of the number. She lifts the phone to her ear. “Dr. Nolan?”
Apprehension grips me. I move closer and put my hand on Liv’s shoulder.
Her knuckles whiten as she clutches the phone. “Okay. Yes, I can. What time?” She pauses to listen. “No, I’d rather just get it over with. Thank you. I’ll be there.”
She ends the call and lets out a long, shuddering breath. “Biopsy at ten this morning. But Dr. Nolan said that because it’s Friday, we won’t get the results until Monday or Tuesday. She said I could wait until Monday for the biopsy, but I don’t want to. I have to… have to call Allie and tell her I can’t make my shift today.”
She’s shaking. I wrap my arms around her and pull her into me. She relaxes against me for a minute, pressing her face into my chest. I lower my head and press my lips against her ear.
“It’ll be okay,” I whisper roughly, but it’s the most inadequate and useless thing I’ve ever said to her.
The morning passes in a haze of unreality. We get through our morning routine and drop the kids off at school. I don’t have classes on Friday mornings, but I call the university to let them know I won’t be at my office.
We drive to Forest Grove. The sky is a robin’s-egg blue, the sun acting like it’s just another ordinary day.
Even though it’s anything but.
I stop at a red light.
“Dean.”
“Right here.”
“What if it’s
not
nothing?”
I look at my wife. She’s gazing out the window, her profile reflecting against the glass. Everything inside me tenses with the need to tell her not to think about that because no fucking way can something evil grow inside
her.
Not her. Not Liv. It would be a massive cosmic fuck-up if this turned out to be
something.
“We’re not going to think about that right now,” I say—again, so goddamned useless. “Or try not to.”
We can’t.
“But—”
“Liv, baby.” I swallow past the tightness in my throat as I turn toward the hospital. “If it’s not nothing, we’ll deal with it together. But we need to take this one step at a time.”