Authors: Lisa Scottoline
“No, I wouldn’t do that for Rahul. We used to do that more often, because of language impairment, but he isn’t showing any delays. You can dress him, now.” Jill went to the computer on the desk, typed her password into Epic, opened Rahul’s file, and typed in her notes. Pembey Family Practice had EMR, or electronic medical records, but Jill always waited until after the exam to record her findings. She liked to look the mom in the eye and stand in front of a child, not a keyboard.
“So no tubes?” Padma asked.
“Not yet. Let me check one last thing in his file.” Jill navigated to Rahul’s weight chart, with its line climbing up a hill, until six months ago. He’d started life in the thirtieth percentile, but now was down to the fifth, which meant he fell off his curve. That wasn’t good, either.
“So, amoxicillin?”
“Yes, since it’s been over a month since the last time he’d used it, and Tylenol, too.” Jill closed out the file, leaving the screen waiting for the password of the next doctor. She’d coded it as a URI for insurance purposes, but she wasn’t 100 percent sure why it kept happening. The saying in medicine was, if you hear hoofbeats, don’t go hunting for zebra, but Jill knew better. Zebras existed, and pediatrics was full of them. She stood up. “Let’s see him again on Wednesday. I know you’re busy, but I want to keep an eye on him.”
“Okay.”
“Also, before you leave, I’d like to take some blood.” Jill didn’t elaborate because she wasn’t about to alarm Padma. There was a chance that Rahul had an autoimmune problem, leukemia, or lymphoma, but they were only remote possibilities. “The lab’s just down the hall. It won’t take long.”
“Blood?” Padma’s dark eyes flared. “For an ear infection?”
“Yes, I want to know why he keeps getting them, and a blood test will give me a complete picture of what’s going on in his system and see what type of infection his body is fighting.” Jill didn’t add that the blood test would tell her how many and what type of white blood cells Rahul’s body was producing, whether lymphocytes, neutrophils, or monocytes, and that would eliminate the more serious diagnoses. “You only have to take him down the hall, and I promise Selena will make it easy.”
“Okay, if you think it’s really necessary.” Padma pressed a strand of dark hair into her short ponytail.
“I do, and I’ll call you when I get the results, probably on Tuesday. Please let me know if anything changes.” Jill printed out a script for amoxicillin, signed it, and handed it to Padma. “Here we go.”
“Thanks.” Padma picked up Rahul’s little jeans, and Jill placed a reassuring hand on her shoulder.
“I mean it, don’t hesitate to call me.”
“Will do. Thanks again.” Padma smiled, and Jill gave her a hug.
“Love to the boys and Dave. Rahul, bye-bye.” Jill caressed the baby on the cheek and left the examining room, checking her watch on the fly. Pembey Family Practice had office hours until one o’clock on Saturdays, and it was 1:15, so she wasn’t as behind as usual. She needed to spend time with the patients, but it put her in constant conflict with their office manager, Sheryl Ewing. Jill hoped to leave today without seeing Sheryl because she didn’t need the lecture, with the memorial service ahead of her.
She bustled to her office, thinking of William, and anger flickered in her chest, an ember that didn’t need fanning. She felt hypocritical going to his memorial service when, in her darker moments, she had actually wished him dead. And if she were really honest, she wouldn’t be surprised if it turned out that someone had murdered him.
Because in her very darkest moments, she would have done it herself.
Chapter Eight
Jill drove down Route 202, heading east toward Philly, with a somber Megan in the passenger seat, her face turned to the window. Even her phone was quiet, and Jill wondered if she had silenced it or turned it off. Rain pounded against the windshield, and they passed a strip mall that used to have a huge Circuit City, which was now vacant. The only sound was the rhythmic beating of the wipers and the low rumble of the road.
“You look nice, honey,” Jill said, looking over. Megan looked grown up in a simple black dress she wore for choir concerts, with low-heeled black shoes. Her hair was still wet from the shower and gathered in a black velvet scrunchy.
“Thanks.” Megan turned to her, with a brief smile, but the strain showed on her face. “Is this service gonna be weird?”
“A little, but we’ll get through it.”
“Will it have an open casket like Grandma’s?”
“No.” Jill felt a pang, thinking of her mother’s wake, in the funeral home. “This isn’t a Mass, it’s a memorial service, in a church. An historic church.”
“William didn’t go to church.”
“Sometimes they hold services in church, even if the person didn’t go there.”
“Is there something after it, like with Grandma? Do we all go to a restaurant?”
Jill realized that Abby hadn’t mentioned a reception. “I don’t know.”
“Who else will be there, besides Abby and Victoria?”
“I don’t know. I guess William’s friends and maybe someone from work.”
“Where did he work?”
“I don’t know that, either.”
Megan shook her head. “We don’t know anything about him anymore, and he used to be my
Dad
.”
Jill felt stricken. She knew the feeling, albeit from the other side. If it was impossible to be an ex-parent, it was impossible to have one.
“It’s like he just forgot we were in the same family. Like he never even knew us, and we didn’t matter to him at all.”
“He didn’t forget you, honey.” Jill’s fingers tightened on the wheel. They’d talked about this many times, but it was all coming back now, with William’s death.
“Yes, he did. He didn’t answer any of my emails or texts, not one. He didn’t call me, not even when I got into National Honor Society.” Megan’s tone stayed matter-of-fact. “You tried to talk to Abby and Victoria, but he didn’t even try to talk to me. He didn’t even answer me, when
I
tried.”
“That doesn’t mean he forgot you.”
“Yes, it does.”
“No, not necessarily,” Jill said, wanting to comfort Megan, even though she could never forgive William for cutting Megan off the way he had. If Jill hated him for one single thing, it was that, and she always would.
“Then why didn’t he answer my email?”
Jill tried to think of an honest answer. “Maybe because he couldn’t face his hurt, or yours. We’ll never know now. But I know nobody could forget you. You’re a wonderful, wonderful girl.” Jill patted her leg, and another silence fell. Megan looked out the window again, her head moving slightly with the motion of the car.
“Look, a padiddle.” Megan pointed at the window. “Remember when we used to play that game in the car, with Abby and Victoria?”
Jill did. A padiddle was a car with only one headlight, and whoever saw one on the road got a point. “I do remember that, but I don’t see a padiddle.”
“Look in your mirror. There’s a padiddle behind us, one car back.”
Jill glanced in the rearview, and a black SUV with one headlight was behind them. She flashed on the scene outside the house last night, when Abby had come staggering down the sidewalk. She’d been visible in the beam from a black SUV, with one headlight. A padiddle. Not that it meant anything. The world was full of black SUVs, with or without headlights, which was why Jill drove a white Volvo.
“Do you think they think about us, when they play padiddle?”
“I bet they do.” Jill was remembering that the headlights on the SUV last night were boxy, but all SUVs had boxy headlights. SUVs were boxy, in general. They were practically boxes on wheels.
“Except they probably don’t play padiddle anymore. They’re too old.”
“They still might.”
“I think Abby thinks about us, but Victoria doesn’t, as much. Abby loved us more.” Megan turned back to Jill, her dark eyes troubled. “Victoria doesn’t let herself love people a lot, you know what I mean?”
“Yes, exactly.”
“Victoria doesn’t love enough, and Abby loves too much. Isn’t that funny?”
Jill looked over, impressed. “Well said.”
“Which is better?”
“The middle. Let yourself love. Love is good. Just choose the people you love wisely. They have to deserve you.” Jill heard herself pontificating, but she’d learned it the hard way. “You’ll make mistakes, but that’s okay.”
“It is?”
“Yes, of course, it’s human.”
“You mean because you can always get a divorce?”
“Well, yes,” Jill answered, pained. “It’s not ideal, but it’s the best choice, if your marriage is terrible.”
“Except I didn’t divorce William,” Megan said, again, matter-of-factly. “I didn’t divorce anybody. Neither did Abby or Victoria. The kids don’t get a choice.”
Jill felt a wave of guilt. “I know, sweetie, and I’m sorry.”
“I didn’t mean it in a bad way, I’m just saying.”
“I’m still sorry, for the way it all turned out.”
“It’s okay.” Megan reached for her phone at the sound of an incoming text.
“Don’t forget to turn that off at the service.”
“I won’t.” Megan checked the text, and a new smile flickered across her face.
“Is that Courtney?”
“No. A boy.”
“Really?” Jill brightened, happy to change the subject. “Can I know more?”
“Well, he’s really cute.” Megan smiled, warming. “He’s in one of the other clubs, the Hornets. He’s one of the fastest freestylers on the team.”
“Good for him. What’s his name?”
“Jake Tilson.”
“Did you start doodling Megan Tilson in your notebook?”
“No, Mom, you weirdo!” Megan laughed, which was the desired effect.
“What does he look like?”
“He has blond hair and it’s curly, and he has blue eyes and he’s a little short but I don’t care. And he’s really cut.”
Jill laughed. “Everybody’s cut at thirteen.”
“No, he’s
cut,
Mom. He’s
ripped.
He’s
shredded.
You can see his abs from across the pool. And he plays guitar. Real guitar, not Guitar Hero.”
“How did you meet him?”
“I’ve seen him at meets but I talked to him at Courtney’s party. He knows her twin brother from swim camp. He friended me after the party, and now we’re texting.”
Jill felt delighted. Megan needed more fun in her life. “Sounds like a modern romance.”
“And guess what else?”
Jill smiled, looking over. “What else?”
“We
kissed
!” Megan covered her face with her hands, laughing.
“Good for you. So, was it fun?” Jill knew this was big news, because Megan hadn’t had a boyfriend yet. She felt happy, and sad, that Megan had her first kiss, but counted herself lucky that Megan was slower than her classmates, judging from the stories she’d heard from other swim moms.
“No!” Megan slid her hands down, flushed. “It was scary and I was bad at it. He has braces, too. We were like Iron Man!”
“Aw, no you weren’t.”
“We
were.
” Megan moaned. “It’s me. I’m a bad kisser.”
“You want a tip?”
“
Mom.
” Megan recoiled. “It’s not like the backstroke, you can’t
teach
me.”
“Why not? Just relax your mouth. Don’t pucker up.”
“Oh, this is so
random.
” Megan giggled. “You have to be kidding me, right now.”
“No, I’m a pretty good kisser. I’ve been kissing boys for a long time. I’ve kissed thousands. Millions.” Jill’s heart eased when Megan giggled again.
“Stop, no. This is gross.”
“No, it’s not. It’s okay to like a boy, and it’s okay to kiss a boy, too. Just don’t lose your head.”
“I won’t, Mom.” Megan snorted. “I’m not
Teen Mom.
”
“I know that, but still.” Jill knew that any teen could become
Teen Mom.
“You’re so
wacky,
Mom.”
“I know, I get it from you.”
Megan laughed again, then resumed texting, and Jill hit the gas, keeping her eye on the road. Traffic picked up, and she took the on ramp onto the Schuylkill Expressway with most of the traffic. She checked the padiddle, and it was still back there, behind a white pickup, too far away to tell the make. They reached the West River Drive, and she lost the padiddle in the traffic. The rain finally stopped, and they parked in a garage, where Jill cut the ignition.
“Remember, stay with me,” Megan said, looking over.
“I will, don’t worry.” Jill managed a smile, shooing the black SUV out of her mind.
Chapter Nine
Jill and Megan got to the church early, entered through the arched doors, and found themselves milling in the back among a small, well-dressed crowd, talking in low tones before they went to their seats. Jill didn’t recognize anyone, which didn’t surprise her, because after the divorce, their few friends had sided with her. She caught a glimpse of a teary Abby, accepting condolences from the guests, standing next to the rector, in his red-and-white vestments.
“Poor Abby,” she said to Megan.
“I know, she looks really sad,” Megan whispered back. “I feel so bad for her.”
“Me, too.” Jill felt a deep pang, seeing how Abby looked, lost and heartbroken in an ethereal boho dress, with heavy makeup. It made her worry about Victoria, whom she couldn’t see through the crowd. “Megs, do you see Victoria?”
“Yes, you’ll see her when that old lady moves. She’s doing better than Abby. Look, Mom, she looks so pretty. She got highlights.”
“Really?” Jill craned her neck and spotted Victoria, standing tall in a black linen dress with pearl drop earrings. Her newly honeyed streaks were pulled back into a sophisticated twist, and her lovely face had elongated as she’d gotten older, enhancing the prominence of her cheekbones. Light, perfect makeup emphasized her hazel eyes, and she projected grace and poise, though she was only twenty-three. Jill felt a bittersweet rush of emotions, feeling love at seeing her again, happy that she’d grown up so well, but loss at all the years they could have been in touch, and pain for how she must be feeling.
“I think that’s her boyfriend,” Megan whispered, and Jill noticed a tall, good-looking young man in a dark suit and wire-rimmed glasses, who stood behind her.