In the springtime,
when the babies were old enough, Lilly and Armina took them up Tattler’s Branch Road to visit the Beckers.
Armina was amazed at the work Cletus had done on the place. He’d torn down the old bridge and replaced it with one wide enough to handle their carriage. The brambles and briars had been tamed and a new, wider cattle gate installed.
“Who’d of ever thought Cletus Becker would have turned out to be so handy?” Armina said, guiding the horse up the path toward the house.
Last summer had changed them all, Lilly thought. She had learned a valuable lesson after spending the fall and early
winter on bed rest. It was humbling to say the least, being dependent instead of being in charge. Tern had learned from the experience too. He still traveled, but he was never out of touch. They had made a pact to talk every day, convenient or not. And Mazy
—who would have thought she’d turn so independent? She still seemed smitten with Chanis, but she was taking it slow. Time and distance would prove if that new love was true.
“I guess Cletus just needed a chance,” Lilly said, trying to hold the squirming babies still.
“Like ever’body else,” Armina said.
“Yes,” Lilly said, her mind going to Shade Harmon, wondering where he was and how he was faring. She had believed the story he told her that stormy night in the woods. Her belief was confirmed when the sheriff discovered a rusted boning knife near the footbridge over Tattler’s Branch. Two months after the incident that had nearly taken her life, she’d received a thick packet in the mail. In it was a deed to Shade Harmon’s property as well as a legal document ceding the farm to Anne Becker. It was his desire that Anne continue to care for his daughter under Lilly’s direction. He asked that Lilly be the administrator of the securities and bonds in Betsy Lane’s name with everything to revert to Lilly in the event of his daughter’s demise. Lilly could never accept his money, of course; who knew where it came from? But if need be, she’d see that it went to a good cause.
It came as no surprise to her that Mr. Harmon included money for the proper burial of his wife. It was Lilly’s opinion
that he did love Noreen in his way. She couldn’t help but wonder how different things might have been if they had been properly instructed in the care of so difficult an infant. Sadly, no family member ever came forward to claim Noreen’s body even though they posted her death in every newspaper in the state and put it over the wire several times. They laid her to rest in the graveyard beside the church the Beckers attended. The granite marker simply read:
Noreen Harmon
?–1911
Beloved Mother of Betsy Lane Harmon
Anne and Cletus took Betsy to visit the grave site every Sunday after service.
It had been a surprise to find a bond in Timmy’s name included in the packet. The boy could go to the college of his choice. Timmy teased that he would trade it for a bottle of pop and a candy bar. All he wanted was to be a lawman like Chanis Clay.
Chanis was up for reelection in the fall. Lilly was sure he wouldn’t have a problem getting the vote. Folks still talked about how he found “Doc Lilly” by tracking her through the woods with Cletus Becker’s old hound dog, using little more than the scent from one of Betsy Lane’s blankets. Lilly knew it was a miracle that he found her in time to save two of her babies.
Firstborn Julia Verily and her brother, Simon Inasmuch,
blessed Lilly and Tern every day. But Lilly’s heart would always bleed for the loss of the tiny baby she would have named John Cipher if indeed it was a boy. When she was twenty weeks and they’d heard two heartbeats instead of the one that was expected, Mama had told her the miscarriage was for the best
—chances of her carrying triplets to term were slim. In her weakened condition, twins had been hard enough. Losing one to save the others was hard to come to terms with, but she trusted that God knew best.
As they rounded a curve in the road, they could see Anne and Amy on the porch. Betsy Lane was hanging from the loop of Amy’s arms like a satisfied cat. She was nearly as big as Amy. The baby grew like a weed once her heart murmur had resolved. Sometime this summer, Lilly would take the child to Lexington for her first consult with a surgeon and hopefully to begin the tedious repair of her cleft palate.
Anne waved and started down the steps with Amy on one hip and Betsy on the other. She managed the child care center Lilly had started for employees of the clinic and for local mothers who needed a short break. Bobby Bumble was a frequent visitor. In the fall, when Mazy went off to secretarial school, Lilly also would have a safe place for Julia and Simon when need be. Right now, Armina and Mazy wouldn’t hear of anyone else caring for the babies, and she suspected Armina never would.
Lilly knew how blessed she was. She had much more time at home now that Ned had completed his training as a registered nurse. There was little that he couldn’t handle when
she was absent. Lilly was encouraging Ned to go for his medical degree, but Armina told her to mind her business. Just because Lilly was content with a traveling man didn’t mean Armina would be. And Armina wasn’t about to move to the city for any man. Facts were facts.
Kip barked and leaped from the carriage before it came to a full stop. The dog rarely let Lilly out of his sight these days. Whatever he’d run up against that day in the woods had cured him of his rambling ways. It didn’t hurt that he thought the twins were puppies and that he alone was in charge of their well-being.
The women came together in the middle of the yard with an exchange of babies, laughter, and a few dashed tears. A warm spring breeze showered them with the rounded sweet-smelling petals from the pear orchard just beyond the house.
Anne was all smiles. Armina was strong and ornery again, content with her husband and her Jersey, not to mention one of Sassy’s offspring. Lilly had her babies and her traveling man and a job of service to her community. She was exactly where God meant for her to be, and she was thankful.
“All things work together for good to them that love God,”
she thought as she was surrounded by her friends.
Though their lives had been torn asunder and pieced back together like a crazy quilt, each woman was stronger in the mended places and softer for the wear.
1908
Stanley James knew there’d been an accident before the blast of the whistle shattered the stillness of the morning. He felt the slightest tremor against the soles of his feet when he bent to lace his high-top work boots. His arm jerked and the rawhide string snapped. Coffee sloshed from his cup and ran across the table like a tiny river overflowing its bank. It dripped onto the knee of his just-ironed coveralls. Stanley swore.
“There’s no call for that purple language in my kitchen,” Myrtie said in that disapproving way she had. She mopped the spill with a bleach rag before he had a chance to move out of the way.
“Wake the gal,” Stanley said.
“It’s early yet, Stanley, and she was up late last night.”
It would be right pleasant, Stanley thought, if just once Myrtie would do what he asked instead of throwing a wall of words up against him.
Myrtie’s eyes grew round as the first warning shrieked. She covered her ears as if it came from right next door and not a mile up the road.
“I’ll go get her,” she said, folding the rag on the tabletop. Pausing at the door, she looked back. “Will you have time to eat your breakfast?”
Stanley was at the cupboard getting down a box of carbide. “Wrap up some biscuits and fix a thermos. We’ll carry it with us.”
Myrtie hesitated.
“Wake the gal first, Myrtie. Tell her to shake a leg.”
“Stanley, you’ve got no call to remark on her limbs.”
“It’s a saying!” Stanley shouted over the alert. “It means hurry up.”
“Don’t be telling me what to do, Stanley James. I’ll go as fast as I want to.”
It didn’t much matter, Stanley thought. What good would a slip of a gal be against an explosion or a cave-in?
Lilly Gray Corbett was awake. She liked to get up early and climb partway up the mountain to attend to her devotionals
under a stand of regal pines. The trees looked down over the valley, where wood-sided shotgun houses jostled each other for elbow room. She leaned against the rough bark of one of the trees, enjoying the fresh green scent of its needles, searching in her Bible for a verse in Isaiah, the one about being called.
When she heard the far-off whistle, her mouth went dry. It was one thing to study about accidents and mangled bodies, quite another to actually attend to one. Carefully, she retraced her steps toward home.
Last night had gone well, though. The baby girl she’d delivered slid into the world without as much as a thank-you. The young mother would have done just as well without Lilly’s assistance. If you didn’t count the number of births she’d attended with her mentor, Dr. Coldiron, this had been her first delivery
—or baby catching, as her mother would say.
Maybe folks were beginning to trust her a little. She’d been here at Skip Rock for two weeks, opening the doctor’s office daily, but last night was the first time she’d been called out.
When she reached the end of the one-cow path, Mrs. James met her. “Better hurry, Dr. Corbett. Stanley’s in a dither.”
Lilly would like to see that
—Mr. James in a dither. She’d never seen him break a sweat. He was as deliberate as a plow mule, and he worked just as hard.
Mrs. James ushered her around the side of the house like she was a birthday present. “Lookee here, Stanley. I found her.”
Mr. James looked Lilly up and down. “Them skirts ain’t going to work.”
“Stanley James!”
“Get the gal some overhauls,” he said, while fitting pebbles of carbide into a small, round lamp. “We might be going down in the hole.”
Dressed and ready, Lilly hurried to catch up to Mr. James. She nearly had to run to match his long stride. He didn’t want her there, she knew. In his world, women weren’t doctors and they didn’t belong in the mines.
Lilly wasn’t so sure she didn’t agree about the mine part. If her stepfather could see her now, he’d have a heart attack.
The overalls were too long and she kept tripping over the hems. Mrs. James had cinched the waist with a piece of twine, but still they ballooned around her. “I’ll fix them proper when you get back,” she’d said. “Next time we’ll be ready.”
Next time?
Lilly swallowed hard. What had she gotten herself into?
It seemed to Lilly that she was predestined to be a doctor. Her mother was a natural healer. Her father and his father had been medical doctors. It was in her blood, if not yet in her bones.
She had earned her degree at the end of May and before you could say
whippersnapper
was on her way to the mountains
to gain some experience. Sadly, the elderly doctor she was to shadow had died just days before she arrived.
It was no wonder Mr. James’s face had fallen when he met her at the train station. He’d stared at the paper in his hand and looked again at her. “Says here you’re a man.”
She set her hatboxes on the platform and stuck out her hand. “I guess you can see I’m not.”
Instead of shaking her hand, he waved the piece of paper under her nose. “Larry Corbett? Larry’s not a gal’s name, and a gal ain’t a doctor.”
“I’m Lilly, not Larry,” she said. “Dr. Lilly Corbett.”
Doctor?
Would she ever get used to using that title?
Mr. James held the paper at arm’s length, as older folks do. “Humph,” he said.
She picked up the two round, beribboned boxes and lifted her chin. “Shall we proceed?”
What could the poor man do? He stuffed the paper in his pocket and reached for the traveling trunk the porter wheeled out. He said not a word on the buggy ride to her lodgings and kept his face straight ahead. But every so often his eyes would slide sideways as if he was taking her in. It was obvious he found her wanting.
Mrs. James, on the other hand, seemed delighted to see her. She fussed over Lilly as if she were a prodigal daughter as she showed her to the one-room tar-paper shack out behind their house. She even helped Lilly unpack, exclaiming over each garment she hung from pegs beside the door.
“If this ain’t the prettiest,” she said when she unfolded
Lilly’s long silk gown and her matching robe. She laid them across the bed. “I ain’t never seen the like.”
“Thank you,” Lilly said. “It was a gift from my aunt Alice. I guess she thought I was going to Boston or New York.”
“I never heard of them places,” Mrs. James said. “Are they over round Lexington? My sister’s been to Lexington.”
“They’re just cities. Just big places.” Lilly moved to one of the two windows on either side of the door. “Does this raise? Do you have a screen?”
Mrs. James’s face colored. “No, I don’t have such, but I could tack a piece of greased paper over it, if you want it open. It’s clean. I washed it myself.”
Lilly felt bad that she had embarrassed her benefactor. The Jameses were kind to provide room and board for her in exchange for a smallish stipend. It was all arranged through the medical school and the mining company. Lilly would be here for the summer practicing her trade.
“Goodness, no, this is fine,” Lilly said. “I was thinking I might like some fresh air, that’s all.”
“Best leave the winders down and the door closed. The air here ain’t as unsullied as it once was
—it gathers in your lungs and sets up like wallpaper paste. But you know, beggars can’t be choosers. We’re that glad for the work. As Stanley says, it’s a clean breath or a day’s pay.”
Mrs. James took a snow-white rag from her apron pocket and wiped the windowsill. “You can push it up after dark if you want. Seems like the night dew settles the dust. I’ll have Stanley see if the company store carries ary winder screens.”
Opening the door, she shook the rag out over the stone stoop. “We’re saving up, though. I got a money jar hid behind the grease can.” A wistful note crept into her voice. “Soon’s as we get a bit together, we’re fixing to buy a place over to Stoney. They ain’t any mines besmirching the mountains there.”
Coming out of the memory, Lilly stopped for a second and rolled up her pant legs. She would take scissors to them herself when she got back.