The Department of Lost & Found

Read The Department of Lost & Found Online

Authors: Allison Winn Scotch

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Literary, #Family Life, #General

T he department

of

Lost & Found

Allison Winn Scotch

For Lizzie. I still hear you roar.

Contents

Round One

September
1

One

THE ELECTION WAS in six weeks and counting, and admittedly… 3

Two

It all happened very quickly, which is why, I think… 13

Three

It had started raining by the time I made my…

31

Round Two

October
39

Four

I had the dream again. The same one I had…

41

Five

I’d gotten into the habit of not setting my alarm—a…

61

Six

I sat at my desk, struck by his comment. I…

71

Round Three

November

73

Seven

The first Tuesday in November, just as I had on…

87

Eight

I cannot believe that you got a dog,” Sally said…

95

Nine

The next weekend, Sally, Lila, and I set off for…

107

Ten

I rolled my eyes at the computer screen. So now…

125

Round Four

December

133

Eleven

Nobody particularly enjoyed the annual office holiday Christmas party, but…

135

Twelve

We’re going to run some tests,” Dr. Chin said. “Similar…

157

Thirteen

I am woman, hear me roar,” I thought to myself…

169

Round Five

January

179

Fourteen

THANK GOD I’M wearing my wig. That was literally my…

181

Fifteen

I don’t know how I didn’t see it, but I…

189

Round Six

February

197

Sixteen

I got to work early enough the morning of my…

199

Seventeen

I realize now that I’ve marked my time since my…

205

Eighteen

Natalie.” Senator Tompkins’s aide, Brian, sighed into the phone.

“You… 215

Round Seven

March

231

Nineteen

Two days after we got back, a week into my…

233

Twenty

I cannot believe her,” I said to Jake, over Sunday…

241

Round Eight

April

251

Twenty-one

If I hadn’t experienced it myself, I’d never believe it…

253

Twenty-two

What do you mean, she’s not in the office today?…

271

Twenty-three

On Wednesday, the day before Jake and I were set…

277

Twenty-four

There were no skies more sunny than those off the…

283

Twenty-five

When we met at the spa for hair and makeup…

295

Remission

July

307

Twenty-six

309

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Praise

Cover

Copyright

About the Publisher

R o u n d O n e




September



o n e

D
ear Diary,

And so I begin. Janice, my cancer therapist, suggested that it might be healthy for me to channel my
feelings onto paper instead of channeling them inward and sitting around feeling sorry for myself, which I’ve spent a great
deal of time doing in the past few weeks. So I’m going to give
this diary thing a shot. Though, really, who can blame me for
moping? I was diagnosed with wretched cancer, my boyfriend
dumped me, and the office won’t return my calls.

Of course, when Janice suggested this little hobby, I told
her I had nothing to write about: My cancer was certainly
out—spending hours in a darkened bedroom with a pen in hand
mul ing over my mortality wasn’t an option. But then, I was
4

a l l i s o n w i n n s c o t c h
lying on my couch staring at the ceiling, hearing the radio but
not really listening, when I heard Jake’s voice come over the
airwaves. Jake. He of my all-consuming love. He was singing
about lost love, and I sunk into the pil ows and pul ed the chenille
throw blanket over my legs and wondered if he were singing
about me. When the DJ spun a new song, I sat up with a start.

Inspiration.

You see, Diary, in the weeks since Ned up and dumped
me, it has occurred to me that I’m not entirely sure what went
wrong between us. And when I further pondered this situation,
I realized that I wasn’t sure what went wrong in just about all
of my prior relationships. And when I pondered this one step
more, I realized that I must lack any or all bits of self-awareness.

I mean, what sort of person walks away from a relationship
and doesn’t even devote a moment to the root of its ending?

Sure, I spent time mul ing over the ending itself—the overdra-matic epitaphs, the wasted tears—but not necessarily the why
behind it.

So with that, Diary, I’m off to retrace the steps and missteps
of my past: Yes, I’m going to track down the five loves of my life
and see what I might glean, who I’ ll be, where I’ ll end up. Who
knows where it will lead? But you’ ll be along for the ride, Diary.

Wish me luck.

t h e e l e c t i o n wa s in six weeks and counting, and admittedly, being out of the action was beginning to take its toll. Ever since law school, I’d only known one thing: work. Higher, stronger, more. Which is how I’d ascended to my pivotal position as the great Senator Dupris’s senior aide. All by the age of thirty, which
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5

I turned in early September, just before the world as I know it otherwise imploded.

Before said implosion of my world, I was a woman about town.

I’d be parked at my desk by 7:30 a.m., already having run four miles, chatted up the Starbucks barista, and scanned the morning headlines. The next twelve hours would be a blur: The day would be spent cajoling aides, seducing lobbyists, caressing the media, or demolishing anyone who stood in the senator’s way. If I were lucky, in the evenings Ned and I would split Chinese takeout around nineish, and after checking my e-mail one last time, I’d crash on my four-hundred-thread-count sheets, only to start it up all over again the next morning.

Now? Well, here’s an example of what I did today.

8:27 I wake up.

8:28 I consider vomiting, so roll back over onto Ned’s side of the bed and pull my sleep mask back down.

8:31 I can’t ward off the effects of Friday’s chemo treatment any longer, despite my heavy use of the antinausea drugs that Dr. Chin, my oncologist, prescribed, so I rush to the bathroom just off my bedroom and lean over the toilet while my body rebels against the very medicine that’s trying to save it.

8:35 I brush my teeth, wipe the sweat off my brow, and climb back into bed, swearing that I’ve never hated anything more in my life than this cancer, which, if you were privy to several of my professional entanglements, 6

a l l i s o n w i n n s c o t c h says a lot about my distaste for my current condition.

9:26 The phone rouses me from bed, and I assure Dr. Dor-ney—well, Zach, I should really call him (or Dr.

Horny, as my friend Lila, the one who ended up dating him for a year and a half before unceremoniously dumping him on the grounds that she couldn’t stand dating a man who looked at vaginas for a living, liked to call him)—that I’m fine and don’t need anything, and please to not stop by. I sit up in bed and catch my reflection in the closet mirror on the opposite wall: my matted hair, my three-day-old pajamas, my sallow skin. No, I tell him firmly, you should most definitely not drop by.

10:06 My eyes (and brain, perhaps) glaze over as I become entranced with Bob Barker and his lovely bevy of beauties.

10:11 The antinausea tea that I’ve quickly grown to rely on winds its way through my system, so I nibble on a banana. It’s only been three weeks (or one chemo cycle), and I’ve already lost five pounds.

10:54 Despite feeling rather bulletproof with my
Price Is
Right
expertise, I lose the vacation to the Bahamas and the Ford Thunderbird in the showcase showdown. Now what do I have to live for?

11:02 Time to e-mail Kyle at work.

The Department of Lost & Found

7

From: Miller, Natalie

To: Richardson,

Kyle

Re:

What’s Up with Taylor?

Kyle—

Saw the paper this AM. What’s up with the leaks about Dupris’s tax returns? You know that Councilman Taylor will do anything to win this election and put her out of the job. He’s a slimy bastard—and a state councilman at that!

Where does he get off? What are you guys doing for damage control?

—Nat

11:54 I check e-mail.

12:03 I check e-mail.

12:11 I check e-mail.

12:34 I realize that my BlackBerry will alert me to my e-mail, so decide to take a walk.

1:37 The flukishly mild late September air warms my body from within, and as I sit on a bench in Central Park, I’m surprised to discover that I am not overcome with a fit of shivers. The chemo has turned my skin into virtual Saran Wrap, as if the drugs aren’t just killing the lethal cells within me, but eating away at my protective coating as well. I inhale the sunny air while watching a group of new moms “strollercize” in front of me and wonder if I’ll ever have kids. The pit of my 8

a l l i s o n w i n n s c o t c h

stomach rises up, as I remember that Dr. Chin told me that the odds of a Stage III cancer patient maintaining her fertility are not high. I then further remember that the odds of survival aren’t that high, either—about 50/50, give or take—so I push the ruinous, devastating thoughts from my mind and pour my energy into walking the half mile home.

2:07 I finish the banana and become embroiled in the dis-turbingly weird plotline of the soap opera
Passions
, which involves a witch, a puppet, and a long-lost sister.

3:11 Plodding to my computer, I e-mail myself to ensure that my e-mail and BlackBerry are working properly.

3:24 Nap time.

4:55 The phone once again shakes me awake, and I groggily say hello to Sally, my best friend, who has returned from Puerto Rico, where she is planning to marry next spring. I assure her that I’m feeling fine; I’m just a bit stir-crazy. Senator Dupris mandated that I take time off from work during the first few chemo cycles so that I won’t run myself ragged, but it’s not the cancer that’s killing me, it’s the boredom. Thus my
Passions
addiction. I fill Sally in on my diary plan and ignore her when she states, “Returning to the scene of the crime is almost always dangerous. I wrote an article on this once, and psychologists say that revisiting history can do more damage than good.” I respond that despite the
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9

fact that she is a freelance writer (primarily for women’s magazines) and thus well versed in just about every subject and study known to man, she does not, in fact, know everything, and therefore, I’m planning on completely ignoring her sage counsel. She doesn’t argue, instead saying that if she has to write one more insipid story on lipstick, she’s going to jump off a bridge.

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