Authors: Lynn Hightower
âYou can't be sure that's what it meant.'
But Amelia did not seem to hear. âAnd I can't seem to get her parents to understand that prolonging things is torture, and the end game is not going to change, it's only a matter of how much their little girl is going to suffer before she dies. Sometimes, Livie, there are things worse than death, and a lot of those things are in hospital rooms.'
Olivia put a hand to her throat. âWhat did you do, Amelia? Tell me you didn't pull the plug on that little girl.'
â
Pull the plug?
Livie, number one, if I was going for euthanasia, I wouldn't have to do something quite so crude. And second, I did take an oath. It's not my decision to make.'
âSorry, Amel. It's just . . . the look on your face when I picked you up at the airport.'
âIt wasn't that. It's what happened later. When Alexis and I had our talk.'
Greg swooped in from the kitchen with their orders, setting the plates down on the table, refilling their tea.
âSo?' Olivia said, when Greg had gone away.
âLivie, I think he can hear us. This room echoes.'
âIt does not echo and just talk soft. You said at the airport you did something bad, now you tell me what you mean.'
Amelia looked at the cornbread. âThey put butter on it.' She broke off a piece and crumbled it in her fingers. âI just . . . I was talking to Alexis, late in the night. Jack was sitting with Marianne, and Alexis and I went down to the cafeteria to get some coffee. The doughnuts are delivered hot at three a.m., and I was trying to get her to eat. We were both so tired we didn't know which end was up. And out of the blue, Alexis starts going on and on about the afterlife, about children going to heaven and how could you be sure they would be okay. Who would take care of them, when they were dead.'
âIs she religious?' Olivia asked.
âShe seems to go back and forth. I thought she was finding her way to letting Marianne go. She was pretty shook up, Marianne had been having a horrible night, gasping for every breath, and Alexis asked me point blank what it felt like, what Marianne was going through, and I told her the truth. That her little girl was drowning in air.'
â
Amelia
.'
âYeah, I know, it was a rough thing to say. I thought it through before I said it. But somebody needs to wake her up. She's right there, she can see how bad it is. I'm not going to let her off the hook and give her platitudes. Marianne might survive another surgery, she might not, but the chemo is making her sick and miserable, it isn't helping, it's just making her death slower and more agonizing. Alexis and Jack have to make the call, but it needs to be an informed decision.'
âI don't think that's bad, Amelia. I think it's tough, but true. I think Alexis needed to hear it.'
âBut that's not all I said. She just seemed to want to talk about it, what happens when you die. Like we can know, right? So I told her about your phone call from Chris. That your brother actually called you after he died. And he said it was all right, that everything was okay. I thought it was going to be like one of those Hallmark television specials, where Alexis would be comforted, and get the strength to man up and let her little girl go. Instead we go straight to the paranormal channel, where she accuses me of having demonic influences, and trying to manipulate her into â how did she put it?
The sin of euthanasia
. She freaked out on me, Livie.' Amelia put her hands over her face and tears streamed through her fingers and into the chili. âSorry, Livie. I didn't mean to cry.'
âHow are things between you now? How'd you leave it?'
âAlexis went to the attending and had me barred from Marianne's room.'
âGood God, no wonder you're upset. What a horrible thing for her to do.' Olivia tried to ignore what felt like a tiny betraying twinge of satisfaction. Shameful. She had always been envious of Amelia's friendship with Alexis. She tried to push it down. âAnd how long have you guys been friends?'
âSince college,' Amelia said. âAnd I love Marianne like she was my own. And Alexis knows that. She and Jack
know
how much I love that little girl. I was in the damn delivery room when she was born. I thought . . . I thought I was
family
.'
Olivia put a hand on Amelia's shoulder. âYou're still family, Amel. Their daughter is dying, they're not going to be all that rational. Look, remember the other night on the phone when you said Charlotte and Janet were looking for someone to blame? I know it's not fair, but that's all this is. You were talking to a friend, you were honest, you tried to help. You didn't do anything wrong. Alexis has her back to the wall and she's looking for somebody to be mad at and someone to blame.'
âI know. I know you're right. It's just not fun being the one.'
âHey. I've got news to distract you. I'm cooking a big dinner tomorrow afternoon. You're going to get to meet the famous McTavish. Only you have to promise not to let him fall in love with you, so keep the charm on medium, because I'm calling dibs on this guy.'
T
he dinner had almost gone off the rails when Jamison refused to come into the house. Olivia, who remembered the blond heartbreaker her big sister Emily had idolized, saw nothing of that boy in Jamison the man. He was tall still, big shouldered like McTavish, but stooped now, with an uncertain, sideways cant to his walk. He wore stiff, off brand jeans and a short sleeved plaid shirt, a UT ball cap, and Timberland boots that looked brand new. He was in his forties, but he looked older, and the shiny blond hair had dulled, showing gray. He was freshly shaved, jeans creased. He wore his clothes as if someone else had picked them out.
âGo ahead, Jamison. You want me to go first?' McTavish headed through the arched front door, pausing on the stoop.
âMaybe he's shy,' Amelia said.
Teddy pushed her glasses back on her nose. âShy people don't like it when you say that, Dr Amelia. Are you scared, Jamison? See Winston, his tail is wagging, and there's lots of people around.
You know who
only watches when there are so many people around. It should be safe if you go home before dark.'
Olivia looked at Amelia, who slid the cat glasses up on her nose and stared at Teddy.
âWho is
you know who
?' Amelia said.
Teddy frowned. âIt's better if you don't say his name.'
Olivia looked at Teddy. Considered saying something, then decided to deal with it later, in private.
âCome on, Jamison,' Teddy said. âI'm icing brownies, want to help? You can wear an apron, like me.'
Jamison followed Teddy across the threshold and back to the kitchen. He did not look right or left, but focused on Teddy, like a man walking through the woods and whistling in the dark.
Teddy tied Jamison into an apron and handed him a table knife, and the two of them iced the brownies while Amelia drank a dirty martini, three olives, and critiqued their work. But Olivia could see that Amelia was watching Teddy, and sipping steadily, as if unaware there was high octane vodka in her glass. Olivia was watching Teddy too.
McTavish breezed past them after grabbing a beer. âYou handle the brownies there, Jamison. I'm going to tackle that grill.'
Olivia made potato salad and baked beans, and McTavish grilled fresh asparagus along with the ribs, brushing them with the Bone Sucking Barbecue Sauce
Olivia had found at Earth Faire. Olivia had to hide in the hallway just before they sat down to eat to wipe the tears out of her eyes. It was ridiculous, of course, but in her mind's eye she imagined Chris, elbows on the table, eating ribs, and that knock at the door she had listened for all of her life, where they found Emily and Hunter waiting on the front porch, home at long last. Olivia was flooded with that mix of happy and sad that comes to those who move away and come back.
They ate in the sunroom, a late dinner as the sun went down. McTavish was sweaty in his tee shirt and jeans, the hairs on his arms smudged with the blackened grease he'd cleaned out of the barbecue grill. McTavish drank Killians, and Olivia had martinis with Amelia, and Jamison and Teddy had bottles of lemonade. By the second martini Olivia had forgotten to be mad at Teddy for acting weird. They would talk later, when their guests were gone.
They left the mess in the kitchen and piled into the living room. McTavish and Amelia amused themselves at Olivia's expense by swapping Olivia stories, trying to mesh the Tennessee Livie with the Livie in LA.
âI'm the same no matter where I live.' Olivia threw an olive at McTavish, which he caught in midair.
âWell, yeah, Livie, that's kind of what's so funny. The fish out of water, and
Innocents Abroad.
I need another beer. You ladies want to really go for it with a refill? One more martini and Livie's going to sing.' McTavish was heading past the staircase when he stopped and cocked his head. âDo you hear that?'
Amelia had just asked Olivia in a whisper if she'd bedded him yet. âHear what?' she said, talking loud.
They went quiet, and Olivia turned the music down. Sobbing, soft sobbing, distinctly masculine, coming from upstairs. She looked at once for Teddy, who had curled up in the red leather chair with
The Sign of the Twisted Candles
and fallen asleep. Teddy looked exhausted all the time now. She did not seem to sleep much at night.
âWhere's Jamison?' McTavish said. He glanced around the room, then headed up the stairs, taking them two at a time, Olivia and Amelia right behind. âJamison? Where are you, buddy? You okay?'
The bathroom door was shut tight, and Winston was scratching at the door, whining softly. McTavish knocked once, then went in. â
Jesus, man
. Are you okay?'
Olivia looked at Amelia.
âYou need help or privacy?' Amelia said.
âHe's decent. But Olivia, you better look at this.' McTavish pushed the door open wide. âI noticed you had a big hole in the ceiling when I was up here earlier, butâ'
âOh, hell,' Olivia said.
Jamison had clearly been washing his hands after using the bathroom, and a section of the ceiling had come down on his head. He had plaster in his hair, and blood running down his temple from a gash on his scalp.
âLet me look at that,' Amelia said.
But Jamison backed away. Pointed up to the ceiling. âWaverly,' he said.
âWill he freak out if I clean up that cut?' Amelia said to McTavish. âIt looks like it might need a stitch or two.'
âJamison doesn't cry when he gets hurt, do you buddy? Jamison is the King of Stoic. He only cries when he's scared. It would have scared me too, buddy, if the ceiling came down on my head.'
Jamison looked at McTavish and frowned. His face was flushed and there were beads of sweat mixing with the run of blood. â
Waverly
.' He pointed up into the ceiling. âNames.'
âWhat names, buddy?'
âHis name
is
up there, in the ceiling,' Olivia said. âBut I don't know how he could see that from here.'
McTavish picked chunks of plaster off of Jamison's shoulders and tossed them in the trash. âWhat are you talking about, Livie?'
âJust what I said. There are names up there. Look, I can get you a stepladder and a flashlight and show you.'
âJamison, why don't you go back downstairs, and maybe you and Teddy could watch a movie.'
Jamison folded his arms and put his back to the wall, shaking his head. He had barely spoken all day â McTavish said that was the norm â but he was talking now, repeating
Waverly
over and over.
âOkay, Jamison, I get you. Olivia, darlin', better get me that stepladder and flashlight. He's not going to stop chanting till I take a look.'
Amelia matter of factly fished peroxide out of the medicine cabinet, and wet down a wash rag, then wrung it out. âCome on, Jamison, let me clean that cut while the two of them check the ceiling out for leaks.'
âIf you've got a plumbing problem, Livie, I know a guy. I'd do it myself but I'd probably flood the house. Remember my mother's kitchen?'
âThere's no leak up there, McTavish, I had a plumber out already. I have no idea why that ceiling is caving in. Or why there are . . . names.'
McTavish was already up the steps, and his head and shoulders disappeared up into the ceiling. They heard the click of the flashlight, saw him twist and shift as he played the light.
âThis is weird,' McTavish said.
Jamison watched him, barely noticing when Amelia cleared the blood and plaster from his forehead, not even flinching when she dabbed the cut with peroxide.
âYou can get by without any stitches,' Amelia said. âIf you don't mind a scar. But this is a nasty little gouge.'
âDid you
see
this, Livie?' McTavish said.
âYou mean the names?'
âYeah. Jamison, Chris, Emily. Allison, Bennington and Teddy.'
â
Teddy?
'
âYeah.'
âGet down, McTavish, let me look.'
Olivia took the flashlight, and McTavish steadied her arm as she scrambled up the stairs.
âYou see?'
Olivia was trembling so hard she wasn't sure she could keep her footing on the ladder. Teddy's name was written on a stud, just below
Chris
. But not burned in, like the others. This was new, written in what looked like blue chalk. Olivia touched the letters, smudging the
y
.
âYeah, you're right, McTavish, Teddy's name is here. But it wasn't there before. It's new.'
âHow could it be new?' McTavish said.
â
I don't know
. Seeing as how it's up in the goddamn ceiling. I don't like it either.'
âWaverly,' Jamison said.
âDo you know what he means by that?' Amelia asked.