Authors: Hilary Norman
Where she had come close to losing her life â after which she'd met Dr David Becket and the rest of his family.
Her family now.
The tranquilizer was keeping her in Dr Sutter's office, but neither the doctor nor David were in any doubts as to her high level of anxiety.
âI don't know if it helps,' Dr Sutter had told her, âbut I can assure you that you're by no means alone. I've encountered many nervous patients in my time.'
Mildred had thanked him, and the doctor had suggested they keep questions for later, and get the exam over and done with first, and she knew it ought all to have been easy as pie, but she had hated every second of it, though she'd just about managed until it came to the slit-lamp examination.
Dr Sutter asked her to rest her chin and forehead on a support, and Mildred had already done that several times, but perhaps the tension was cumulative, because suddenly she didn't know how much more she could take.
He inserted dilating drops, which stung a little.
âA small waiting period now,' Ralph Sutter told her. âThe drops can take fifteen minutes or a little longer to work.'
âI don't know,' Mildred said.
âIt's necessary,' David said, âso that Ralph can see the back of your eye.'
âIt may be
necessary
, but it doesn't mean I can tolerate any more.'
âIf you can't, Mrs Becket, that's OK,' the doctor said. âThough now the drops are in, it would be a shame to miss the opportunity to complete the exam.'
âI can taste them,' Mildred complained. âHow come I can taste them?'
âThey drain down from your tear ducts,' David told her.
âI wasn't asking you,' she said.
She knew she was behaving badly, but she couldn't seem to help it, and the truth was that her vision had been growing foggier for a while now, and if it hadn't been for the fact that she could still read, she might have feared she was going blind.
She'd dealt with it in a manner she'd grown expert at during her years as a homeless person. Some things you dealt with head-on, even if they were tough. Sometimes, though, there were things you just could not face, and if you thought you could get away with it, you simply buried your head in the sand.
Which did not, of course, make you wise.
But she had married a wise and sensible man.
So here she was.
Didn't mean she had to like it.
Paperwork Tuesday for Sam and Martinez.
The last two weeks had been quiet for Violent Crimes. One armed robbery with a firearm â suspect placed under arrest within hours. One sexual battery â suspect arrested at the scene. One felony battery, also with a result.
Good jobs.
Detectives Cutter and Sheldon were seeking an armed carjacker. On the streets and in a couple of nightclubs, people had been getting in fights â the usual â but if anyone had pulled or used a knife or a gun lately, it had not been reported to MBPD.
Maybe not love in the air, but peace of a kind.
And a lot of paperwork to complete.
The usual.
Grace called from Zurich at five after one.
âI'm about to have an early dinner with a few of the delegates,' she told Sam. âI don't know where we're going, but they seem a nice bunch.'
She was hungry for details about Joshua, wanted to check on the rest of the family, to know how Sam's rehearsal had gone.
âYour day first,' he said.
âIt's been good â interesting session on parenting, tougher afternoon dealing with serious depression in adolescents.'
âCertainly your territory,' Sam said.
âI did contribute,' Grace told him.
âHow did that feel?'
âGood,' she said. âStimulating, I guess.'
âI'm feeling a little sore,' he told her. âAll we really did last night was block the moves for the fight, and even that felt like a damned workout. Jack Holden might weigh less than me, but he's no lightweight, I can tell you.'
âTell him I said to be gentle with you,' Grace told him.
And then they both said how much they missed each other.
Both knowing it was true.
Both liking that.
âCataracts,' David told her, âare nothing in the scheme of things.'
âExcept they make you go blind,' Mildred said.
âIf left untreated, yes, they do.'
She had been very quiet on the short drive home, had let David take her arm getting in and out of the car because her eyes were still blurry, had then sat thinking dark thoughts about how much worse things might become if she did not start doing as she was told.
Mildred had never appreciated being
told
.
David had waited till they were safely back home in the comfortable old living room that had been little altered since his late wife Judy's days. Not that David hadn't encouraged Mildred to make changes if she wanted to, but though she had bought some cushions and had expressed a great liking for a painting of South Beach â which David had promptly gone out to buy for her â the room was still much as it had been.
âI'm not minimizing anything,' he said now. âBut I can't help feeling relieved.'
âYou thought it might be worse.' She was assailed by guilt. âYou've been afraid for me. I'm so sorry. I've been selfish.'
âYou've been scared,' David said. âIt's allowed. And I know you're still scared because of what comes next, but it's going to be fine. In fact, once it's done, it'll be better than fine.'
âI know that's true, and I know I'm generally regarded as having good common sense. But now I have to go see an ophthalmic surgeon, and you'll have to give me two tranquilizers that day' â her voice shook a little â âand then there'll be the surgery . . .'
âWhich you will know nothing about,' David said gently.
âBut Doctor Sutter said that most people have cataracts removed under local anesthesia.'
âHe also said that plenty of other people opt for sedation or general anesthesia. And in your case, I can't think of a single reason why you should have to put yourself through any ordeal that isn't absolutely necessary.'
Mildred looked at him through the lingering blur of the drops. âI'm still a first-class coward,' she said.
âNo one's perfect,' David said. âNot even me.'
The waiting room was almost full.
No more than usual in a busy, multiphysician Miami Beach practice. Patients with sore throats or asthma or gynecological problems or sunburn or any number of ailments or issues, waiting for their respective doctors to summon them.
Several women flicked through old copies of
Elle
,
Good Housekeeping
and
Reader's Digest
. A skinny man of about thirty, dressed in black, appeared immersed in
GQ
. A visually-impaired woman with dark glasses, a cane propped beside her, popped a green Tic Tac into her mouth. A woman beside her listened to music through tiny headphones, her eyes closed. A man with badly-dyed blond hair read something on his iPad. A woman with retro Rita Hayworth-style red hair stared into space. A couple in their twenties, in T-shirts and shorts, texted endlessly on their BlackBerrys, and once, briefly, the man laid a hand on the young woman's knee, and she smiled at him.
When the door opened and two newcomers walked in, Rita Hayworth, the man in black and the iPad guy glanced up briefly, then lost interest.
Just a mother and daughter, at least twenty years apart, yet lookalikes, dark-haired with tawny lights, expensively dressed, both slim, both wearing large, dark Tiffany sunglasses which neither removed.
The mom checked them in with the receptionist as the teenage daughter chose a seat, picked up an old copy of
Cosmo
, opened it, then closed it again and dumped it back on the table.
She waited until her mother sat down beside her.
âI'm not going in,' she said quietly.
âSure you are.' The mother's accent was lightly Hispanic.
âI'm not.'
âYou promised you'd let the doctor look at you.'
The tension in the mother's tone carried, made several people glance up.
âI've changed my mind. I can't bear it.'
âYou're being foolish.'
âAnd who taught me that, Mama?'
Hysteria bubbled under the teenager's tone, and her mother tried to take her hand, but the daughter snatched it away.
âI understand, baby, if anyone does, but they're so sore.'
âYou're such a hypocrite. You can't even say the
word
.'
âStop it, Felicia,' the mother said.
âEyes,' the girl said, and shuddered. â
Eyes
,' she repeated. âYou made me a freak, and you're cruel to make me come here.'
Everyone was listening now, most trying not to stare openly.
âThis is hard for me too,' the mother whispered. âYou know that.'
âSo I'll make it easier for you,' the teenager said.
And stood up.
âWhat are you doing?' the mother said.
âLeaving,' the daughter said.
And went out the door.
The mother took a distraught breath, then stood up, looked helplessly toward the receptionist. âI'm very sorry,' she said.
âMrs Delgado,' the receptionist began.
But she had already gone.
The young couple grinned at each other; the blind woman's lips compressed a little; the skinny man raised his eyebrows; Rita shook her red head.
The receptionist sighed softly, picked up a pencil and crossed through something in one of her appointment books.
A little after four, Billie Smith called Sam, surprising him.
âI'm having a bit of a crisis of confidence,' she told him.
âI can't imagine why,' he said, âbut how can I help?'
âYou could help me a lot,' she said, âby agreeing to a couple of extra rehearsals of our scenes. Especially our duet.'
âSmall beer for you, surely, compared with the rest.'
âTo be truthful,' Billie said, âwhat I'm really hoping is that you might help me work through my Act Four stuff with Don José.'
âThen surely it's Jack you should be asking.'
âHe's not as approachable as you are, Sam.'
That surprised him.
âHave you talked to Linda about it?'
âNo
way
,' Billie said.
She sounded horrified, like a teen scared of exposing weakness to a tutor, reminding Sam again of how young she was.
âI'm sure Linda would gladly organize some extra rehearsals,' he said. âThough it's Mondays and Thursdays from next week, so that should help.'
âI'd rather it was just the two of us, just this one time.' Billie stuck to her guns. âSo I could really feel I was getting somewhere before next week.' She paused. âI'll understand if you say you don't want to, only please don't.'
It was exactly like talking to a kid.
Sam sighed. âYou'd have to come to my house. We could work in the lanai.'
And Claudia would be around.
Grace's sister, who'd been horrifically widowed last year, had moved to Sunny Isles Beach a few months back, close to where Saul â Sam's adoptive, much younger brother â and Cathy shared an apartment. And with his dad and Mildred just up in Golden Beach, all of them in easy reach of the Bay Harbor Islands, where Sam and Grace lived, they were spoilt for choice when it came to babysitting.
And in this case, chaperoning.
Better safe.
âThat would be just great,' Billie said. âTomorrow?'
âI'll have to run it by my sister-in-law,' Sam said. âShe's staying with us while my wife's away.'
âTaking care of your little boy?' Billie said. âJoshua?'
âThat's right.'
âSeven o'clock, if it's OK with her?'
âSure,' Sam said.
Grace's address â titled âIrrational fears and phobias in the young teen' â began at nine a.m. on the penultimate morning of the conference.
She was buzzing with tension, her pulse racing, but she took a calming breath, conjured up a favorite image of Sam and Joshua playing, and took in her audience.
Those whose faces she could see looked expectant, interested.
Having no viable alternative, she began. âThe title of my talk this morning is misleading. One of Merriam-Webster's definitions of the word “irrational” is “not based on reason”.'
She paused, plucked a single face out of the front row.
Female, fortyish, anonymous.
She talked to her.
âIt seems to me,' she went on, âthat any young person has an incalculable number of reasons to experience fear of some sort. Being a still-growing, developing, unfolding human is both fascinating and terrifying. And even those children and young teens most capable of superficial toughness â the ones who appear to skate through â are often deep-down scared.
âI know I was,' she said. âWeren't you?'
In the long, narrow foyer just outside the conference room, a young man watched and listened through the slightly open glass doors.
And smiled.
He had wavy brown hair and rimless glasses, and he was dressed in a well-cut gray suit, blue silk tie and perfectly polished shoes.
A middle-aged woman in a navy-and-white-spotted dress came out of the room, moving carefully, quietly, so as not to disturb the speaker or her audience. The young man held the door open for her, and she nodded her thanks.
He stepped inside the room, took out his phone.
Went on listening and watching.
And, every now and then, discreetly, took photographs.
Sam called Grace before he took his shower.
Five a.m. in Miami. Eleven in Zurich.
Her printed schedule stated that the talk after her own was set to begin soon, which meant that Grace's phone was probably switched off.