Healer (23 page)

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Authors: Carol Cassella

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary, #Medical, #Contemporary Women, #General

BOOK: Healer
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“Early for that. We don’t usually see much pesticide exposure till later in the summer. Which orchard?”

“Johnson’s—a small place, way east of the highway. But they told me he’d moved to Walker’s, and then somebody at Walker’s, another worker, said he’d moved to Wenatchee, and that turned out to be a dead end.”

“Nobody in Walker’s office knew where he’d gone?”

Claire shakes her head. Then she scoots closer to the table and leans forward, lowering her voice. “But speaking of Walker, do you have a phone number for him?”

Dan seems to consider Claire’s question before he answers. “Walker’s not likely to know any of his workers. Kind of stands back from the day-to-day in his businesses. The Money God, if you will.”

She smiles at his assumption. “No, no—I wasn’t going to ask him about Rubén. I want Addison to talk to him. About a business deal.”

As if he had been listening for his name, Addison steps out of the kitchen and Claire sees the change on her own face register in Dan’s expression, a mix of empathy and angst, and… something else. A memory, maybe. He has had almost twice her years to collect them. Three times her years living a marriage.

Addison has a soaking-wet, hot-pink apron tied around his neck, and his hands are gloved in suds. It would be funny but for the expression of betrayal on his face. It makes her want to turn away—not with shame for anything she’s said, but because it is so clear that her husband is prepared for her betrayal, is only waiting for a hint of proof as minor as this mention of his name with Walker’s.

• 20 •

On the drive home Claire can practically feel Jory’s eyes moving from one parent to the other, waiting for someone to break the tension. It was only a few months ago that a moment like this would have ended with one of them erupting in laughter, teasing the other out of the mood, letting Jory witness one way to resolve an adult argument. Claire turns away from the prejudiced set of Addison’s jaw to watch the night landscape pass by her window, feeling the interior of the car close in around her, silently shouting her side of the fight they can’t have. The worst of it is that tonight she was genuinely trying to help. It was his pride that was making him twist it all against her, his assumption that she is trying to manage his business.

A flash of red and white light shows up ahead and Claire tells Addison to pull into the
ampm
so she can pick up milk—anything to break the tension. He wheels into the parking lot without a word and she is out before he’s fully stopped, slamming the door behind her. She squints under the store’s bright fluorescent lights, irritated, now, by their harsh contrast to the dark car. The low-pitched buzz of the coolers, the red eye of the security monitor, the watchful gaze of the night clerk—it feels like a jury is observing her family conflict. She pulls a Darigold carton off the refrigerator shelf and carries it to the cash register, only at the last minute realizing she has no cash. She pulls her purse off her shoulder and starts plucking quarters and dimes out of the pockets and seams, finally looks up to ask the cashier what the minimum
purchase is for a credit card.

She stops, speechless. The woman putting the milk into a small brown paper bag is hers—her patient—the woman who’d been hunched at the end of her exam table just two days ago, hiding bruises underneath her thick pancake makeup and, even worse, beneath her clothes. “I’m so sorry. I mean, I don’t have enough money. Enough cash,” Claire stutters, the first words that come to her, tumbling ahead of what she wants to say:
I tried to find someone to help you. You didn’t have to hide from me.

The woman… no, it is a girl, really. Only little more than a girl. She stares down at the bag, pays careful attention to folding the top of the brown paper in a crisp, unwrinkled crease before she pushes it across the counter toward Claire. “It’s okay, ma’am. Just pay the rest next time.”

She shuts the door quietly when she comes back to the car, fumbles with the buckle on her seat belt. Addison pulls out on the highway slowly, cautiously. The silence in the car, she can tell, is now there to guard her, and she looks at these other two Boehnings, trying to guess what was said while she was in the store. When she can’t stand it anymore, Claire turns to Addison and chokes out in half a sob, “I’m just trying to help. To help you. To help
us
!” She sees the quick twitch below his eye; the car holds steady, fixed for home. “So I have to live with the consequence, but I’m not supposed to have any say in how to get out of it. Is that it? Is that how you want us to be?”

Without a word to this Addison slows the car down, steers onto the shoulder just emerging from the melting snow. He shifts into Park and stares at the road ahead as if he could see it still moving underneath them. “All right,” he says, his voice alarmingly calm. “All right. I’ll call Walker when I get to Seattle. If that’s what you want.”

Long after they are asleep Claire startles awake, listening for whatever threat broke into her dream; the house and land are still except for the whip of wind in the aspen grove. Addison is softly snoring. She blows across his neck until he shifts his body and falls quiet; the dimly lit folds
of his chin and full pout of his parted lips make him look untroubled as a child. She bends over him, waiting for him to feel her eyes. “I’m scared,” she whispers. “I don’t know where we are anymore.”

He has always been such a lucky man, had been born believing in his own luck. He’d warned her, when it was clear they would marry, Jory still without formed digits—a tailed frog floating in a dime-sized salt bath—warned her about the genetics of his lineage, the twisted gifting of his luckiness. When Jory was eight or nine she had asked Claire (it seems almost prescient now), “Is Daddy very much like Granddad was?” She had met her paternal grandfather so few times before he died she couldn’t have any clear memory of him, and Claire is half glad for that. Addison’s father had nearly gambled himself into homeless shelters by the time he was diagnosed with lung cancer. The more money Addison gave him, the faster it disappeared.

“Well,” Claire had finally answered, “you’ve seen his picture. They look a little bit alike. Of course, Daddy’s more handsome.”

Jory had tucked this fact into a corner of her emerging self and continued, “What did he do? I can’t remember.”

Because we never told you, Claire thought. “He was in the military for a while when Dad was little. And after that, well, he was kind of an investor.”

“What do you mean? What did he invest in?”

“Various things. Kind of a financial risk analyst.”

So maybe it was Addison’s inherited chemistry that convinced him his solitary signature, borrowing against their communal property, was justified by the profit he expected to count into Claire’s trusting hands. His conviction that vascumab
deserved
production,
deserved
its market share and more. The return, in fact, should hardly matter. What mattered was the drug. The patient. The cure. And maybe that was part of what she’d fallen in love with—not the luck itself but Addison’s blissful, gullible belief that with any luck at all fate would ultimately be fair.

He’ll go away again tomorrow, put on his pressed suit and tie and stride into the offices of billionaires with all the numbers and practiced spiel they should need to believe their next chart-breaking product could be vascumab, a pale yellow liquid, the targeted poison that might
shatter all the nearly imperceptible gains most new chemotherapies tout as success. Before his own project had imploded Addison relished in scoffing at the two, three, six extra weeks of life manufacturers were using to justify “improved” drugs that cost a thousandfold more than the current standard of care. “And the side effects
still
ruin any quality of life,” he would say, following Claire around the kitchen with the latest
Clinical Oncology
journal rolled up in his hand, whapping it on the counter to make his point. She’d gotten used to it after the first few months, realized it was an exercise for him to share the rush he got from his work, the humming conviction that vascumab was a unique, critical leap in cancer care.

Claire had realized he was on the brink of a personal miracle even before he did. He’d come home late from an international pharma meeting, with that distracted manner he got with all of his incipient ideas, the germ of it clustering and dividing deep in his cortex—a peculiar restlessness waking him in the middle of the night to hunt for notes, tracing the dim scheme onto an imaginary whiteboard with his forefinger, like a sleepwalker who couldn’t be startled awake. It reminded her of labor, this ineluctable struggle that overtook him as the seed bloomed into a viable molecular answer.
Gestating
—it came to her now as the perfect word to describe his invisible amalgamation of facts and hypotheses into an idea ultimately too huge to contain. It was almost as if the project happened
to
him, not because of him, as if his brain had been tapped by the stars to bear this infant of pharmaceutical progress.

She had awakened at four one morning to an empty bed and found him sketching out molecules on the back of an envelope at the breakfast bar, target proteins and ion channels. It was winter and she had on a thick cashmere robe with the collar turned up around her throat. Addison, too, was in a bathrobe, so engrossed in the lightning burst of what became vascumab that his thick green fleece had fallen loose, exposing a wide V of pale chest and belly. “I can’t believe it,” he said, tapping, tapping the point of his pen in the center of the paper so that a cluster of blue dots broke through the surface like Braille. “I have to try it.” He looked up at her for the first time since she’d come into the
room; his expression implied that she knew exactly what he was referring to, as if the bald crown of his head were made of glass.

Claire shivered and waited. It was like trying to anticipate an earthquake, a volcanic eruption—a shifting of space and ground that would change everything in unpredictable ways. She had been through it before with Addison, when he had first conceived his ovarian cancer test. She’d held her breath, grabbed hold and ridden the wave with him, never fully understanding the science he explained, but trusting that if she clung tight enough he would carry Jory and her to higher, safer ground.

Addison says good-bye to them after dinner Monday night. He has been back just long enough for Claire to get used to both sides of the bed being warm, used to the rock and sway when he rolls over in the night, and the pocket of cold air left in his wake. In their other life she would move into that space, press her body against his; more often now she only wraps the comforter tighter around her neck. Without wanting to, she admits some balance has shifted; having him away is the routine, at home he is the guest.

Jory clings to him in the doorway, then returns to her homework and instant messaging. Claire walks him out to his car. A wind has come up and the sky is brushed with the thin white cirrus clouds of changing weather, maybe the last surprise snow of spring before the greening.

Addison stands with one foot propped on the runner, one arm cocked up on the open door. “I have this great idea for a new business.”

“Okay. I’m ready,” Claire says.

“Telemedicine.”

“That’s not new, Addison.”

“No, just listen. I’m going to call it Dial-a-Doc.” Claire narrows her eyes. “You call an eight hundred number with, say, a skin rash. And it puts you through a menu: ‘If your rash is itchy, press one. If your rash is oozing, press three. Bleeding? If you’ve soaked more than two towels, press two. Abdominal pain? If you’re vomiting, press four.”

She laughs but can’t hide the sarcastic bite spurred by their
arguments the day before. “Maybe you should just start selling Laetrile!”

He puts his hands on her shoulders and gives a little shake, bends his knees to bring his eyes down to hers. “Claire. It’s a joke.”

Her eyes start to fill and he pulls her against him so the world is swallowed up inside his damp wool coat. “It’s gonna be okay. We’ll make it.
I’ll
make it okay.” When she finally breaks away he reaches into his pocket and hands her a small white box. It is the earrings, the blue glass earrings with the golden wave she had seen in the gallery window. “Not exactly Tiffany’s.”

“Thank you,” she says, but it comes out as a whisper. “You already did Tiffany’s.” She pushes her hair back and slides the wire loops into her ears.

He kisses her and gets into the car, stops a few feet down the drive and rolls down the window. “Remind Jory to check our Lotto numbers. I taped the tickets to the fridge.” And then he is gone. Again.

When Claire goes back inside Jory is at the computer holding up a fan of tickets she and Addison had bought the week before. She shrieks, “Mom,
MOM!
Come look at this. I think we won!
COME LOOK AT THIS!

Claire reads the numbers out loud one by one while Jory checks them against those displayed on the computer screen. They match, all six of them. Jory falls off the chair and kicks her legs out in a split. “Whooey! Seattle, here I come!”

“One problem, hon. Look at the date.”

Jory sits up and snatches the ticket out of her mother’s hand. “You mean he picked the right numbers
one day too late
?”

“No. I mean he bought a ticket on Thursday with Wednesday’s winning numbers. To make you laugh. Why don’t you call him as soon as you’re ready to laugh about it. Better start your homework.”

Claire sits at the dining room table with her laptop open to their bank’s website, and this month’s bills laid out in categorical columns. Her pay stub is parked at the top, as if it might rain money down in some fair distribution to every waiting envelope. She sits with her hands jammed into her blue jeans and stares at a vague point in the middle of all
the papers. She’s tried three variations, the first time arranging them according to balance due. Then she reversed the order, hoping that paying off the small debts might bolster her courage to write the bigger checks. Third was by order of importance: Would it be easier to lose their lights or their propane? Their car insurance or Internet access? Telephone or next week’s groceries? In that go-round the Internet had started on the lowest rung, but she knew Jory would run away from home if they lost that contact with her world. She loosely sums the debts in her head and subtracts them from the red number highlighted on the computer screen. It’s almost funny how meaningless the digits can become if you stare at them long enough. She plays around with putting all the zeros that used to come behind the final tally in the front, moving the decimal place around randomly. It doesn’t really change what they’re going to eat for breakfast tomorrow morning, after all.

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