Authors: Isobel Bird
But was that true? Could she, for instance, tell Aunt Netty that she had been studying Wicca for almost four months, and that she'd gotten into it because she'd done a spell that landed her the boyfriend she'd so recently dumped? Could she tell her aunt that she had a makeshift altar in her bedroom, and that sometimes when no one else was home she did rituals to the Goddess? What would Aunt Netty think of her then? Would Kate still be her favorite niece, or would everything change? Kate didn't know, and for the first time in her life she'd found something she couldn't tell her aunt about.
“Well, you know about Tyler,” Kate said, trying to buy time. “Things are going really well with him. And Annie and Cooper are okay, too. I hate to sound boring, but everything is pretty much fine. I don't throw up my dinner. I'm not using any controlled substances. And I haven't sent anyone naked pictures of myself over the Internet in a couple of months now.”
“Very funny,” Aunt Netty said. “But there must be
something
going on in the life of Katherine Elaine Morgan.”
Kate rolled her eyes. She hated her full name, and her aunt knew it. She only used it when she wanted to tease Kate. Now Kate wished more than anything that she could tell Aunt Netty about her involvement in witchcraft. But she just couldn't. She wasn't ready to take that risk. Not yet.
“I'm serious,” she said. “There's nothing going on. I'm going to be the most boring junior at Beecher Falls High School. But what about you? What's this assignment you're here on? Something good, I hope.”
Her aunt took a long drink and looked out over the water for a minute. When she turned back to Kate she sighed and said, “There's something your mother and I have been keeping from you,” she said. “She didn't want me to tell you, but I think it's time you knew.”
“Don't tell me you're getting married,” Kate said excitedly, remembering how her mother had seemed so nervous about Kate's asking personal questions the night before and putting two and two together.
Her aunt laughed. “No,” she said. “I'm not getting married. At least not any time soon. You kind of need a man for that anyway.”
“I don't get it, then,” Kate said. “What's the big secret?”
“There's something I want to show you,” said her aunt. “Remember how you said my hair was shorter than last time you saw me?”
Kate nodded. Then she watched as Aunt Netty reached up, removed her hat, and lifted her hair clear off of her head. The hair dangled from her hand as she waved it around, and Kate stared in shock at her head.
“You're bald!” she said.
“Surprise,” said her aunt, putting her straw hat back on. “Do you like it? I hear it's all the rage now.”
“You're bald!” Kate said again, not believing what she was seeing.
Her aunt plopped the wig onto the table, where Kate stared at it as if it might leap up and bite her. “That's the big secret?” she asked. “You've been wearing a wig?”
Her aunt laughed. “Actually, the wig is a relatively new development,” she said.
Kate was confused. “I don't get it,” she said.
Aunt Netty reached out and took Kate's hand. “I'd like to tell you that I'm making some grand statement about fashion, or even that I've become a Buddhist,” she said. “But, honey, the truth is that I'm not here on any assignment. I have cancer.”
Kate shook her head. “What did you say?” she asked.
“Cancer,” said her aunt. “I have cancer. That's why I'm wearing a wig. My hair fell out after the last round of chemo. I know finding out like this must be more than a little strange for you, but I didn't really know how else to do it. I figured just jumping in would get the shock over with as quickly as possible.”
Kate was stunned. She didn't know what to say. Was her aunt kidding? It would be just like her to shave her head. But pretending she had cancer? She would never joke about something like that.
“When?” was all Kate could say. “How? Why?”
“I found out about three months ago,” her aunt explained. “I discovered a lump in my breast while I was showering. I went to the doctor, he did a biopsy, and voilà âI had cancer.”
Kate looked into her aunt's face. There were the familiar brown eyes, the nose that looked just like her mother's nose and her own nose, the mouth that was smiling the reassuring smile that had comforted Kate so many times. But with her hair gone, Aunt Netty looked different. She was changed. And that change was because of the cancer inside of her.
“I know I should have told you earlier,” Aunt Netty said. “You and I have never had secrets from each other, and I didn't want to start now. But I wanted to do it in person, and I thought I would wait until the lump was gone and I was okay again.”
Kate felt herself beginning to cry. Partly she was devastated by the news of her aunt's illness. But more than that, she felt even more terrible about not being able to talk to Aunt Netty about Wicca. Here she was, battling cancer, and Kate couldn't even talk to her about something as simple as her own spirituality.
“Don't start that,” Aunt Netty said, handing Kate a napkin. “If you cry then I'll cry, and then this will all be way too much like a bad after-school special.”
Kate laughed despite herself. She dabbed at her eyes with the napkin, then looked down at the wig sitting beside her aunt's bread plate. “Are you going to put that back on?” she asked.
“I don't think so,” her aunt replied. “I sort of dropped it in the butter. Besides, I never liked it. Now that I don't have to pretend anymore, I think I'll stick with the hat look.”
Aunt Netty took the wig and put it in the bag she'd been carrying with her. Then she took out a bottle of pills, opened it, and popped one in her mouth.
“So it wasn't just a headache,” Kate said, suddenly remembering the incident from the night before. “And that's why you didn't eat much yesterday, and why Dad kept telling you to take it easy.”
Her aunt nodded. “I'm really sorry I didn't tell you earlier,” she said. “I'd hoped this would turn out to be nothing and that I could tell everyone when it was all over.”
“But it isn't over?” asked Kate fearfully.
Her aunt shook her head. “The lump was larger than we thought, and it turned out that the cancer had spread to some of my lymph nodes,” she answered. “That's when I had the chemo and my hair fell out. Unfortunately, that still didn't get it all. That's why I'm here. The hospital here has a terrific cancer treatment center. My doctor has basically done everything he can. We want to see if this is any better.”
Kate looked down at her hands, which were twisting her napkin into a ball. There was a question she desperately wanted to ask, but she was almost equally afraid of the answer she might get.
At that moment the waiter arrived, bringing them their lunches. As he set the plates in front of them he glanced briefly at Aunt Netty's bare head under her hat before looking away. Kate noticed his reaction and wanted to say “She has cancer.” She knew the waiter was wondering, and she didn't like the idea of people looking at her aunt and thinking there was something wrong with her. But the waiter just asked them if they would like anything else, and when they shook their heads he walked away as if they were having a perfectly normal lunch.
Only it wasn't a perfectly normal lunch. It might have been when they'd sat down, but everything had changed as soon as Aunt Netty had uttered those three words that Kate was sure she would never get out of her head: “I have cancer.”
“Are you going to die?” she asked suddenly, the question she'd been unable to voice tumbling out of her mouth before she could stop it.
Her aunt paused, a forkful of red snapper halfway to her mouth, and looked into Kate's eyes. “I don't know,” she said. “I know that's not the answer you want. It's not the answer I want either. But it's the truth. I'm not sure what will happen next.”
“You're right,” Kate said. “That's not what I wanted to hear.”
She looked at the pile of clam strips in front of her. Just the thought of eating one made her feel sick to her stomach. The idea of ever eating anything again seemed impossible. How could she enjoy food when her favorite aunt was dying? What she wanted to do was scream and cry and tell everyone how unfair it was that someone so smart and funny and beautiful could be filled with something that was eating her up from the inside.
“It won't do any good,” her aunt said, interrupting her thoughts.
“What won't do any good?” Kate asked.
“Not eating,” said Aunt Netty. “I tried that. I tried crying a lot and trying to figure out what caused it, too, but that didn't work either. Trust meâI've tried pretty much everything, and it doesn't do any good. But you know what
does
help?”
“What?” asked Kate glumly when her aunt paused.
“Cheesecake,” said Aunt Netty. “There isn't a problem in the world that cheesecake can't solve. Why do you think I had you order it?”
She gave Kate a huge smile, and Kate couldn't help but give her a little one back. She still felt a great big knot of pain and fear in her stomach, but seeing her aunt smile made it loosen a little bit.
Maybe even enough to fit a clam strip in there,
she thought, picking up one of the fried pieces and dipping it in the bowl of tartar sauce on the side of her plate.
“That's my girl,” said Aunt Netty. “So, do you have any other questions, besides the one about my imminent demise?”
“I don't know,” Kate said. “I've never known anyone who hadâ” She paused, not knowing how to finish. “Who had what you have,” she said finally.
“Cancer,” said her aunt. “I have cancer. I know it's an ugly word, but you make it uglier when you don't say it.”
“Cancer,” Kate said, hating the sound of it. “I've never known anyone who had cancer.”
“I'll give you the crash course, then,” her aunt said. “Basically, I have these cells in my body that, for one reason or another, are behaving abnormally. They divide and form new cells when they aren't supposed to, and this forms tumors. Eventually, these cells can begin to destroy surrounding organs.”
“They can't just take the tumors out?” Kate asked.
Aunt Netty nodded. “That's what we did first,” she said. “But the cancer had already spread to other parts of my body. Now we're trying to stop it from spreading any more.”
“How?” Kate asked.
“Various things,” her aunt explained. “I'll be happy to explain all of it later. But right now let's just have lunch. We have my whole visit to talk about medical things.”
“When do you go into the hospital?” asked Kate.
“Tomorrow,” her aunt informed her. “This may be my last chance to have cheesecake for a while, so let's enjoy it. Maybe I'll even get
two
pieces. I'm feeling pretty good today.”
So was I,
Kate thought as she picked up another clam strip and put it into her mouth.
At least until a few minutes ago.
Annie walked into Shady Hills on Thursday morning wishing she was anyplace else. Her run-in with Ben Rowe on Tuesday had gotten things off to a bad start. Although she hadn't seen the old man at all on her second day, the memory of his anger was still fresh in her mind. To make everything even worse, Kate had called her the night before, distraught, to tell her that her aunt had cancer. Annie had never heard her friend so upset before, and while she had tried to comfort Kate as much as she could, she knew she wasn't very good at that kind of thing. In fact, hearing Kate's news had brought back a lot of memories that Annie hadn't wanted to face, at least not quite yet.
As much as she'd been tempted to call in sick, or even to quit altogether, Annie had made a promise to Mrs. Abercrombieâand to herself. So she pushed open the doors of the nursing home and went inside. As she walked toward the nursing office she thought about what they had discussed in their Wicca study group on Tuesday night. Because it was summer, a number of people were on vacation or away until Jasper College started up again in September, so the study group was smaller than usual. Instead of their usual format, they were meeting more informally to talk about what was happening in their lives and to discuss any particular issues they were having with their individual progress.
Annie had been particularly anxious for Tuesday's meeting because of what had happened at work that day. Being with other people who were studying witchcraft relaxed her and made her feel like she was part of an extended family. She knew she could talk about what had happened with her friends and maybe they would have some advice for dealing with her feelings.
She'd been right. When she told the group what had happened with Ben Rowe, Sophia had nodded her head knowingly. “Remember at your initiation, when we told you that there would be a lot of challenges as you walked the path for a year and a day?” she'd asked. “Well, sometimes those challenges come in the form of people. It sounds like you've tripped right over one.”