Authors: Eileen Goudge
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Family Life, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Sagas, #General
pregnant, about six weeks I’d say, but we’ll run a urine test to be sure.
“David?” she called to him softly over the pattering of the water in the old enamel sink. She
sank down on a chair, not bothering to put her pants on, just pulling her shirt down over her
knees. “I’m pregnant.”
He twisted his head around, looking at her as if she’d told a [122] bad joke, his mouth crooking
at the corner as if he wasn’t sure whether to laugh or sneer.
“Rachel, that’s not funny, not even to joke about,” he said, smiling now.
“I’m not joking.” The words seemed to rise, not from her throat, but from the aching hollow of
her stomach.
She watched his face grow dark, remote. Why was he looking at her like that, as if
she’d
spoiled everything, as if she was somehow attacking him?
“Christ, Rachel. Are you sure?” He caught himself, hitting the heel of his hand against his
forehead. “Dammit, of course you are. You’re a doctor. How on earth could you have let
something like this happen?”
You.
Not “we.” Like it was all her fault.
“I wasn’t exactly playing solitaire when it happened,” she snapped.
Two quick strides, trailing splotches of water on the floor from his dripping hands, and he was
in front of her, leaning toward her, palms smacking down on the table. Anger flashed in his green
eyes.
“Holy Christ, Rachel. You’re not one of those kids we see, sixteen, illiterate, knocked up
because they’re too dumb to know what birth control is. You told me you were using a
diaphragm. Just now, I thought ... shit, that’s why I didn’t, inside you, because I was too hot to
wait for you to put your goddamn
diaphragm
in.”
His eyes had a queer flat look that made the blood in her veins turn to ice water. She felt his
anger humming and crackling in the air like electricity seeking a ground.
She stared at his hands. She couldn’t look at him. His fingers were splayed against the knotty
pine tabletop, the fine golden hair below his knuckles glistening with jewel-like droplets.
Damn him. The bastard.
Rachel took a deep breath, struggling to subdue her hurt and her anger. “I
was
using the
diaphragm. They’re not infallible, as you know. Maybe I took it out too soon. Or put it in too late.
Or maybe little green men from Mars poked holes in it when I wasn’t looking. Dammit, how
should I know how it happened?”
She looked up and saw his face now was very still and cold.
“Maybe you do know. Maybe it wasn’t such an accident.”
[123] Rachel felt, more than heard, his words—like ice in the pit of her stomach.
Oh God. Did
he really say that?
No, he couldn’t really believe that. Not really. He must know she’d never do a thing like that.
She wanted to hit him, shatter that expression of cool disdain.
Then suddenly the anger went out of her, and she felt deflated, flat and empty. “Look, let’s not
do this. Getting angry won’t help. It’s no one’s fault. It just happened.”
David straightened, driving the fingers of both hands through his thick sandy hair, and exhaled
as if relieved. “You’re right. I’m sorry. No sense getting all worked up. It’s not as if any real
harm was done.”
“What do you mean?”
He looked at her as if she were a child, and not a very bright one. “An abortion. You’ll have
one, of course. I’ll arrange it.”
Shrinking away from him in her mind, Rachel felt as if she were standing at one end of a long
tunnel, seeing David as a dark speck silhouetted at the other end. She felt a vast distance between
them, certain as she sat here in the safety of her snug kitchen that if she stretched her arm out to
touch him, it would meet only cool darkness.
David, mistaking her silence for acquiescence, was smiling now, walking around behind her to
knead her shoulders, his touch sure and deft.
“Look, I know what’s eating you,” he continued. “Those girls, the ones who come in all cut up
from some back-street butcher with a coat hanger. It won’t be anything like that. I have a friend,
from med school. He’s in private practice now. OB-GYN. He owes me a few favors. It’ll be done
right. Safe. Easy as pulling a tooth.”
She pulled away, and turned to stare at him, a rushing sound in her ears.
Rachel thought of the baby inside her, its warm glow, and how she’d already begun imagining
what it would look like, how she would feel holding it in her arms. She’d thought, too, of the
cozy house she and David would live in, the room they would decorate as a nursery.
And she wouldn’t have to give up medicine, she had told herself. [124] Maybe a few months’
leave, and then with David’s help, and Mama’s, and a nursemaid, she could still do her residency.
But now he was telling her to get rid of it, her
child,
as if it were something nasty that had to be
scraped from the bottom of her shoe.
Rachel shot to her feet, bumping the table with her hip. She heard a crash. She looked down
through tears at the starburst of white crystals and broken china that had been the sugar bowl.
“No,” she said, amazed at how steady her voice was. “I won’t have an abortion.”
“Then you—”
“That’s right I’m having this baby.”
He stared at her, an instant of blank disbelief, then his handsome face began to harden, his
emerald eyes narrow.
“You’d be throwing away your career,” he said coldly. “For a clump of cells. What are you,
six, eight weeks? A clump of cells no bigger than your thumbnail then. Something we studied
under our microscopes in embryology, way back in pre-med. Or have you forgotten?
Romanticizing it doesn’t change the biological facts.”
“You bastard.” She wanted to slug him, punch his handsome, smug face as hard as she could.
“You cold bastard.”
“Did you expect me to marry you, was that part of the fantasy, too?”
“No,” she said, her voice breaking. “I just thought you’d care.” She stared at him, a tall
stranger poised against the pans that hung from hooks on the brick wall behind him. She was
trying to remember why she had ever thought she loved him.
He turned away, showing his profile, like a Roman emperor on a coin. “I care,” he said, each
word separate and exquisitely wrought. “I care about being a doctor, and I care about you. But I
won’t make any excuses. I never promised you anything in the beginning, and I won’t now. If
you have this baby, Rachel, you’ll have it alone.”
Rachel stared at the shattered bowl on the floor. Whole one minute, broken beyond repair the
next.
She felt slightly nauseated, dazed by his coldness. The thought of what they’d done on this
table a few minutes ago now seemed dirty, humiliating, a locker-room joke.
[125] And an even worse joke was that even now, in spite of all he’d said, she longed for him
to take her in his arms, and make the pain go away. Pain like dull knives hacking at her insides,
making her struggle to breathe.
“Go away,” she told him. “Just go.”
“Guess what?”
Kay blew in through the front door, plump arms laden with Balducci bags, her round face
flushed with excitement.
“What?” Rachel asked, curled on the couch amidst crumpled Kleenexes, feeling even worse
than she had last night with David.
Rachel watched Kay plop the bags onto the pine hall table. Delicious spicy, smoky smells
drifted toward her. Only now they made her stomach heave.
If this is because of some guy, Rachel thought, he must really be something. Kay, the original
yenta, the Sherlock Holmes of Jewish mothers, still hadn’t picked up on the fact that Rachel was
lying here in the dark at two in the afternoon when she should have been at the hospital.
“I quit!” Kay threw off her coat, and did a clackety dance in her Dr. Scholl clogs across the
bare strip of floor. In her white uniform and gold-rim glasses, her hair crinkling in a dark cloud
about her round face, she looked like a demented Orphan Annie.
“No more Valium overdoses,” Kay jabbered on. “No more breast implants. No more nose jobs.
No more Barbra Streisands who think they can look like Grace Kelly.” She gave a little hop to
keep from tripping over the telephone cord, stretched across the floor. “Rachel, would you
believe, today this woman, this
kvetch,
comes hopping into the ER. Sprained her toe, now get
this, on the escalator at Saks, and while she’s whining and bitching, a kid with multiple stab
wounds is practically bleeding to death not five feet away. I don’t know what happened,
something in me just snapped. I told her she should take her dear little toe back to Saks and get a
refund. Then I went outside for some air, and I got to thinking about Abbie Steiner. Remember
her? She bailed out last summer and went to a Red Cross hospital in Vietnam. I got a letter from
her. Boy, do they need help over there, nurses, doctors—like, desperately. And I’m [126] sick of
making noises about this war, and not doing anything, so I decided—” She stopped, her round
face puckering in sudden concern. “Hey, Rachel, you all right, you sick or something? What are
you doing home now? I thought you were on call.”
“It’s a long story.”
Rachel winced as Kay raised the blinds open, harsh winter sunlight stabbing her eyes. “Please,
not that much. A little lower. I like it dark. No, I’m not sick, just a little bit pregnant. Kay, you
can’t be serious.”
Dumb question, she thought. When it came to good causes, Kay was nothing if not serious.
Rachel remembered the nurses’ walkout that first summer of her Bellevue clerkship. When
Rachel had tried to wrangle her way through the picket line, Kay, a frizzy-haired munchkin with
the bellow of a longshoreman, had buttonholed her, winning her over with an impassioned
outpouring about how it was mostly the patients who suffered when the nurses were short-staffed
and underpaid. She was so intrigued that she’d invited Kay for a cup of coffee later. They’d been
friends ever since.
Kay flopped onto the sofa beside her. “As serious as a Richard Nixon is about trying to run for
President again.”
“Jesus, Kay. I can’t believe you actually quit Lenox Hill. Just like that. And Vietnam? It’s too
much.”
“I know.” Kay gave a gravelly laugh that didn’t quite hide an edge of unease. “No place for a
lady to be caught in torn underwear, as my dear ma would say. But think of it, Rachel. My God, a
chance to
do
something besides sit, clucking over what a rotten waste it all is.”
Rachel smiled. “Somehow, I just can’t quite picture you ever sitting and clucking.”
“My mother, God forbid, when she finds out about this, she’ll go to Washington, harangue
Johnson and every member of Congress to stop me.”
“Oh, Kay.” Rachel rested her head against Kay’s shoulder, letting her tears spill out. “I think
you’re crazy. And brave. And I don’t know how the hell I’m going to get through this without
you.”
And for an insane instant, she thought:
I
wish I were going, too. So far away from this mess I’m
in.
[127] Then Kay was hugging her, crying a little too. “You’ve told him then?”
Rachel nodded. She had fallen into an exhausted sleep last night before Kay got home, and this
morning Kay was gone by time she’d dragged herself out of bed.
“He wants me to have an abortion.”
“Is that what you want?”
“No.” Rachel buried her face in her hands, the pain of last night coming back acutely. “But it’s
so damn complicated. Without David, how would I manage? Give up everything I’ve worked for?
And if I don’t, how fair is that, having a baby when I’ll hardly be around?”
Kay shrugged. “Who said life was fair?”
“The crazy thing is, even knowing how hard it would be, I still want it. And for all the wrong
reasons. I can’t bear the thought of someone scraping it out of me. And I want to see it, see if it
looks like me. But the big thing is, it’s already a part of me. I feel changed by it. I can never be
the same again. Kay, tell me, are those good enough reasons?”
Kay stood up, moving across the room, reaching for the packet of Salems that sat on the
bamboo bookcase. She lit one, jetting the smoke out through her nose.
She gave a harsh little laugh. “Who’s to say? Did you ask for your parents? Did I? My mother,
you could eat off her kitchen floor, but she hated to cook for her family. She would push her
vacuum cleaner to the North Pole and back, but try getting her to sit down for an hour and play a
game of Gin Rummy with me or one of my brothers. Yet in her own meshuggene way, I know
she loved us. The way I figure it, when you’re a kid, you take what you can get from whatever
parents you’re stuck with, and be glad for it.” She looked at the cigarette between her fingers as if
surprised to see it there, her wide, generous face falling. “I gave them up last week. Six whole
days without a smoke, and now look at me. Jesus. Maybe I ought to take up vacuuming like Ma.”
Rachel thought of Sylvie then. Did wanting this baby have something to do with Mama? All
those years she’d watched Mama gazing sadly at the empty cradle in the nursery? Now there
would finally be a baby to fill that cradle. A baby they would both love.