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Authors: Simona Ahrnstedt

All In (27 page)

BOOK: All In
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38
Monday, July 21
 
“N
atalia De la Grip?”
Natalia closed the magazine she'd been browsing. Luckily it was an old edition—in other words, no gossip about the hostile takeover. There had been some pictures of Alexander, though, from some society event in New York.
“Yes,” she said loudly, setting down the magazine, getting up and shaking hands with the doctor who had come to get her in the waiting room.
“Hi,” the doctor said. “I'm Isobel Sørensen. Welcome.”
Isobel's handshake was firm, almost hard, and she was implausibly beautiful with her red hair and freckles. “You already gave us a blood test, right?” she asked with one eyebrow raised.
Natalia nodded. “Several vials,” she replied.
“That's good. We'll take excellent care of you.”
Natalia studied the doctor more closely. “Have we met before?” she asked, because there was something familiar about this redheaded Amazon.
“In BÃ¥stad,” Isobel replied with a nod. “We were at the same party.”
Natalia remembered the redhead she'd seen with Alexander. “Are you a friend of my brother's?” she asked.
A sarcastic smile, which Isobel either didn't have a chance or didn't bother to hide, fluttered across her lips and then vanished again just as fast. “No,” she said simply and showed Natalia into her examining room. “This way.”
Natalia sat down on the visitor's chair.
Isobel sat at her desk, looked at her chart, and then looked straight at Natalia. Her demeanor was objective and professional. “It says here that you'd like a checkup,” she began. “That's why we started with the blood tests. How are you feeling?” Intelligent gray eyes studied Natalia attentively.
“I'm feeling pretty good. I had some kind of flu last week, but that's not why I'm here. I've been working hard, and, well, there's been a lot going on lately . . .” Natalia paused, unsure how much Isobel already knew about her. She felt totally transparent, despised all this exposure. But she wanted to do this. The meeting with David on Friday had snapped her out of her shock. Now that the weekend was over, she was ready to look to the future.
“I understand,” Isobel said calmly, and somehow it felt as if she really did understand.
Natalia shifted her position in the chair. Her normal doctor, an older man, had retired, and now she had this woman instead, and she wasn't feeling completely comfortable with a doctor who was almost the same age as she. “I just want to make sure everything's the way it should be,” she said by way of explanation. “Taking care of myself. Coming here felt like the right thing to do.”
She paused and looked around at the room. The walls were mostly covered with colorful posters and pictures. An anatomical chart showing muscles and tendons hung next to the window. There were two photographs from some foreign country pinned on the bulletin board, two serious little squares in the midst of all the other light, impersonal stuff. One showed Isobel in the middle of a group of laughing black children. The other showed Isobel weighing an underweight infant in a simple scale. Natalia recognized the emblem of the aid organization in one of the pictures.
“Do you work for them?” she asked.
Isobel nodded. “When I'm not working here. It's a nice change.”
Natalia bit her lower lip, ashamed of her first-world concerns. What did a little fatigue or vitamin deficiency matter? She was healthy and vaccinated, had a roof over her head, and ate her fill every day.
“It's good you came in,” Isobel said somberly, as if she had a sense of what Natalia was thinking. “While we wait for the blood test results, I'll do a proper physical exam. Does that sound alright?”
Afterward, once Isobel had examined Natalia with succinct, efficient movements, once they'd done an EKG and Natalia felt thoroughly poked and prodded from top to bottom, including her lymph glands and breasts—yes, Isobel had even examined her breasts—Isobel concluded with, “For women your age, with the symptoms you've described, I like to do a pregnancy test as well.”
Natalia straightened her clothes. “There's no need. I just had my period, and I can't get pregnant.”
Isobel nodded, entered something into the computer, and then looked at Natalia. “You're not on birth control pills?”
Natalia looked down at her clasped hands. She hated these kinds of routine questions. “No, like I said. I can't get pregnant.”
Isobel nodded encouragingly. “How do you know this?”
Natalia bit her lip. “My former fiancé and I were tested. That's what the tests showed.”
“I see. Have you had any unprotected sex recently?”
Embarrassingly enough, Natalia blushed. “No,” she replied. “I mean, yes, I've had sex recently, but not unprotected. We used condoms. To protect against STDs.” She thought about laughing a little, but the laughter stuck in her throat. Oh my God, she hadn't caught an STD, had she?
“Smart,” said Isobel. She handed Natalia a small container. “It's just routine,” she said in a tone that did not exactly encourage further dialogue.
Irritated, Natalia took the container, went to the bathroom, and did what she'd been asked. She handed the urine sample calmly back to Isobel, who took it, excused herself, and left the room.
Natalia picked at the tape and the gauze in the crook of her elbow. She decided she didn't like this bossy new doctor.
Isobel came back in with some papers in her hand. “Your blood test results are back,” she said.
“So fast?”
“We have a top-notch lab right here in the building.” Isobel looked over the results and then looked up at Natalia. “Your blood work looks good,” she said. “No causes for concern. Liver, iron, glucose, everything looks fine.”
Well, then. She would buy some vitamins and supplements, and then she'd be her old self again. Natalia got ready to gather her things and go.
There was a knock on the door. A nurse came in wearing noiseless white rubber-soled shoes and handed Isobel another sheet of paper. Isobel thanked her and quickly perused it. A little wrinkle appeared on her forehead. She looked at Natalia. “You said you had the flu last week?”
“Or a cold.”
Isobel looked at Natalia for so long that Natalia started blinking her eyelids nervously. Something was wrong. She sensed it.
“What is it?” she asked.
Isobel gave her a friendly smile. “The pregnancy test came back positive.”
Natalia laughed, a short, joyless laugh. “I just told you,” she pointed out. “That's impossible.”
Isobel looked at the piece of paper again. “Not according to your urine sample. It's very early, but you're definitely pregnant.”
“But I
can't
be pregnant,” Natalia repeated, now angry. How dare this woman sit there and mock her? “You must be looking at the wrong results,” she said. She came from an almost unbroken line of Swedish noblewomen and Russian grand duchesses. She was born a countess, even if she never used the title, and when she really wanted to, she could sound quite stuck up, and she did now, furiously. She stood. “And besides, I don't
feel
pregnant. I don't feel anything.” Isobel must have misread the results. Or maybe she wasn't even a real doctor, just an intern or maybe a model, mocking her.
“Are you tired?” Isobel asked, completely unflappable.
“Yes, but . . .”
“Are you nauseated?”
“Maybe.”
“How do your breasts feel?”
Natalia's forehead crinkled. Isobel's exam had been gentle, but she'd really felt it. “Tender?”
Isobel shrugged, as if that settled matters. “You're pregnant,” she said.
Natalia blinked. But then she came to her senses. This was utterly absurd. She gave Isobel one of her chilliest stares. Enough was enough. “I have papers that show I can't get pregnant,” she snarled. “And as I just informed you, the last time I slept with someone we used protection.” Relief coursed through her when she also remembered, “And I had my period the other day, which I also mentioned to you.” She pointed to the notes on Isobel's desk. “Just a couple minutes ago.” It was outrageous to treat her like this.
She was going to demand to switch doctors.
“I see that this wasn't planned,” Isobel said. She still seemed completely unruffled despite Natalia's outburst.
“Planned?” scoffed Natalia. “This must be some kind of sick joke. Are we done yet? Can I go?” Suddenly she hated this redheaded Amazon of a woman. What did someone like Isobel even know about what Natalia had been through? Isobel Sørensen looked like some sexy fertility goddess. She probably had four kids at home that she'd popped out in between prestigious doctor gigs. Natalia was leaving and never coming back. She was going to report Isobel, call some boss and complain, maybe the Ministry of Health. You just couldn't do this kind of thing to people.
Isobel leaned back in her chair and put her fingertips together so that her hands formed an airy triangle. Her red hair screamed like a stop sign against her white lab coat. “The period you had. Was there very much blood?” she asked.
Natalia tried to remember. It had been in BÃ¥stad. She shook her head. “No, but it's always varied quite a bit.”
Isobel cocked her head to the side. “That's called spotting. It happens when the egg implants in the uterus. And in terms of infertility, it does happen that women who thought they were sterile get pregnant.” She shrugged her shoulders apologetically. “Nature isn't an exact science.”
“But we used a condom,” Natalia said weakly. Now her head was spinning again. This just
couldn't
be true.
“No form of birth control is one hundred percent effective,” Isobel said. “You can put them on wrong. They can break or be old. Condoms aren't meant to be stored for a long time.”
This wasn't happening.
This just couldn't be happening.
Because Isobel was right. The condoms she'd had in her dresser drawer weren't exactly spring chickens. Suddenly Natalia felt like she was falling. She sank down onto the chair.
Isobel stood up, filled a disposable cup with water, and handed it to Natalia.
Natalia took the water. All the anger had streamed out of her. She swallowed and swallowed. “Have you ever heard of something like this before?” she asked quietly.
The beautiful doctor's eyes filled with something that Natalia couldn't put her finger on, boundless sadness maybe.
“I've worked as a doctor in war zones and refugee camps. The things I've seen . . .” She smiled a little and nodded at Natalia's stomach. “This still falls within the bounds of normal.”
Normal.
It didn't feel normal.
“Are you in a steady relationship?” Isobel asked.
“I'm sorry?”
“Do you know who the father is?”
Natalia nodded weakly. “But it's impossible,” she said even more weakly, because she couldn't take this in. For so many years she had longed for exactly this. So many months when a pregnancy would have been the only thing she wanted from life, that enormous, all-encompassing desire for a baby, which she'd been forced to give up.
“I can see that this is a lot to absorb,” Isobel said. “It's still early. A pregnancy is counted from the first day of the last period. You become pregnant during the third week. If we assume that that was spotting you had, then that happens in week four, which means that you are in about week six now, which matches what the test said—they're incredibly sensitive nowadays. As I said, it's very early. It's not even a fetus yet, just an embryo, a little cluster of cells. If you wanted to terminate the . . .” Isobel stopped. She was being completely professional toward Natalia. There was no judgment, no opinion, just enormous calm.
I'm pregnant.
Natalia tried to get her head around the word. She put a hand on her stomach, which was almost ridiculously flat. She was six weeks pregnant. With David's child. It had probably happened that very first night, the very first time. What was the word she was looking for?
Surreal.
That's what this was—completely surreal.
“Are you quite sure?” she asked.
Isobel nodded. “If you decide to keep it, you will have to think about telling the father.”
“Do I have to?”
“This is the twenty-first century. Most men usually want to participate in their children's lives. And children need their fathers.”
Natalia stood up, her legs wobbly. She walked over to the sink, placed her hands on the cool porcelain. She leaned over and threw up.
BOOK: All In
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