Cate Campbell (21 page)

Read Cate Campbell Online

Authors: Benedict Hall

BOOK: Cate Campbell
2.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Margot’s hand tightened on Frank’s. “What was it? Why would he do that?”
Frank had to look away from her intense gaze, out to the glistening waters of Elliott Bay beyond the pier. “We had a disagreement.” He saw they had reached Cherry. “Here will be fine, Blake. Thank you.”
Blake pulled the car to the curb, and Frank released Margot to put his hand on the door.
“Wait,” she commanded. “Blake, what’s this about? What’s Preston done?”
The edge in her voice, the quick fury, made Frank look at her again. She was leaning forward, tension in every line of her body.
“Margot, I don’t—” Frank began.
She cast him a swift look, and he saw in an instant that she knew what her brother was. She understood, perhaps better than he did. There was no need to explain.
He opened the car door. “You have a patient waiting,” he said. “Let’s talk soon.” Before she could object, he stepped out of the car, only bending to say briefly, “Thanks for the lift, Blake.”
Margot said, “Come to the house tonight, Frank.”
“I don’t think that’s best.” And then, fearing she would misunderstand, he said, “Perhaps another time.” But as he closed the door and the car pulled away, he doubted there would be another time. He stood watching, lifting his hand, as the Essex pulled away.
 
“Blake,” Margot said. “What did Preston write about Frank?”
“It wasn’t good,” Blake said heavily. He drove with his usual deliberate speed. “He accused him of brawling in the street. He didn’t use Major Parrish’s name, but I have a good idea there’s no other amputee engineer working at the Boeing Airplane Company.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“All of this happened in the middle of Loena’s illness, Dr. Margot. It was my judgment that you had more pressing concerns.”
“But why would Boeing fire Frank over one of Preston’s silly columns?”
“Mr. Dickson would know more, but I suspect there’s pressure from the city government. I’ve heard your father say that the mayor and the council have their doubts about Boeing using Lake Union to land the seaplanes. There was that crash, you remember. In the lake.”
“So Preston did this on purpose. But why?”
Blake only shook his head, and Margot leaned back in weary frustration. “I like him, Blake. Frank, I mean.”
“I like him, too, Dr. Margot.”
“Do you think Preston did it just to hurt me?”
Blake hesitated before he said, slowly, and in a voice rough with sorrow, “I’m not sure Mr. Preston needs a reason.”
Thea’s house was small and dingy, with a flat roof and a neglected patch of lawn in front. The next-door neighbor was pushing a mower around his own yard, and he looked up curiously when the Essex pulled up and parked. When Margot went in, calling out to Thea that she had arrived, she was struck by how spare everything was. A brown divan rested beneath the curtained front window, with a matching armchair drawn up before an empty fireplace. The kitchen opened to the right, a narrow, dark room with a wooden table and two chairs. There seemed to be only one bedroom at the end of a short hallway. Margot felt a twinge, thinking of the beauty and space of Benedict Hall compared with the meanness of the Reynolds home, to say nothing of the Essex waiting in the street outside. It occurred to her for the first time that she had no idea how Thea got to work.
Thea emerged from the bedroom, her face haggard, her graying hair straggling from its pins. “Margot, thank you for coming. I’m so sorry about the office—”
“Nonsense. Where’s Norman?” Margot said.
“He couldn’t get out of bed this morning. His breathing is so bad.”
“Let’s have a look at him.” Margot took off her gloves as she followed Thea down the short hall and into the bedroom.
Here a small window had been opened to the fresh air, and dimity curtains billowed slightly in the breeze. A lamp beside the bed burned weakly, shedding just enough light so Margot could see. An emesis basin and a small stack of towels rested beside the lamp, along with a pitcher and a glass.
Norman Reynolds lay propped on pillows, but his head was pulled back as he struggled for breath. His lips were blue, and when she picked up his hands, the nails were gray. Despite the open window, the odor of necrotic flesh overpowered the scents of salt air and newly mown grass.
She said quietly, “Good morning, Norman.”
Thea said, “It’s Dr. Benedict, Norman.” Her husband’s closed eyelids flickered.
Margot opened the clasps of her bag, and took out her stethoscope and a pair of rubber gloves. She pulled on the gloves, then affixed the earpieces. Thea opened Norman’s flannel nightshirt, and Margot bent to press the chestpiece to his skin. She was interrupted by a spasm of his coughing, while Thea pressed a towel to his lips. When she tried again, she found that it was, as Thea had already surmised, very bad. Norman’s lungs bubbled as if he were trying to breathe thick liquid through a straw. She imagined the seared tissue struggling to flex, to open and close. There was little she could do beyond another dose of potassium iodide.
When she had done what she could, she drew Thea back into the front room. “There’s one other thing we can try, Thea. A physician named Haldane has been administering oxygen with an anesthetic mask. It may help. I’ll have to find a source for oxygen bottles.”
“Thank you.”
“And don’t worry about the office. Stay here with Norman.”
Thea nodded wearily, and Margot asked, “Do you have anyone to come and help you?”
“A neighbor. The one who telephoned.”
“Good. I’ll come back tonight.”
“What will you do about the clinic, though? You’ll need someone.”
“I’ll manage.”
“And what about Dr. Whitely? Are you going to have to go before the board?”
“I am. But I can manage that, too.” Margot touched Thea’s shoulder. Thea looked up, her eyes full of the grief that was drawing nearer by the moment. “I’m so sorry, Thea. I wish I could do more for him.”
“I know. Thank you.”
As Margot walked across the neglected lawn to the Essex, she drew a deep, rib-expanding breath. Such a simple act, breathing, filling her lungs right to the brim with sweet, fresh summer air. It was a sensation Norman Reynolds would never again experience. As Blake drove her away, she glanced back at the little house that looked so tired and worn. As worn as poor Thea. “Good God, Blake,” Margot said softly. “What human beings do to each other!”
“I know, Dr. Margot. I know.”
Suddenly, she didn’t think she could bear to be alone, to think about this all by herself. She wanted the company of someone who understood. Who liked her. She blurted, “Blake. Do you have a telephone number for Major Parrish? At his rooming house?”
She heard the smile in Blake’s voice. “I believe I can find it, Dr. Margot. Would you like me to call him?”
“No. No, just get me the number, if you please. I’ll call him myself.”
C
HAPTER
12
Preston cursed, and kicked at a skinny mutt nosing around a trash bin near the
Times
building. He had succeeded in getting Parrish fired, but his other plan had gone awry. He had no one he could blame, in this case. He had ruined it himself. He must be getting soft, living the way he did, with his mother and Hattie fussing over him, and all the old biddies crowding around in hopes of a mention in his column. He should have let the stupid girl die.
It had been a moment of weakness. Of believing his own press. Of wanting to remain the hero in his mother’s eyes, and not wanting his father to give him that measuring look, or Dick to eye him as if he had just popped out of a sewer.
And now everyone thought Margot had saved Loena’s life! As if all of her witch doctoring could have done it—enemas, for Christ’s sake, or vinegar soaks. It was a great shame he couldn’t have just shown her the sapphire, told her its story, made clear to her that it was
he
who had allowed the little slut to live. Instead, Dr. Margot Benedict was now the great healer, the miracle worker! Resentment at the irony made his teeth ache.
This morning, over breakfast, Father had fixed him with his gimlet eye. “Preston,” he said, “how are things at the
Times
? Going well?”
Preston had looked up over his plate of eggs and ham, and grinned. “Just dandy, Pater.”
His mother beamed from the other end of the table. She had a copy of the paper folded beside her plate. “Lovely column today, Preston,” she said. “You should read it, Dickson dear. Listen to this:
Will Seattle’s Pine Street be the Western version of New York’s Fifth Avenue? If Frederick & Nelson’s devoted clientele is any measure, it could well happen, and happen soon. Ladies of fashion know that Frederick’s is the place to find the latest hat or frock, the finest gloves or stockings, in designs to rival anything New York can offer. Frederick & Nelson offers a ladies’ luncheon every Tuesday in their tearoom. When this reporter dropped by, he was treated to an elegant display of the latest
modes
worn by the leading ladies of Seattle fashion. The Misses Sorensen, of the West Seattle Sorensens, both sported long Parisian scarves of painted silk—”
Dickson put up a hand, and Edith’s voice trailed off. She said, with a tentative smile, “But Preston writes very well, don’t you think? Everyone says so.”
“Do they.” Dickson raised one thick gray eyebrow. He put one fist on the table as he turned his dark gaze back to his son. “I saw Bill Boeing yesterday. There was evidently some unpleasantness with one of his engineers. He tells me you saw fit to write about it in the paper.”
Edith’s smile faded, and she turned a confused look on Preston. “What unpleasantness? What happened, dear?”
Dick, across the table from Preston, laid down his fork.
Ramona said, “Oh, it was nothing, really.”
Dick said, “You read it, Ramona? You didn’t tell me.”
“Or me,” Edith said. She frowned. “When was this?”
Ramona said, “Mother Benedict, I didn’t think you would—that is—well, I liked it, because it was interesting to read something that wasn’t just parties and dresses and things. I didn’t think you’d care for it, though.”
“I would hardly call it nothing,” Dickson said. “Bill Boeing certainly thinks it’s something. It caused him a lot of difficulty with the city council. It should have been kept private, in any case.”
“Why private?” Preston said. He strove to keep his tone light. “I’m a journalist. I write the news as I see it.”
“Journalist.” Dickson waved his hand, brushing the term aside.
Preston had to breathe to release the pressure building in his gut. When he dared trust his voice, he said, “I don’t see how this concerns you, Father.”
“Everything to do with my family concerns me.”
Dick said, “I told you to watch your step, Preston.”
“Mind your own fucking business, Dick,” Preston snapped.
Edith gasped, and Ramona said, “Preston! Please!”
His father glared, and Preston said hastily, “I’m sorry, Mother. Ramona. Too much time with soldiers.” He contrived an innocent, round-eyed look of chagrin.
Edith said faintly, “I suppose so, dear. But that word. My goodness.”
“You’re absolutely right, Mater. I hope you’ll forgive me.” He pushed back his chair, hoping to escape the whole absurd scene.
His father, however, like the bulldog he resembled more every day, persisted. “Preston, our family business stays out of the paper in the future.”
Preston stared at his half-finished breakfast. Tension grew in his belly, an explosion waiting to happen. His breastbone throbbed with it. “Father. I think you’re overreacting.”
“I still don’t know what happened,” Edith said in a plaintive tone.
Dickson said, “Preston was in a street fight with Major Parrish. A one-armed man! Then he wrote about it in the paper where anyone could see.”
“He attacked
me,
” Preston protested, and then wished he hadn’t. He sounded like a wounded child.
“You cost him his job,” Dickson said. “Bill Boeing is none too happy about it. And neither am I.”
Ramona glanced sideways at her mother-in-law. “Does Margot know?”
No one answered her.
Now, remembering that scene, Preston yearned to break something, to bash someone, but he didn’t dare. Not after his pose of innocence in the whole Parrish altercation. He had his column to write, and a deadline looming, but he couldn’t go to the
Times
in this mood.
He turned away, striding back the way he had come. He would go down into the Tenderloin, to that flophouse where Carter was living. He would pay up, maybe take the silly sod for a drink. It was probably best to let everything blow over, calm down for a while. He had time.
He pressed the sapphire against his chest, and let its weight ease the tension in his belly. Yes, he had time. Of course. He had plenty of time. It could wait.
 
Margot swept the floors of the examining room and reception, and stowed the broom and dustpan in the back storage closet. She had run the autoclave, and disinfected the examining table. She washed her hands, and went around turning out the lights. It had been a quiet afternoon, but she had seen three patients. She felt a modest sense of satisfaction.
She was putting on her hat when Frank stepped in through the front door. His eyes were a vivid blue beneath the brim of his Stetson, and he looked very tall in the cramped clinic.
“I hope I’m not late.”
She smiled at him, and pulled her gloves from her pocket. “Your timing is perfect. I’ve just finished.”
He held the door for her to pass through, and took her medical bag from her as they turned down Post Street. She stepped to his left side. He flinched, but she let her fingers rest, with the lightest of touches, just under his upper arm. His gaze came down to hers, and she leaned a little closer. “Just enough to hold on to,” she said. He blinked, and then laughed.
She liked walking next to him down the street. She liked him being taller, and she liked the tilt of his hat brim and the length of his steps. He smelled like soap and fresh air and, just faintly, of whisky. Once or twice someone turned a head to watch them pass, and Margot didn’t mind that at all.
He led her toward Pioneer Square, to the Merchant’s Café. “I booked a table,” he said. “Hope it’s all right.”
“Of course,” she said. She wondered if he knew the upper floor of the building was a brothel, and decided he couldn’t. He would never have brought her here if he did. She hoped he wouldn’t find out. She said, “You’ve seen what the food is like at home! We all love Hattie, but the Benedicts eat out a great deal.”
Holding her bag in his right hand, he struggled a bit with the door handle. Margot stood back, resolutely leaving him to it. In a second he had the door open, and he propped it with his shoulder as she went through. As the waiter held her chair, she noticed how deft Frank had become, setting her bag down quickly beneath the table so his hand was free to help her with her coat. He shrugged out of his own overcoat, and smoothed his empty sleeve into the pocket of his jacket before he sat down.
“You’re getting used to it,” she said.
He glanced at her in surprise. “Used to what?”
“Doing everything one-handed. It’s hardly noticeable.”
“About time, I guess.”
“I would imagine, in the hospital, the nurses did everything for you.”
“They did a lot.”
The waiter bent to ask if they cared for a drink. Margot said, “Are you serving?” He nodded, pencil poised over his pad. “Not Vine-Glo, I hope?”
The waiter laughed. “Not here, ma’am. I promise.”
Frank said, “If you have scotch, I’ll have one.”
“I’ll have the same,” Margot said. She hoped Frank had enough money, but she didn’t dare ask. She would not repeat her previous mistake.
He murmured, “So much for Prohibition.”
“The farmers in the valley are making more money on moonshine than on their crops.”
“So I’ve heard.”
“A milk bottle full of gin for three dollars. It’s a lot worse than letting people buy legitimate alcohol at a decent price. And a lot more dangerous.”
He looked away, as if there was something interesting on the wall behind her. There was silence until she ventured, “How’s the job search?”
He leaned back in his chair. “Frustrating.” She waited, eyebrows raised. He seemed to fumble for words. “No one will talk to me. It’s as if—”
“As if what?”
He looked around the room at the other diners, then to the window, where the lights of Pioneer Square flickered in the long summer twilight. “Never mind,” he said. “No point in talking about it. Tell me about your day instead.”
She said ruefully, “I didn’t think anyone wanted to hear about a doctor’s work. My family certainly doesn’t. Ramona thinks it’s disgusting. My mother always changes the subject.”
Frank shifted his left shoulder, as if trying to ease it, and smiled a little. “I wouldn’t ask if I weren’t interested.”
“Father thinks I should turn the large parlor at Benedict Hall into my office. He offered to put in a separate entrance, and he says I would have a better class of patients on Fourteenth Avenue than on Post Street.”
“And would you?”
She grinned. “Probably. But can you imagine Mother tolerating a lot of sick people marching through her house?”
Their drinks came, neatly disguised in teacups and perched on saucers. Margot lifted her cup, and the gesture seemed to mirror the lifting of her heart. It was lovely to be sitting here with a handsome man. It made her feel girlish and young. Happy. “Here we go, then, Frank. I’ll tell you about my day, and when you’ve had enough, stop me.”
He drank from his own cup, then set it down, slightly too far from his hand. “Tell me.”
“Without Thea, it’s a bit difficult,” she began. He watched her with an intentness that was both flattering and a little unnerving. “I didn’t realize how much I depend on her.”
His fingers twitched, reaching toward his cup, then resisting. Margot noted the movement, and filed it away to think about later. “I did have patients today, though.”
“You don’t always?”
“Not private ones. Plenty of them at the hospital.” She sighed. “Mostly poverty cases! They give me the leftovers, I’m afraid.”
“Because you’re young.” His restrained smile gave her that burst of giddiness again.
She took another sip. “And female.”
He gave a measured nod. “I didn’t see a single female doctor in the army.”
Margot raised her eyebrows. “Really? There are a few, but . . . Actually, there were more women physicians in America twenty years ago than there are now.”
“Didn’t know that.”
The waiter put a menu in her hands. She held it without opening it, frowning. “You know, Frank, they’ve made it harder for women to get into medical school, deliberately harder. Rules and restrictions, reduced hospital privileges, all sorts of things. They want women to be nurses, not physicians.”
He seemed to consider this for a time. He picked up his cup and took a shallow sip. As he set it down, he said, “All the more credit to you, then, for making a success of it.”
“I’m not there yet!”
“You will be,” he said. “You had patients today, after all.”
“None with any money. That’s what Father would point out.”
Margot watched as he took another careful sip of scotch. Rationing it. She wondered if it was because he couldn’t afford another.
The waiter came and Margot hastily opened the menu and scanned it. They ordered, baked salmon for both of them, with fried potatoes and fresh greens from the valley. When the menus had been whisked away, Margot put her elbows on the table and cupped her chin with one hand. “Tell me more about Montana,” she said. “And don’t say there’s nothing to tell.”
Frank dropped his eyes, and his fingertip traced the edge of his cup. “Dad runs around five hundred head of cattle, mostly Angus with a few Herefords. He keeps about two hundred acres for seed stock, too, kind of a specialty of our ranch.” He pushed the cup in a circle, then released it, tapping his fingers on the tablecloth. “His ranch.”
Margot resisted an urge to take his hand, to still those restless fingers. “And your mother?” she asked.
“She works just as hard as Dad. Always has. They want me to come home, but . . .” He lifted his left arm, as if that explained everything.
“Frank,” Margot said. “Amputees do all sorts of jobs. You’re getting better at handling things with one hand every day.”
He turned his face away from her, and the lights from the square glistened on his profile. His jaw flexed, and his fingers stretched toward the teacup again.
“What is it?” she asked.

Other books

Watch Me by James Carol
Bait and Switch by Barbara Ehrenreich
Magestorm: The Reckoning by Chris Fornwalt
Codependently Yours by Maria Becchio
Capital Punishment by Robert Wilson
Subterranean by Jacob Gralnick
Why Are We at War? by Norman Mailer