Midwives (17 page)

Read Midwives Online

Authors: Chris Bohjalian

Tags: #Mystery, #Adult, #Chick-Lit, #Contemporary

BOOK: Midwives
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“What exactly did Anne say to you?” My father. Suspicious.

“Tell me something first. If you don’t mind. How well do you know Anne?” the doctor asked, and I could tell he was directing the question at my mother.

“I believe I know her well.”

“But she hasn’t been your apprentice very long.”

“No, not long at all.”

“About six months?”

“Not even that long. Three. Maybe four. We started working together in December.”

“You’re stalling, B.P., you’re avoiding the issue. What did the girl say to you?” my father asked once more, his patience fading.

B.P. sighed. Finally: “When you made the incision into Mrs. Bedford to rescue the baby, she says she saw blood spurt. A couple of times. She says she thinks Mrs. Bedford was alive.”

There are expressions to convey silence; there are all the old cliches. There are the poetic constructs and affectations. A silence deep as death, a silence deep as eternity. Quiet as a lamb, a quiet wise and good. The silence of the infinite spaces, the silence upon which minds move.

After B.P. spoke, did the living room grow so quiet we could have heard a pin drop? Rooms are often that still, and the floor of that particular living room was hardwood painted gray. We could have heard pins drop in the quiet of that room most days and nights. No, the stillness that overtook the three adults and me, the stillness that fell upon our house was very different from silence. It was not the silence of thought, the quiet of meditation. It was not the silence that grows from serenity, the hush that flowers around minds at peace.

It was the stillness of waiting. Of preparation. Of anticipation tinged—no, not tinged, overwhelmed—overwhelmed by gloom.

How long we all remained still—the adults in the living room, I in the kitchen—was probably far different in reality than it feels to me now in memory. I remember the stillness lasting a very long time; I remember leaning over the sink on my arms for what seemed a great while. But I was so dizzy I feared I might become ill, and in reality the stillness may have lasted mere seconds. A pause in the conversation—albeit one in which everyone present understood that our realities were changed by B.P.‘s news, that our lives before and after his remark would be very different—but a simple pause nonetheless.

And then it broke. The stillness brought on by words was done in by words.

“If you’d like,” my mother said simply, “I’ll talk to Anne tomorrow and put an end to this.”

“She won’t be here tomorrow, Sibyl, I’m telling you that.”

“Why are you so sure? Did she say something to that effect?”

“She didn’t have to. But it’s clear. It’s clear from the fact she hasn’t connected with you since … since the woman died. She’s avoiding you.”

“Avoiding me.” More of a statement than a question. My mother sounded more incredulous than concerned.

“Avoiding you. Yes.”

I took in a few deep breaths to try and calm myself, to settle my stomach. But my knees were going and so I gave in, I allowed my body to slide to the kitchen floor. I fell slowly, as if I were slipping serenely underwater, my back sliding against the cabinet under the sink as I collapsed.

“What did you say to Anne when she called?” I heard my father ask, and for a brief moment the voices sounded so far away I feared I would faint, but the moment passed.

“I told her I doubted what she said was true. I told her I’d already spoken to you and Andre, and my sense was she probably saw a lot of blood and it was probably very frightening. But she hadn’t seen you cut open a living woman. It just wasn’t possible, given who you are.”

“Who I am,” my mother murmured. An echo.

“Yes. An experienced midwife. A woman with excellent emergency medical training.”

“And then?” My father again.

“She seemed to understand, and I hoped that would be the end of it. I suggested she call you and get it all off her chest. Get it all out in the open between the two of you.”

“But she never called me,” my mother said, and in her voice I heard as much hurt as I heard fear.

“Apparently not. But later that day, she did call Reverend Bedford.”

“She called Asa?”

“And then she called the state’s attorney’s office.”

“And she told them she thought this woman had been alive when Sibyl did the C-section?” my father asked.

“So it would seem. What she probably told the state’s attorney—and this is why I wanted to come by tonight—is that she and Asa both saw blood spurt when you made your incision. In her opinion, the heart was pumping when you began the operation.”

“Then why didn’t she say something?” my mother said, raising her voice for the first time that evening. “No, she knew Charlotte was dead—and Asa did, too!”

My mother wasn’t frantic, but her tone suggested she understood clearly that Asa’s perception of the tragedy affected everything. My father, perhaps with some cause, feared that frenzy was just another revelation away, and asked quickly, “B.P., why are you here tonight? This moment? Did something happen today?”

“I was interviewed. I guess that’s the right word. Interviewed. I was interviewed today by a couple of state troopers. They wanted a statement. And based on their questions, I got the distinct impression that everyone—state’s attorney, medical examiner, father—believes that somebody’s dead right now because a midwife performed a bedroom cesarean on a living woman.”


Later that night my mother knocked on my door and asked if I was awake. She probably knew that I was because she could see the light on under my door, and I was never the type to fall asleep while reading. Through the register in the floor I could hear my father downstairs, adding a last log for the night to the woodstove.

“Come on in,” I said, rolling over in bed to face the doorway, and tossing the magazine I was reading onto my night table.

I was surprised that my mother hadn’t yet gotten ready for bed. B.P. had left hours ago; it was probably close to midnight. But my mother was still dressed in her loose peasant skirt, and she still had her hair back with a barrette. She limped across the room and sat on the edge of the bed. Outside my window the moon was huge, an oval spotlight one sliver short of full.

“You’re up late,” she said.

“It’s the coffee,” I told her, teasing. I’d seen how closely she’d watched me that morning when I’d decided to test one of my limits. It was a completely spontaneous exploration, absolutely unplanned. I simply saw Mr. Coffee, and my arms and hands did the rest.

She picked up the magazine, one for women in their twenties, and thumbed through its pages. That particular issue had articles on super summer shorts and the pros and cons of tanning salons, as well as a special pullout section on birth control. There was no woman in the state of Vermont with a figure as perfect as the Texas blonde on the cover, and no girl with hair that big.

“Anything interesting in here?”

My mother knew exactly which parts of the magazine I found interesting.

“There are some shorts I like on page 186,” I told her, not a complete fabrication, but not exactly the truth either.

She nodded and smiled. “They’d look good on you.”

“Yeah. But they are sort of yachty,” I said, making a word up when I couldn’t find the right one. “I think you’d have to live on the ocean to get away with them.”

“Probably.”

“Or be some rich guy’s mistress,” I added, an inside joke between us. Whenever we saw a young woman in Vermont who was mind-numbingly overdressed for our little state, one of us would whisper to the other, “Over there—some rich guy’s mistress,” drawing out the word
rich
until it became almost two syllables:
ri-ichhhhhh
.

“Oh, good, there’s an article on how to choose the right tanning salon. That should be very, very helpful,” my mother said.

“There is one now in Burlington, you know.”

“No, I didn’t know.”

“Yup.”

“We’re becoming pretty hip up here in the hills.”

“Mostly I just look at the ads. To see what’s cool.”

She skimmed the headlines and captions in the section on birth control. “How are you and Tom doing?”

“Fine.”

“Was it strange not going to the dance with him Friday night?”

“Strange?”

“Did you miss him?”

“We talked on the phone. And he came over Saturday afternoon, you know.”

“I know. But I’ll bet it’s not the same as hanging out with him at a dance.”

“Nope. Not exactly.”

She looked down again at the magazine, and with her eyes on the section about diaphragms she said, “Don’t ever forget: When you think it’s time, you tell me. We’ll go straight to the clinic.” The clinic was our word-saving shorthand for Planned Parenthood.

“I will.”

“Promise?”

I rolled my eyes. “Mom!”

She rolled her eyes and threw back her head histrionically in response.

“Promise?” she asked again, a reference to the vow she’d asked me to make when I turned thirteen that if I ever thought there was even the slightest chance I might be having sex in the foreseeable future—even if that chance was as statistically remote as being hit by lightning in late December—I would tell her, and we would visit Planned Parenthood and get me fitted for a diaphragm. Short of dealing heroin to our schoolmates or shooting a teacher, I think the only thing Tom and I could have done that year that would have truly disappointed and upset my mother would have been to have had the sort of tumble together that results in an unexpected teenage pregnancy.

When I told some of my friends about this promise, girls like Rollie and Sadie, they decided that there was no mother on the planet as cool as my mom. Most mothers then wouldn’t even say the word
diaphragm
to their thirteen-year-old daughters, much less offer to drive them to the clinic where they could get one. In the eyes of my friends, the attitudinal advantages of having a midwife for a mother dramatically outweighed the inconveniences brought on by long labors and midnight deliveries.

“I promise,” I said.

“Thank you.” She rolled the magazine into a tube and held it primly in her lap like a diploma.

“You’re welcome. How does your ankle feel?”

“It feels okay.” She shrugged. “Painkillers.”

“They work?”

“You bet.”

“What did Dr. Hewitt want?”

“You weren’t listening?”

“I couldn’t hear everything.”

“He’s a good friend,” she said instead of answering my question. I don’t think it was a conscious evasion, but she quickly continued, “I think I’m on my own for the prenatals tomorrow.”

“Anne doesn’t do much yet anyway, does she?”

“She does her share. She’s learning.”

“It sounds like she’s got a lot to learn.”

My mother looked at me for a long moment, and I worked hard to maintain eye contact. I think she realized in that second just how much I understood: how much she needed to share with me, and how much she didn’t. She didn’t blink, and if the cluster flies in our walls were not dormant that moment, they would have seen my mother’s head nod just the tiniest bit.
Yes
, that nod agreed,
she does
.

Downstairs my father added water to the kettle atop the wood-stove, pushing the wrought-iron lid against the brass handle. I knew the clang it made well. A second later my mother and I both heard the brief sizzle from the drops of water that spilled down the sides of the kettle onto the soapstone surface of the stove, hot enough to turn that water to steam in an instant. He then pulled the chain of the reading lamp by the couch, and we knew he was about to come upstairs.

Finally I looked down at the edge of my quilt, unable to meet my mother’s gaze any longer.

“Sleep well, sweetie,” she said. “Sweet dreams.”

“You, too, Mom,” I answered, and somewhere inside her she found the strength to murmur the lie that she would.

Chapter 11.

$25,000. A two and a five and three zeros—five zeros if you’re using a decimal point. Not a whole lot less than it took to buy this whole house not that many years ago. The cost of two years of college for Connie. The cost of my baby’s entire college education, with change, if she decides she wants to go to the University of Vermont
.

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