Mystic Summer (28 page)

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Authors: Hannah McKinnon

BOOK: Mystic Summer
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“I don't know.” I was already imagining the multiple items my mother could pick out that would still total less than this one shirt.

“What's the matter? You look great.”

I shrugged helplessly. How to explain to my best friend that my parents couldn't afford it, without feeling like I was throwing them under the bus?

“Just show your mom,” Erika insisted.

She followed me to the lone clearance rack in the rear where we found my mother. “Mom, what do you think about
this rugby?” Desperately, I tugged it over my head over my T-shirt.

“That's cute.” Then Mom checked the tag. “Oh, honey.” She looked at me apologetically. “I still have to take Jane back-to-school shopping, too. Maybe it will go on sale,” Mom said brightly.

But I knew the truth. There was no second chance for the first day of school.

When it was Erika's turn to make her purchases, she piled her findings on the counter. Cargo shorts, tank tops, a red hoodie. Beneath it all the striped sleeve peeked out.

It was near the end of the week, during gym class, when it happened. We'd played tennis outside in the gorgeous late summer weather, and when we filed into the girls room to change, I opened my locker. There, hanging beside my jeans, was the Abercrombie rugby.

I glanced around. Erika was sitting on the bench, two girls down, unlacing her sneakers. My blue shirt, that I'd worn to school, was missing. “Erika?” I whispered.

She looked over at me. “Wow, Maggie,” she said loudly. The girls around us quieted instantly, listening in. “I love your new shirt.”

It was then I noticed the sleeve of my blue shirt sticking out of Erika's backpack. She zipped it up, and when no one was watching, flashed me her pinky finger.

Now, standing on the bridal shop riser, with my feet practically sewn together in this god-awful gown, I stand up straighter. “Erika. Do you love this dress?”

Erika nods, sadly. “But you girls can't move in it. I don't want you to be uncomfortable.”

From behind me, I can feel the weight of Leslie's, Carly's, and Peyton's incredulous stares. But I shake my head. “It's not that bad,” I tell her. “We'll put a slit in the back. Right?”

The seamstress nods in agreement.

“And you don't think the fabric is too heavy?” Erika worries aloud.

“Nah. It'll keep us tame on the dance floor.”

Behind me Peyton sighs audibly.

“Are you sure?” Erika asks, trying to temper the excitement in her voice.

“I'm sure,” I say, running my hand over the insidious green belt. “Besides, look at this.”

Erika smiles hopefully. “The belt?”

I smile back as convincingly as I can. “The belt makes the dress.”

Twenty-One

T
he bridal party is scheduled for a lobster dinner cruise aboard the
Mystic Whaler
tonight, courtesy of Trent's family. The schooner will take us out to Fishers Island, a place I've been excited to share with Evan since I first told him I grew up in Mystic. With the dress fittings complete, I want nothing more than to run home for a nap before I have to shower and get dressed in time to meet everyone at the pier. On the way home, I take a turn onto a side street too sharply. Something rolls out from under the seat of my car and hits my foot. Startled, I reach down to retrieve it and lift up Emory's bright green teething ball. It's all the excuse I need.

Cam's Jeep is in the driveway, and I'm relieved to see that his parents' cars are not. I park and jog up the walkway. No sooner have I stepped up to the front door than I notice a figure bent among the garden beds across the yard. It's Mrs. Wilder.

She kneels, her gloved hands working quickly as she carves small divots in the border. Beside her is a tray of pink and white pansies. “Mrs. Wilder?”

She turns, her trowel poised above the soil. Mrs. Wilder's expression is flat, her normally tidy brown bob frayed with the day's humidity.

“I guess you've heard,” she says, sitting back on her haunches.

I hesitate, unsure of what she means. “Is everything okay?”

“Emory's back at Yale.” She turns back to the garden bed. I watch her complete the row of divots she'd been working on, as I stand there trying to make sense of what she's just said—one, two, three more small holes. Then, discarding the trowel roughly, she reaches for the plastic tray of flowers. “She has thrombosis, but she's stable now. I just left them a couple hours ago.” She plucks a clump of pansies from the tray and separates the roots.

“I had no idea. When?”

Mrs. Wilder tucks the flowers into a hole, patting them snugly into the ground. “Emory seemed fine after the procedure on Wednesday, but yesterday morning she starting showing symptoms of low oxygen and her leg was turning blue.” She pauses, and wipes the back of her hand across her forehead. “They took her to Lawrence Memorial, then transferred her right over to Yale.”

“I'm so sorry. Is she going to be all right?”

She seizes her trowel and looks at me. “She has to be.”

I have never seen Mrs. Wilder looking like this. She has always been a somewhat intimidating, if polite, woman, a protective mother of her only son. Now, sitting among the vigor of her flower beds, she appears hollowed out. “Is there anything I can do to help? Would you like a ride to the hospital, when you go back?” I am babbling, unsure of what to offer, unsure of what the Wilders would even need right now.

“No, thank you. I was there all night. I just came home to rest.”

I look at the garden bed and it's then I register the
numerous piles of plastic flower trays, discarded and tossed aside, all around the yard. The borders of each bed are freshly overturned, the dark soil baking already to a pale brown in the sun. “Why don't you come inside and have a glass of water?” I ask. She looks down at her shaking gloves, smeared with dirt. I almost expect her to ask me to leave.

Instead, she rises uneasily. “Okay,” she says.

She holds the back door open for me, and when I realize that she hasn't followed me into the kitchen, I hesitate. I find her in the living room, lying on the couch.

There is a pitcher of iced tea in the refrigerator. I fill a glass. But instead of bringing it to her, I start opening cabinets. I find what I'm looking for in a bottom drawer. It's the red tin tray that I have seen Mrs. Wilder use over the years to serve. To serve bowls of Jell-O, in every color, the Christmas that Cameron had his tonsils out. To bring us lemonade on their back porch, the first summer we dated. The red paint has faded and there are small dings along its edges. But now I pull out the familiar tray and place her iced tea on it along with a bowl that I fill with some yogurt. I find a banana on the counter and slice it quickly, adding it to the mix.

When I return to the living room, Mrs. Wilder's eyes are closed. They flutter open as I approach. She looks surprised to see me, but I motion for her to stay where she is and pass her the cold glass. Her eyes water when I press it into her open hand.

I am two exits away from Yale. Mrs. Wilder is back at home, hopefully still resting on the living room couch. Erika is at the club with Peyton and Mrs. Crane, going over the menu one last time.
Evan and the men will be playing golf until the dinner cruise. He does not understand what I am doing.

“What do you mean you're driving to New Haven? Where are you now?” he'd said.

“It's my friend Cam. His little girl, the one I told you about, is back in the hospital.”

He'd hesitated, and I wondered which had given him more pause: the mention of Cam again, or the fact that there was a seriously ill child. “I'm sorry to hear that. But tell me again why you're going there?”

“Because it's serious,” I'd snapped.
Because he may need me
.

Evan didn't argue, but his tone was curt. “So I take it you'll be back in time for the river cruise.” It wasn't so much a question.

“I'll call you when I know more,” I'd said, before hanging up.

I take the elevator up to the pediatric cardiology wing. Cam's father is with him, Mrs. Wilder had said. As I walk down the corridor past patients' rooms, I wonder what I will say to them, but then I remind myself that I don't really have to say anything. I'm here.

The nurse at the main desk tells me in no uncertain terms that it's family visitation only when I stop to inquire about Emory's room number. I don't even hesitate. “I'm her mom,” I lie. She looks at me funny, and I realize that I would know where my child's room was if I were truly Emory's mother. If I were Lauren, I would be in there already, with her.

But she points down the hall. “Eleven A.”

I force myself to slow down as I reach the doorway. Outside I take a deep breath, and smooth my hair.

When I step inside the room, I'm surprised to see three silent figures hovered around the bed. Two men, Cam and his father, have their backs to me. But the third is on the other side of the bed, facing my direction. She looks up when I halt in the doorway. Her blond hair frames the angles of her face, her eyes a lucid blue against her pained expression. I recognize her immediately from the picture in Cam's room. It's Lauren.

Cam sits beside me in the cardiac waiting room, playing with a stray thread on his T-shirt.

“How is she?”

“She's stable now,” he says, his voice thin with fatigue. “Last night—” he begins, then stops. He returns his attention to the stray thread. I watch as he tugs it gently, then tears it off.

“I just heard,” I say. “I was in such a rush to get here, but I should've run downstairs and gotten you a change of fresh clothes. Or something.”

He looks at me. “You were at my house?”

“I was returning something.” I fumble with my purse. When I hand Cam the green teething ball, his fingers shake. He presses it to his nose and closes his eyes.

I reach around the breadth of Cam's shoulders and squeeze. He doesn't cry. We sit in silence, side by side on the bench. Finally he clears his throat. “Dr. Weil did more imaging. The patch appears to be holding and the blood clot is breaking up. As long as she responds to the heparin, we should be out of the woods, for now.”

I lean my head against his arm. “Thank God. All I could
think about on the drive here was seeing her.” But Lauren is here now, I remember. And this is not my place.

After a while Cam runs his hands through his hair and stands. I let my arm fall away. “I've got to get back.” He looks down at me. “Thank you for coming, Griff.”

I nod. But it's too soon for me to go. There are too many unknowns. What does it mean that Lauren is here? And is she going to stay? They're questions I have no right to ask of Cam, especially not now.

Cam motions for me to follow, and I do, uncertainly. When I arrived and saw them standing over her bed together, I'd halted in the doorway. Cam had turned to me, then, and walked me wordlessly to the waiting room. I didn't even get close enough to Emory to see her.

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