Book Read Free

Truths I Never Told You (ARC)

Page 22

by Kelly Rimmer


  his potential, and I know that one day he’s going to be a great

  man,” she sighed. “And for all of his faults, and I know he has

  many, I still love my place in his life. I know you two don’t see

  eye to eye on a lot of things, but if you could see each other the

  way I see you, I just know you’d love each other.”

  “I don’t want to find a place in a man’s life at all. I just want

  to be in charge of my own life.”

  “You have such a unique way of viewing the world, sister.”

  “There are plenty of women who feel as I do,” I assured her.

  “And they are finding the strength to speak out, more and more

  every day. A hundred years from now things will be very dif-

  ferent.”

  She gave me a weak smile, then turned to look out the win-

  dow again. After a while she reached across and took my hand

  and squeezed it. Hard.

  “I don’t know how I’ll ever repay you for this. I feel like I was

  headed for a head-on collision with disaster, but you jumped in

  and intervened and now I’m going to walk away unscathed.”

  “Tell me about what it’s like for you when you had the chil-

  dren. Do you think you’re just prone to the ‘baby blues’ more

  than others?”

  “I don’t know what it is. But whenever I’ve been pregnant

  and had a child, I feel like an ungodly fog descends on me, and it

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 190

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  Truths I Never Told You

  191

  takes me at least a year to claw my way out. Having Beth nearly

  killed me, and feeling like that with another baby? I wouldn’t

  survive it.” She drew in a sharp breath, then admitted very qui-

  etly, “I’ve been a terrible mother, Maryanne.”

  “Don’t say that,” I protested. “Why on earth would you think

  such a thing?”

  “I let them down all the time when they were small. You

  have no idea how dreadful I was in the early days after each

  birth. Some days with the twins, I’d forget to feed one…prob-

  ably both. Tim is four years old and he knows how to organize

  lunches now, because I’ve been through this twice since he was

  born, and he’s had to grow up too fast. In the summer I let Beth

  crawl around some days without a diaper because I couldn’t be

  bothered to change her. I had days where I cried from the min-

  ute I woke up until the minute I went to sleep. The misery just

  felt endless, even when I’d done this before and I knew it would

  pass if I just held on.”

  “Didn’t you have friends to help? I know Mother and Father

  haven’t been good to you lately, but surely there were others

  you could call.”

  She sighed and shook her head.

  “I know it doesn’t make any sense at all, but the sadder I get,

  the less I’m able to reach out and so all of my friends drifted

  away. It’s like I curl up into a miserable ball, even when I know

  that doing so makes everything else worse.”

  “Why didn’t you tell me about this?”

  “I tried. I sat down to write you last year after Beth, but I

  was mortified to admit how awful things were,” she murmured.

  “Are you really telling me you’d cry all of the time? What

  was Patrick doing during all of this?”

  “He took me to the doctor once, but the doctor just said I

  needed to be stronger. Patrick didn’t understand—I’m convinced

  he thought I wasn’t trying hard enough. He just wanted me to

  handle myself better.”

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 191

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  192

  Kelly Rimmer

  “So you were on your own, depressed for months on end,

  with no relief?” I surmised grimly, thinking that the next time

  I saw my brother-in-law, we were going to have words.

  “Well, I have found an outlet recently. I’ve been writing these

  notes to myself. It probably sounds a little silly, but just sitting

  down and scrawling my thoughts out on paper has helped me

  a bit since Beth. Even today I wrote one before we left…about

  what we’re doing today. About how grateful I am to you.”

  “You wrote a confession letter and named me in it, then left it in the house for Patrick to find?” I gasped. Grace laughed softly.

  “Maryanne, I’ve been doing this for over a year and he’s

  never even come close to finding my notes. I keep them in the

  last place he’d ever think to look for them, believe me. And

  they help me so much, I do think it’s worth the risk. It’s like

  jotting those words down on paper gives me the chance to see

  them with fresh eyes, and sometimes once they’re out, the bad

  thoughts aren’t as big as they seem when they’re locked up in

  my mind.”

  I was still unnerved, if a little relieved to hear this “note”

  wasn’t sitting out in the open somewhere. And I knew she was

  probably getting nervous about the procedure as the city drew

  nearer, but I decided that later, when it was all over, I’d ask her

  to destroy that note. I couldn’t risk my part in this coming out

  somewhere down the line—I wasn’t at all ashamed of what we

  were doing, but the risk to my career was simply too great.

  “Have you thought about what happens after this?” I asked

  her instead. “How you’ll make sure you don’t end up in this

  position again?”

  “I just don’t know. I’ll be sure stay out of Patrick’s bed for

  a long while after this. And…well, we did manage to avoid a

  pregnancy for some months just by…” She paused, then flushed

  furiously as she muttered, “Well, we found a way, anyway.”

  “Was he pulling out?” I asked her.

  “Maryanne!” she gasped. “Don’t talk about these things.”

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 192

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  Truths I Never Told You

  193

  “Oh, Gracie, there’s no shame in it. Pulling out works some of

  the time, but if you really don’t want another baby, then maybe

  you need to get yourself a diaphragm. Or better yet, find a doc-

  tor who will give you a hysterectomy. Then you know you don’t

  have to worry about it anymore.”

  “Patrick always wanted a big family,” Grace said softly.

  “Patrick gets you pregnant and leaves you to deal with the af-

  termath.”

  “Maybe if some more time passes and Beth and the kids grow

  up some more…then maybe I’d be able to cope with another

  baby when one comes.”

  “Do you even want more children, Grace?”

  “What I want doesn’t matter,” she laughed softly, slightly

  confused, more than a little bitter. “Babies don’t come when

  you want them.”

  “You shouldn’t have to keep having pregnancy after preg-

  nancy until it kills you.”

  “I just have to hope that’s not my destiny.”

  “You control your destiny. That’s why we’re doing this today,

  because you know what you want and you have every right to

  make it happen for yourself.”

  “Maybe,�
� she murmured. I sighed and pulled the car over to

  park beside a clothing store. When I flicked the ignition off,

  neither one of us moved.

  “What time is it?” Grace asked me. I glanced down at my

  watch and butterflies rose in my stomach.

  “We have ten minutes to walk to the meeting point.”

  Grace breathed in, then exhaled.

  “Okay.”

  “Are you scared?” I asked.

  “Kind of. Mostly, I just wish you could come with me.”

  “Me, too,” I said softly, but then I felt compelled to reassure

  her. “But everything is going to be fine, Grace. You’ll see. A

  few hours from now we’ll be home and it will all be over.”

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 193

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  194

  Kelly Rimmer

  * * *

  Grace and I walked slowly on our way to the meeting point,

  striding so close that our arms kept colliding. A heavy cloud

  cover had come over, casting shadows down onto the footpath,

  and the air felt charged with danger as we neared our destina-

  tion. I could hear Grace’s breathing was heavier than it should

  be, and when I glanced at her, she was positively green. I wanted

  to promise her that everything was going to be fine. Women

  had abortions every day. I wasn’t sure why I couldn’t say what

  I needed to in order to reassure her. It felt like the words were

  stuck in my throat, and no matter how I tried, I couldn’t con-

  vince myself to say them. Maybe it was because, despite my bra-

  vado, I knew on some level that there was a very real chance

  that everything wouldn’t be fine.

  When we reached the mouth of the alley, we slowed to a

  stop, and we stood in complete silence for a long moment. Grace

  wrapped her arms around her waist, took a sharp breath in then

  exhaled slowly.

  “You’ll wait here, won’t you?” she whispered, her gaze des-

  perately searching mine. “Out of sight so he doesn’t get upset

  with me. But I’ll feel a bit better if I know you’re here.”

  “Of course,” I promised. I actually had every intention of

  following the car, but I didn’t want to promise her that I’d be

  right behind her, because I knew that keeping up with him was

  a long shot in the busy city traffic.

  Grace drew in another deep breath, then threw her arms

  around me. I hugged her back, my arms locked tight, feeling

  somehow that I could keep her safe just by embracing her with

  all of my strength.

  But then in the distance, I heard a clock strike twelve, and

  we both knew she had to go. The alley was clear for now, but

  the man was due any minute. Grace disentangled herself from

  me, took a step back and offered a wan smile.

  “I’ll see you at two o’clock.”

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 194

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  Truths I Never Told You

  195

  “Two o’clock sharp,” I promised.

  “I don’t know how I’ll ever repay you for this.”

  “Knowing you’re well will be repayment enough.”

  “I love you, Mary.”

  “And I love you, too, sister. See you soon.”

  Grace nodded and turned and walked into the road, disap-

  pearing into the shadows and the dismal gray of a city road at

  noon on an overcast day.

  I did as promised. I lurked just beyond the top of the alley,

  standing in front of a restaurant with a book in my hand. I hoped

  it looked as though I was waiting for someone to join me for

  a lunch date. Only a few minutes passed before I saw a faded

  lemon Ford emerge from the alley. A man was in the driver’s

  seat and at first, I thought it must be a different car because I

  couldn’t see Grace in the back. Only when he passed did I see

  the blanket over the backseat, and the unmistakable shape of

  someone beneath it.

  I closed the book and walked briskly to my car. As the Ford

  waited for a break in the busy traffic, I opened the car door with

  shaking hands and slipped inside. On first attempt, the engine

  stalled, and I swore and shook a little harder as I tried again. Fi-

  nally, the car spluttered to life, just as the Ford passed. I wanted

  to look calm. I couldn’t afford to panic and drive erratically and

  rouse suspicion. Dad’s car was already eye-catching enough—a

  near-new aqua Chevrolet Bel Air.

  So my instincts were to pull out without indicating and to

  gun the engine to catch up with the man, but I waited until an-

  other car passed, and then in the smallest of gaps, slipped into

  the traffic behind it. For several blocks I managed to hang just a

  car or two behind the yellow Ford, and my heart rate was start-

  ing to settle and I was actually starting to think I’d be able to

  follow him all the way to wherever he was going.

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 195

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  196

  Kelly Rimmer

  Then a traffic light turned amber, and just as I prepared to flat-

  ten my foot to race through it, the car in front of me stopped dead.

  I sat behind that car as the light turned red, watching as the

  lemon Ford carrying my sister disappeared from view.

  It’s no exaggeration to say that it was the longest afternoon

  of my life. By two o’clock I felt like I’d been waiting weeks in-

  stead of hours. I was already at the alley, tapping my toe impa-

  tiently against the concrete of the footpath, glancing toward the

  sky that was darkening ominously. I had a blister forming in my

  right heel and I’d been sweating so much that my nylon dress

  was clinging to me all over. I bought a sandwich at a nearby

  deli, but it now sat untouched in a nearby bin. I was hungry

  enough to feel a little light-headed, but I’d raised the food to

  my lips a few times, only to find my stomach was turning over

  so violently I couldn’t manage a single bite.

  By two-fifteen, I was pacing between a stack of trash bins

  and the roller door of a garage. I jumped at every sound, and

  when a car finally turned into the alley, my knees went weak

  with relief. But it wasn’t the yellow Ford. It was an olive-green

  Chevy, and the driver gave me an odd look at my rapidly fad-

  ing smile, then drove right past me.

  By two forty-five, I could feel myself hyperventilating. She

  was forty-five minutes late and there was no longer any avoiding

  the “what-ifs,” but once I opened that floodgate in my mind,

  I was quickly overwhelmed. I sank onto the curb and forced

  myself to take some deep breaths because I wasn’t going to help

  anyone if I actually passed out.

  By three o’clock, I’d returned to my father’s car and found

  the tattered piece of paper with the unregistered doctor’s phone

  number on it, and I was frantically looking for a pay phone in

  the blocks around the road, no longer trying to stay calm, and

  no longer trying to look inconspicuous.

  I finally found a pay phone. It took me six attempts to dial

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977
.indd 196

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  Truths I Never Told You

  197

  the number because my hands were shaking so violently. The

  busy signal echoed in my ear, so I tried again, and again, and

  then I ran back to the road again, and I checked at the car in

  case she’d found her way there somehow, and then I ran back

  to the pay phone and tried again.

  I repeated this cycle over and over, trying to convince myself

  that any minute now the call would connect and the “doctor”

  would give me a very reasonable explanation for the delay or

  that Grace herself would wander around a corner and tell me

  she’d simply gotten lost.

  Grace is fine. I kept telling myself she was definitely fine.

  She had to be—she had four children at home who desperately

  needed her. I desperately needed her. The universe wouldn’t be

  so cruel as to have her harmed when I was only trying to help.

  When I ran out of change, I managed to convince the at-

  tendant at the deli that I’d had a family emergency, and he let

  me use a phone in his apartment upstairs. I sweated as I raced

  through the entries in the telephone book, calling hospitals,

  praying someone had information about my sister. My attempts

  at conversation were embarrassingly unclear because I was so

  flustered I could barely explain what I needed.

  “Grace Walsh…but maybe she’s not admitted under that

  name. Maybe she’s just been dropped off injured and you don’t

  know who she is yet. Have you had any unidentified women

  admitted this afternoon…? Do you have a women’s ward? Could

  you ask them?” And then finally, when I grew still more des-

  perate, “I don’t know what you call the wards but I know you

  have places where women go. The women who’ve had failed

  abortions. Could you please check there?”

  “We have two,” the clerk said curtly. “The sepsis ward, or

  the palliative care ward?”

  “Oh, God. Check both.”

  When my calls turned up nothing, I had started driving from

  emergency room to emergency room. One hospital did have

  Truths I N_9781525804601_ITP_txt_275977.indd 197

  8/23/19 8:20 AM

  198

  Kelly Rimmer

  a Jane Doe recently admitted and I waited half an hour to see

  her, but she turned out to be a stranger.

  In the early hours, all I could think about was Grace. I was

  terrified for her—frantic only at the thought that she might be

 

‹ Prev