Just one more hour until I leave for the airport.
Seven hours until I land in Seattle.
Eight hours until I see Henry.
I pause my last-minute packing to peer at my flight reservations for the hundredth time, my chest filled with only excitement by the prospect of being back there. Miles put me in first class to Seattle. Henry will pick me up in his jet and weâll fly to the private airstrip. From there, itâs just a quick ferry ride and Iâll be at Wolf Cove again.
Itâs going to be weird. Iâm no longer an employee there and that means that everyoneâs going to know about Henry and me.
Jed trudged around like a sour child all day yesterday, but he hasnât said a word in protest. Neither has Mama, oddly enough. She sniffed a little at dinner last night, acting hurt, waiting for me to console her. When I didnât fall for it, she reluctantly agreed with Daddy that I deserved to get away for a few days. That Iâd been working hard and I had every right to go.
It was rather odd, but Iâm guessing Reverend Enderbey had a hand in that because I heard her on the phone with him. Heâs still trying to convince her that time will change things. That Iâll break up with Henry like Jed broke up with Cammie, and weâll find ourselves back together. I donât know when theyâll finally accept thatâ
A loud crash sounds downstairs.
I take the steps two at a time. âMama? Daddy?â When I get to the kitchen, I let out a scream. Mama is sprawled out in the middle of the kitchen floor, gasping for air, her hand on her chest over her heart.
âI need an ambulance!â My dad demands into the phone receiver. He was sitting in his wheelchair having his breakfast. Luckily, the phone was within reach.
âMama!â I dive to the floor.
âIt hurts!â she manages to get out through gasps.
âDaddy, I think sheâs having a heart attack!â It wouldnât be surprising. Both Great-Grandma Pearl and Grandma Maggie died of heart attacks, though Mamaâs young yet.
âDoes your left arm hurt?â
Her eyes widen. âYes!â She grabs her arm and moans.
Oh my God. I canât believe this is happening. Sheâs only thirty-nine years old. âOkay, hold on, Mama! The ambulance is coming!â
She paws for my hand, grasping it tightly until the paramedics arrive. âStay with me, Abigail. Iâm scared.â
âOf course!â Tears sting my eyes. âI would never leave you.â
Celeste Enderbey arrives just as theyâre wheeling Mama into the ambulance. She must have heard the sirens wailing. âWhat do they think it is?â
âThey donât know. Her heart rate is all over the place.â
Celeste squeezes my arm. âYou go ahead, Iâll stay here with Roger.â
I wedge myself in the corner as the paramedics hook Mama up to all kinds of machines, managing to keep hold of her hand the entire time.
The ambulance races toward the hospital and I pray.
Everything else is forgotten.
~ ~ ~
âIndigestion?â
I stare at the doctor, waiting for him to correct what I thought he just said, because I must have heard wrong.
âHonestly? I donât know what else could have caused the pain. Iâve gone through the tests several times. Everything has come back clean. Even her heart is fine. Surprising, to be blunt. All I could see was some irritation in her esophagus, common to acid reflux.â
âIâve been sitting in this hospital for twenty-eight hours because of gas? I missed my flight to Seattle because my mother ate pizza?â
He gives me a sympathetic smile. âWith her family history and her weight, we had to run the tests to make sure. And her heart rate was irregular when she came in.â
âYes, of course. Iâm glad you did. Iâm sorry, I donât mean to soundâ¦.â Ungrateful, selfish, horrible. I shake my head, still surprised. âIs it normal that gas would knock you on your back like that?â Mama was literally lying on the floor, clutching her chest.
âWell⦠peopleâs pain thresholds are different. Combine that with the high levels of anxiety your mother says sheâs been experiencing and maybe?â His expression isnât convincing. âIâm going to talk to her about making some serious changes to her diet while we finish up with the paperwork, and then I can release her. Youâre welcome to go in and see her.â
âThanks.â I watch him stroll away.
And wonder, would Mama have faked a heart attack just to keep me from going to Alaska to see Henry?
No. Sheâs stubborn and resourceful, but thatâs downright crazy.
Stillâ¦.
I eye her door for a long moment, deciding if itâs smart that I go in there right now, with this doubt brewing.
I walk past it toward the cafeteria.
~ ~ ~
âWell, thatâs just great that it turned out to be nothing. Isnât that just great?â Celeste turns in her seat to smile wide at me.
âYes. Great.â My voice lacks enthusiasm, but I canât help it. I turn to watch the roads drift by, quietly playing out the whole thing again. Her face didnât turn red, she wasnât sweating. Andâ¦. I frown as it all comes back to me. Her arm didnât seem to hurt until after I mentioned it, and then it was suddenly so painful.
Seriously, did Mama just fake a heart attack to keep me from seeing Henry?
No. Iâm horrible for thinking that.
Horrible.
âThank goodness my Abigail was here to take care of me.â Mama reaches over. âThe doctor seems very concerned about my heart. He said I need to be extra careful for the next few months, to make sure I donât aggravate it any more, what with my family history. Gosh, between me and Roger, I donât think this poor girl is going to get a momentâs rest.â
I replay the conversation in my head. Iâm pretty sure the doctor said her heart looked fine and that she needed to lose weight and not eat pizza.
She babbles on with Celeste and the Reverend, her gaze shifting to me every once in a while, just long enough to smile and pat my knee. Though each time, those smiles grow more wary.
Reverend Enderbey pulls into the gas station just outside of town. âI just need to top us up. Iâm afraid we wonât make it back.â
âIâll do it!â I hop out of the car before he even has time to unfasten his seat belt, struggling to unclench my jaw as I jam the gas nozzle into the Oldsmobile. If she was trying to keep me from seeing Henry, she has succeeded. Even if I fly to Seattle now, by the time I get to Alaska, itâll be night, and Henry is leaving for Beijing in the morning. Honestly, I considered it. I even went as far as to try and book another flight while I sat in the cafeteria, waiting for Mama to be discharged and the Enderbeys to pick us up. But nothing was available.
I wonât see Henry for weeks. Months, possibly.
Iâm fighting tears when a car pulls up beside us.
âHey, Abigail!â
I look over to see Jenny climbing out of the driver side, adjusting her skirt. Veronica and Beth are also with her, surprise, surprise. âHey, Jenny.â I canât keep the melancholy from my voice.
Veronica nods to Jenny once, a silent communication.
Jenny turns back to me. âWeâre going out tonight. Do you want to come?â
Iâve never gone out with any of them. It doesnât take a genius to see whatâs going on here. They figure they can get close to me and then have an in with Henry. And right now, all I want to do is curl up in my bed and cry anyway.
From inside the car, Mama clears her throat loudly. She doesnât approve of me going anywhere. Of course.
âMy mother just got out of the hospital. I should probably stay home.â
Jennyâs eyes flitter to the back window. âI hope sheâs okay.â
My defiant streak flares. âYeah, sheâs fine. Just bad gas,â I say, loudly enough for Mama to hear.
âOh.â Jenny presses her lips together, trying not to laugh. She lowers her voice to say, âIf you change your mind, weâre leaving out from my place at nine.â
âOkay, thanks.â I glance at my watch. Itâs two oâclock. I should be tangled in Henryâs sheets right now. Instead, Iâm pumping gas and letting Mama win. How long will I last at home before I make my suspicions known?
With each passing minute, going out with three girls I donât even like is sounding better and better.
~ ~ ~
âWhy would you say such a thing!â
I push through the screen door and into the kitchen. Daddy and Jed are sitting at the table, bewildered looks on their faces.
âWhat in heavenâs name is going on now?â Daddyâs spoonful of soup is halfway to his mouth.
âIâm fresh off the heels of a heart attack and sheâs mocking me!â Mama cries, huffing and puffing as she tries to catch up.
âYou didnât have a heart attack. You had gas!â
âWell⦠I thought it was a heart attack,â she mutters with indignation.
âDid you? Did you really?â
Her mouth drops open. âYou heard the paramedics. My heart was going haywire. What are you insinuating?â
âAbigail!â
I turn to see the harsh disappointment in my dadâs eyes and mine immediately begin to burn with tears. I take the stairs two at a time, running all the way to the bathroom, slamming the door shut behind me, somehow managing to kick the trash can over in the process as I crumple to the floor in a fit of sobs.
Guilt weighs heavily on me.
I canât believe Iâve actually convinced myself that Mama would fake a heart attack. What is happening to me? I never would have done that before. I just wanted to see Henry so badly. Is this what Daddy was talking about, when he said he didnât want me to turn into someone I couldnât be proud of?
I need to apologize to them.
Pulling a tissue from the box, I blow my nose a few times, then set to cleaning up the mess I just made.
Five small foil wrappers catch my attention. I pick one up to read the small writing on one side. And frown. Caffeine pills?
Whoâs been taking caffeine pills? And five of them. I emptied the trash for collection yesterday morning, so someone took five caffeine pills between yesterday morning andâ
Realization dawns on me. I march downstairs, wiping my tears from my cheeks with the back of my hands, an odd sense of vindication taking over.
I hold up the pill packaging in front of Jed but Iâm looking at Mama. âDo you know anything about this?â
âWhat are those? Caffeine pills? Heck, no,â Jed says.
But Iâm not even listening to him because the look on Mamaâs face says it all. She tries to smooth it over, but itâs not fast enough for me. Not even for Daddy.
He frowns as he looks from Mama to me, to the pill packaging, and back again.
âSomeone took five of these yesterday morning after I emptied the trash. Do you know something about that, Mama?â
Mamaâs eyes dart to the freshly brewed cup of coffee in her hand, that the doctor specifically asked her to cut out. âNo. I like my caffeine in a cup. Must have been⦠someone else.â
âThe only other person here was Celeste, Bernadette. Why would she take those? And why would she do it in our upstairs bathroom?â Daddyâs been married to her a long time. Long enough to see through her bullshit, too.
She swallows, feigning indifference. Something sheâs not good at doing, because there isnât anything she doesnât have a strong opinion on and, if she suspected Celeste was popping pills like this, sheâd already be on the phone. âI couldnât tell you.â
âYou took them yesterday morning to spike your heart rate, just so you could keep me from going to Alaska to see Henry.â
She opens her mouth and I know denial is coming.
âThat wasnât a question.â I toss the wrappers onto the table. âIf you ever try to interfere with me seeing Henry again, I will tell every last person in this town what you did.â
âGood Lord, Bernadette. If anyone needs their head examined, itâs you! Do you know how dangerous this is? You could have killed yourself!â
I leave them to argue because Iâm done. I march right back upstairs, intent on getting out of here. Maybe not to Alaska, but at least to wherever Jenny is planning on going. Anything is better than staying here.