chapter
14

On Saturday, my parents arrived early, not too long after lunch. Distressed at how washed-out and tired my mother had appeared when I last saw her, I had called and invited them over for dinner. After depositing Mother with me, Daddy and Paul disappeared almost immediately, heading for Galway Bay, the pub around the corner, to bend an elbow over a beer or three and trade corny jokes with Fintan, the owner’s irrepressible brother. Mother and I adjourned to the kitchen where she sat bolt upright in a chair, her hair, closer to the color of apricots in the artificial light, curling damply and in sharp contrast against her pale cheeks.

“Thanks for having us over, Hannah. If you hadn’t asked, I would have hinted. I just couldn’t face cooking today, and I know your father is getting tired of carryout.”

I was making lasagna from scratch, a favorite recipe that used meatballs instead of crumbled hamburger. I dumped a cup of seasoned bread crumbs mixed with Parmesan cheese into the ground round, added an egg, and began kneading the mixture with my bare hands. “We’ll have salad with this, and garlic bread.”

“Sounds delicious. What can I do to help?”

I held up a hand, gooey with meat mixture. “Absolutely nothing. Just sit, drink your tea, and keep me company.” I pinched a bit of the mixture from the bowl and began rolling it between my palms, forming a meatball about three-quarters of an inch in diameter. “And I’ll tell you the story of Julie and the Sheets.” I tossed the meatball into a hot frying pan, pinched off some more of the meat mixture, and began shaping another.

“Julie and the Sheets? Sounds like a rock band. I can’t wait.”

By the time I finished my tale, eight more meatballs were sizzling in the pan and my mother was sprawled in her chair, convulsed with laughter. “Scott is such a stick! Just the picture of him romping around, draped in a sheet …” Mother wiped her eyes with a napkin. “That’s just too funny!”

“And Julie tells me Georgina wore pink. Even in her selection of recreational toga wear, your youngest daughter remains resolutely fashion-conscious.”

The smile slid from her face. “What are we going to do about Georgina, Hannah?”

I dropped another meatball into the frying pan. “I honestly don’t know, Mother.” I didn’t dare share the information I had learned posing as a police official to make highly illegal telephone calls. She would have scolded. But I did mention my visit to the therapy group and my conversation afterward with Gwen and Mindy. Mother seemed enormously cheered when I told her about the Cabbage Patch doll. “I’m sure it will sort itself out,” I said. “Georgina is interviewing new therapists as we speak. Diane Sturges was just one bad apple in a very large basket of good ones. Surely she’ll find somebody competent.”

“I hope you’re right.” She stirred her tea. “Want to know what I’ve been doing since Tuesday?”

I turned my head and raised a questioning eyebrow.

“I’ve been surfing the Internet.”

“You? No way.”

“I went over that information you got from L. K. Bromley and started hunting on the Internet for information on childhood sexual abuse.” She leaned forward in her chair. “It’s all very distressing, I’m afraid. While I have no doubt that there are adults out there who were sexually abused as children, people who may well have wiped the memory of abuse clean out of their minds, I’m equally convinced that Georgina’s memories are totally false.”

“We all know she wasn’t abused, Mother, so the memories must be false. And if so, we have to ask ourselves: Where did they come from?”

“That damn therapist,” my mother said. “Over the past few days I’ve read articles about hundreds of young women like Georgina, and I think I can see how it happened.”

I turned my back to the stove. “How?”

“Well, a patient comes in with a list of symptoms. If the therapist believes in recovered memory and tends to see sexually abused children around every corner …” She extended her hands, palms up, and shrugged. “I rest my case.”

I remembered my conversation with Mindy and Gwen, about our present condition being the result of some dreadful, long-hidden event in our past. I paraphrased Gwen. “I see your point. If I’m an alcoholic, I must be trying to drown the evil memory. If I try to slit my wrists, it’s because I hate myself for allowing Uncle Hugo to take advantage of me.”

“Exactly. And Georgina’s a textbook case.”

“How so?”

“She’s depressed. Reason unknown.”

“If I were married to Scott, I’d be depressed, too.”

“Hannah, mind your manners.”

“Sorry. Go on.”

“It’s all so scriptlike. She had stomachaches. Recurring nightmares. She wet her bed until she was ten.”

“What does that say about sexual abuse?”

“If the bed is wet, who’d want to crawl into it?”

“Oh, gawd, Mother. That’s gross.”

“Your sister took an overdose of sleeping pills at fourteen—”

I spun around, the lasagna forgotten. “What? You never told me that!”

“You were away at college.” She moistened her lips. “It was exam time and I didn’t want to worry you, honey.”

“Jeez, Mom. What else haven’t you told me?”

She ignored my question. “The point is, it all fits a pattern. It’s a red flag that screams ‘child abuse.’ ” Her violet eyes widened. “Even if it didn’t happen.”

“So what else did you learn online?” I returned to rolling up the meatballs.

“That there are parents in easy reach of my modem who’ve been falsely accused of abusing their children.” She pushed her cup, still full of tea, away. “I can’t tell you how much comfort it gives me to know that there’s a logical reason behind Georgina’s delusions—that those memories were planted there by an irresponsible therapist. I’m confident that over time, she’ll come to realize this and change her story.”

I hoped my mother was right. I turned my attention to the simmering sauce, tasting it with a wooden spoon and adding a slug of Tabasco. I was rolling up the last of the meatballs when the telephone rang. “Could you get that, Mom? My hands are a mess.”

Mother pushed herself out of her chair and moved to the telephone with uncustomary slowness, as if every bone in her body hurt. She reached for the receiver. “Hello?”

Her face transformed itself from blank indifference to surprise, then to shock. “I beg your pardon?”

I looked up from the sizzling meatballs. “Who is it?” I whispered.

Mother listened a few more seconds, then slammed the receiver into its cradle. She returned to her place at the table and sat down with an audible plop.

“Who was it?” I asked again.

“I don’t know! He frightened me, Hannah. It was a man’s voice, but he didn’t identify himself. He just growled into the receiver, ‘We know who you are. Cut it out or you’ll be sorry.’ ” She studied me seriously. “He thought I was you. Then he said, ‘Leave Diane Sturges’s patients alone.’ What did he mean by that, Hannah?”

I pumped some soap onto my palm and washed the meat off my hands in the sink, keeping my back to my mother until I figured out what I was going to say. I felt like a high school kid trying to decide how much of the fun at a slumber party I was going to tell her about. Mother had enough on her mind without my sharing with her everything I’d been up to. I turned to face her. “After I found out Georgina had been involved with that therapy group at All Hallows Church, and I talked with some of the women … maybe I upset someone.”

“Who the hell was that, then?” She gestured toward the telephone. “It certainly wasn’t a woman!”

“I don’t know.” I sat down next to her, drying my hands on my apron. “It could be the husband of one of the women. A father, maybe.” I tried to make light of the situation. “It could even have been Scott, I suppose, disguising his voice.”

“It wasn’t Scott. I would have known Scott.”

“I know one way to find out.” I crossed to the telephone and pressed the review button on our caller ID. “Damn. Unknown. The bastard was blocking his number.” I reached out and patted her hand. “It’s nothing to worry about. Somebody’s nose is out of joint is all.”

She grasped my chin and turned my head so that she could look directly into my eyes. “Speaking of noses, are you sure you aren’t poking yours in somewhere it doesn’t belong?”

“Yes, Mother,” I lied.

“You don’t have a good track record on minding your own business, as I recall.”

“No, Mother.”

I rose and picked up the loaf of French bread from the counter and set it on a cutting board in front of her. I handed her a serrated knife. “Here. Would you slice it for me?”

“Be happy to. On the diagonal?”

I nodded. Mother began carefully slicing the bread while I returned to the stove and moved the meatballs around the pan to keep them from burning. I had just put the lasagna noodles on to boil when I heard the front door slam. “Finally! Our menfolk are home from the perilous hunt.” I rested the spatula on the edge of the pan. “We’re in the kitchen,” I shouted.

But it wasn’t Paul or my father. I knew it when I heard the surprise in my mother’s voice. “Well, hello.”

I paused in my stirring and turned around. Georgina stood in the doorway between the kitchen and the dining room, her green coat unbuttoned, revealing a scoop-necked T-shirt tucked into a pair of slim blue jeans. “I … I didn’t expect to see you here,” she stammered.

Mother laid the knife down carefully next to the cutting board. “But I’m glad you’re here, sweetheart. I’ve been wanting to talk to you.”

“Well, I don’t want to talk to you, Mother. And you can stop sending me those articles.”

I looked from my mother to my sister. “What articles?”

Georgina answered, “Those damn false-memory articles.” She stood in the door and seemed prepared to stare Mother down.

“You were such a wonderful, happy child until all this happened, Georgina. You’ve been brainwashed by that therapist. She planted those awful memories in your head.”

Georgina threw her purse down on the floor. “For the love of God, Mother. You don’t understand anything! Why would my therapist put ideas into my head? Why would I have gone into therapy if I hadn’t been abused? I didn’t need a therapist to convince me I’d been abused, for Christ’s sake, I went to therapy for help because I had been abused!”

Mother gazed at the spectacle of her youngest daughter with sad eyes. A tear rolled down her cheek.

Georgina, who must have noticed our mother beginning to cry, ignored it. “And that part about my having been a happy child is a crock! I wanted to die, Mother!” She slumped back against the doorjamb. “Sometimes I just wanted to die.”

Mother rose from her chair, supporting herself by holding on to the table. “Why did you tell the police that your father abused you, Georgina? I just want to understand.”

“Because he did!”

“How can you say these terrible things about your father? He never harmed a hair on your head.” She turned to me. “Tell her, Hannah!”

But Georgina didn’t give me the chance. “You can believe that lie if you want to, Mother. But it happened. I was molested. And your denial is not going to change that fact!”

Mother took a step toward my sister, her arms outstretched. “Georgina …”

But Georgina backed away. I stood there, helpless, wanting to intervene but not knowing what to say. When Georgina spoke again, her voice was laced with venom. “The day I came home from the hospital after getting my tonsils out, Daddy came into my room, ripped the covers off my bed, and raped me.”

Mother fell back against the table. “Oh, my God!” Mother’s eyes were pleading. “How can she say that, Hannah?”

“Georgina!” I grabbed her arm and squeezed it, hard. “Stop it! Can’t you see how much you’re upsetting her?”

“She’s upset! Ha!” Georgina leaned toward Mother, pulling away from me. “You were supposed to protect me, Mother, but you didn’t. You just stood by and let it happen. You had to have heard my screams.”

Mother’s eyes had not left my face. Suddenly she moaned and slipped to the floor.

“Mother!” I let go of Georgina, rushed to Mother’s side, and knelt down. Perhaps she had fainted. I grabbed Mother’s hand and rubbed it briskly, trying to coax some warmth back into it. “Mother!” The tips of her fingers were blue, and so were her lips. What was happening?

“Oh, God, Georgina. Call nine-one-one! I think she’s having a heart attack.” I desperately tried to remember what I had learned in CPR. I felt for a pulse in my mother’s neck. At first there was nothing, no movement at all under my fingers. Then I felt a flutter. Then another. But Mother remained unconscious, and her hands were cold, so very cold. I looked around the kitchen for something to throw over her. Georgina hadn’t moved, but was backed up against the wall, her eyes wild with panic.

“Give me your coat, Georgina.” Georgina seemed frozen. “Give me your coat!” I screamed. “And call nine-one-one. Now!”

Georgina snapped out of her daze, slipped out of her coat, and threw it to me. I laid it over my mother, tucking it around her sides to separate her body from the cold floor. Behind me I could hear Georgina, stirred to action at last, giving our address to the operator. In less than two minutes, I heard the reassuring wail of an ambulance coming from the fire station a short distance away.

When I looked again, Georgina was sitting on the floor under the telephone, her knees to her chin, rocking back and forth, wailing. I kept checking Mother’s pulse, praying that her heart would keep going until the ambulance arrived. “Mother,” I crooned. “Hang in there. You’re going to be all right. The ambulance is coming. I can hear it now.”

“It’s all my fault!” Georgina wailed behind me. Great sobs racked her body. She buried her face against her knees. “She’s going to die, and it’s all my fault!”

I had to agree that it was Georgina’s fault, but I didn’t see how it would help the situation to tell her so. I stroked my mother’s cheek and continued to speak soothingly to her. The world had telescoped to just me and my mother on a cold kitchen floor. “They’re coming, Mother. You’re going to be fine.”

I turned to Georgina. “Go open the front door.” She raised her head and looked at me, streaks of mascara running down her cheeks. “Now!”

Georgina crawled to her feet and scrambled out of the room, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand. I heard the front door open and, a few seconds later, the thump of heavy shoes clumping across the dining room.

Two paramedics burst into the kitchen carrying a stretcher on which were balanced several pieces of boxlike equipment. I stood and moved away from my mother’s side. “I think she’s having a heart attack,” I said. “She’s got a pulse, but it’s very weak and irregular.”

I stood by, helpless, while the older of the two took her pulse, nodded to his colleague, and with swift efficiency, hooked Mother up to one of the boxes—a heart monitor. He flipped a switch and studied the digital display for a few moments. “V-tach,” he muttered. “We need to shock her out of it, pronto!”

I was aware of Georgina behind me when I heard her ragged breathing. We watched silently while the paramedic ripped my mother’s shirt open and tore it away from her chest. A single button popped and rolled away across the floor. I followed it with my eyes until I lost it under the refrigerator.

The younger paramedic, his hair cut in a blond buzz, squeezed gel from a tube onto a pair of electric paddles, then rubbed the paddles together vigorously. He laid them against my mother’s bare chest.

“Clear,” the older one shouted.

Mother’s body arched and fell.

He consulted the monitor, then shook his head. “Again. Clear.” I watched the electricity course though my mother once more.

What he saw on the monitor this time pleased him. “Better,” he said. He looked up at me. “We’ll need to take her to the hospital and get her stabilized.”

I nodded, numb. “Can I go with her in the ambulance?”

The blond one nodded.

While they bundled Mother onto the stretcher, I turned to Georgina. “Go around the corner to Galway Bay and find Daddy and Paul. Tell them what’s happened. Ask them to meet us at the hospital.”

Georgina nodded, mutely, picked up her coat from the floor, and disappeared through the back door. I trailed after the stretcher as the paramedics carried it through the dining room, into the hall, and down the front steps. Outside our house, the ambulance had drawn a small crowd. A clump of tourists clustered across the street on the sidewalk in front of the William Paca House, gawking. I barely noticed. I climbed into the ambulance and held my mother’s hand, still cold, as the ambulance screamed down Prince George to College Avenue.

Everything was a blur after that. I remember the bright lights of the emergency room as they wheeled Mother through the automatic doors and away from me. I remember a nurse asking me questions. Name. Address. Next of kin. I didn’t break down until they asked for her social security number. “How the hell am I supposed to know that?” I shouted at the nurse. She handed me a tissue and waited, her fingers poised patiently over her keyboard, until I had calmed down enough to continue. “My father will be here soon,” I assured her. “He’ll know.”

After about ten minutes, Daddy burst through the door with Paul at his heels. An orderly was just passing, an instrument tray covered with green surgical cloth in his hand. Daddy grabbed his arm. “Where is she?” he demanded. “Where’s my wife?”

“Daddy!” I ran to his side. “They’re taking care of her in there.” I pointed toward one of the emergency cubicles. “She’s got an irregular heart rhythm, Daddy. Ventricular tachycardia, someone said.”

Daddy rushed off in the direction I had pointed, but Paul hurried after him, stopping him short with a hand on his shoulder. “George, come on. Let’s sit down. I’m sure they’re doing everything they can.”

Daddy shrugged Paul’s hand away. “I need to see her. She needs to know I’m here.”

Paul approached the nurse I had just been speaking to. “This is Captain Armstrong. His wife’s just been brought in. Can he see her?”

The nurse looked up from her computer screen. “I’ll find out for you.” She tapped a number into the telephone, whispered into it, listened for a while, nodded, and hung up. “Please have a seat. Someone will be out to see you in a few minutes.”

“Oh, God!” I threw myself at Paul and melted into the circle of his arms. “That sounds bad, Paul.”

He led me to a chair, then sat down next to me. Daddy refused to sit. Straight-backed and sober, he continued pacing. “Tell me what happened,” Paul asked me. “Georgina was hysterical. I couldn’t get a sensible word out of her.”

So I told him.

“That little bitch,” he said.

“It’s not her fault. She’s confused.”

“That’s no excuse for what she just did to your mother.”

A doctor wearing a blue shirt and a red tie under his lab coat pushed through the swinging doors. Daddy ambushed him. “How’s my wife, Doctor?”

The doctor took my father by the arm. “Let’s sit down, shall we?”

I gripped Paul’s hand in terror, knowing the news couldn’t be good.

“Your wife’s got an enlarged heart, sir. She’s very weak. We’ll need to keep her here for a while and start her on some medication to stabilize her heart rhythm.”

“Will she be all right?” I asked.

“It’s too soon to tell. There appears to be considerable damage to the heart muscle, but with rest and medication, there’s a chance she’ll recover.”

“What are you doing for her?” Paul inquired.

“We’ve started her on amiodarone and wheeled her down to the coronary care unit.”

“When can I see her?” Daddy demanded.

“Shortly. Be patient. I’ll send for you.”

As I watched my father’s face, the last word that came to mind was “patient.”

The next time we saw Mother, she lay on a bed in the coronary care unit in a small glassed-in cubicle near the nurses’ station. An IV disappeared into her arm, a monitor beeped next to her bed, and oxygen hissed through a tube into her nose, but she was awake.

“Hannah …” she whispered.

Daddy took up a post next to his wife and held her hand.

“They say you’re going to be fine, Mother.”

“What a liar!” Mother managed a weak smile.

“Your heart’s enlarged,” I told her.

“I guess this means I have to give up cigarettes again.”

I looked at Paul. “All is not lost. The woman still has a sense of humor.”

A nurse appeared. “I’ll give you five more minutes. But she really needs to rest.”

“Can I stay?” My father’s face was lined with worry.

The nurse softened. “Of course. I’ll just bring you a chair.”

I kissed my mother good-bye, hugged my father, and walked down the corridor to the snack bar, where Paul bought us each a coffee. I was halfway through it before I thought to ask. “Where’s Georgina?”

“Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.”

I knew Paul was just trying to cheer me up, quoting Rhett Butler like that, but suddenly it all came crashing down on me. My mother’s health; my father’s reputation; Georgina’s mental state; my own upcoming surgery; and the mess I had left in the kitchen back home. The floodgates opened. I put my head down on my arms and began to sob. I felt Paul’s hand, soft upon my back, his gentle breath against my ear. “Hannah, Hannah, it’s going to be all right.”

“No, it isn’t,” I wailed. “It’s all turned to shit! And on top of everything else, I’ve ruined the lasagna.”