HELEN DUCKED OUT of LaVyrle’s Cut ’n’ Curl and took a slow drag of fresh air, her lungs so full of hairspray that she felt buzzed. She bent her head to tuck her wallet into her purse and didn’t see the woman coming at her down the sidewalk—not until their arms bumped, jostling Helen so that she dropped her handbag to her feet, scattering its contents.
The woman let out a surprised “oh,” as a large tote bag fell from her arms, spilling out a host of legal pads, which sprawled across the sidewalk, yellow pages fluttering in the breeze.
“I’m so sorry,” they both said at once, “I didn’t see you!”
As Helen stooped to recover her pocketbook, the other woman crouched to help, and Helen realized she was looking into the tousled hair and flushed face of her granddaughter.
“Helen, Nancy? Everything all right?” a voice boomed from nearby as Bertha Beaner ambled up. “Oh, my, let me help,” she offered and set down her own oversized bag to collect the scattered legal pads Nancy had dropped.
Nancy seemed to panic, snatching yellow pages from Bertha’s hands. “I’ve got it, thank you, Mrs. Beaner,” she insisted, scrambling to shove the papers back into her tote.
“If you say so,” Bertha said and turned her back for a moment to collect her handbag. “I need to hustle anyway,” the woman said to Helen and jerked her head toward the salon. “I’ve got a date with LaVyrle.”
Helen replied, “No, don’t be late,” but she wasn’t worried about Bertha getting one of LaVyrle’s lectures once she disappeared inside. She was worried about Nancy. Something was wrong.
“Sweetie,” she asked and touched the young woman’s arm. “What’s got you in such a hurry? Have you finally decided to run away from your job with Grace Simpson?”
If she expected to elicit a smile from her granddaughter, she failed miserably.
Instead, Nancy cast a worried eye up the street and quickly shushed her. “Grace has ears like a bat,” she said under her breath, “except when I need to talk about my position.”
“So you didn’t get the chance to chat with her?” Helen knew that Nancy had been summoning up the courage to do so for the past week.
Nancy shook her head. “She basically ordered me to scram.”
Helen made a sympathetic cluck.
“Maybe I should go back to school and get my master’s sooner instead of later,” her granddaughter suggested. “I thought real-world experience would be a plus, but working for Grace is more pain than gain.”
“I’m sorry, sweetheart,” Helen said helplessly. “Like your grandpa used to tell me every time life disappointed me, all is not lost. When things don’t work out, it means there’s something better out there.”
And Helen was sure that was true in this case.
It wasn’t long after Nancy had taken the job with Grace straight out of college that Helen had realized assisting the town’s only psychotherapist wasn’t easy. Nancy often grumbled about Grace’s fear of computers and inability to type, much less do any administrative work for herself. I have to buy office supplies on my dime, Grandma, Nancy had told her, and she doesn’t reimburse me for a month.
Nancy sighed with frustration. “I thought I’d be gaining insight into the profession, but instead I’m just a glorified toady.”
“If Grace is so unbearable, maybe you should quit,” Helen said firmly.
Nancy opened her mouth to respond but ended up shaking her head. “I’m not a quitter, and you know it. Besides, she might treat me like her minion, but she really cares about the profession. She’s interested in why people do the things they do, and she honestly wants to help them.”
“Honestly?” Helen repeated and arched her eyebrows. “She sure doesn’t seem to want to help you, seeing how she’s always having you run her errands and wait for repairmen.” Her granddaughter’s duties seemed to cover everything from chauffer to lackey to laundry picker-upper. “That hardly sounds like a position with room for advancement.”
“Yeah, I thought I’d learn more about the field than about how to make really good coffee. And, yes, there are times I want to wring Grace’s neck,” Nancy said, holding tight to the tote bag and patting it. “But if this book does for Grace what I think it will, it could be a breakthrough for me as well. Being her assistant could really mean something then.”
“And you’re willing to wait and see?”
Nancy bit her lip. “I guess I am.”
Helen wasn’t sure why River Bend needed a therapist in the first place. After all, they had the resident pastor who presided over their nondenominational chapel and never ignored a plea for help. Although, Helen admitted to herself, they did seem to go through resident pastors like Kleenex. Their last preacher, Dr. Fister, had remained for only a year, and the church had scrambled to find a replacement. They had Doc Melville for medical issues and LaVyrle Hunnecker at the beauty shop for anything else. Any additional set of ears—and costly ones at that, from what Nancy had mentioned—seemed above and beyond the necessary.
Despite Helen’s misgivings, Grace Simpson had appeared to do quite well. The novelty of it had certainly drawn her clientele initially. “According to my therapist” seemed to be the anthem of the twenty-first century, even in a town as small as this.
Ah, progress, Helen mused, and her stomach rumbled.
“Are you hungry?” she asked, wondering if Nancy had dinner plans, though the girl was always so busy with work that Helen doubted it. “Nancy?”
But the young woman didn’t seem to hear. She was digging deep inside her tote, a worried frown on her face. She started looking around on the sidewalk.
“Are you all right?” Helen asked.
Nancy bit her lower lip. “Grace was being so awful, and I left in such a hurry, that I must’ve forgotten one of the legal pads in my desk.”
“Do you need to go back?” Helen asked. “Are they important?”
“Yes, they’re important, and no, I don’t want to go back.” Nancy shuddered. “I’m not in the mood for another tongue-lashing, and I wouldn’t want Grace to find out that I haven’t shredded these yet.” She patted the leather tote. “They’re the handwritten notes for Grace’s book that I finished transcribing this morning. I was supposed to have cross-shredded everything already, but I haven’t had time. If she knew I still had them—” Nancy paused and drew a finger across her throat.
“Aw, you poor, mistreated creature,” Helen teased and put an arm around the girl. “How about I buy you dinner? We’re not going to run into Attila the Therapist at the diner, are we?”
“No, Grace won’t be eating at the diner tonight,” Nancy said and looked behind her. “But we’d better get a move on or we might bump into her here on the sidewalk. Grace has a six-thirty appointment with LaVyrle and then a dinner meeting in St. Louis with her publisher. She wouldn’t let me email the book, can you believe? She wants to hand over the sole hard copy to Harold Faulkner in person.”
“Luddite,” Helen muttered, although she was enough of one herself. She preferred her old landline to the “smart” phone that Patsy, her eldest daughter and Nancy’s mother, had given her last Christmas. Maybe the phone was smart, but all its confusing bells and whistles made Helen feel pretty dumb.
“Not so much a Luddite as paranoid,” Nancy said, shifting her tote bag so she could take her grandmother’s hand. With a final glance back, she tugged Helen along, walking so quickly that Helen felt out of breath by the time they’d reached the Main Street Diner.
When they’d been seated in a booth and the waitress had brought them water and menus, Helen dared to ask, “So what do you think of the book? You’re the only one who’s seen it besides Grace, I presume.”
“Eh,” Nancy said, burying her nose in the menu.
“Don’t give me that,” Helen whispered, leaning forward. “You must have an opinion. Everyone in town’s already speculating about it.”
“No kidding.” Nancy sighed and put the menu down. “I’ve already fielded dozens of calls about Grace’s manuscript. It got so bad today that I started letting them all go to voice mail. I don’t know why Grace is so worried about who sees the thing beforehand, when she’s been dropping hints about it all over River Bend, ticking people off for weeks.” Nancy set her elbows on the table and plunked her chin into her hands. “Now everyone who’s ever been in for a session is afraid she’s put them in there.” Nancy looked over at Helen, her forehead wrinkled. “Despite the fact that Grace used pseudonyms, people are freaked out about being recognized, and I can’t blame them. This isn’t L.A. It’s more like Mayberry.”
Helen took a slow sip of water. She’d heard the gossip about Grace’s book, of course. The rumor mill ran rampant in River Bend. How could it not, with only two hundred residents and everyone seeming to know each other’s business? But talk was one thing. Having your peccadilloes exposed in black and white for the public to see was another thing entirely.
“Is it legal?” Helen finally asked. “Doesn’t Grace need permission to write about real people and their problems?”
“She’s covered so long as she doesn’t use their real names and fudges with their social standings and professions a bit,” Nancy said. “Grace checked it out with her publisher’s legal department. It’s an academic press, so they’re strict about rules.”
“Otherwise, they’d be sued out of business.”
“No doubt.” Nancy nodded, and her eyes clouded over.
“You’ve seen what’s on the pages,” Helen said, cocking her head. “Do folks have cause to worry?”
Nancy fidgeted. “Okay, so maybe I did wonder a bit if the man with the heavyset wife and impotence problem was Art Beaner and if the woman who felt her authority-figure husband had started wearing ladies’ panties because he found her unattractive was Sheriff Biddle’s wife, Sarah.”
Helen had taken a sip of water, and she had to fight to keep from spitting it out all over the table.
“But who am I to say?” Nancy went on with a shrug. “I don’t know anyone in town as well as you do, Grandma.” She reached across the table to give Helen’s hand a squeeze. “How about we forget about Grace and her stupid book and order some dinner? I don’t know about you, but I’m starved.”
Helen smiled thinly.
She was hardly the only citizen of River Bend who knew her neighbors so well that pseudonyms would not be cloak enough. And once the townsfolk got their hands on copies of Grace Simpson’s “stupid book,” she could only imagine the trouble it was going to cause.