1978
It was the hottest day of the year, no rain for weeks, the tail end of a scorching season. These health-and-beauty trade shows used to excite June, back in the days when staying at a hotel, even a Howard Johnson’s, felt special. But now shows were little more than long, solid days on her feet and a lot of extra hours. She wanted to go home, take a bath, sleep in her own bed. She had planned to start driving earlier, she didn’t like leaving Bobbie at home on her own, but her car had no air-conditioning and the heat sat heavily on the whole of the East Coast, so that the dust and humidity found her even in the shade, the forecast declaring record temperatures. Due to an engine fault she was reliant on movement to keep the car’s fan in operation, and she worried what would happen if she was stuck in traffic. She’d be stranded on four lanes of concrete, cooking.
By three o’clock, the heat had risen further. The radio reported schools, newly opened for the academic year, canceling their afternoon sports activities. Local TV stations chattered about the importance of hydration, symptoms of heat stroke, risks to the elderly. She’d already checked out of the hotel; she wanted to go home. But when she reached her car, its sauna interior unchanged even with the doors open, she turned on the radio and heard that there was a pileup on the parkway. She realized now she could hear ambulance sirens, the noise seeming to mix with the broiling sun.
The waiting and the heat and the sirens made her anxious, so she went back to the hotel and bought cupcakes from the little gift shop inside, fooling herself into believing she was buying them for Bobbie. Some minutes later, she discovered that the turnpike also had major problems and now there was no choice but to remain in the cramped hotel lobby—her room key long returned to the desk, her car motionless in the parking lot amid shivering rises of heat—for God knows how many hours.
The cupcakes were in a pretty box with a ribbon. She reached for them, then diverted herself by arranging the collection of magazines on the square glass table into a concertina. She managed a few more minutes, thumbing through the pages of the hotel’s travel magazine, the cupcakes untouched, until at last she gave in and plucked the colorful ribbon from the smooth white box. There they were, six perfectly shaped cakes, all different flavors, all laden with creamy frosting and sparkling sugar sprinkles. It was the anxiety and boredom that caused the cupcakes to disappear as, one by one, she plunged her tongue into their whipped frosting. The calories, she knew, were astronomical, and she despaired once more that everything good in life came at so high a price.
At last, the big orange sun lowered itself in the sky and the traffic report brightened. She pressed through the springy automatic doors of the hotel, meeting at once a wall of fuzzy warmth and a cloud of insects that might have been waiting for her all these hours. She looked across the parking lot and saw she’d left her passenger-side door wide open. She trotted in her heels across the asphalt, hoping there was still charge in the battery.
The seats were no longer red hot as they had been hours earlier but warm like wet towels, even inviting. She hoped that she’d be home by midnight. If all went well, Bobbie might still be awake. She would set up a fan beside her daughter’s bed, and another next to her own, curl up in the cool sheets, and get the sleep she now longed for and which would come, she knew, as soon as she closed her eyes.
But the journey was a disaster, the roads a mess, and her stomach rumbled beneath her flowery blouse from all the sugar with which she’d poisoned herself. Yes, she admitted, poisoned herself, wrecking yet another diet day, this time with the unconquerable cupcakes—six of them in total—not because she’d been that hungry but because they came in a box of six. She was ready to check herself into a fat farm, chain a leg to a vegetable patch, eat only what she could hoe. It was past time for a change, she told herself. Way past time.
She thought about men, about the way they looked with their shirts off, their chest hair, long torsos, the way they felt and smelled. It had been a long while since she’d been with a man and she couldn’t see how she would attract one if she stayed at this weight, which she saw as the great drawback to her life, the reason for everything being amiss. But she had been here before, having this same little talk with herself, and in some ways she was at home with such desperation.
She pawed at her stomach, untucking her blouse, creased and in need of laundering, then hiked her skirt above her knees to make driving easier. It was too tight, the skirt, and she recalled the days when it had hung comfortably, wondering what had happened between then and now. Cupcakes, that’s what had happened, and all their irresistible cousins: brownies, doughnuts, baked goods in general. She thumbed loose the skirt’s button, then notched down the zipper a few inches. There was no law against undressing while driving, none that she knew of anyway, and while truckers might see a little too much leg from their high vantage points, it was unlikely they’d look at her leg, which had its own defense mechanism against voyeurism, being round as a Labrador and a shade of bluish white normally associated with recovered bodies.
She tried not to think about this, nor the condition of her Plymouth sedan, and especially not the new Dorothy Hamill haircut that she felt made her round face rounder and had done nothing whatsoever to lengthen her neck, despite promises by the stylist at the salon. The haircut mistake happened, she knew, because it took no effort to change hair, while bodies took longer, possibly forever. If she’d been in any doubt of this, some unkind bastard at her weekly weigh-in had reminded her of the fact a few weeks earlier by saying that shoes and hair were the only thing fat women could control, which is why they did it.
Did what? she’d asked. She’d been standing by the buffet table, wearing a freshly ironed dress and new patent leather pumps. She’d curled her hair and polished her earrings before clipping them on. It had all been part of a new image she was trying to cultivate, to look more stylish, sophisticated.
Fuss with the hair. Buy every damned shoe, the man had said.
The weekly meeting took place in a church. On the wall above his head was a crucifix and posters of Scripture. Vases of carnations left over from Sunday wilted on tables. She ought to have said something sharp to the man, something cruel, but instead she’d asked him whether he’d ever stooped so low in his pursuit of a thinner self that he’d found himself actually envying Christ’s trim figure on the cross.
As she said this, she noticed the man widen his eyes at her. She took this as a sign of interest. She continued, explaining that she’d occasionally looked up at the image of Jesus on the cross, ignoring the bleeding feet, the pierced palms, the bloodied brow, and instead admired only his leanness. It made her think she was more desperate than others, and she wondered if it was a common thought, and whether, indeed, he’d ever felt the same.
Jesus, he’d said.
Yes. He’s always portrayed as very thin.
I meant, Jesus what a crazy thing to say.
He stared at her as though she was foul. He was not a handsome man, not someone who would normally intimidate her. He had the swollen belly of a drunk, a hernia sticking out under his shirt like the stem of a pumpkin, a pink can of Tab in his stout hand. The first time June had noticed him there—one of the few men who attended the weekly weigh-ins—she’d imagined him to be a warm, avuncular member of the group, but she been wildly mistaken.
I was only being honest, June said. She wanted him to change tone, to tell her he was sorry and he hadn’t meant it that way. I was being honest about how I feel, she continued. She smiled broadly at him. She’d taken to wearing red lipstick—true red and not pink—as part of her effort to appear more chic. The smile ought to have softened him, but it had the opposite effect.
I bet you have a whole closet of shoes, he’d said coldly.
She couldn’t think of a reasonable retort. She kept imagining that a man like him, whose back was round with fat, whose neck had long disappeared into his shoulders, whose stomach would make it awkward to drive a car, let alone to walk a mile, was only so vicious because he, himself, was wounded.
Actually, I don’t have a lot of shoes, she said gently.
He looked at her directly, licking his upper lip, then his bottom lip, as though sharpening a pair of knives. I don’t believe you, he said, like he’d been in her closet already and taken an inventory, knew exactly how many slingbacks and ankle boots and clogs and open-toed sandals and mules; every color—yes, she did keep them in order by color—and the succession of long boots that her calves had outgrown, extra wide, and then extra extra wide, and the heels she could no longer balance in.
Well, it’s true, she managed, before having to get away from him, away from the meeting, the other people, including the slim figure of Christ dying. She pushed past the man, rushing outside to her car, where she climbed into the driver’s seat, put the key into the ignition, and waited to stop shaking so she could drive home.
She thought about the guy now because, beside her, sitting high up in an eighteen-wheeler, was someone who looked just like him, staring down at her with an expression that may have been intrigue or disgust. She couldn’t tell if he disapproved of her driving or he’d figured out that she had unfastened her body from the control-top panty hose and the great harness of a bra that kept her shape. She did not like being so untidy. She was precise with her clothes. To be seen as she was now, even by the truck driver, pained her. But she could not afford to distract herself when the traffic was so fierce. No hard shoulder, crazy speeds, radio full of static. For hours, she had been wedged between cars on her left and a metal fence on her right, so close it was within touching distance.
And so she plunged on through the night, through the gritty air that smelled of exhaust fumes. Her eyes itched. Somewhere during the journey, another car had hit a pigeon and feathers exploded all over the road—and now there were tufts of white down stuck on June’s windshield, though she’d done everything she could with her wipers. All of this—the cupcakes, the unpleasant man at her weigh-in, the truck driver, the feathers—was what made it so important that she find her radio station as soon as possible. Her favorite radio station, like her own bed and bath, brought her peace. As she drove toward the sphere of its signal, the all-important wave range that would bring the midnight show clearly through the car’s speakers, she thumbed the dial, hearing the static lessen with each mile she traveled, and was relieved. She watched the clock for the minute when Craig Kirtz would burst on the air.
He always started the show with a cool hello, as though he’d been waiting in a hotel bar all evening for his listeners to arrive. She tuned in to him most nights, his voice alighting like a nocturnal creature across the night sky. It wasn’t the music he played that lured her—sometimes she didn’t even like the songs—but the way he spoke, the tenor of his voice. Whenever he introduced a love song, a slow song, a ballad, he made a kind of direct address to the audience, as though he had someone special in mind. He had a deep, velvety voice that floated across the airwaves, and while she imagined there was probably nothing sincere in his seductive murmurings, no live, actual woman to whom he was speaking, and certainly not her (why could she not remember this?), she pretended that it was she who was the object of his longing. She remembered such language of love, of desire, of a special harmony from years ago, before Bobbie’s father had died. And while the voice could never take the place of a husband’s voice, it felt intimate and thrilling.
Craig Kirtz. She wondered if it was his real name.
She admitted the little crush only to herself, how the sound of his name seemed to separate from all the words that preceded it and all those that followed. Even when she met someone else with that same name, Craig, she was suddenly wrenched into attention, as though the name held a tiny charge that freshly lit all her senses.
Nobody else knew how she felt about him, but she was embarrassed anyway. Craig was many years younger, a disc jockey (was there a sexier profession?), handsome, and tall, probably surrounded by girls. And while she waited nightly for his show to come on, feeling a rising anticipation, she also loathed herself for holding out—she had to admit this—a wincing hope that by some miracle he might one day turn his attention to her. It was not entirely out of the question—not strictly a hundred percent impossible, that is. Because among the unlikely events that defined her life so far, June had in fact made a friend of Craig Kirtz, or near enough a friend. The thing that made Craig special to her, aside from the way he cooed into the microphone in whatever distant room he occupied at the station, was the fact she had seen him in person—several times, in fact—and that he not only knew her name but had even been to her house.
She’d met him the first time as he stood by the radio station’s van, giving away bumper stickers. She’d come out of the Safeway with Bobbie and there he was, telling everyone to come over and enter a drawing for a record album, pick up a bumper sticker, maybe win a shirt. She’d allowed Bobbie to enter the raffle and later, incredibly, discovered she’d won the album. To their amazement Craig dropped by the house to bring her the prize. He wore Levi’s and boots, a braided leather belt. Handsome, and so very kind to her, sitting in her kitchen. She’d offered him a Coke, then on second thought dug out a couple of Budweisers from the far reaches of her fridge. How sweet that you made the trip out here yourself, June had said.
I remembered you and your lovely daughter, Craig replied. How could I forget?
It was this last remark that stuck in her mind, and the way he’d said it so sweetly: How could I forget?
Then one day she ran into him at the Department of Motor Vehicles. She’d been there to renew her license and had come into the building and seen him sitting in one of the terrible hard seats in the main area, looking bored, tapping his thigh rhythmically with his thumb as though playing the drums. His mood, she later came to understand, was set permanently on rock ’n’ roll and he seemed oblivious to where he was or the people around him who made it clear they did not like his “dinging” sounds or how he hissed when, in his mind’s eye, he’d hit the snare.
He’d been wearing a duck-down jacket and those same leather boots that put him up around six three, his eyes hidden behind sunglasses. She didn’t quite understand why he was wearing the sunglasses indoors like that, but he was a minor celebrity, she supposed, and did not want to be recognized. She’d spotted him right away. Once she’d distracted him from the song inside his head, it hadn’t taken long to get into conversation.
Do you remember me? she’d asked him.
You’ve got a girl, don’t you? A daughter. Nice kid.
So he had remembered her. It seemed impossible, but it was true. She tried to breathe easily, to think of him as a friend, just a friend like anyone else.
Does your family live out this way? she asked him.
Foster family, but that was back in Maine, and they’ve kind of moved on, he said.
Foster family, she repeated, the words rolling in her mouth. She’d wondered whether that meant they’d just looked after his physical needs or whether that meant real family. The way he said that was back in Maine made her feel like she’d missed an important fact stated earlier about his life and childhood and where he’d found himself through the years. Also, she wondered what moved on meant. Moved on to another place, or perhaps another child now that he was grown?
Are you going back for Thanksgiving? she asked.
Back where?
Again, she’d felt that she’d missed a vital aspect of the discussion, that she ought to understand more than she did.
You could come to us! she’d offered. It’s only Bobbie and me. Informal. I mean, you don’t have to decide right now—
She knew he would say no; of course he would say no. Why on earth would a celebrity spend Thanksgiving in the quiet of her home? He probably had parties to go to, any number of invitations. She’d waited for him to tell her he was spending Thanksgiving with his girlfriend, but he looked at her without replying, until she could no longer hold his eyes. Then he was called to the counter.
She pulled a pen from her bag and wrote her phone number hurriedly on the back of a receipt, then pushed it into his hand. There you go! she’d said, and watched as he closed his fist over the note and walked to the counter.
She’d felt ridiculous, inviting him the way she had. She would have raced to the ladies’ room to hide, except her number was coming up and she didn’t want to miss her turn. She was still in the same place when Craig finished at the counter. He marched across the waiting room without even looking at her while she pressed her knees together and forced herself to not speak or move or turn or wave. It was a great relief—a blessing—when at the door he turned and nodded his head goodbye.
She was sure that was the end of the matter, that she would never see him again. But then, the day before Thanksgiving, the phone rang and there he was, his voice in her ear.
Thanksgiving still on? You and your daughter? he’d said with that same soft caressing tone to his words, a dark, low rumbling like the deep purr of a lion. I’d like to come along if you’re still asking.
Yes! Yes, of course! She hadn’t even bothered hiding her enthusiasm. For the next twenty-four hours, she planned her outfit, prepared recipes, tried different styles for her hair, arranged the table with various centerpieces, all the while attending to the dreadful persistent thought that either Craig would not come at all or that he’d not come alone. He’d bring a girlfriend, June imagined, a despairing thought that made it difficult for her to look forward to the dinner as much as she would have liked. She worried she would be forced to entertain the two of them right there in her own house, that her affection for Craig would be obvious and shame her. She could not ask if he planned to bring a girlfriend, either, because to do so would be to suggest that he ought to. She tried to put it from her mind but by the time Thanksgiving dinner was in the oven, she was so sure he’d arrive with a girlfriend that she’d almost put out an extra place setting.
A few hours later, she watched his car roll down her street, then the door opened and he got out. He wore a corduroy jacket and had combed his hair back. She waited for the other door to open and for a long-legged, glamorous woman to emerge from inside the Buick. But no woman came. He walked to the steps by himself, just him, all alone, and she nearly leaped at the sight.
He’d brought a couple of T-shirts from the station as gifts. Throughout dinner, he told them all about what it was like to work in radio. June watched the way Bobbie tensed in fascination, her face shining toward Craig, the beautiful child mixing now with the teenage girl she’d newly become. Bobbie had been entranced by Craig. He told her stories of where he’d worked, of the famous disc jockeys he’d known. He talked about band members he knew personally. He did an impression of Casey Kasem. June was grateful, if a little jealous, when Craig promised to let Bobbie come to the station and see it in real life.
That would be fun, wouldn’t it? he’d asked her, and Bobbie had nodded, unsure how to accept so great an offer. To be inside a real radio station was an unimaginable treat.
At the end of the evening, June said, You’ll have dinner again with us, won’t you? She couldn’t bring herself to say have dinner with me. It felt too unlikely, even preposterous. She knew she still needed to lose some weight; she needed to wear better clothes, to do something. All she had been able to offer—for the moment—was the appeal of a home-cooked family meal. Weak bait, but maybe Craig was a hungry fish?
Sure, he had said. And for a little while he’d come have supper with her and Bobbie. He’d astound them both with his knowledge of records and hit charts. He’d reel off the Top 10, even sometimes the Top 20, for any year in a decade. He could tell you whether a years-old album was gold, silver, or platinum without pausing for thought. Bobbie adored him—that was obvious—and hugged him at the door as he was leaving.
She’s fond of you, June had said.
She’s some girl.
It was nice of you to remember her birthday.
He’d brought her several record albums and a big box of chocolate for her fourteenth.
Least I could do.
But then, just as it had appeared he and June were establishing something, he’d disappeared. She resigned herself to the fact he was not attracted to her, not interested in that way. Even so, she listened to him on the radio and sometimes sent him a note. You played my favorite song today! she would write, though that might not be true. Once, he’d dedicated a song to “the little lady in the house surrounded by woods,” and she’d thought for sure, or at least perhaps, he’d meant her.
All these thoughts sifted through June’s mind as she drove. After the awful heat wave and the hours of fierce traffic, and the tired remaining last hour of the journey, his voice was the tonic she needed. When he did not begin his show, she wondered what had happened. She thought perhaps her car’s clock was fast, but when she checked her wristwatch, she saw that it was well past midnight and still no greeting to the listeners from Craig, nor any explanation. Songs played, one after the other, and the music felt to June like silence, each song like another three-minute block of empty time.
Something was wrong. Twenty past midnight and Craig still hadn’t arrived on the air. It was a terrible thought that he could disappear from the airwaves and that such an important part of her life could conclude so abruptly. She wondered if something had happened to him. The station sounded unmanned, just a parade of songs, one following another, and it seemed ominous, a sure sign that Craig was either injured or dead. She now felt certain that something bad had happened; Craig was gone.
This notion that he was physically injured was so powerful that she finally pulled into a gas station. She teetered in her heels over the broken cement to a phone booth in order to call the station. Why not? she reasoned. She was a devoted fan. The station should be grateful for listeners who cared so much. But standing in the booth, enveloped in the smell of beer and urine, looking through the glass door mottled with dead gnats, and seeing stars peeking through a veil of purple sky, she considered that the people at the station would not be grateful. They would see straight through her, spy the inane, hopeless crush she had on Craig, and dismiss her completely. Nevertheless, she continued. Under the halo of a yellow lamp, in a cloud of stinging insects, she dropped her coins through the slot and waited. But the station didn’t answer. He probably had dozens of women calling him nightly. Too many like her.
Back in the car she decided she was just man-starved. That was her trouble. Whenever she left home for a period of time, a more adventuresome spirit took hold and she did things like buy a new dress or get her hair restyled or call a man. At home, in the normal routine of her days, it was possible to live in a closed, sexless world. She sold makeup to women—who are you going to meet in a job like that? Women, that’s who. She wanted a man, or at least his voice, and now she had nothing. She told herself there were any number of reasons Craig was off the air now. He could be recording commercials or creating voice-overs. There was little reason for her to worry. Even so, a little while later, when Craig still hadn’t arrived on the air, she pulled into a rest station, already reaching for her purse.
The phone was next to the bathroom door and she hoped nobody flushed while she was talking. She dialed the number, then listened to the phone ring and ring. She was tired; the phone seemed heavy in her hand. She’d almost decided to hang up when she heard a click and someone’s voice. “Hello?” she said, cautiously. “Is this—?” She heard music in the background. It was, indeed, the station. She did not ask if Craig was there. She said, “I am a friend of Craig Kirtz. Can you tell me why he is not on the air now?”
She was surprised by how she came across, not like a silly, lurking fan but businesslike, concerned. The person on the other end of the phone, the screener—a young man by the sound of his voice—treated her accordingly. Craig was now forty-five minutes late, he explained. She heard the sigh at the end of the line. “We don’t know why.”
“Shouldn’t you check the hospitals?” she said.
“Check hospitals?” The man sounded alarmed. “Lady, I’ve got to get his show filled.”
SHE DROVE TO a hospital—in the early hours after midnight, at a time when reason sleeps, it seemed a sensible thing to do. She parked the car, then made her way across the lot toward the main building, with its blocky wards and tiny squares of lit windows that gave it an all-night feel. She entered the wide doors at the front of the emergency room, hearing the whoosh of them opening and feeling the sudden chill of air-conditioning within. It seemed to June she’d been ebbing toward this hospital all night, but with no clear reason why she had come. A young man had gone a little AWOL—it did not mean he was in the hospital and it certainly did not mean he was in this hospital. She’d taken her fantasy of Craig too far, not only half believing that it could be she to whom he was speaking words of affection when introducing love songs but now that it might be she who came to his aid at the time of his greatest need. She was pathetic, she decided. She wanted to leave the hospital, the state, the nation. She wanted to never be seen again. But she had come this far.
She went to the desk and asked after Craig, explaining he was a radio celebrity, expected right now at the station, and that everyone was concerned about him.
“We are asking hospitals all around the capital if he has been admitted,” June said seriously, as though this were a reasonable thing to do. If the receptionist—or whoever she was—mistakenly believed she was from the station, that was okay by June.
“Who would have brought him in?” the receptionist asked. She had corn-yellow hair with dark roots. Her eyeliner had filled the creases beneath her eyes, and she wore an expression as though she’d been hounded all night by crazy people and June was just another.
“I don’t know,” said June.
“What I mean is do you know if it was an ambulance? Do you have a reason to think he’s at this hospital?”
“No. Yes. I don’t know.”
The receptionist took a sharp breath. June told her what he looked like, his age, height, a guess at his weight. The receptionist checked through a clipboard full of admission sheets, pausing finally and looking up at June.
“Wait here,” she said, then disappeared behind a curtain for a few minutes. When she returned, she went to the corner of the desk and made a phone call. Then she approached June with a curious expression as though she wasn’t quite sure what to say. Yes, a person of that description had been brought in.
“Oh!” June said. She was horrified. She felt she had created this scenario somehow. That the power of her imagination had caused Craig to be in this hospital, in pain.
“His first name is Craig but his last name…well, he has his radio name but his actual last name is…uh…” She wondered how long she could stall. If she really knew the man, she’d know his real name.
“We’ve got Kirtz,” the receptionist offered. “Hang on a second.” The receptionist held up a finger.
June watched as she went back to the phone and punched some numbers. The woman was turned away from June, having dragged the receiver as far from the desk as the cord would allow. Another woman, a black nurse with a stethoscope and a crisp white trouser suit, arrived a few minutes later from behind a curtain and told June she was not allowed to discuss patients with anyone except relatives.
“Are you a relative, ma’am?” She had a thin flat face with a wide nose, deep lines beneath her straightened bangs. Her eyelids hung heavily, like two weighted curtains, and she looked serious, even angry, or it may have been that after so many years of organizing patients and staff, an air of exasperated bossiness had become her natural state. Typed out on a badge above her shirt pocket was the biblical name Esther.
“Oh…yes. Yes, I am a relative,” June said.
“You his wife?” Esther asked.
“Not his wife, no.”
“Then who are you?”
She thought for a moment. “His wife.”
Esther gave her a look, then shook her head slowly from side to side, as though everything about June was difficult. “He had a car accident,” she began. There was an explanation about how he’d been retrieved, and that he had not been conscious when they brought him in, and how there had been no number in his wallet so they hadn’t notified his next of kin.
“Next of kin,” June repeated and wondered if he was dead. When her real husband had died, had been found dead, in fact, it had taken three of the staff just to cope with her. And she wondered if it was her apparent calm now that made this nurse doubt who she was. “How bad is it?”
“He broke his arm—”
“That’s it, his arm?”
“And a head injury and…are you really his wife?”
“We’ve been married for three years,” June heard herself say. As she said the words she began almost to believe them. “We have a daughter,” she added, then felt a shiver of panic and a deeper voice calling to her from inside herself, asking, Have you lost your damned mind?
She sensed a subtle shift in tone in the nurse, who came out from behind the desk and took her to one side, huddling beside a fire extinguisher mounted on the wall and a big stainless-steel table on legs. June was told it was serious but that he was stable. No, he could not be seen now. She could go home or she could wait.
June searched out a chair in the waiting room, joining a few other people with their newspapers and bandages and kiddies in strollers. The seat was hard plastic, linked by the arm to the one next to it. Across the aisle was a family—a mother and father with their little girl whose lap was filled with a large, gaudy pink teddy bear, and her foot wrapped in ice. The foot was swollen so that it looked like a paddle, the toes bluish. The girl did not look especially unhappy. Like many of the injured, she had an almost giddy response to her accident. She bounced the teddy bear on her knee, then pretended to feed it some of a Hershey’s bar she was eating. June did not worry for the family; the worst was over for them and now only good things would happen. The foot would be x-rayed, then set in a cast. They would go home with the feeling of near escape. She was not even that worried about Craig. He was alive; she was here waiting for him. The doctors would fix him. Every bad thing about the day—the long drive, the dust of the road, the sun’s uncomfortable heat—was over now. She could relax in the waiting room as these others around her were doing, with a sense that within the labyrinthine corridors of the massive hospital, and all its privacy curtains and examining rooms and surgical suites, good was being done for those who needed it.