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Authors: Diane Chamberlain

BOOK: Cypress Point
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Gabriel suddenly looked a bit uncomfortable at having consumed so much of the attention at the table. “Let's move on to a more pleasant topic,” he said, looking directly at Carlynn. “You two truly do look alike,” he said, lifting a scallop from his bowl. “It's hard to say which of you is more beautiful. Are you interested in sailing as much as Lisbeth is, Carlynn?”

“No,” Carlynn said with a shudder. “That was Lisbeth's passion.”

“We went out with our father one time,” Lisbeth explained, “and capsized. Carlynn got stuck underneath the boat for a bit, and she decided sailing was not her cup of tea.”

Gabriel winced. “I don't blame you for that,” he said to Carlynn.

“Lisbeth was a much better swimmer than I was,” Carlynn said.

“The same thing happened to my sister and myself when we were kids,” Gabriel said. “We were sailing on this estuary in Oakland when we capsized. She was stuck underneath for a couple of minutes. I dived under and got her, and she wasn't breathing when I brought her to shore.”

“What happened?” Lisbeth asked.

“Well, she was essentially dead,” Gabriel said. “But my great-grandmother was there. We were having a picnic, and all the aunts and everyone were with us. Granny grew up in the South, in Alabama, and she was a healer.”

Lisbeth and Carlynn exchanged quick glances.

“One of my aunts did mouth-to-mouth on her, but it didn't work. Then Granny came over and held on to my sister's shoulders, and said, ‘In the name of Jesus, child, breathe!”'

His voice rose, and when a few of the diners turned to look at him, he grimaced. “Sorry,” he said to his tablemates with a laugh. “I got carried away. Anyhow,” he continued in a softer tone, “my sister started breathing. In a few minutes, she was good as new.”

The three of them stared at him in silence.

Gabriel looked at Lisbeth. “Did I say something wrong?” he asked. “I'm sorry I shouted.”

Lisbeth touched the back of his hand. “That's not it,” she said. “You didn't say anything wrong.”

Carlynn was ready to explode with questions, but Alan beat her to it. He leaned forward in his chair. “Tell us more about your granny,” he said.

Gabriel didn't answer. Instead, he looked at them suspiciously, and Carlynn wondered what they were giving away on their faces.

“What's going on here?” he asked.

“Please,” Carlynn said. “Just tell us about Granny.”

“Well, she had a reputation,” he said slowly, leaning back in his chair, still obviously confused by whatever strange hunger he saw in their eyes. “She always fixed me up when I was a kid.”

“Do you mean she cleaned your cuts and put Band-Aids on them?” Alan asked.

“Or did she use herbs or her own special poultice?” Carlynn added.

Gabriel shook his head. “No. If I had a cut or hurt myself she would hold me, or put her hand on the place that had been injured, and she'd go into a trance of some sort and talk about God and Jesus, and I'd be better. Everyone in the family turned to her when they were sick. Even the neighbors. Even the
white
neighbors. I remember wishing she was still alive
when I lost my fingers, although I'm not sure she could have done much about that.” He smiled.

“What was the most remarkable healing she ever performed?” Lisbeth asked.

“I think bringing my sister back from the dead was pretty remarkable,” Gabriel said. “But she also cured a neighbor boy's polio.”

“Was this polio diagnosed by a physician?” Alan asked.

“Yes. And it was very obvious that he had it. He needed to use an iron lung sometimes. But Granny actually moved into his house, into the same room he lived in, and she'd pray with him and…I don't know what-all she did, but that kid was cured in a month's time.”

Alan turned to look at Carlynn, and she could see the question in his eyes.
Can we tell him?
he was asking her. They couldn't keep hounding Gabriel with their own questions without telling him why they were filled with curiosity. She liked Gabriel, but she'd only known him for slightly more than an hour. And he worked at SF General, and he also liked to talk a lot. Who might he tell?

Lisbeth caught her eye, giving her the slightest of nods.

“All right, I'm beginning to feel left out here.” Gabriel set down his spoon, but the frustration in his voice had a playful edge to it. “You three are communicating with each other wordlessly, back and forth across this table, and I would love to know what the secret is.”

Carlynn took in a breath. “Can you keep this quiet?” she asked him.

“Of course.”

“I seem to be able to heal people sometimes,” she said. “I don't know exactly how it happens, but that's why we're asking you questions about your great-grandmother. We're all very interested in the phenomenon.”

“My.” Gabriel looked a bit stunned. “I wasn't expecting that. Tell me more. How do you do it? Who have you healed?”

The three of them started talking at once, and the conversation lasted into dessert. They speculated about everything. Could his great-grandmother have cured the neighbor of polio
without
living in his room with him? And what did invoking the name of Jesus have to do with her healing?

“I think it's all the same thing,” Alan said finally. “Whatever your great-grandmother did and what Carlynn does is connected. It's not the religiosity involved. But maybe it does have to do with faith. I just don't know.”

Gabriel looked at Lisbeth. “You must have this ability, too,” he said. “After all, you have the same genetic makeup as your sister. Have you ever tried?”

The color rose to Lisbeth's cheeks. “I don't have it,” she said with certainty. “There must be something more than genes at play.”

Gabriel covered her hand with his. “I guess one healer in a family is enough,” he said.

By the time they left the restaurant, Carlynn had the feeling she'd known Gabriel for years instead of hours. He fit in well with the three of them, and his adoration and admiration of Lisbeth was clear.

“Can we give you a lift home, Lisbeth?” Carlynn asked.

“I was hoping to have the honor of driving Lisbeth home,” Gabriel said before Lisbeth could answer.

“I'd like that.” Lisbeth easily put her hand through Gabriel's arm, and the two of them started walking down the wharf together, and this time Carlynn didn't even notice that Gabriel's face was not like any of the others.

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

M
idmorning found the Women's Wing bustling with activity. Two sets of triplets had been born overnight in addition to twice the usual number of single births, one of them to the wife of a popular local sportscaster. Newspaper reporters and photographers clogged the corridor, where a security guard was doing his best to keep them from disturbing the patients. The nurses were frantic, and extra staff needed to be called in. Although it was nearing the end of July, the weather was still unseasonably hot for Monterey, and the air-conditioning in the Women's Wing was not working properly. Engineers trying to fix the problem added to the mayhem in the hallway. Some of the rooms were ice-cold, the mothers and babies bundled in blankets. At the other end of the corridor, perspiration dripped from the new mothers' foreheads as they nursed their nearly naked infants.

Joelle did not feel well. She had picked up a stack of twelve
referrals from the social work office earlier that morning, and so far had managed to see only one of the patients on her list. That case had required her to make over a dozen phone calls, and as she leafed through the remaining referrals, she hoped the rest of them would not be so labor intensive. She really wanted to go back to her office, put her head on her desk and fall asleep.

For the past couple of days, she'd been having pain low in her belly. It was subtle at first, and she'd mentioned it to Rebecca the day before when they passed each other in the hall. Rebecca said it was most likely more of the same ligament pain that had been bothering her for the past month. “Don't be concerned about it unless it gets worse,” she'd said.

Well, it
was
getting worse, although Joelle wondered if it was the chaos in the Women's Wing that made everything about this day seem unbearable. She was certain, though, that the pain had been sharper when she woke up this morning, tugging at her groin along her right side. Plus, she'd been unable to eat breakfast. She'd made her usual oatmeal and strawberries, but when she sat down at the counter in her condominium and looked into the bowl, she'd felt nearly overwhelmed by queasiness. She was supposed to have lunch with Carlynn that afternoon and would have to cancel with her once again if she didn't start feeling better soon.

Leaning against the wall of the corridor, trying to stay out of the way of a guy with a newscam, she studied the next referral on the top of the pile. It was for a twenty-four-year-old woman who did not want to see her baby, and her room was, unfortunately, in the hot end of the maternity unit. Joelle started down the hall, trying not to limp or wince as she walked, but unable to find a gait that didn't increase the pain in her side. Rebecca had probably been right. Every step would pull on the ligament, wouldn't it? Still, she made a bar
gain with herself: if, after seeing this patient, the pain had not lessened, she would find Rebecca and have a discreet chat with her about it.

Stopping outside the patient's room, she had to read the referral once again, despite its simplicity. Her brain felt foggy, and she'd already forgotten why she had to see the woman in room 23.

The woman was alone in the room, in the bed nearest the window. Her eyes were closed, her head turned toward the window, and Joelle stopped first at the foot of her bed.

“Hello, Ann,” she said. “Are you awake?”

The woman slowly opened her eyes and turned her head toward her. She was a striking young Asian woman, most likely Chinese-American, with long, straight black hair. The expression on her face was flat and lifeless, however, and the whites of her eyes were so pink they nearly glowed. Joelle recognized the look. She'd been in this business long enough to know that it meant one of two things. She glanced at the referral again, and saw that Ann's baby was a girl. That fact alone was probably responsible for driving Ann into the depths of depression.

Joelle stepped around to the side of the woman's bed and sat in the chair between the bed and the window, wincing as she did so from the cramping in her belly. Would ligament pain cause cramping? For the first time she wondered if something might be wrong with her baby.

“Hi,” she said again, trying to concentrate on the woman in front of her. “I'm Joelle D'Angelo. I'm a social worker here in the maternity unit, and your nurse asked me to visit you because she's concerned about how sad you are.”

The woman turned her head away from her so that her perfect profile was sharp against the pillow. “You can't help me,” she said in a voice that only hinted at a Chinese accent.

“I'd like to understand what has you so down, though,” Joelle said. “Sometimes new mothers feel terrible because of the hormonal changes that occur after pregnancy, and—”

“That's not it.” Ann spoke into her pillow.

Joelle felt the nausea returning, rising up from somewhere low in her gut, washing over her slowly, the way it had when she'd looked at the bowl of oatmeal. It was so hot in the room. She wasn't sure she could make it through this interview.

She licked her lips and tried again. “Your nurse told me you gave birth to a healthy baby girl during the night,” Joelle prompted, and she knew immediately she'd hit the real reason for Ann's depression. The woman turned her face toward her, tears spilling down her cheeks.

“My mother-in-law will never forgive me,” she said. “It's the second girl. My husband is so angry. He won't even come in to visit me.”

Joelle barely heard her last words. She was going to be sick. Standing up quickly, she managed to say, “Excuse me, I'm sorry,” to the woman before fleeing from the room.

All she wanted was to make it to the rest room in the nurses' lounge, halfway down the hall, but the colors and smells and motion in the corridor made her dizzy, and she knew she would never reach the lounge in time. Ducking into one of the patient rooms, she was relieved to see that the bathroom serving the two beds was free, and she managed to close the door behind her before vomiting into the toilet.

Flushing the toilet, she stood up and leaned back against the wall. What a lousy time to run out on that mother! What a horrible thing to do to the poor woman. But her thoughts quickly returned to her own pain, which was still there, burning and cramping, and the bathroom felt like a sauna. Could it be her appendix? she wondered, but the pain now seemed too high on her side for that.

Wetting paper towels with cool water, she pressed them to her forehead. Did she have a fever, or was it the lack of air-conditioning that was making her so hot? Either way, something was definitely wrong with her. A summer flu, maybe. Whatever it was, she didn't dare try to go back to Ann's room. She'd have to fill one of the nurses in on the situation and see if someone else could take over for her. Right now all she wanted to do was find Rebecca.

She rinsed her mouth out with cool water and looked at her watch. It was nearly eleven. Rebecca should be finished with her rounds by now and in her office.

Leaving the patient room, she headed down the long corridor toward Rebecca's office, the pain in her belly jarring her with every step. Someone behind her called her name, but she didn't bother to turn around. They would have to get along without her for a while.

She was nearly crying by the time she reached Rebecca's office, and she felt the two patients in the waiting room staring at her as she limped toward the reception counter.

“LuAnn, I need to see Rebecca,” she said to the receptionist, who was writing something on a form.

LuAnn glanced up at her, then back at her notes. “She's with a patient, Joelle,” she said, but then her head jerked up again as if the sight of Joelle's sweaty face had just registered in her brain. “You look terrible!” she said, setting down her pen. “What's the matter?”

“I'm not sure. I'm sick. Let me go into one of the examination rooms, please. Then tell Rebecca I'm here.”

LuAnn's eyes flew open. “Are you
pregnant?
” she whispered.

“Shh.” Joelle pressed a finger to her lips, but she knew the gesture was futile. So much for her plan to escape Monterey before anyone knew. She had the feeling that, whatever was
going on with her body, today was the day everyone would learn that unmarried, unattached Joelle D'Angelo was more than four months pregnant. And if everyone knew about it, Liam would, as well.

“Go in the first room,” LuAnn said. “I'll let Reb know you're here and that you look like hell.”

In the small examination room, Joelle could not decide whether to sit, stand or lie down. No position offered relief from the pain, and every movement felt as though it was tearing something loose inside her. She thought she should try to undress so that Rebecca could examine her. Her red-checked jumper could stay on, but she should at least get her panty hose off.

She was leaning against the examining table, the room spinning around her, one leg of her panty hose off and the other on, when Rebecca stepped into the room.

“What's going on?” Rebecca asked, taking Joelle's arm as if to steady her.

“The cramping is worse,” Joelle said. “And I've been throwing up. I'm dizzy. I'm hot. I think something's really wrong, Rebecca.”

“Can you get up here?” She patted the table with her free hand.

Joelle nodded and managed to climb onto the step, then turn around and sit down gingerly on the edge.

“Are you all right?” Rebecca asked, her hand still on Joelle's arm and a look of concern in her eyes. “Do you need a basin?”

“I don't think so,” Joelle said. “It hurts, though, Rebecca. I don't think it's ligament pain anymore.”

“No, I don't either.” Rebecca helped Joelle lie down. She pulled off the remaining leg of her panty hose, setting them on the chair in the corner, before picking up the receiver of the phone on the wall.

“I need to get a CBC on a patient, stat,” she said into the
phone. Then she was back at Joelle's side, pressing her fingers on her belly, and Joelle tightened her abdominal muscles to keep her from pushing too hard.

“Extend this leg out,” Rebecca said. “That's it, all the way.”

“It hurts,” Joelle said. “Oh my God, Rebecca!” She tried to sit up. “I just realized I haven't felt the baby move yet this morning!”

“I think the baby's okay,” Rebecca said. “She or he is probably just giving you a break, since you have so much else to deal with right now.” Rebecca took her temperature, but Joelle did not need a thermometer to know she had a fever.

“I'm going to do a sonogram,” Rebecca said as Gale Firestone, a nurse Joelle knew well, walked into the room. Joelle saw the sharp look of astonishment on Gale's face at the sight of her rounded belly, but the nurse got her surprise quickly under control.

“Sorry you're not feeling well, Joelle,” she said as she set up the phlebotomy tray on the counter.

“I think you've got a case of appendicitis,” Rebecca said. She turned on the ultrasound monitor. “But I'd like to rule out a cyst and a few other things just to be sure.”

Joelle closed her eyes as Gale drew blood from her arm, but opened them again to watch the screen while Rebecca moved the transducer over her belly.

“I don't see a cyst,” Rebecca said. “But I do see a healthy baby. Not too sure of the sex yet, though.”

“It's okay?” Joelle asked. “It's moving and—”

“There's the heart,” Rebecca said, leaning back so Joelle could see the screen, and she spotted once again that reassuring flutter of life inside her.

“Thank God,” she said, lying back again.

“I'll call you with this,” Gale said to Rebecca as she carried the tube of Joelle's blood out of the room.

“Make it fast,” Rebecca said, and Joelle could feel her urgency.

Rebecca gently wiped the gel from Joelle's stomach, then lowered her dress back over her thighs.

“Do you want to sit up or stay like that?” she asked.

“I don't want to move any more than I have to,” Joelle said. She looked at Rebecca. “Now what?” she asked.

Rebecca's gaze settled on the small, shaded window of the room, and Joelle recognized that look on the obstetrician's face: she was thinking through her options.

“I'd really like to get an MRI,” Rebecca said, “but I'm concerned about wasting time. I'm ninety-five percent sure it's your appendix, and we don't want it to rupture. That's not something we need, with you pregnant.”

“Is that serious?”

“It could be quite serious,” Rebecca said. “Let's see what your white blood count tells us and go from there.” She moved toward the door. “Do you need a blanket?” she asked, her hand on the doorknob. “It's cold in this part of the building.”

“No,” Joelle said. “Just hurry back, please.”

She must have dozed off, because the next thing she knew, Rebecca was telling her to sit up.

“What's happening?” Joelle tried to sit up with Rebecca's help and let out a yelp as the pain cut into her side again. “Did the blood work come back?”

“Yes, and it confirms my suspicions. I'm sending you upstairs for an emergency laparotomy. Dr. Glazer will perform it. You know him, don't you?”

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