About two years ago, Jenny had started to put on weight. Unfortunately, this was not uncommon these days, especially for girls like Jenny, who had gotten her first menstrual period shortly after her eleventh birthday. Their lives were more sedentary, and fast food was more readily available than it should be. Hormones in meat and dairy products helped the process along. Case studies in some of the journals Sara read were already dealing with ways to treat girls who entered puberty as early as eight years old.
Sara continued reading through Jenny's chart. Shortly after the weight gain began, Jenny had been diagnosed with a urinary tract infection. Three months later, the girl had come in with a yeast infection. According to Sara's notes, there was nothing suspicious about this at the time. In retrospect, Sara questioned her judgment. The infections could have been the beginning of a pattern. She turned to the next page, noting the date. Jenny had come in a year later with another urinary tract infection. A year was a long time, but Sara pulled out a sheet of paper and made notes of the dates, as well as the two other visits Jenny had made after, both for sore throats. Perhaps Jenny's parents shared custody. They could trace the dates to see if they corresponded with visits to her father.
Sara set down her pen, trying to recall what she knew about Jenny Weaver's father. Mothers were more likely to bring their children into the clinic, and as far as Sara could remember she had never met Jenny's father. Some women, especially women who were recently divorced, would volunteer information about their husbands as if their children were not in the room. Sara was always uncomfortable when this happened, and she usually managed to cut it off before it could really start, but some women talked over her, bringing up the kind of personal information that a child should never know about either parent. Dottie Weaver had never done this. She was talkative enough, even chatty, but Dottie had never disparaged her ex-husband at the clinic, even though Sara had gathered from the sporadic way the single mother paid her insurance balance that money was tight.
Sara's glasses slipped up as she rubbed her eyes. She glanced at the clock on the wall. Sunday lunch at her parents' was at eleven, then Jeffrey was expecting her at the station around one-thirty.
Sara shook her head, skipping over any thoughts of Jeffrey. A headache had settled into the base of her neck and the dull throbbing made it difficult to concentrate. She took off her glasses and cleaned them with her shirttail, hoping this might help her see things more clearly.
"Hello?" Sara called, throwing open the door to her parents' house. The cold air inside brought welcome goose bumps to her clammy skin.
"In here," her mother said from the kitchen.
Sara dropped her briefcase by the door and kicked off her tennis shoes before walking to the back of the house. Billy trotted in front of her, giving Sara a hard look, as if to ask why they had spent all that time in the hot clinic when they could have been here in the air-conditioning. To punctuate his displeasure, he collapsed onto his side halfway down the hallway so that Sara had to step over him to get to the back of the house.
When Sara walked into the kitchen, Cathy was standing at the stove frying chicken. Her mother was still dressed in her church clothes, but had taken off her shoes and panty-hose. A white apron that read don't mess with the chef was tied loosely around her waist.
"Hey, Mama," Sara offered, kissing her cheek. Sara was the tallest person in her family, and she could rest her chin on her mother's head without straining her neck. Tessa had inherited Cathy Linton's petite build and blonde hair. Sara had inherited her pragmatism.
Cathy gave Sara a disapproving look. "Did you forget to put on a bra this morning?"
Sara felt her face redden as she untied the shirt she was wearing around her waist. She slipped it on over her T-shirt, offering, "I was in the clinic. I didn't think I'd be there long enough to turn on the air."
"It's too hot to be frying," Cathy countered. "But your father wanted chicken."
Sara got the lesson on sacrificing things for your family, but answered instead, "You should have told him to go to Chick's."
"He doesn't need to eat that trash."
Sara let this go, sighing much as Billy had. She buttoned the shirt to the top, giving her mother a tight smile as she asked, "Better?"
Cathy nodded, taking a paper napkin off the counter and wiping her forehead. "It's not even noon and it's already ninety degrees out."
"I know," Sara answered, tucking a foot underneath her as she sat on the kitchen stool. She watched her mother move around the kitchen, glad for the normalcy. Cathy was wearing a linen dress with thin, vertical green stripes. Her blonde hair, which was only slightly streaked with gray, was pulled up behind her head in a loose ponytail, much the same way Sara wore hers.
Cathy blew her nose into the napkin, then threw it in the trash. "Tell me about last night," she said, returning to the stove.
Sara shrugged. "Jeffrey didn't have a choice."
"I never doubted that. I want to know how you're holding up."
Sara considered the question. The truth was, she was not holding up well at all.
Cathy seemed to sense this. She slipped a fresh piece of battered chicken into the hot oil and turned to face her daughter. "I called you last night to check in with you."
Sara stared at her mother, forcing herself not to look away. "I was at Jeffrey's."
"I figured that, but your father drove by his house just to make sure."
"Daddy did?" Sara asked, surprised. "Why?"
"We thought you would come here," Cathy answered. "When you weren't at home, that was the obvious place to check."
Sara crossed her arms. "Don't you think that's a little intrusive?"
"Not nearly as intrusive as childbirth," Cathy snapped, pointing at Sara with her fork. "Next time, call."
After almost forty years, Cathy could still make Sara feel like a child. Sara looked out the window, feeling as if she had been caught doing something wrong.
"Sara?"
Sara mumbled a quiet, "Yes, ma'am."
"I worry about you."
"I know, Mama."
"Is everything okay?"
Sara felt her color rise again, but for a different reason. "Where's Tessa?"
"She's not down yet."
Tessa lived over the garage of their parents' home. Sara's house was just a mile down the road, but that was far enough to give her some sense of independence. Tessa did not seem to mind the closeness. She worked with Eddie, their father, in the family's plumbing business, so it was easier for her to walk down the stairs and report for work every morning. Besides, part of Tessa was still a teenage girl. It had not hit her yet that one day she would want a house of her own. Maybe it never would.
Cathy flipped the chicken, tapping her fork on the edge of the pan. She slipped it into the spoon rest, then turned to Sara, her arms crossed. "What's going on?"
"Nothing," Sara answered. "I mean, other than last night with the girl. And the baby. I guess you heard about the baby."
"It was all over the church before we even walked through the doors."
"Well"-Sara shrugged-"it was very hard."
"I can't even imagine how you do that job, baby."
"Sometimes, I can't either."
Cathy stood, waiting for the rest. "And?" she prompted.
Sara rubbed the back of her neck. "At Jeffrey's…" she began. "It just didn't work out."
"Didn't work out?" her mother asked.
"I mean, didn't work out as in…" Sara gestured with her hands, encouraging her mother to fill in the rest.
"Oh," Cathy finally said. "Physically?"
Sara blushed again, which was answer enough.