“Meet me in my office,” Gretchen said. “The door on the right at the end of the hall. Just come on in after you get your clothes on.”
A few minutes later, I found her sitting in fresh blue scrubs in one of two overstuffed purple chenille armchairs. The chairs faced a massive cherry desk, the top barely visible under a slough of papers, medical journals, two iPads, and a large flat-screen computer monitor glowing with what looked like a tiny white rat in a man’s hand. A baby? I peered closer. No, it definitely appeared to be a rat.
The doctor gestured for me to sit in the other chair. Equals. No power moves, with her behind the desk.
My eyes skimmed a diploma from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School. Medical journals were crammed up against John Irving and Emily Dickinson on the bookshelves. A small bar in the corner was set up with crystal glasses and a few bottles of premium hard stuff. “It took me a second to get that.” I pointed to a small wooden sign that hung over the bar alcove. “Oh-be-gin. Clever.”
“A gift,” she said, “from a very relieved woodworking daddy.”
“Cute, cute.” I sounded idiotic. Absurdly nervous. Filling the space. How the hell was I going to start this conversation? It turned out, I didn’t have to.
“First, call me Gretchen, Emily. Second, you need to know that Caroline is an extremely complex person. What is that line Jessica Rabbit says? ‘I’m not bad, I’m just drawn that way.’ Anyway, it’s always reminded me of Caroline.”
Gretchen’s eyes were an unusual color. Almost lavender. Lavender, and bloodshot. No makeup. A short nose, blunt chin, a casual bob of hair shot with gray. Not a beautiful face, but a compassionate one. I felt guilty about taking up her time. One of the Bunko girls had told me that Gretchen delivered as many as five to ten babies a week. A third of the time she was paid in tamales. Besides her own practice, she volunteered at the county’s free clinic, which served mostly illegal immigrants.
“Thirty years ago,” Gretchen told me, “we were just a small group of women trying to find their way in sexist and repressive small-town Texas. Not all of us were born in the South and held pedigrees. It was a shock to our systems, like it probably is to yours.”
She pushed herself up from her chair and walked to the bar, pulling out two bottles of Dasani from a small refrigerator underneath. “Don’t kid yourself. The good old boys’ network is still thriving here and will be long after the two of us are dead. It’s like racism. A lot of people just spray on more whipped cream and keep serving it up. It’s so ingrained, we don’t even acknowledge that it’s there. These are the same men who pat themselves on the back for not being racist like their daddies and then suggest electrifying a large wall on the border.” She handed me an ice-cold bottle of water, and sucked two-thirds of hers down while I waited for her to continue.
“It couldn’t even be called a club at first. Most of us were either in the early stages of careers or were wives supporting men who were. We drank. We shared. We traded our secrets in little living rooms, long before careers took off and money rained down. Caroline burst into our lives maybe a decade after we began, when we’d already started meeting regularly, once a month. She said she lost both her son and husband in a house fire in Kentucky and all she had left was a pile of money and a sister she hardly ever saw. She needed a clean start. What she really needed, it turned out, were people to take care of.”
A sister, I remembered. But Caroline told me her sister was dead.
I couldn’t believe Gretchen was actually sharing all of this. She finished off the water, and leaned forward to toss the bottle into a bin for recycling. The bleach on her scrubs hung in the air. It reminded me of hiding in the freshly laundered sheets my mother hung on the line. Everything lately, it seemed, was reminding me of people I had lost.
“We were those people,” Gretchen was saying. “Caroline became our mother confessor. She made herself available at all hours, on the phone, in person. She delivered instant intimacy. Unconditional friendship. It was like being seduced, without the sex. She paid hundreds of dollars for therapy for women in this town who didn’t want their husbands to find out the real person they’d married. One was drinking and slapping her kids after school if they brought home anything less than an A. Another was molested by her father as a child and had been faking orgasm ever since. Intimate, scary stuff. Caroline took our friendly little club to a whole new level. And, yes, there were copious amounts of liquor and that little box involved.” Gretchen forced a tight smile. “Caroline puts so much money in the clinic, it should have her name on it. But she won’t let the board of directors do it. How do you hate a woman like that?”
I wasn’t sure how to respond. I hadn’t asked Gretchen if she hated Caroline. Was she trying to ease my mind by pouring forth all this information? If so, she wasn’t. I’d only seen hints of the do-gooding woman Gretchen raved about. The whole thing sounded way too Southern gothic, an overwrought Pat Conroy novel. And wasn’t Gretchen, a doctor, just a little too smart and cynical to be pulled into this?
“It wasn’t until a year ago that I realized that Caroline was… losing it a little,” Gretchen said bluntly. Defensively. “I should have seen it much earlier.”
My head snapped up. It was like she heard my thoughts. Just as easily as she had conjured my child’s tiny, beating heart a few minutes ago.
Gretchen ran her palms distractedly down her thighs, ironing out wrinkles in the scrubs that weren’t there. “She wasn’t as discreet with our private lives. She taped our meetings, even personal lunches. She was clearly in a mental tailspin. Suspicious all the time. Of everyone. One night about two months ago, she called at two a.m., sobbing, asking if I knew where Alice was. I had no idea who she was talking about. The next day, she acted like the conversation never happened.”
“So maybe she did harm herself.” Or maybe she had pushed someone in the club too far. Maybe someone who was Alice in another life.
Gretchen didn’t appear to mind-read that one. She shook her head. “Emily, she’s my friend and my patient. I’m skirting a thin ethical line here. In fact, I’m well over it because I want you to understand why you should stay out of this. I’m not going into more details. The club has someone looking for her. We’ve hired a private professional. And to be perfectly clear, I know nothing about Caroline attempting to blackmail you.”
“But she’s done it before,” I persisted. “Hasn’t she? I get that she handpicks the club, so there’s loyalty. But maybe some of them didn’t want to play her party games anymore. Not with so much at stake.”
She stared at me intently before replying. “I don’t think one of the girls made off with her, if that’s what you’re asking. She’s been gone a little more than a day. If it weren’t a small town, the police wouldn’t even be paying attention yet. We’ll find Caroline in a few days, and we can resolve this quietly. I’ll have a word with her. I’m trying to help you, Emily. I obviously can’t stop you, but I’d prefer that you didn’t share all these details with your husband unless Caroline doesn’t show up soon. Maybe put him off a little.” The overall tone was now less warm, less polite. The message was the same as the cop’s. Lay off.
I suddenly wondered whether Gretchen was manipulating me, not the other way around.
Anna peeked her head in the door, which I’d left cracked.
“Sorry to interrupt, Gretch. The emergency room called to say that Ms. Lindstrom just delivered in her car.”
Gretchen stood. “All’s well?”