Family Affair Read online

Page 4


  "You can take it to your regular pharmacy and they can fill it."

  "Great." Chase turned around and muttered something unflattering about the inefficiency of HMOs.

  "Come on, we'll hit Smith's on Menaul and then we can go shopping," Lacey said.

  "I hate that store. It's like grocery shopping in a shoebox and I get really claustrophobic."

  "Chase." Lacey took her arm and escorted her to the parking lot. "Let's get the pills you need to be a safer, saner person."

  "All right."

  They drove across town listening once again to Shakira singing about her hips not lying and something by the Black Eyed Peas about my hump, my hump, my lovely lady lumps. Chase rolled her eyes, thinking that this was what the world had come to, songs talking about body parts. And she was the crazy one.

  The shoebox grocery store parking lot was full of cars. An old man in a black Crown Vic slowly pulled out of a spot, turning so that the long car was jammed up between the rows and it required much pulling forward and backing up before he got the car straight enough to pull out. Thoroughly exasperated, Chase said, "Why bother with the medication—the baby will be in college before we get parked."

  "Chase, it's the middle of the day. These are retired people with diminished reflexes. Just thank God we don't have real jobs and have to suffer the after-work crowd. Now, those people are cutthroat."

  Chase pulled into the spot vacated by the geriatric. It was not to her liking being right next to the cart return, thus putting her side panels at risk, but it would have to do. "I have a real job,"she contended.

  "No, Gitana has a real job. All you have to do is write fifteen a day, keep your editor happy by turning things in on time and kiss your publisher's ass once in a while to keep on her good side."

  "I suffer from writer's cramp and chapped lips," Chase said. She puckered her lips and made kissing noises.

  Lacey collected her enormous purse and they exited the car. They entered the store, careful to avoid people with diminishedmreflexes now armed with shopping carts. The line for the pharmacy was long.

  Chase glanced at Lacey who was studying the labels of diet foods that lined the aisle. She sighed heavily and then whispered, "This is going to take forever."

  "No, it's not. These people know what they're doing. Most of them have four-dollar prescriptions and pay in cash," Lacey responded not looking up.

  "How do you know all this?"

  "Duh, I have to get my birth control pills every month."

  Having never bothered with contraception, this was news to Chase. She studied the older people in line. Waiting was always good for observation. She just had to get in the zone—that place where the person she observed made a picture in her mind, then she logged the details—their appearance, choice of shoes, their hands, the cadence of their voices, word choice, the banal stories they told to others. It all imprinted itself on her mind—stored away for future use.

  Lacey broke her concentration. She picked up a Slim-Fast bar and asked, "Do you think this stuff tastes good?"

  "No," Chase replied.

  "Why not? It says it does."

  "If something is supposed to have sugar in it and they take the sugar out it's like a house where you have removed the studs. What happens then?"

  Lacey was an avid watcher of HGTV. It was like her college. Her eyes brightened. "Why, it would collapse."

  "Consequently, sugar-free chocolate bars are studless."

  Lacey wrinkled her brow. Chase smiled. Lacey wasn't one for quantum leaps.

  A silver-haired well-coiffed woman waiting in line ahead of them turned around. "Honey, that stuff stinks."

  She snatched it from Lacey and threw it at the magazine stand. She just missed the redneck with his butt crack showing as he leaned over to reach for the Low Rider magazine with a car and a woman with abnormally large breasts on the cover. He appeared not to notice the flying candy bar as he ogled the magazine.

  "Wow, you've got an arm," Chase said. Not a softball player herself, she still admired the sport.

  The woman smiled. She had sparkling white teeth and red lipstick—some of which was on her teeth. Chase admired that quality—if you're going to wear it, keep it on your lips and off your teeth. She suspected it was an expense thing—cheap stuff on the teeth, department store on the lips.

  "Used to play fast pitch back in the day. I was a first-string pitcher."

  Lacey was glaring at the redneck drooling over the magazine. "Could you hit that guy over there with the butt crack?"

  "If I wanted to." The woman studied him and then pursed her lips in obvious contempt.

  Lacey handed her a candy bar.

  The woman smiled. "This is just between us." Chase and Lacey gave her my lips are sealed gesture.

  The butt crack man stood unawares.

  The silver-haired woman cocked her still lethal arm. "This is for the ladies, you big pervert." She let loose. The candy bar cold-cocked him in the back of the head. He turned around glaring, in search of the perpetrator.

  Lacey was studying the label on a Slim-Fast can. The silver-haired woman looked straight ahead and then glanced at her watch affecting impatience. Chase picked up several cans of Slim-Fast as if to purchase them.

  Finding no one to blame, he kicked the candy bar, rolled up the magazine tightly in his grubby paw, gave his pants a good yank and started to the checkout counter.

  The silver-haired woman winked at them after she got her order. As she passed by she said, "Remember, girls, fight the good fight."

  Finally Chase handed her script to a young man with a baby skin face, round as a pumpkin. He studied the script. "What am I supposed to do with this?"

  Incompetence always turned Lacey from nice girl into Cat Woman. Chase could tell she'd already been revved up by the butt crack episode and this poor bastard was going to get the brunt of it. "I don't want to tell you your job but two words—fill it."

  Sometimes Lacey reminded Chase of her mother. Even their lexicons had similarities.

  "You don't understand. We don't know what a sample pack is." His pumpkin face reddened.

  "From what was explained to me, I start with the lowest available dose and gradually increase over a month long period," Chase said, hoping this would speed up the process.

  The young man quickly looked up the drug. "This is an anticonvulsant." His eyes got large.

  Lacey took full advantage of this. "That's right. Look at her. She could have a seizure at any moment."

  Under the counter, Lacey kicked Chase in the shin. Chase doubled over in pain and groaned. "See, it's already starting. Do you want her to turn into a frothing maniac in the next five minutes?" Lacey said.

  "I'll call the doctor. Please take a seat. We don't want her falling."

  Lacey and Chase took a seat on the hard plastic bench at the side of the pharmacy. The geriatrics studied Chase like they were waiting for something to happen.

  "Everyone's staring," Chase said.

  "Seizures make people nervous," Lacey said.

  "Ms. Banter, your order is ready."

  At the counter the pumpkin boy handed her a cup of water. "I think you should take one right now."

  Chase swallowed the tiny pink pill, wondering how drug companies decided on the shape and color of their medications. Then she took out her wallet and paid the twenty dollars.

  As they walked out of the store, Chase said, "I feel better all ready."

  Lacey rolled her eyes.

  Chapter Six

  "When are you going to ask her?" Lacey screamed into her phone.

  Chase took her cell phone into the bathroom and closed the door quietly. She hoped the toast wouldn't burn in her absence. Due to the open floor plan and the subsequent lack of walls, sound carried and she didn't want Gitana to hear this conversation. They were probably the only people in the state who could sit on the toilet or take a bath and talk to the other one in the kitchen from upstairs. Thank God they didn't have any neighbors because th
ey certainly didn't have any curtains.

  "Today. I'm going to the greenhouse at lunchtime."

  "Why there? It's not very romantic."

  "Because I'm emotionally detached. I might get too intense and mushy and I'm not good at that. Besides, I'm paranoid and superstitious. All our friends who got married and had ceremonies in which a strange woman in a long burgundy robe muttered marital incantations are split up now. So I figure if I do it in an odd or unusual way we'll last. Hopefully, the goddess of sorrow will be deceived. It's kind of like Jude the Obscure during the good parts."

  "Are you taking your meds?"

  "Religiously. Why? Don't I seem better?"

  "You're not as crabby, but you're still not right. Really, marital incantations and the goddess of sorrow."

  "All right, I admit that was over the top," Chase said.

  "Call me after."

  She heard the toast pop. She thought she was behaving better. She hadn't said anything mean to her editor, Ariana, despite the fact they were in the editing stage of Chase's eleventh moist mound saga, Songs from the Open Window. Ariana seemed to notice the change, commenting one day that Chase hadn't sworn at her in the last two phone calls.

  She'd seen Dr. Robicheck three times so far and she wasn't giving Chase queer looks despite her admission of burying road-kill so in death the poor rabbits and prairie dogs could have dignity instead of ending up in people's tires or being picked to pieces by the ever present crows that sat perched on telephone lines. Dr. Robicheck noted it down on her yellow legal pad, a look of complete stoicism on her face. This lack of expression concerned Chase. She wondered if Dr. Robicheck was really listening or only pretending to the way Chase did when she was bored, letting her mind wander to someplace more interesting.

  She buttered the toast, putting peanut butter on hers and marmalade on Gitana's. Gitana's toast was usually cold by the time Chase brought it up, but she didn't seem to care. Chase always got up early. She was like the dogs. Three sets of eyes, one human, two canine popped open like a Jack-in-the-Box triggered by the morning light filtering in through the window. Day had arrived, time to get up. Gitana slept late by their standards. Chase let the dogs out and then fed them their breakfast.

  Chase seemed to need less sleep than other people, excepting Lacey. Dr. Robicheck had asked about her sleeping pattern and she'd lied. Told her that she got a lot of exercise during the day and that she was very tired at night. She didn't tell her that she slept well at first, but then she'd wake up again in a couple of hours like the computer part of her brain had rebooted. Her thoughts would wind themselves around her until exhausted she fell back asleep again. Even then, her dreams would drift in and out and like a film director she ran parts over and over again, editing and rewriting until things turned out to her liking.

  She didn't know why she felt she had to lie. It seemed like it was crucial to not let the doctor know about her most sacred place—the shrine of her imagination. Later she figured it out. She didn't want anyone tinkering with her mind. What if it screwed up her most precious possession—the ability to create? This was a room no one had the right to enter. It unnerved her that every shrink she'd met in her life was always very interested in her once they found out she was a writer, a real writer in their eyes because she was published. They were bigots. Being published was not the Holy Grail. She knew writers who deserved to be published more than she did.

  A writer was a person who sat down, invented worlds and described what it was like using the best possible words they could find. She was not going to let Dr. Robicheck or anyone else into her fictional house of cards to forage. She invited people into this house and tried to put them at ease while she cooked up some surprises. She certainly didn't want that messed with. Now, the other parts of her life did need a little work and the good doctor was quite welcome to tinker with those.

  She poured the coffee and put the toast on the tray and took it upstairs. Usually, the smell of coffee got Gitana's eyes open. She set the tray down and gathered up her medical instruments to give Gitana her morning exam. Gitana had insinuated that the daily blood pressure checking was not necessary, but Chase had ignored her.

  Gitana opened her eyes. "Am I dreaming or is that real coffee?"

  "Coffee is coffee. Decaf does not smell different."

  She sat up and Chase puffed up the pillow behind her. "Ah, but there you are wrong. This is real coffee."

  "It is. I looked it up on the Internet. Small doses of caffeine are not harmful," Chase said.

  Gitana picked up the cup. She studied it. "It looks smaller."

  "Oh, I hadn't noticed." She avoided her gaze. "Cream?"

  "I never use cream." Gitana sniffed at the cup deeply and then took a sip.

  "Dairy products build strong bones."

  "I'm already taking prenatal vitamins." Gitana set her cup down and took a bite of toast.

  Chase ignored her and added cream. Then she busied herself with the task of taking Gitana's blood pressure.

  "Good, it's one-twenty over eighty." Then she looked in Gitana's ears.

  "What exacdy are you looking for?" She sipped her coffee.

  "I'm not certain, but if something appears different we can immediately go to the doctor. I think it's a sound plan," Chase said.

  "Like what exacdy would look different? My eardrum would suddenly go missing?" She bit into her cold toast and eyed Chase suspiciously.

  "You're not being very cooperative. In fact, I sense hostility."

  "We used to make love in the morning, now we check vital signs." Gitana pursed her lips.

  "Oh. Well, I can remedy that. It's all right?" Chase asked, having not researched about pregnancy and having sex.

  "Yes." Gitana put her toast down.

  Chase kissed her and unbuttoned her pajama top. The soft blue fabric fell away from Gitana's shoulders.

  "We can do health care and body care," Chase said as she kissed Gitana's stomach.

  "I'll agree to that, but you have to tell me one thing," she said, as she pulled Chase's T-shirt over her head.

  "Anything." She slipped off Gitana's pajama bottoms and kissed her inner thigh.

  "Are the coffee cups smaller?"

  Chase murmured something as her tongue ran around Gitana's soft pink folds. Gitana moaned and Chase figured she no longer cared about the size of coffee cups.

  Later that afternoon, Chase searched her closet for some decent clothes. Finally, she managed to locate a pair of black rayon trousers and a green dress shirt. After further rummaging and a variety of choice swear words, she found her Italian leather dress shoes. Had she known it would take this long to find an outfit she would have began earlier. She fixed her hair, giving it a good brush job, removing most of the snarls. If she could ever decide which of the seven lesbian hairstyles most suited her she would immediately go to a stylist and get the whole snarly mess cut off. Then she could be more comfortable and hip, but she couldn't make up her mind so she tried to remember to brush her hair more often and purchased high quality hair conditioners.

  Satisfied with her appearance, she left the bathroom and took a quick peek in the nursery. Lacey had done a great job. The walls were a pale yellow and the baby furniture sky blue. She'd covered the wood floor with a plush rug with a sunflower border. Above the crib was a mobile of the planets. Toy cubbies, already full of safe but educational toys, ran along one wall. Chase went to the dresser, already full of cute little outfits, and opened the top drawer. She pulled out two burgundy boxes each containing a simple white gold ring. She studied the ring meant for Gitana.

  "This is for you," she said, addressing the yet-to-be-born, Bud. "I'm not much of a conformist—so this is really hard for me." She wondered how many one-sided conversations she was going to have with her baby. "So I hope you appreciate the gravity of the situation."

  She must remember not to tell her shrink about these conversations. She could only imagine what Dr. Robicheck would say. She didn't want any more information
than was necessary on the yellow legal pad resting ominously on the doctor's knee.

  She gave the dogs a biscuit and checked to make sure all the gates were locked—got to the garage and had to go back and check it all over again because she couldn't remember if she'd done it. Her medication wasn't helping her with her focusing problem. Dr. Robicheck had suggested meditation. She was supposed to find a class. It was low on her list of priorities. She'd have to remedy that before her next session or come up with a damn good excuse. She managed to get to the road before the panic attack hit. The car jostled so much on the dirt road that she couldn't pull up the call list registry on her cell phone. She stopped in the middle of the road and called Lacey as her neighbor Rusty came up behind her in his black Ram Charger truck. She resumed driving.