she flipped pancakes and turned bacon for Ted’s breakfast. Josh came and took the kids. Josh had been quieter than usual over the past week. He seemed withdrawn, though Vicki didn’t have the time or wherewithal to ask him if everything was al right. Stil , Josh made a point of giving Vicki a hug and a kiss before he left with the kids for the beach.

“Good luck today,” he whispered.

“Thanks,” she whispered back.

Later, she spent a long minute locked in an embrace with Melanie, who looked dangerously close to weeping. There should be a handbook, Vicki thought, for the friends and relatives of people with cancer, and in this handbook it should be mandated that the friend/relative be neither too upbeat (Ted) nor too gloomy (Melanie) about one’s chance of survival. The friend/relative, Vicki thought as Melanie clung to her, should act like Josh. Josh had wished her luck. Luck was useful. Luck, perhaps more than anything else, was what she would need.

“I’m going to be okay,” Vicki said. “I’m going to be fine.” This is just great, Vicki thought . I’m the one whose head is on the chopping block and I’m comforting Melanie.

“Oh, I know,” Melanie said quickly, wiping at her eyes. “It’s just al this stuff. The summer. Peter, the pregnancy. You. It’s a lot, you know?”

“I know,” Vicki said.

Brenda insisted on coming along with Ted and Vicki. “I’ve been with you al summer,” she said. “And I am not missing today. Today is the big day.”

Yes, the big day. There had been any number of big days in Vicki’s life: her first day of kindergarten; the opening night of the school play with Vicki in the lead; the night of her first school dance, where she received her first kiss. There were Christmases, graduations, first days on the job, there was the day Duke won the NCAA Tournament, there was her wedding day, the nine perfect days of her honeymoon in Hawaii, there was the day she found out she was pregnant, the day she gave birth, the day she and Ted closed on the house in Darien, there were nights of charity benefits, three of which she had co-chaired, there were nights in New York City at restaurants and Broadway shows. There were days cluttered with commitments (the Yukon serviced, root canal, a field trip with Blaine’s preschool, free box tickets for the Yankees–Red Sox game). Al of these were big days, but none as big as today. Today would be the day Vicki looked at her cancer a second time and heard Dr. Alcott, or Dr. Garcia on a conference cal from Fairfield Hospital, say, Better? Worse? Live? Die?

Nothing prepared a person for this, Vicki thought as she fastened her seat belt. Ted was driving; Brenda was in the backseat. When Vicki checked on Brenda in the rearview mirror, she saw Brenda’s lips moving.

Nothing.

As they pul ed into the hospital parking lot, Brenda’s cel phone rang.

“That would be our mother,” Brenda said.

“I can’t talk to her,” Vicki said. “I’m nervous enough as it is. Can you talk to her?”

“She doesn’t want me,” Brenda said. “She wants you.”

“Give her to Ted,” Vicki said.

Ted swung into a parking spot and took the phone from Brenda. That was for the best. El en Lyndon would be reassured by Ted’s optimism.

Brenda took Vicki’s hand as they headed for the door. She patted her bag. “I brought the book.”

Vicki raised a questioning eyebrow.

The Innocent Impostor. My good luck charm. My talisman.”

“Oh,” Vicki said. “Thanks.”

“And I’ve been praying for you,” Brenda said. “Real y praying.”

“Praying?” Vicki said. And that reminded her. “You know, there’s something I’ve been meaning to ask you.”

“Yeah?” Brenda said. “What is it?”

Ted strode up alongside them. “Your mother wants us to cal her as soon as we know anything.”

“Okay,” Vicki said.

“I don’t get it,” Brenda said. “Does she think we’l forget about her?”

“She’s a mother,” Ted said.

“What did you want to ask me, Vick?” Brenda said.

Vicki shook her head. “Later,” she said. Though she was running out of time.

“Later for what?” Ted said.

“Nothing,” Vicki said.

Brenda narrowed her eyes at the front of the hospital, the gray shingles, the white trim, the blue-and-white quarterboard that said NANTUCKET

COTTAGE HOSPITAL. “Do you realize this is the last time we’re coming here?” she said. “Strange, but I think I’m going to miss this place.”

For al the anticipation and al the worry, for every strained breath and the eight fitful hours of sleep the night before, Vicki found that the actual CT

scan itself wasn’t that bad. The hospital was short-staffed, it seemed, because the person who administered the CT scan was . . . Amelia, from oncology.

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