Authors: Kathryn Harvey
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He winced. They all hated taking ER call. That messy business was usually relegated
to residents and doctors new to the staff. “How come, my friend?” he asked. “Don’t tell
me you need the money!”
No, Linda didn’t need the money. But she couldn’t tell this handsome orthopedic sur-
geon with a social life that read like
People
magazine just what her needs were. Namely, that
she needed to stay away from the loneliness that was haunting her house on the beach.
It seemed to lie in wait for her every night, that cold loneliness, hovering just on the
other side of her salt-weathered front door ready to engulf her the minute she walked in
and turned on the lights. It would rush at her in the same way the sounds of the eternal
waves rushed at her, and she’d find herself standing in the entryway, among her driftwood
and seagull sculptures, unable to move.
How could she tell this man, who had girlfriends galore and who went to parties every
night, that she was afraid of her own house?
Emergency Room call gave her an excuse to stay at the hospital and sleep in one of the
on-call rooms. It gave her something to do, kept her busy, worked her mind to the point
of exhaustion, so that she couldn’t think about anything else. Because St. Catherine’s was
located near the beach and on the Pacific Coast Highway, the Emergency Room of the
enormous medical complex handled more than a normal share of car accidents, surfing
mishaps, muggings, and knifings. Linda was kept on her toes, examining, diagnosing,
suturing, taking patients up to surgery. She drank copious amounts of strong black coffee,
ate stale Danishes from vending machines, and was losing weight. The OR greens hung
on her.
She felt José Mendoza studying her, but she ignored him. When he had first come to
St. Catherine’s three years ago, a hotshot sawbones whose patient list included famous
athletes and movie stars, José had put the make on the single and somewhat aloof Dr.
Markus. She had rebuffed him in a firm but friendly way. She had been a puzzle to him
then, and she was a puzzle to him now. Linda wasn’t married, he knew, and not dating
anyone, according to the hyperactive hospital grapevine. All she did, it seemed, was work.
“Can I give you some advice, my friend?” he said.
She looked at him. José Mendoza was one of those men whose sexuality was enhanced
by the drab, tacky operating-room duds. That, plus his sparky Latino charm, and it was
no wonder that most of the nursing staff was in love with him.
“Well!” drawled old Dr. Cane. “Would you look at that?”
Linda and José turned to the TV.
The screen showed Danny Mackay coming out of the residence of a former president
of the United States. A man who, to everyone’s surprise, had just endorsed Danny
Mackay as a presidential candidate. Danny was smiling and waving to the cameras, his
arm around his wife’s waist, a mob of reporters around them. It was the image of a man
determined to make it into the White House.
“Would you look at that,” said old Dr. Cane. “Who would’ve thought Mackay would
have gotten
his
backing? That’s sure to give the other runners in the race something to
think about!”
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Kathryn Harvey
“Think he’ll get the nomination in June?” José asked.
Dr. Cane got up from the desk and headed for the locker room. “Wouldn’t surprise me
a bit. The man’s practically becoming a national idol.”
“He is a smart man, too,” Dr. Mendoza said softly. “He’s doing everything except
coming out and calling himself the next John Kennedy.”
They stared at the TV for a few minutes. Finally, the other two doctors left the lounge,
and José and Linda were alone. He got up, turned off the TV, and looked at Linda. “How
is your patient? The young gangster?”
“He’s comatose, but liver and kidney functions are restored. I think he’ll be all right.”
José Mendoza regarded the woman on the sofa for a thoughtful moment, then he
drew up the chair from the dictating desk and sat in front of her, elbows on knees. “May
I talk to you, my friend?” he said quietly.
She smiled and reached up for the green paper bonnet that covered her hair. It felt
good to take it off and let the cool climate-controlled air blow over her perspiring fore-
head. She had put the bonnet on early that morning for surgery and hadn’t removed it
since. “What do you want to talk about?” she said, wadding up the hat and tossing it into
the waste basket.
“Why are you driving yourself so, my friend?”
She looked at him. Earnest and sincere eyes were gazing at her. “Why does any of us?”
she asked quietly. “With me it’s work. You drive yourself, too, in a different way.”
He nodded solemnly. “I do not dispute that. The last time I was in my house was last
weekend, when I needed my tennis racket. But at least my madness is recreational. You,
my friend, are filling up your hours with work. This is not good for you.”
She started to rise, but he stayed her gently with a hand. “Let me give you some
advice,” he said. “I have seen this before, what you are doing. Some people work them-
selves to death in order to forget something; others are trying to fill their lives with some-
thing. Others yet are running from something. But I tell you, my friend, this is no
solution.”
“And which are you?” she asked quietly.
He leaned away from her and gazed at the wall. “I was married once, back in the old
country. But she died. And when she went out of my life, the light went out of my life. So
now I surround myself with friends and I go to parties every night.” His eyes came back
to Linda. “But as I said, it is no solution.”
She returned his gaze. Through the closed door came sounds of a busy surgical suite:
gurneys rolling by, nurses calling orders, a voice paging softly over the PA system. Linda
thought of Barry Greene. He had called again, asking her out. She had hesitated, wanting
to go. But in the end she had declined, knowing that it could not lead to the bedroom. At
least not yet. Not until she had worked out her problem, with Butterfly’s help.
“Why don’t you let me take you out to dinner,” José Mendoza said. “We can talk
about it.”
She looked into his sincere dark eyes and smiled. “I’ll be all right, José,” she said qui-
etly. “Thanks for caring.”
Puzzled, he watched her go.
21
Texas: 1963
“Manuel nearly killed me this time! You’ve gotta help me, Rachel!”
The words in Carmelita’s desperate letter echoed over and over in Beverly’s mind as
she sped along the highway in her blue Corvair, crossing from New Mexico into Texas,
with the Tornadoes singing “Telstar” on the radio.
It had been five years since Carmelita’s letters had stopped coming. And then all of a
sudden, last week, an envelope had come to the diner, addressed to Rachel Dwyer. “We
had a bad fight,” Carmelita had written. “Manuel tried to kill me. I can’t live like this any
more, Rachel. You and I once promised to help each other if we were in trouble. I hope
this letter gets to you because I’m in real trouble now.”
Beverly had left the diner in the care of Ann Hastings and was now once again speed-
ing across the vastness of Texas. For the first time in nine years.
Change was in the air. She could feel it. The world seemed to be moving faster and
faster. The Russians had sent a man into space, everyone was dancing the twist, and bomb
shelters were a national obsession. It seemed to Beverly that the world had arrived at a
brink, as if the way of life that America had known for so long was about to alter sud-
denly, drastically, forever.
If asked to be specific, she would not have been able to do so. It was simply something
she felt but could not see or touch. There were the signs for everyone to see: riots were
increasing among oppressed Southern Negroes; folk singers were emerging from the
Beatnik fringe and gaining public popularity; even the movies were changing, with every-
one going mad for spies and secret agents. And Beverly seemed to see it all, as she gazed
out at the flat Texas desert, against the formidable backdrop of a mushroom cloud.
Was that what was causing the change? The Bomb? The ever-increasing threat from
across the ocean?
What, she wondered as “Telstar” ended and the Beach Boys launched into “Surfin’
U.S.A.,” had happened to the innocent, insular way of life of the last decade? And if this
was only a threshold, as her intuition was whispering, then what lay beyond?
Whatever it was, whatever kind of future lay just over the horizon, Beverly knew one
thing for certain: that she was going to be rich.
Earlier this year Eddie had rewarded Beverly with 10 percent interest in his company.
With fourteen Royal Burger stands raking in profits, Beverly was beginning to receive
handsome dividends. And when she had decided that her savings account wasn’t growing
as fast as she would like, she had taken Eddie’s advice and bought one of the new tract
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Kathryn Harvey
houses out in Encino. She didn’t live in it; she rented it out to a family. Already the value
of the house was going up; the San Fernando Valley was undergoing a building boom. So
she withdrew more of her savings and put down payments on two more little houses,
renting them immediately. The three Valley houses were, at this moment, as she was
whisking across the Pecos River, bringing in a positive cash flow. Beverly planned next to
raise her sights to the new houses in the Tarzana hills, which were being built with views
and swimming pools. They were selling for twenty thousand now; in ten years, Eddie
guaranteed, they would be worth ten times that much.
However, Beverly continued to be careful with her money. When Eddie had tried to
urge her into buying securities and bonds, she had held fast to her bank account. She
could see that the San Fernando Valley was a boomtown; her own common sense told her
that those investments were going to grow. But she shied away from the chancier gambles
that Eddie and Laverne were getting into. And, by the same token, while Eddie and his
wife had moved into a fancy new home, Beverly continued to live in the tiny apartment
on Cherokee. Every dollar that she put away was a dollar for the future.
The blue Corvair that she now drove through the town of Sonora had not been new
when Beverly bought it, and she had gotten it out of necessity rather than for conven-
ience. As the regional manager for Royal Burgers, she was required to travel around
Southern California and check up on the stores. Royal Burgers were up to fifteen cents
apiece now; jalapeño fries, twelve cents. Quality control was essential for continued suc-
cess. And Beverly wanted very much to be successful.
On this warm November morning, Beverly followed the same route to San Antonio
that she and Danny had taken eleven years earlier. She was following it on purpose. The
journey was like a bitter tonic. Each mile she covered injected new strength into her soul.
As the west fell behind her and the Hill Country of Central Texas drew nearer she felt her
body become invigorated with purpose. She saw familiar landmarks, she filled her eyes
with sights that had thrilled an ignorant fourteen-year-old Rachel Dwyer, in love with
Danny Mackay, racing toward her destruction. Beverly clutched the steering wheel and
forced herself to remember those days of long ago; she kept the memory alive, she kept
the anger and taste for revenge alive.
“You said you’re a man who’s going places,”
she had said
to Danny the night he had thrown her out of his car.
“Well…I’ll be richer and more pow-
erful than you.”
The Beach Boys faded as a radio commercial came on. And then the San Antonio dee-
jay reported the local news. “President John Kennedy, on a mission to smooth over a bitter
fight between a Democratic bloc led by Governor John Connally and a liberal coalition
headed by Senator Ralph Yarborough, has arrived in Houston today as part of a non-polit-
ical tour of Texas. The president was met by cheering crowds as he drove by in his custom-
made blue Lincoln limousine. He had requested that the protective plastic bubble be