Read Her Great Expectations Online

Authors: Joan Kilby

Tags: #Summerside Stories

Her Great Expectations (8 page)

BOOK: Her Great Expectations
11.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
CHAPTER SIX
“D
IABETES IS ONE
of the leading causes of kidney disease—more than excessive drinking or smoking,” Sienna informed the guys at the Men’s Shed later that week.
She’d asked Jack if she could give a talk on men’s health issues as a community service and he’d suggested she come at their morning coffee break. Standing beside her posters propped on an easel, she concluded, “I have a patient who contracted type 2 diabetes at the age of thirty-three. Without treatment, his kidneys slowly deteriorated. Now, at fifty-five years old, he has to spend fifteen hours a week on a dialysis machine just to stay alive. He can’t travel or do any of the things he’d planned to do in retirement. One in four people with diabetes develops long-term kidney damage.”

She glanced around the room, her gaze resting briefly on Steve. “Don’t be one of the statistics.”

Over the smattering of applause, she added, “Are there any questions?”

Paul, Ralph, Steve and Bob were seated on the couch and chairs. They’d listened in polite silence. Now they shook their heads—
no questions.
All through her talk Sienna had been conscious of Jack leaning against the fridge, arms crossed over his chest, watching her.

She unhooked her flip chart and started to dismantle the stand. She hoped the men—especially Steve—had taken in the message, but it was hard to tell. “Help yourself to the fruit and veggie platter. I’ll stay around for a few minutes in case you want to ask me anything.”

Paul reached for a handful of carrot sticks and dipped one into the chickpea dip Jack had made for the occasion. The other men, including Steve, gravitated toward the chocolate chip cookies Jean had dropped off earlier.

Sienna left the chart stand and offered the veggie platter to Steve. “Can I have a word?”

Steve threw a hungry glance at the chocolate chip cookies, then sighed and took a few cucumber sticks and a slice of melon. “Sure.”

Sienna set the platter on the table and followed him away from the others.

“A cookie wasn’t going to kill me.” Steve eyed the cucumbers in his hand with distaste. “Were you aiming your talk at me?”

“Not just you. Men’s health is an important issue. I give the same talk to other groups in the community. But I’m glad of the chance to speak to you privately.” Sienna glanced around to make sure no one was within hearing distance, then continued. “I received the lab results from your blood sugar tests. Your blood sugar is three times the acceptable level.”

Behind his steel-framed glasses, fear flickered in Steve’s eyes. “There must be some mistake.”

“There’s always a possibility these results are an anomaly,” she said. “That’s why standard procedure is to confirm with a follow-up test. Same thing again, on a different day.”

Steve groaned. “Not more fasting.”

“I’m afraid so.” From her purse she produced a pamphlet and gave it to him. “Read that. Discuss it with your wife and family.”

Reluctantly he accepted it, then immediately rolled it into a cylinder. “And if the next test gives the same result?”

“It will indicate you have type 2 diabetes. It’s not the end of the world,” she added quickly as his expression turned dark. “Diet and exercise are critical to managing the condition. Medication can improve the efficiency of your own insulin—”

“Yeah, yeah.”

“You will go for the follow-up test, won’t you?” Sienna pressed. “As I’ve just told the group, if diabetes goes untreated there can be serious complications.”

“I’ll get the blood test,” Steve said, but without enthusiasm. “Does Jack know about the first one?”

“Not unless you mentioned it to him. Have you told your wife?”

“Nah. She’s gone walkabout,” he muttered. “A bloody meditation retreat.”

Searching his troubled face, she said gently, “Steve, why are you keeping this from your family?”

“I explained already,” he said, frowning. “I don’t want people fussing over me.”

Or stopping him from eating sweets, was Sienna’s guess. “Make sure you take care of yourself. Are you walking?”

“Smedley gets me out every day.” He bent and scratched behind the dog’s ears. “Come on, pup. You need to go outside before we get back to work.”

Sienna returned to the lounge area to finish packing up her display. As she was stuffing rolled posters into a cardboard tube she saw Steve detour into the kitchen, drop the cucumber sticks into the rubbish bin and tuck a couple of cookies into his pocket. Her heart sank as he left the shed. Then she shrugged. She wasn’t the food police.

The other men had drifted back to work. Jack was last to go, grabbing a carrot stick and a cookie. “You hit the health message pretty hard,” he said. “I think the guys are a bit shell-shocked. Food is also about enjoyment. Maybe the next time you give that talk, you might think about finding a way to make healthy food fun.”

“I’m speaking to adults, not children.” Sienna slid a sheaf of extra pamphlets into her briefcase. Jack looked good in his polo shirt and snug jeans but she kept her mind on business. “Does Ralph’s wife bring cakes and cookies every day?”

“Pretty much. The guys really look forward to it.”

Sienna hesitated. She couldn’t betray doctor-patient confidentiality, but she had a moral duty to convey her concern. “Your dad would be wise to cut back on sweets. He’s overweight, especially around the middle.”

“He likes them.” Jack’s chin came up. “Doesn’t everyone?”

Sienna noticed Steve, back from taking Smedley outside, watching them from across the room and decided not to pursue the matter. It was up to him to take responsibility for his health.

“All things in moderation. So, you got the shed up and running,” she commented to Jack. “Are you enjoying it?”

He scowled in feigned exasperation. “Ralph puts his tools down all over the place and then forgets where. Bob needles Paul continuously. My dad’s wood shavings are getting into my electronics.”

In other words, he loved it. And she found the aura of purposeful energy that surrounded him
very
attractive.

“Remember, it’s temporary,” he warned. “Don’t get any ideas.”

“No ideas whatsoever.” Sienna lifted her palms, careful not to say
I told you so.
“Do you mind if I take a look at what the guys are doing before I go?”

“Go ahead. I’d better go see what Oliver’s up to.”

Sienna left her posters, easel and briefcase in the sitting area and walked across to the workbench where Bob was making kites.

“Very impressive,” Sienna said, watching Bob’s stumpy fingers notch together the diamond-shaped fiberglass frame he’d constructed. Finished kites hung from the pegboard behind the bench. The colorful sails were made of ripstop nylon and appliquéd with butterflies and birds.

“My wife makes the sails at home,” Bob said. “She’s got a commercial sewing machine and a friend who sells her the fabric wholesale.”

“You two could go into business,” Sienna said.

“Nah, you couldn’t make a living out of it.”

As Sienna moved away, her gaze sought out Jack and Oliver. Their heads were bent together as Jack showed Olly how to attach wires to the dogbot. Olly was nodding, the way he did when he listened hard. Jack glanced up, saw Sienna watching them. She looked away, annoyed at herself for getting caught staring.

Amid a liberal sprinkling of sawdust was a pile of rough wood blocks and a couple of wooden toy cars and boats. The layer of wood shavings carpeting the concrete floor rustled as she approached.

“Those aren’t finished,” Ralph said as she picked up a toy car. “I’ve got to give them a coat of paint.”

“The wheels even turn,” Sienna said, spinning a front tire. “I love the headlights and outlines of the doors.”

At the end of the workbench Jack had his head down, working steadily. If he was aware of her coming closer, he wasn’t letting on.

She moved on to where Steve was fitting the rockers onto a wooden horse while Jason sanded the body of another beast. A finished palomino with a painted golden body and white mane and tail stood to one side.

“Hey, Steve, Jason,” Sienna said. “What a pretty horse.”

Steve hiked his pants up his bulging belly and proudly touched the palomino’s head to set the rockers in motion. “Jason got us real horsehair from his cousin’s stables. ’Course, I know he’s just hanging around the stable to chat up the girls who come to ride. Isn’t that right, Jase?”

The boy flushed bright red and ducked his head, his hand flashing as he scrubbed faster with his sandpaper.

Sienna laughed softly. This time when her gaze rose she found Jack watching her. She recalled how he’d tweaked her braid. Her cheeks turned warm. Deliberately she moved away from the bench even though Olly had talked of nothing but dogbots all week. Instead she veered across the room to see what Paul was doing with the bikes.

Two used children’s bikes were leaning against the wall. A third was upside down on top of a canvas tarp with the front wheel lying on the floor. Paul was hunkered down beside it, nuts, bolts and small tools organized tidily along the perimeter of the tarp.

She ran her fingers through the white plastic streamers on the handles of a pink-and-purple girl’s bike. “I had a bicycle just like this when I was five years old.”

Paul rose and stretched out his lower back. “You should have seen the rusted mess that was when it came in. I had to take it completely apart and spray paint every piece separately.”

“You guys have accomplished so much already,” she marveled. “I can’t wait to see what you come up with by Trivia Night.”

Paul shrugged. “We’ve got three weeks to find out.”

Three weeks until she had to see Jack again socially.

She hovered at the edge of Paul’s workspace. From the back, Jack’s broad back was bent slightly as he worked, his triceps flexing below the short sleeves of his polo shirt. He stood with one hip cocked, the denim pulled snugly over his butt. Olly glanced up at him every minute or so to ask a question or get confirmation that he was assembling his robot correctly. Jack was so different from Anthony, who could perform delicate heart surgery but wouldn’t know how to change a washer on a tap.

Paul stepped around her to get something and cast a curious glance her way. Realizing she was still standing there, she took a breath and set out across the room. Her son saw her coming and made space for her between him and his new hero.

“Look at this,” Oliver said, proudly placing his dogbot upright.

The toy was six inches high with a square flat body of transparent yellow plastic. It had four plastic legs attached to wheels, a black whipcord tail, a head with a steel bolt for a muzzle and pricked ears made of swiveling steel washers.

Oliver picked up a remote control and switched it on. The dogbot’s head turned. Sienna smiled as Olly supplied the bark. He pressed a toggle switch and the dogbot rolled forward. “We’re trying to find a way to make the tail wag.”

“Your son put that together,” Jack said. “He’s got real talent.”

“It’s great, Olly.” Sienna was surprised but not necessarily thrilled. She was always proud of Oliver, but lately this…talent…was distracting him from his studies.

Her ambivalence must have shown. “Something wrong?” Jack asked.

“Olly’s been spending every afternoon here.”

“Jack needs my help,” Oliver piped up.

Sienna looked at Jack.

“That’s right.” Jack gazed down at Oliver and smiled.

A surge of possessiveness rushed through her. Oliver was besotted with his new friend. Jack had altogether too much influence on her son.

Get a grip.
They were only making toys. It wasn’t as if he had any real influence on Oliver.

She nodded at the black metal box shrouded in plastic pushed to the back of the workbench on the other side of Jack. “What’s that?”

“That? Oh, nothing.” There was a shimmer of tension in his voice. He leaned over to sort through a container of screws and bolts, blocking her view.

She nodded and backed off. Oliver wasn’t as experienced at picking up clues or else his curiosity overrode politeness. He peered around Jack to get a closer look. “It looks like some kind of electronic instrument.”

“It’s just a thing I built for small aircraft,” he said dismissively. “It doesn’t work.”

“What kind of a thing?” Oliver persisted.

“Don’t bother him with so many questions,” Sienna said. Although she had to admit she was curious, too. If it was nothing, why was he taking such pains to hide it?

“He doesn’t mind, do you, Jack?” Oliver said.

“It’s a global positioning system.” He was clearly making an effort, not entirely successful, not to be irritated with the boy.

“A GPS? Cool!” Oliver put down his dogbot to scurry over.

“It’s broken,” Jack repeated. “Nothing to look at.”

Oliver lifted a corner of the plastic. The casing was dented so badly that the components inside must have been damaged, too. The screen on the front was cracked and the control panel stripped clean away.

“It’s broken, all right.” Oliver touched a piece of the screen that was sticking out and accidentally chipped it off.

“Don’t do that,” Jack said sharply.

Oliver dropped his hand, startled. “Sorry.”

“When you say you built it, do you mean you invented it?” Sienna asked.

BOOK: Her Great Expectations
11.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Crime Seen by Kate Lines
The Innocent by Ann H. Gabhart
The Land of the Shadow by Lissa Bryan
Faceless by Kopman Whidden, Dawn
THE BRIDGE by CAROL ERICSON
Wildfire by James, Lynn
The Ming and I by Tamar Myers
Lily: Captive to the Dark by Alaska Angelini
Sangre en el diván by Ibéyise Pacheco