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Chapter no 21

The Women

On a hot June afternoon, three months after her return from Vietnam, Frankie woke from her first decent nightโ€™s sleep.

Maybe she was getting better. She was.

Sheย was getting better.

She put a robe on over herย SKI VIETNAMย T-shirt and panties and headed down to the kitchen for coffee.

She found her mother at the kitchen table, dressed for the country club, smoking a cigarette, a cup of coffee beside her, reading the newspaper. Frankie saw the headline:ย FIRST LT. SHARON LANE KILLED IN ROCKET

EXPLOSION IN VIETNAM.

Mom drew in a sharp breath, slammed the newspaper face down on the table. Then she looked up, tried to smile. โ€œGood morning, dear. Well, good afternoon.โ€

Frankie reached for the newspaper. โ€œNoโ€”โ€ Mom said.

Frankie wrenched it away from her mother, turned it over to the article.ย Army nurse Sharon Lane is the firstโ€”and so far onlyโ€”nurse to be killed by enemy fire, although seven nurses have been killed or died during the conflict to date. First Lt. Lane died almost instantly when a rocket fragment struck her during an attack at Chu Lai.

Frankie put down the paper. Enemy fire. A rocket fragment.

Almostย instantly.

โ€œDid you know her?โ€ Mom asked quietly. โ€œNo.โ€

And yes. We were all the same in some ways. I could have been her.

Frankie closed her eyes, said a silent prayer.

โ€œMaybe you should call in sick for work today.โ€

Frankie opened her eyes. She felt jittery now, anxious. Angry. โ€œIf I called in sick every time I felt sad, Iโ€™d never go to work.โ€

โ€œI ran into Laura Gillihan yesterday at the Free Bros. Market. She mentioned that Rebecca would love to see you.โ€

Frankie poured herself a cup of coffee, stirred in some heavy cream. She was breathing a little fast, felt almost light-headed.

Becky Gillihan. There was a name she hadnโ€™t heard in a long time. Once upon a time, theyโ€™d been friends. At St. Bernadetteโ€™s Academy, theyโ€™d been inseparable.

โ€œSheโ€™s married. Still lives on the island. I could call. Tell her youโ€™ll stop by before work. What else will you do until your shift starts?โ€

Frankie wasnโ€™t really listening. She could feel her motherโ€™s worried gaze, felt how she was being watched. Frankie should say more, tell her mother that she was okay,ย not to worry,ย but the thought of Sharon Lane wouldnโ€™t let her go.

Almost instantly.

She walked down the hall, stripped out of her clothes in her bedroom, and took a long, hot shower, crying for the unknown nurse until her tears ran out.

Afterward, she re-dressed in the clothes she found on her bedroom floor

โ€”bell-bottom jeans and an embroidered peasant topโ€”and realized she was shaky from a lack of food. She lit up a cigarette instead of eating.

On the kitchen table, she found a note from her mother.

Frances Grace,

I spoke to Laura. Rebecca was thrilled at the prospect of seeing you. She asked me to pass along that she is hosting a party for Dana Johnston today at 4:00ย P.M.ย She invited you!

570 Second Avenue.

We are off to a charity auction in Carlsbad.

Home late.

Frankie glanced at the clock on the stove. The party had started fifteen minutes ago.

She didnโ€™t want to go to Beckyโ€™s. In fact, the thought of going made her feel vaguely ill. Could she handle seeing old friends?

No.

But what was the alternative? Sit in this mausoleum of a house alone, waiting until long after dark to go to work? Or be here when her parents returned? Her mother eyed her nervously all the time, as if she feared Frankie was wired with explosives and one wrong word would set her off. And Dad seemed determined not to look at her at all.

Sheโ€™d promised Barb and Ethel that she would do more than endure, that she would engage.

This was as good a place to start as any.

She ate a piece of Wonder Bread slathered with butter and sprinkled with sugar, and headed back to her room for her shoes and handbag. It occurred to her that she should expend a little effort with her hair and makeup. Maybe wear a dress. Several of her old high school friends would be there, after all, most of whom had grown up swimming at the country club and learning to play golf.

But Frankie couldnโ€™t do it. The Army nurseโ€™s death had stripped her defenses down to nothing. She was barely hanging on as it was. She started the Bug and backed out of the garage and headed across the island, drove up Orange Avenue, and turned left on Second, just a street from the park.

The house was a bungalow from the 1940s; small and perfectly kept up, gray paint, a bright red door. Flowers grew in neatly tended window boxes on either side of the stone path that led from the sidewalk to the front door.

Frankie got out of her car and walked very slowly to the gate, opening it

โ€”clickโ€”shutting it behind herโ€”click.

The stone path was lined on either side with flowers in bright pink bloom.

She stopped at the front door, knocked, and immediately heard footsteps on the other side.

Becky answered the door. For a split second, Frankie didnโ€™t recognize the beautiful young woman with bouffant blond hair, who carried a plump,

blue-eyed toddler in a sailor suit on her hip. โ€œFrankieโ€™s here, everyone!โ€

Becky shouted so loudly that the baby in her arms started to cry.

Frankie was pulled through a house cluttered with childrenโ€™s toys, out to the patio, where a dozen well-dressed women were sitting in folding chairs, drinking champagne. A silver coffee service sat on a slim wooden table; beside it, an array of hors dโ€™oeuvres: pigs in a blanket, ants on a log, nut- covered balls of cheese encircled by Ritz crackers.

It felt strangely discordant to Frankie that this staid, unchanging world of flowers and champagne and women in summery dresses persevered while menโ€”and womenโ€”were dying in Vietnam.

Frankie recognized several high school friends, girls sheโ€™d played volleyball with and gone on double dates with, a few of the cheerleaders, two or three older womenโ€”the mothersโ€”and also saw some young women she didnโ€™t know. College friends of Danaโ€™s or relatives, perhaps.

The patio was decorated with balloons; a large table held beautifully decorated gifts. It was a birthday party, she supposed. Had her mother told her that?

โ€œI โ€ฆ should have a gift,โ€ Frankie said, feeling out of place. She didnโ€™t belong in this party full of pretty housewives who wore pressed dresses and smoked Virginia Slims.

โ€œDonโ€™t give it a thought,โ€ Becky said, taking her by the arm, leading her through the party to a chair near a fragrant, laden orange tree.

Dana began opening gifts.

Frankie tried to smile in admiration at appropriate times. She saw the way the other women oohed and aahed over household items. Silver candlesticks. Waterford glasses. Sheets from Italy.

Dana, whom Frankie barely remembered from grade school, smiled brightly at each present and said something special to the giver. Her mother sat beside her, making notes about each gift, so that short work could be made of the thank-you notes. A maid in a black-and-white uniform bustled from table to table, freshening drinks and delivering canapรฉs.

A wedding shower, Frankie realized slowly.ย Oh God.

Frankie snagged a glass of champagne from a nearby tray.

She drank it quickly, put her empty glass down, and picked up another, and then lit up a cigarette, trying to smoke herself to calm. Then she

remembered that she had to be at work at 2300 hours. She shouldnโ€™t drink before her shift at the hospital.

It was just a party. Nothing dangerous or frightening, but she felt anxiety ripple through her. Panic rose up; she closed her eyes, thought,ย You can leave soon.ย But what was she so afraid of?

โ€œAre you okay?โ€

She felt Becky come up beside her, smelled her floral perfume. Jean Natรฉ. Their favorite from high school. It made Frankie think of โ€™Nam, and how her perfume had reminded the wounded men of their girls back home.

Frankie released a breath, let it out slowly, and opened her eyes.

Becky was there, tucked in close as she used to do a lifetime ago. Her smile was bright and untroubled. She seemed impossibly young, but she was Frankieโ€™s age.

Frankie tried to smile, but her anxiety was so high, she wasnโ€™t able to tell if sheโ€™d succeeded.

โ€œFine,โ€ Frankie said. How long ago had Becky asked? โ€œFine,โ€ she said again, trying to smile. โ€œSo. Whenโ€™s the wedding?โ€

โ€œTwo months,โ€ Becky said. โ€œDana is marrying Jeffrey Heller. You remember him? Football scholarship. We were all at USC together.โ€

โ€œDid he go to โ€™Nam?โ€

Becky laughed. A pretty, optimistic sound. โ€œCourse not. Most of the boys we know have ways out. A few have gotten married.โ€

โ€œHow fortunate.โ€ Frankie got to her feet so quickly it must have looked like she wasnโ€™t in control of her body, and really, she wasnโ€™t. She was like an animal who had sensed danger and gone into full flight mode. If she didnโ€™t leave now she might scream. โ€œI should go.โ€

โ€œWhy, you just got here, silly!โ€

โ€œI โ€ฆ have to work.โ€ Frankie sidled to the left to give herself a clear path.

Someone put a record on the stereo and turned up the volume.

โ€œWe gotta get out of this placeโ€ฆโ€

โ€œTurn that shit off,โ€ Frankie snapped. She didnโ€™t realize that sheโ€™d yelled it until the record was scratched and the party fell quiet and everyone was staring at her.

She couldnโ€™t smile. โ€œSorry. I hate that song.โ€

Becky looked frightened. โ€œUh. How was Florence? Chad and I are going for our anniversary.โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t in Florence, Bex,โ€ she said slowly, trying to calm down, pull back, be okay. Be normal.

But she wasnโ€™t okay.

She was standing with a bunch of debutantes and sorority girls who were planning a wedding with fresh flowers and honeymoons abroad while men their age were dying on foreign soil. Notย theirย men, though, not their rich, pretty college boys. โ€œI was in Vietnam.โ€

Silence.

Then a titter of laughter. It broke the silence; the women all joined in.

Becky looked relieved. โ€œAh. Funny joke, Frankie. You always were a card.โ€

Frankie took a step closer, went toe to toe with her best friend from ninth grade. All the while she was thinking,ย Calm down, back off,ย at the same time she thought,ย Killed by enemy fireย andย almost instantly.

โ€œBelieve me, Bex. It is not a joke. Iโ€™ve held menโ€™s severed legs in my hands and tried to hold their chests together just long enough to get them into the OR. Whatโ€™s happening in Vietnam is no joke. The joke is here. This.โ€ She looked around. โ€œYou.โ€

She pushed past her friend and strode through the pod of silent, staring women, heard someone say, โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong with her?,โ€ and before she made it outside to her car, she was screaming.

 

 

Frankie sat at a picnic table in Ski Beach Park, overlooking the ocean. As usual on a summer evening, the place was crowded with people out walking their dogs or jogging in brightly colored short shorts. Kids played in the grass and in the sand, their shrieks of joy sometimes startlingly loud.

She ignored all of it, or, more accurately, she didnโ€™t notice the commotion going on around her. She smoked one cigarette after another, only getting up to put her butts in the trash.

There was something wrong. With her. And she was unsure of how to fix it. Her behavior at the shower was unacceptable on any level. There was no doubt about that. Oh, Becky and the others had been offensive about

Vietnam, but so was much of the country. That didnโ€™t give Frankie license to lash out. All sheโ€™d had to do was claim a need to leave and politely walk out of the party.

Instead โ€ฆ

Her anxiety and anger had surged, come out of nowhere, and suffocated

her.

Even now, hours later, it was still there, lying in wait, ready to lash out

at a momentโ€™s notice. It made her feel weak, shaky. Fragile.

Sheโ€™d never thought of herself as fragile, and yet here she was. Alone and afraid.

She could handle a MASCAL in โ€™Nam with ease, but a long-forgotten friend at a bridal shower could bring her to her emotional knees with the flick of a word.

Vietnam.

That had to be at the root of her outburst. And how could it not? Sheโ€™d shown up at aย bridalย shower only months after Ryeโ€™s death. Wouldnโ€™t anyone be upended by grief at a time like that?

But what about the sudden anger? Was that part of grief?

She had to do better, be better. No more putting herself in upsetting situations. No more telling people sheโ€™d been to Vietnam. They didnโ€™t want to hear it, anyway. The message was clear:ย Donโ€™t talk about it.

She needed to do as everyone suggested and forget.

She knew that enforced silence added to her anxiety, increased her anger, but it was undeniably true that even her own family was ashamed of her service and expected her to be ashamed, too.

At 2245 hours, long after dark, she was still on the wooden picnic table bench, worrying over all of it, gnawing on the bone of her failures. When she stood up, she realized she hadnโ€™t eaten all day and the pack of cigarettes sheโ€™d smoked had left her light-headed.

She got up and walked to her car, hearing the ocean purr behind her. The park was mostly empty this late; just a few pairs of lovers out here now.

She drove the short distance to the hospital and parked. Moving cautiouslyโ€”she was jittery, unsteadyโ€”she entered the brightly lit halls, went to her locker, and put on her uniform. After brushing her teeth at the

sink, she straightened and caught sight of herself in the mirror: a young face with old, tired eyes, black hair, and a stark white nursing cap.

She headed for the nursesโ€™ station, made herself a cup of coffee, ate something from a vending machine, and began her rounds.

The halls and rooms were quiet. Most of the patients were sleeping and there were no surgeries scheduled for tonight.

Four hours later, she sat at the station desk, tapping her pen. On her shift so far, sheโ€™d changed four bedpans, helped three patients to the bathroom, and replaced two pillows. Sheโ€™d filled water pitchers and lowered a bed and helped one old woman sleep by reading to her.

As usual, she had pretty much just twiddled her thumbs.

Suddenly the elevator doors banged open. An ambulance attendant rolled a patient in on a wheeled gurney. โ€œThe ER is packed,โ€ he said. โ€œBus accident.โ€

Frankie shot to her feet, felt instinctively for the Kelly clamp on her fatigue pocket. Not there.

โ€œGunshot wound,โ€ the attendant said.

Frankie felt a rush of adrenaline. โ€œThis way,โ€ she said and ran alongside the patient, who was a young man. Shot in the upper chest at close range. Blood gushed from the gaping wound, dripped onto the floor. He couldnโ€™t breathe, gasped, grabbed for her.

In OR 1, Frankie hit the intercom. โ€œCode. Bay One. Code. Bay One.โ€ To the attendant, Frankie said, โ€œGet him on the table.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s no docโ€”โ€

โ€œOn the table,โ€ she shouted, washing her hands, looking for gloves. โ€œNow.โ€

The attendant moved the kid onto the operating table. Frankie masked and scrubbed up and hurried back to the table. โ€œYouโ€™re going to be okay,โ€ she said to the young man.

He gurgled, gasped, clawed at his throat. Something was obstructing his breathing.

Frankie went to the intercom again, hit the button with her elbow, and called for help, this time saying, โ€œCode blue. STAT. OR, Bay One.โ€

โ€œHang on, kid,โ€ she said. โ€œThe doc will be here soon.โ€ The patient gasped, started to turn blue.

Frankie glanced back at the door. Didnโ€™t these peopleย listen? Did they not respond to calls?

She waited five more seconds, then found the surgical cart, grabbed some antiseptic ointment and a scalpel and a breathing tube.

He was dying.

She wiped his neck with antiseptic and picked up a scalpel. It took less than twenty seconds to do the tracheotomy and get the kid breathing.

โ€œThere,โ€ she said when he inhaled and exhaled through the tube. She cut off his shirt and vest, exposing the wound. It wasย gushingย blood. She grabbed some gauze, applied pressure, and tried to stop the bleeding.

A short-haired man in scrubs rushed into the OR and stopped in his tracks. โ€œWhat in theย hell?โ€

Frankie threw him an irritated look. โ€œThere you are. What took you so long?โ€

The doctor stared at her, his mouth open. Mrs. Henderson appeared beside him. She looked at Frankie, her face no doubt streaked with the patientโ€™s blood, her white nurse uniform stained red in places, her cap thrown to the floor, applying pressure to a patientโ€™s wound.

โ€œWho did the trach?โ€ the doctor asked, looking around. โ€œHe couldnโ€™t breathe,โ€ Frankie said.

โ€œSo you performed a trach?ย You?โ€ the doctor said. โ€œI called. No one came,โ€ Frankie said.

โ€œWe have other emergencies,โ€ he said. โ€œTell that to this kid.โ€

The doctor turned, said, โ€œMrs. Henderson, get a team here. Now.โ€ He went to wash his hands.

Frankie felt flushed with pride. She had shown them her skills. Saved this young man, maybe.

Mrs. Henderson stood there, her arms crossed, her hair frizzed out around her white, starched cap, her forehead pleated, her mouth set in a grim line. โ€œYou could have killed that man.โ€

โ€œI saved him, maโ€™am.โ€

โ€œWho do you think you are?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m a combat nurse. A good one.โ€

โ€œThat may be,โ€ Mrs. Henderson said, โ€œbut youโ€™re also a loose cannon.

You have just exposed this hospital to liability. Youโ€™re fired.โ€

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