Fighting for Anna Read online

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  I winced. “Sorry. Hit too close to home for a second.”

  Annabelle nodded, her eyes huge.

  I squeezed her shoulder. “Gertrude’s owner, Gidget. She’s in there, on the floor.”

  “Oh my God.” Annabelle pressed her face to the glass.

  Sam did the same above her head.

  “We’ve got to help her.” I rattled the locked doorknob and shouted, “Gidget, can you hear me?”

  Still nothing.

  I pushed, but the door wouldn’t budge. I knew I should call 911, but first I had to check on Gidget. “Sam, we’ve got to bust through the door. On three?”

  He crouched in front of the door, and I did the same beside him.

  I said, “One, two, three.”

  We threw our combined weight against the flimsy old door, and the jamb gave with a splintering of wood. Sam and I half fell through as it swung open. Annabelle followed us in.

  The house reeked of burnt coffee. I put the back of my hand to my nose and stumbled forward. I crouched at Gidget’s side, careful not to slip in her blood. I dropped my hand from my nose and reached for her wrist, pressing my fingers against the inside of it as it jerked spasmodically, and I searched for a pulse. It was very faint, but it was there. My eyes darted around the room. Were we the only ones in the house? I knew Gidget had a troubled medical history, but that didn’t necessarily mean she’d landed on the floor without help. There was nothing to suggest a struggle, though, no overturned lamps or tables, and I didn’t hear any noises to indicate an intruder. I’d have to search the house in a moment. Meanwhile, Gidget was the priority.

  “She’s alive. Call 911,” I said.

  “Um, I don’t have my phone.”

  Not a surprise. Sam never had his phone.

  “I’ve got yours,” Annabelle said, already pressing the numbers on the keypad.

  I was afraid to move Gidget, but we needed to stop her bleeding. “Find me a rag, please, Sam. Wash your hands first.” I thought again about the possibility that Gidget had been attacked. “And be careful.”

  He disappeared.

  Some cruel puppeteer kept pulling Gidget’s strings, her body jerking spasmodically, and I wished I could cut them. Instead, I smoothed steely curls away from her temple on the dry side of her forehead and they sprang back into place. Her pale skin seemed gray, the lopsided red lipstick garish against it. I put my ear next to her mouth and my hand on her sternum. She was breathing, just barely, with long lapses between each breath. I opened her mouth. Her tongue wasn’t obstructing her airway, which was good. I heard water running from down the hall.

  “Gidget, are you okay?”

  No response.

  Gertrude crawled on her belly, her gnarled locks pooling on the floor and soaking up blood and some kind of brownish liquid. She inched as close as she could get to Gidget’s head, knocking into a broken coffee cup that skittered out of her way. For the first time, I got a good look at the dog’s face. Beneath the dreadlocks crowning her forehead, one of her eyes had popped partway out of its socket, hanging just over the bottom lid. She looked like something from a B horror flick.

  “Poor Gertrude,” I said, using my most soothing voice. “I’ll fix you up as soon as I can, I promise.” Summers and weekends with Papa had taught me most of what I needed to know to help animals—including genus homo sapiens—in minor emergencies, thank goodness. I’d put many an eye back into its socket, especially with the dog breeds whose eyes were on the outside of their skulls. Like Gertrude’s were, bless her heart. She licked Gidget’s face, seeming not to notice her own injury. I brushed locks back from Gertrude’s face like I had Gidget’s, with the same result.

  Sam returned with a yellow hand towel.

  “Put it here, and press.” I pointed at Gidget’s cut.

  He positioned it tentatively.

  I put my hands over his, applying more pressure. “Like this.”

  He complied. “Why is she jerking around like that?”

  “Seizure.”

  I stepped back, taking in the scene. Gidget was birdlike in a voluminous snap-front housedress. Her high cheekbones slashed across her face, over a pursed mouth now barely sucking in enough air to keep her alive. Concern had tightened Sam’s brow at the same time compassion softened his eyes. He put his free hand on Gidget’s shoulder, as if to stop her spastic movements.

  I heard the 911 operator on speakerphone. The voice and static crashed through the living room like a wrecking ball. “Nine-one-one, what’s your emergency?”

  Annabelle’s eyebrows rose. She shrugged at me, a clueless gesture. Teenage girls. Teenagers in general.

  I shouted so the phone would pick me up from across the room, and I motioned for Annabelle to move closer, which she did. “My name is Michele Lopez Hanson. We found my neighbor collapsed and in a seizure. She’s unconscious, bleeding from a head wound, and barely breathing. I don’t know what happened to her, but we need an ambulance.”

  The connection crackled behind the loud voice. “Where are you calling from?”

  “I’m not sure of her address. Out near Serbin, between Giddings and La Grange.” I gave her my address. “It’s near there.”

  Before I could explain further, the operator shouted, “What county is that? Lee? Fayette? Washington? They all come together out there.”

  “Lee County. Gidget—my neighbor—isn’t on the same road as me. She lives about two miles away by car, but maybe a quarter mile as the crow flies.”

  The voiced boomed. I still couldn’t tell if it was a man or woman. “Gidget? Gidget Becker?”

  Of course, with a name like Gidget in a small town, the dispatcher knew who she was. “That’s her. We’re at her place.”

  “I’ll dispatch the ambulance and the sheriff’s department.” Then, more softly, “Poor thing. Another seizure.”

  “Thank you.” I looked into the eyes of my kids. They looked scared. I tried to sound confident. “What should we do for her in the meantime?”

  The voice softened, solemn and more feminine. “Pray.”

  Chapter Two

  Annabelle nudged Sam away and took over at Gidget’s head wound. She was a herder, that one. She stayed on the line with the dispatcher, who engaged her in a hypnotic back-and-forth. I knew Gidget was in good hands, as good or better than my own. I wasn’t what you’d call the Mary Poppins type. I was better at getting my hands dirty and trying to fix things than I was at caring for people, even if I knew my way around a trauma.

  I stepped away from Gidget and whispered to Sam, “Can you give me a hand with Gertrude?”

  He nodded and followed me into the hallway. “What do you mean?”

  “I’m going to get some supplies, then I’m going to need you to hold her while I fix her eye.”

  “Her eye?” He leaned down to get a look at her face. “Oh. Wow. That’s sick.”

  “Yeah. Sick.” I patted his arm. “I’ll be right back.”

  I trotted down the hall toward the bathroom. Stunning original art in vivid colors—a Picasso-like sunflower in oil, a crumbling brick façade in watercolor that read “Dr Pepper”—crowded both sides of the hallway and most of the walls in the house. Gidget had given me a tour before, and half of them were her work, the other half a who’s who of contemporary art from around the world, some of them created for her as thank-you gifts. There were three doors at the end of the hall. Two were closed. One opened to the bathroom, where a lone abstract of the farmhouse in watercolor hung askew above the toilet, signed by Gidget.

  It was a long, narrow room. From the age of the house (early nineteen hundreds, maybe?), it had to be half of a repurposed bedroom or something. The countertops were four-by-four cracked yellow tiles and dirty grout, with a white porcelain undermount sink. A chrome-rimmed medicine-cabinet-type mirror hung above the sink, but yielded nothing except pill bottles when I peeked inside. The bath mat, also yellow, was shag, and from the water damage to the wood floors, the mat didn’t appear to do much good. The
shower curtain was white, as was the rust-stained tub. I still had an eye peeled and my ears attuned for signs of foul play, but saw nor heard anything suspicious. Maybe since Adrian’s murder I assumed the worst. Not everything was a murder mystery.

  Behind the bathroom door were floor-to-ceiling cabinets in cheap wood, painted a color that was almost white. Jackpot. The door to the largest cabinet was stuck shut, and I had to throw my weight into it to pull it open. I found a first aid kit inside, plus other useful supplies for committing veterinary malpractice on the fly. I grabbed gauze pads, saline solution, Vaseline, Q-tips, and another hand towel. I scrubbed my hands with soap and hot water, then soaked two of the gauze pads with cold water.

  “Everything okay, Belle?” I whispered to her as I crouched on the other side of Gidget, by Sam and Gertrude.

  She nodded, her eyes less wide. “Is she going to die?”

  “She might.”

  “She’s really old, isn’t she?”

  I stared at Gidget, unsure. She looked ancient. Not just her skin and hair, but her style. Her curly bobbed haircut was the most current thing about her, really, and even it had gone out of style long ago. But she’d told me not to let her appearance deceive me, that severe medical problems and living too hard had taken a toll. “Younger than you’d think.”

  The dispatcher broke in to talk to Annabelle again.

  As quietly as I could, I said to Sam, “Hold her completely still. I have to put her eye back in the socket.”

  Sam’s jaw dropped. “You can do that?”

  “Papa taught me.” So well that I’d flirted with following in his footsteps, but had ended up at law school because of the smells in a vet practice.

  Sam stroked Gertrude’s back. He looked a little pale. “Uh . . .”

  “Watch out for the broken glass.”

  He didn’t move.

  I put my hand on his knee. “You can do this, Sam.”

  Swallowing, he lowered himself into a cross-legged seated position and pulled Gertrude into his lap.

  She yelped and wriggled.

  “I’m not gonna hurt you, girl. Mom might, but not me.”

  I put the sopping wet gauze pad over her eye, as softly as I could. She flinched. “Shhhh.” I dipped two fingers into the Vaseline and removed the gauze pad. “You should look away.”

  “Why—”

  I smoothed the Vaseline all over Gertrude’s eye.

  “Oh my God, Mom, gross.” His voice was panicked.

  “It’s okay, Sam. Don’t scare the dog.”

  Gertrude had hunched down into the hollow between Sam’s legs. She was shivering, but otherwise hanging in there.

  “Good girl.” I gently dripped the saline solution around the eye and into the socket, then I picked up a Q-tip in my greasy fingers and used it to unroll Gertrude’s lower lid fully. I held the lid in place with the thumb of my other hand. I unrolled the upper lid, securing it in place with my index finger. The tissues holding Gertrude’s eye to her socket looked intact as far as I could tell. She wasn’t bleeding, and the area didn’t even look swollen. These were great signs, and a miracle. How the yaupon and running hadn’t damaged it, I couldn’t fathom. I cleaned some debris away with the gauze, then drew a slow, deep breath. Sam echoed mine. I closed my own eyes for a moment, imagining the tissue I was about to handle as fragile as a raw egg yolk. Gently yet firmly, I pressed against it. Thanks to the Vaseline, it slid right back into place with a tiny plop. Gertrude whimpered, then shook her head. The breath I’d been holding came out in a rush.

  “Holy crap, Mom, you’re a rock star.” Sam’s grin was enormous, and he ruffled the hair hanging behind Gertrude’s ears. “Good girl, you’re going to be just fine.”

  I flipped the gauze pad and put the fresh side over Gertrude’s eye. She shied away from my hand, and I grinned like Sam. The dog could see. “Hold this here.”

  Sam put his hand over the pad. “How long?”

  I stood. “As long as she’ll let you.”

  I worked my hands through Gertrude’s fur, stopping to clean a cut on her shoulder. When I’d doctored her as best I could, I stood, interlaced my fingers behind my back, stretched them down and away from my shoulders, and rolled my head. My neck cracked three times in quick succession. As I released the tension, I got a better look around me. Peeling wallpaper with tiny flowers on it hung from the top of the walls, a surreal contrast to the expensive gallery of art over it. Cobwebs draped from the corners and dust covered picture frames and glass fronts. The faded wood floors were buckled and scarred. The place was old, small, run-down, forgotten. Like its owner.

  I squatted beside Annabelle.

  The dispatcher said in her rough voice, “The EMTs are almost there, sweetie. You’re doing real good. We’re all praying for you and Gidget.”

  Annabelle shook her head at me. “She’s breathing really slow.”

  “You need me to take over?” I said under my breath.

  “I’ve got it.”

  Pride in her shot warmth across my chest. “I’ll be back in a second, then.”

  I gathered the pieces of broken coffee cup before one of us ended up needing stitches. I followed the smell of burnt coffee through the adjacent dining room and into the kitchen. The room was tidy, not a dish or crumb on the white-tiled countertop. No, that wasn’t quite true. Gidget had left a coffee stirring stick on the counter, the wooden kind with a knob on the end. I tilted it sideways. It was the kind with sweetener that melted into the coffee, and all the sweet treat was gone. It smelled odd, though. I picked it up and sniffed it. Soured creamer? I set the pieces of cup beside it. I moved them around a little. A Ferris wheel. Texas State Fair 1965. They had coffee on them, but it was dark, and it didn’t smell of cream. Then I turned my attention to the burnt coffee.

  A vintage yellow percolator-style coffee pot with orange butterflies was plugged in on the counter. The stink was coming from it. The darn thing would probably burn the house down soon. I jerked the plug out of the wall, my Vaselined fingers slipping on the cord. I used my less greasy hand to turn on the water faucet and squirt dish soap, then I lathered both hands up and stuck them into the stream until the water ran clear of suds. I shook my hands as my eyes roamed the tiny kitchen for a towel, taking in the old white refrigerator and white oven with a stovetop. No paper towels. No rags. No dishwasher, either. I semicircled toward the dining area and saw a roll of paper towels on the table. I used a few on my hands, then threw them in the trash. It was full to overflowing, with a milk carton, egg shells, bacon packaging, some pink happy birthday wrapping paper, a white bow, and a UPS envelope on top. I turned back toward the table and saw a stack of mail and papers beside the paper towel roll.

  I hesitated with my hand on them. I’d promised to help write Gidget’s memoirs, even if I’d forgotten about it. It didn’t make the papers my business, per se, but it probably made it okay for me to glance through them, and it certainly made me feel curious and a little proprietary. I looked back at Gidget. I couldn’t ask her permission, yet I had a strong feeling she’d give it.

  Holding my breath, I rifled through. Correspondence, both opened and unopened. A Bluebonnet Electric bill. A Lee County property-tax statement. A letter from the IRS. Texans for Wendy Davis mail. Something with a return address from Lee County Seismic and another item from Eldon “Greyhound” Smith, a bigwig attorney from Houston who I’d heard had slowed down to a country practice in Round Top. A manila envelope with Montrose Fine Arts Gallery in the return address. Another letter, from the office of Julie Herrington Sloane, the campaign manager for Boyd Herrington, U.S. Senator, Texas. I started to dismiss it as political junk mail, but realized the address and postage were handwritten and authentic, rather than machine created. At the bottom, old letters tied with a pink satin bow, no postage or return address on them.

  My heart beat harder in my chest. I picked the letters up for a closer look and smelled something roselike waft through the air. MY DARLING DAUGHTER was written on all o
f them. From Gidget’s mother to her? The thought was like a physical blow, a shove catapulting me back to my mother’s service. Standing at her casket with me, Papa had broken into sobs, and with my arms around him, he’d confessed that I had a brother.

  “We were so young. Cindy couldn’t . . . I didn’t . . . Dios perdóname. We gave him up for adoption. And every year we regretted it more.”

  I’d pushed back from him and stared with my mouth open, blindsided to learn I was not her only darling, or his, either.

  His shoulders heaving, his face in his hands, he’d said, “She tried to find him. We both did. He should be here. He should be here.”

  Annabelle shouted, jerking me back into the present. “Michele, I don’t think she’s breathing.”

  I shoved the mail aside and ran to Gidget.

  The 911 operator asked, “Do you know CPR, hon?”

  Two cops burst through the front door, guns drawn.

  “Sheriff’s department!” The first man through the door yelled. “Everyone put your hands where I can see them.”

  I put my hands in the air and shot a significant look at the kids. Both of them had turned immediately toward me for a clue as to their next move and their hands went up a nanosecond later. We’d had many conversations about complying first and explaining later with law enforcement. And from the flared nostrils of these two deputies to their dilated pupils and dramatic entrance, it was clear this was the most excitement they’d had in their careers. Which had to have been short, because neither of them was much older than Annabelle or Sam. We had to be careful not to spook them further.

  “Gidget has stopped breathing. Are the EMTs here?” I said. When they didn’t answer immediately, I slung my head in the direction of Gidget. “Shall we start CPR or will one of you do it?”

  Behind me I heard the 911 operator. “Hey, guys, these are the people that found Gidget having another seizure. They’ve been a real blessing to her.”

  The man in front, a Hispanic man about three or four inches taller than my own diminutive five foot two, kept his gun up, but the white deputy behind him lowered his without holstering it.