Can't get her out of my head.
Chapter 1
"Hello?" It wasn't her standard greeting, but reception at work had
patched the call through and said it was a Doctor on the phone. This was
not at all an anticipated phone call and she was curious and uncertain.
It was mid afternoon, and she'd ducked home from the office early. Her
plan was to work from home for a few hours, and later pick up the girls.
"Hello, I was after Suzanne Ashwood." It was a male voice.
"Yes. Speaking." She remained formal.
"Oh. Hi...... err....... Suzanne, my name is Dr Thomas Chase, I'm an
Intensive Care Specialist at Western Central Hospital. I have something
I need to discuss with you."
These are the phone calls that you pray you never get. Suzanne's pulse
quickened and her mind raced. It was the Intensive care part of the
introduction that resonated through her. She knew nothing about the
medical field, but she, like most of us would, equated Intensive care
with seriousness.
Suzanne was thinking fast now. 'Oh God; the children? But no, they are
just down the road at school, they weren't going anywhere today - and
Western Central, well that's, that's miles away, on the other side of
town I think. I don't even really know where that is.'
'But of course it could be Stephen.' Her rapid internal monologue
pounded at her. 'I guess it must be. He's at work in the city. What has
happened? How has he ended up in hospital? Intensive care? Oh no! Please
don't let it be so.'
A wave of nausea swept across her and she felt a tingling in her fingers
and her lips.
"Who? What?..." she stammered in a way that made the caller feel the
need to re-identify himself, but she was really asking who was in
intensive care and what was wrong with them.
"I'm Tom Chase - an Intensive Care Doctor at Western Hospital. I'm
afraid I have bad news!"
Then, a pause, not intentionally for dramatic effect, it just seemed so.
It was merely that Tom was still crafting the words in his head. Suzanne
- standing unsupported, felt a sudden need to brace herself on
something, anything, but nothing was near. This is news she fears, or
more precisely now, knows, really is about to change her life.
"It's about Summer. Summer Bryce."
The relief in Suzanne was so palpable that even the Doctor on the phone
could sense the sudden release in tension. Oh thank God. It's not
Stephen. It's nothing really. Well virtually nothing. Suzanne could
breathe again and her self control was quickly regained. It's laughable
even, to think how afraid she'd been moments earlier, to how
inconsequential this whole situation was.
"Who?" But Suzanne had heard perfectly well the first time. She just
wanted to be clear to the Doctor that she didn't have any association
with the person he was referring to.
"Summer Bryce," he repeated. "Your relative." He added the second part
with less certainty than he'd had before he'd initiated this
conversation.
"I'm sorry, I have no idea who you are talking about." Suzanne had now
completely regained her composure and felt the need to make that
apparent by sounding as business-like as she could. She was back to her
working mode voice now. Assured but not too officious.
Dr Tom Chase, on the other hand, felt as though the wind has just
drained from his sails, as another lead appeared to be a dead end. He
felt now, after this sudden crushing setback he was never going to get
what he needed. Calling her a Jane Doe and getting the court order was
painful, but not prohibitive. But this did not sit well with him. It
never did. No-one should die alone and unknown. A relative would not
only be easier, but far more personal really. It would certainly make
him feel better about what he was about to do. What he had to do. He
knew this was part of the job. Not a good part but definitely an
essential part. It seemed though, in his efforts to confirm her
identity, and find a relative to assist with that, and all that was to
come, he was back to square one. However he was sure this woman on the
phone was the correct person. The pieces had to fit.
So he persisted. "Oh. Aren't you.... weren't you Suzanne Bryce. Your
maiden name? I rang your work and they said you were Ashwood now."
"Yes that's right but....."
The Doctor interrupted. "Well we have you down as Summer's next of
kin....."
"What?!?!" It was a half yell, and in that instant she realised she had
given herself away, and that the Doctor had caught her in her lie. "I
mean. That can't be. I'm not her next of kin."
Tom pondered for a moment. First this woman denied knowing Summer, and
now seemed outraged at the implication she is kin. There is more going
on than he understood. He needed to find out what. Some sort of sisterly
spat perhaps? He had decided that they were most likely sisters. It
seemed the most plausible conclusion. Sharing a surname till one of them
married. Although maybe they both were married now. Summer's limited
identification from her purse had two different surnames. Were it even
her purse to begin with he had to note. Assuming that it was then, this
was the only surname, of the choice of two, that had lead to a possible
relative though. So he had to speculate. Maybe there had been a major
falling out and maybe Summer's relative details were never updated.
Surely this situation would transcend such matters though. What would
make her deny the existence of her sister? Even with the news she is
unwell. Although maybe Tom hadn't been clear in explaining how unwell
she was. He would need to. No fight could be so significant for this not
to override it. Even if it was a man involved, as the instigator of the
issues that had come between them. Which Tom, having seen the nature of
such things frequently, felt likely. Still, this was imperative. He was
still not 100% sure that his patient was indeed Summer Bryce, and it was
only by some degrees of detective work that he was able to track down
anyone that might possibly know her.
The only thing he could do, he thought, at this juncture, a seeming
impasse, was to change tack, in a hope to engender sympathy. Even if not
for Summer, then maybe for his plight. He spoke again with his best soft
persuasive voice.
"Mrs Ashwood. I need your help. I have a patient here. I believe her to
be Summer Bryce. I can't find anyone who knows her - or who can identify
her. Her health insurance company have you down as her next of kin. I
rang all the contact numbers with no answer - except your work, who have
patched me through to you......"
"Those details are years old. Those contact details, my home and mobile,
would be well out of date. Disconnected now. I've long since moved. And
she's not my next of kin anymore."
What she should have said, Tom thought, was what she said the first
time, I'm not her next of kin. But that's not what she did say. It may
have been semantics but Tom was certain now he had leverage.
"Well then who is?"
"She has a husband. His name is Darren. Darren........" Oh shit, she
thought, what was his name? The one piece of information that would end
this phone call and rid Suzanne of this recurrent nightmare, finally,
and by the sound of things completely, and she can't remember it. Maybe
I never knew it, she found herself pondering. I suppose I would have if
I'd have looked at that wedding invite, rather than immediately binned
it. She found herself on a tangent then, recalling how ridiculously
audacious it was of Summer to even send it. Cheap tacky invite to a
cheap tacky wedding of an extremely cheap and tacky woman.
"I can't remember exactly..... but the police will know him.... that's
for sure," she added with a thick undertone of what Tom felt was
sarcasm.
"Okay," Tom replied. "We'll look into that." And he would. It wasn't a
bad lead. The cancelled credit card had her name as Summer Kaposnikov.
So that would make her husband Darren Kaposnikov possibly. He even
considered offering up that information as a suggestion, to see if it
would trigger her memory. Yet he predicted that would just further
absolve this woman from responsibility and he would lose her. "But at
the moment you are they only contact we have and we may not have a lot
of time." Which was true, and unsubtle.
Tom hadn't meant to be so blunt. He was better at this than what he had
just displayed, he told himself. It's because I'm so annoyed at all this
hoop jumping, he decided. I'm getting nowhere.
Suzanne, meanwhile, was mulling over what she had just done. It had
occurred to her too late that maybe Darren was the very reason this girl
was in intensive care, and she had just aided in bringing him back to
her.
Oh well, she attempted to exonerate herself; Summer knew what she was
getting herself into. Maybe this is just desserts, or karma. But she
realised instantly that she had failed in her self-extrication, and was
compelled by the slightest hint of guilt.
"What's wrong with her? Was it him?" Suzanne asked. Making sure not to
sound like she cared, for truly she didn't. She would not let herself.
"Pardon?" Tom was confused.
"Did he do this? Darren? Has he beaten her half to death? Is that why
she's in hospital? It's not the first time you know." She sounded so
matter of fact as she said it.
"No. That's not it...." Tom stumbled out, as you do, when such a detail
is exposed. It made him suddenly feel like pursuing the husband as an
alternative contact was indeed a bad idea, and this woman, Suzanne, was
instantly all the more valuable.
"Well what then?" Again she spoke in unfeeling monotone.
"I can't really discuss it over the phone. Especially when you're
not........" Tom regretted it the moment he said it.
"Fine then." Suzanne seized the implication with vice like grasp. "Well
I guess you won't need anything more from me, so thank you for your
call."
Suzanne pulled the phone away from her ear and motioned her other hand
towards the red button. As she did so she could hear the Doctor's voice
calling out.
"Suzanne please! Wait!"
Her hand stopped. He did not have her number - work would not have given
that out. I can just tell them to stop forwarding his calls. I can just
forget about all this. Yet her hand did not move forward. She told
herself it was the sound of the pleading Doctor that stopped her hanging
up, but she knew in part that it was a morbid curiosity that kept her on
the line. She was certain it was nothing more. At least she thought she
was certain.
"What?" she spoke quietly and coldly, but she knew she was slipping
further and further down a path she truly did not want to venture.
"Summer. She is gravely ill Mrs Ashwood. If you have any feelings at all
for your sister......"
"She's not my sister!" Suzanne snapped. Much more animated than moments
before - and very defensive, but still ensnared.
"Ohh. I just assumed that you were both Bryce and you used to be next of
kin......"
"No. We were ...err.... only related by marriage. And that marriage...
well they are not together now at any rate."
"Ex sister in law then?" Tom proffered, as if trying to make sense of it
all in his own head.
After a pause Suzanne affirmed. "Well, yeah, something like that...."
"Okay then," Tom regathered. "But like I was saying, if she means
anything at all to you...."
"She doesn't." Still so matter of fact. Even more so. Suzanne felt even
more control of her resolve. She would not allow herself to feel. No
pity. No remorse. I truly owe her nothing she thought. Steeling herself
into that mindset aggressively.
"Oh." Tom stalled. Where to now? This woman's a bitch. Tom was now
establishing this person possessed that trait with crystal certainty. Is
there no compassion? One last roll of the die is all I have.
"Summer is dying, Mrs Ashwood. It's as simple as that. We need someone
who knows her, and preferably cares about her, to help us work out what
to do now. To tell us what she would want us to do."
The long silence that followed, was sufficient in length for Tom to
think that she had in fact hung up. He stood there stunned. Embarrassed,
perplexed. Phone still at his ear, he was defeated. He hadn't heard a
click, but he felt pretty certain he had failed in his effort to
engender some sympathy.
Then a voice came alive through the phone.
Softer, gentler than any he had heard all conversation, with a sigh of
resignation. "What do you need me to do?"
"I need you to come."
"Okay," she conceded. It was a voice of acquiescence.
To Tom's surprise, as much as to Suzanne's, Tom's plea had worked.
Suzanne reminded herself that she could not give a fat rat's about
whether Summer lived or died or had ever walked the Earth at all. In
fact she knew with all her heart how much she wished Summer never
existed. Now, it would just be good riddance to bad rubbish. Still she
felt she should perhaps oblige, citing civic duty and all that. Be a
good citizen, help the nice Doctor, and various other associated excuses
for reason. All he's asking is for me to identify her and agree to let
her go. Turn the machines off or something. That's what he's implying. I
can do that. Part of me will be glad to do that. End her miserable life
and end my own misery about it to. I guess I can do it. And I suppose
maybe, just maybe, although lets just be clear it's a very small maybe,
completely pathetic wastrel that she is, not even Summer deserves to die
alone and unknown.
"I don't even know where your hospital is, I'm on the other side of the
city. And I have to sort something out for the kids. I could be a long
while. How long have I got?" Would she be already dead by the time I get
there, Suzanne wondered.
"Takes as long as you need Mrs Ashwood - the machines can keep her going
indefinitely at the moment. Where are you coming from? I can help with
directions."
"From Toorong."
Now it made sense; or didn't. Tom thought. Nothing did. But it gave him
a hypothesis. A Toorong housewife. Next of kin to a Westie Hooker.
How could two lives, two worlds be any more different. No wonder this
woman is denying any connection. It would have to be tenuous.
Toorong was far and away the city's most affluent suburb. Two million
was a minimum buy in. And that would get you a shack.
Like most of his medical peers, Tom had grown up in the hilly, leafy
eastern suburbs, in the suburbs of the upper middle class, but Toorong
was another world.
As for the west, that part of town beyond the river bridge; all Tom knew
was that you had to drive through it to get to the surf beaches, and
that you locked your door. Until he worked here.
Immersed in the crime and the poverty and the drugs, Western Central was
a great place to practice your craft. Sure, to see what people were
capable of doing to each other was gut wrenching stuff, but here, even
more than the other major city hospitals - he could really believe he
was doing some good. Yet even though he worked there, he doubted he
would choose to live there. Growing up on the other side of town always
meant that was the preferred home to him. Maybe Summer had been similar.
Not always a local. Yet Suzanne seemed to exemplify the class divide.
There was more to the story of how these two women were so different.
Tom knew it. He wasn't sure whether it would be relevant in achieving
his aims. He'd wait and see.
After giving Suzanne directions, and hanging up. He found he had
wandered unintentionally to Summer's bedside.
Did this explain the incongruity he felt lingered around this Jane Doe's
case? Or make it even harder to comprehend? He would pause for a moment
and reflect on what he knew.
What possible circumstance could have led to two people, so different,
having this connection, initially denied by the conscious affluent one,
but now apparent?
Despite Suzanne's protestations, Tom hadn't given up on the idea that
they were sisters, with this one, the comatose one, heading down a dark
path and being disowned by those who shared her DNA.
It would certainly explain some things, but not all.
He had no idea what she really might have looked like, before all this.
He did not see her till she was wheeled in post op.
With her shaved head, giant craniotomy wound, ICP monitor coming
straight out of her skull.
Not to mention the tubes coming out of the mouth of her swollen
oedematous face.
From the neck down, from what he could tell, she had a healthy, well
maintained body.
Polite physician speak he supposed for meaning she was quite tidy. She
had a rockin' body truth be told, if he were to describe her to his
drinking buddies. But he was a professional, so he certainly wouldn't be
saying that.
If he was right and she was a good girl gone bad then there is usually
only one reason for that.
But where were the track marks? Her veins were pristine.
Sure, heroin is not the only poison, but her teeth were perfect. No
fillings let alone cavities.
Her nasal septum, clean.
No scratching, no wasting of muscles.
No excess piercings, although he knew he was making his own snobby
middle class generalisations, but it all contributed to the tapestry he
felt. Regardless there were no tell-tale signs of coke, crack, ice or
any other possible street stuff for that matter. He wasn't always up
with the latest, the ED guys and the paramedics were always far more
abreast of that than he was. In fact Tom felt he was still mentally
recovering from the patient he'd had in the Unit last week, a man who'd
ripped his own testicles fair off after taking something called 'Meow-
meow.'
Back to Summer, after that offensive interlude, and again he thought he
was profiling, but he found it also odd she only had one tiny discrete
tattoo.
Furthermore her Hep & HIV serology was clear - except for evidence of
previous Hepatitis B vaccination, and she was old enough to have been
born before that was mandatory, so she had actively sought it.
So if that wasn't it - her apparent fall from grace, or diversification
from her sister's lifestyle, wasn't a drug addiction - then what's her
story?
She certainly was well against type, so to speak. She did not fit the
stereotype at all of a drug addled whore. From what Suzanne had said
though, it sounded like she had the abusive partner with a criminal
past, and that certainly fit the mould. But there was as much if not
more incongruity than there was conforming to preconception.
The things we do for love, Tom thought. Maybe it was as simple as
falling in love with the wrong guy.
Then he had to consider the apparent expense outlaid on her body
maintenance. For sure her breasts were cosmetically enhanced, not
uncommon for someone in her line of work, but it wasn't a cheap job.
This was done by a very experienced (and therefore expensive) plastic
surgeon. It was hard to tell too, with her face quite swollen, but he
felt that she'd had a fair bit of work done there as well. Again, the
scars so subtle to be almost unnoticeable. She, or someone, had invested
a lot in her appearance. It did not seem to Tom like turning tricks
could have funded all this. He suspected that somehow, the wealthy
Toorong woman he had been talking to on the phone, had been a more
likely financial source. It seemed to have not been her intent, but Tom
could not help wonder if Suzanne was a reluctant benefactor.
I wonder..., he thought as he stared at her, eyes taped shut, trying to
piece together all the clues.
No, it was more than a wonder. More even than a likelihood. It crept up
on him with sledgehammer subtlety. He was almost certain now. Her
condition, her primary pathology, the disease that resulted in her lying
in his ICU bed, surely had played a role in her apparent fall from grace
and choice of lifestyle.
What an enticing hypothesis. One that was also more than a little
terrifying.
But he had heaps to do though, for his ward of patients, before he could
explore this further. Yet it was now high on his list of personal
priorities to do some reading up on his theory, as soon as he had time.
It would have to wait till he'd finished all his other work. 'I'd best
get to work then.' Became his summation. So without further delay he
turned on his heel and left. If he was correct, and he hoped that he
was, this was a fascinating case, and a most spectacular reason for this
girl's apparent degeneration into a pointless and listless life.
Chapter 2
Thomas Chase was not in the intensive Care Unit when Suzanne Ashwood
arrived.
He came when paged and found her in the little room called "Interview
Room." Where she had been placed by the clerk's and nurses.
It was an unsubstantial room with a table and chairs, calming pictures
on the walls and a box of tissues strategically placed and frequently
replaced. The door did indeed say "Interview Room" but the staff called
it colloquially, "The distressed rellies room." Where countless families
had gathered to hear devastating news about the fate, whether transpired
or about to, of their loved ones. Tom felt it was perhaps the saddest
room in the whole hospital, and similarly felt that the walls oozed out
the misery that was ground into them daily, making it almost haunted. It
always felt cold in there.
Suzanne, seated in that room, was close in appearance to how Tom
imagined she'd be. Well groomed, immaculately dressed.
Tom concluded she was stylish and attractive. If they truly were
sisters, his patient and her, then she was the elder. He noted her
colouring was definitely darker than his patient's, still not enough to
destroy his theory however, but did add to the doubt.
She rose from her chair as she saw him approach.
He introduced himself, and they shook hands. She sported a large diamond
engagement ring and a similarly adorned wedding ring on her left 4th
finger, certainly quite showy.
They smiled briefly at each other, in a way you don't with a total
stranger, because after one emotionally charged phone call, they weren't
quite strangers anymore.
He knew how hard he had fought to get her here, so any idea of a third
degree would be most counterproductive. He needed to proceed gently and
carefully. He could not interrogate; merely converse. He felt he should
be the instigator of conversation though. Lay it all out for her. By
offering up what we had, maybe she will be compelled to give him
something in return.
He directed she return to her seat and she complied.
"Thank you for coming. I realise what an imposition it is for you."
"That's Okay." It's what she was expected to say, but it was clearly
just polite lip service. Tom felt at some point she would let him know
exactly how much of an imposition it really was.
"I'll tell you what we know. Then I'll tell you how you can help us." He
started warmly.
"Okay." This seemed reasonable to her. She did not return his warmth
though.
"Five nights ago, the paramedics brought a woman into our Emergency
Department, scantily dressed, typical attire for a hooker." Maybe that
was detail I should have omitted he thought, but too late. He regathered
and continued. "In what we call status epilepticus," he explained.
"That's a condition when someone doesn't stop fitting."
She looked on, listening with partly feigned interest. The medical terms
meant nothing to her, nor did the cause of Summer's arrival at hospital
seem to be of any relevance.
It was at this moment that Tom realised what he was up against. Whatever
history had passed between this woman and his patient, she really didn't
care at all about Summer's predicament. But he needed her to care. He
needed something more than total indifference to be sure her decision
would be the right one. Even though he knew he could get exactly what he
wanted right now, it did not seem right to get it like this. Suzanne had
to do what she had to do not out of hatred, but out of love, and Tom had
to get her there, and he just could not see how he could possibly
achieve that. But the sugar coating had to go at the very least.
"It's not uncommon around here. Many street drugs in excess or just cut
with toxins can do that. Cause seizures I mean." He chose his words
deliberately now with the bluntness, to ensure her attention. "So the
guys downstairs suspected that she was some junkie whore who'd taken too
much of one type of shit or other."
Suzanne bristled a little at his blunt crassness and Tom realised that
he had to find some middle ground between egg shells and bulldozers.
"I mean they assumed she'd overdosed on something. There's new stuff out
there all the time." This sounded more civil. "Anyway, she had no ID on
her. The paras had just found her on the street. No signs of assault as
far as we could tell. But she just wouldn't stop seizing in spite of our
usual cocktail of Narcan, benzos and the like." He realised he'd lost
her again at this point, too much jargonese.
"What I mean to say is that nothing that usually worked as antidotes to
overdose was working. So we had to sedate her heavily, paralyse her
muscles, take over her breathing, the whole works, and even then her EEG
was still firing like crazy..... she was still fitting, I mean."
She appeared to be following again. Maybe even a little interested. Tom
knew he was painting a bit of a vivid picture. It could be a story from
any medical show or even soapie.
"So she had an urgent CT of her brain, and I have to tell you we've
never seen anything like it." He exclaimed the last, as if, 5 or so days
later it still startled him.
When a Doctor says that, Suzanne was discovering, you can't help but
listen.
"She had this massive tumour - it was huge - spread out over both
hemispheres of her brain. Squashing everything, the sheer size of it,
you have no idea."
He was right, she did have no idea. But he seemed impressed.
"Anyway, it looked like there was nothing we could do. If the tumour had
started in the brain then it was most likely a Glioblastoma, what we
call a GBM. They have a very low survival rate. And one that size, well,
we half expected her to just fit herself to death. On the other hand -
if it had spread from anywhere else, for example, her breasts, then that
would be even worse. That's what we call a metastasis. A tumour that
started growing elsewhere in the body then spread to the brain. That's a
very bad situation and a very bad prognostic indicator too."
Suzanne understood the last. They used similar language in business. It
meant she was stuffed. Dying of cancer. The irony of Summer dying of
breast cancer seemed so ridiculously poetic that Suzanne found herself
quietly hoping for that scenario, and although it seemed cold she
couldn't help but wonder if the telltale lump was not felt in time to
save her behind her pumped up prostheses. It seemed decidedly awful that
Suzanne felt joy at this concept. She was a tiny bit ashamed but not
enough to contain her amusement. In case she had been unconsciously
smirking she thought she should proffer something vaguely sympathetic.
"Well that's not very good is it?"
Tom didn't feel the need to reply to a statement like that, but breathed
deeply and continued. "So we scanned her from top to toe, looking for a
primary, another site of cancer. But there was none. So it seemed to
have added weight to our theory the tumour started in, and had been
confined to her brain. Although we did find though that she has had a
hysterectomy. Quite surprising for someone so young. The usual reason
would be cancer of the uterus or ovaries. And ovarian cancer has quite
the proclivity for heading to the brain."
Suzanne appeared a little lost again. Or even perplexed.
"And this is where I need to ask you a question. As much to help us
identify her as to work out the potential source of the tumour. Or at
least definitely rule it out. Were you aware of Summer having an
operation to remove her Uterus and Ovaries, and was it because of
cancer?"
The histopath of the resected brain neoplasia had proved it wasn't
ovarian in origin, But Tom still felt it possible she had suffered from
two different malignancies. He had seen it often enough. The treatment
of one had induced the growth of another.
Suzanne constructed her answer. "Yes. I was aware that Summer did not
have a Uterus or ovaries, and no, it was not because of cancer."
"Then why?"
"It wasn't cancer!" She made it clear she would say no more.
The matter of fact way Suzanne answered made Tom realise that this topic
of discussion was over.
There were other reasons why a young person might have a total
hysterectomy, and Tom was no gynaecologist, but he couldn't really get
his head around it.
Sure, a massive post partum bleed might cost you your uterus, or an
ectopic pregnancy one tube or ovary, but the whole box and dice, so to
speak, in someone of child bearing age. He couldn't understand it. It
unnerved him. But Tom wondered if there had been some mental competence
issues. Maybe Summer was intellectually disabled. She certainly could
have become so with a tumour that size. Had Suzanne perhaps had her
sister neutered? And possibly without her consent. Was that why she was
being so coy? Again, it may not have had bearing on anything he was
trying to sort out, but it did make him even more wary of Suzanne's
possible malevolence.
Advantageously though it made him even more certain that his patient was
indeed Summer Bryce. The confirmation of the total hysterectomy. Suzanne
had correlated it, without even seeing her.
Which brought him nicely to his next point.
"So here we were with an unidentified woman with a massive tumour,
destabilising and dying right in front of us. No one had reported her
gone. And police ran her prints. No match. Very unusual for a Hooker
around these parts." He gauged Suzanne for a reaction to this. There was
none.
"We did what we felt we had to," he continued. "So she went to theatre,
and to put it bluntly, the neurosurgeons opened her up like a tin can
and scooped out as much as they could."
"Like Ice cream?" Suzanne suggested, only half joking.
"Yeah, I suppose," Tom replied, not laughing. "Did a good job too. As
enmeshed and ingrained as it was to her brain they got most of it out.
But at quite a price it appears."
"What price?"
"The operation was nearly 4 days ago now. Two days ago a stripper from a
local club finally reported a Summer Bryce missing. Went out for a walk
between performances - never came back. Left her purse behind. We
couldn't convince the stripper to come and ID her, but we did get
Summer's purse. That's how we found you - through her health insurance.
Not sure how many strippers have health insurance - but we're glad this
one did." Suzanne was not shocked by the suggestion this woman was a
hooker or a stripper, she clearly knew.
"Anyway," Tom continued. "Like I said, it's now 4 days since her op and
things aren't good. Her brain is so swollen we can't fully put the top
back on. The skull I mean. The pressures in the brain are through the
roof. There are no signs of her waking or moving."
"So, does that mean..... " Suzanne didn't know what to say, she had
gleaned enough though. "Are we talking organ donor here?"
"This is where things get tricky. She has failed two tests for brain
death, so technically she's not."
"I don't understand."
"Not brain dead. There is activity there. So, excuse the bluntness. We
can't just chop her up and turn her off." Tom had been deliberately
shocking, to gauge her, but she did not flinch. She really didn't seem
to care at all.
"Activity?" Was the only point of clarification she sought.
"It's hard to be sure - maybe there is thought, or dreams. But she's not
making any effort to breathe on her own, and her heart is needing lots
of support. So the parts of the brain that matter, that keep us alive,
don't appear to be working in her."
"Can she survive?" It's not a question asked in hope, in fact maybe the
intention was the opposite.
"It's very unlikely. Not unless there is a rapid improvement in her
condition, and that needs to be soon. And even if she did survive,
unless her pressures drop and she starts breathing on her own it's even
more unlikely that she'll ever be cognisant enough to speak or recognise
anyone or even do anything that would make her human."
"A vegetable?" Suzanne asked a little tentatively.
"If you like." Tom was not fond of the term, but it sufficed for his
purpose.
"What do you want from me?" She seemed to have lost most of her
aggression. Was Tom's tale of woe having the impact he hoped?
"Two things. I need you to identify her beyond doubt. And then I need
your consent to turn the life support off and let her go. Like I said,
she's not officially dead, so we can't just do it. But the prognosis
appears so grim I think it's for the best. We need a relative or next of
kin to help us with that decision. Can you help me? Can you help her?"
And that was it. His best and his only shot.
He believed rightly or wrongly, that Suzanne would be a fundamentally
good person, and even though it appeared she would gleefully sign up now
and be rid of something that at best seems to be some sort of thorn in
her side, once she saw her, it won't quite be so easy, and Summer will
die at the hand of her family -making the right decision for the right
reason.
"I'll try." Suzanne was nervous now. She was faced with the reality of
it perhaps. Her resolve was fading. Just as Thomas was hoping it would.
Tom described in detail what Suzanne was about to see before her lead
her to the bed, but no description could prepare Suzanne for the
reality.
The machines, the wires, the tubes, the noise, and in the middle of it
all, a body, scalped, it's face bruised and swollen, almost inhuman.
From that moment of first impact, Suzanne reeled back in response to the
initial visual assault. "I can't; I can't possibly identify her," was
her horrified exclamation. "She looks, she looks...." Grotesque was the
word Suzanne was thinking, but she now had trouble articulating
anything.
Tom was anxious. It was her, he knew it, Suzanne knew it too, Tom
believed. He just needed her to say it.
"It's okay Suzanne. Just take your time. We can go out for a bit and
come back if you like. But after what we talked about, the previous
surgery and everything, with the hysterectomy. It seems very likely this
is Summer. I just need you to tell me it's her."
She remained in stunned silence.
"What about the tattoo?" It suddenly occurred to Tom that this might be
something Suzanne knew about.
"I didn't know she had any tattoos."
"Ohh." So much for that. Another dead end.
"Where is it? What is it?" Suzanne seemed once again asking more out of
curiosity than anything else.
"It's only small, but professionally done, under her left breast,
directly over her apex beat."
"Her what?"
"Apex beat. It's the very tip of your heart. You can feel it beating
through your skin on your left chest."
"What is it? The tattoo?"
"Two little love hearts, each with a letter in them."
"What letters?" God if it's D for Darren and S for Summer I swear I'll
puke right here, she thought to herself, and not because of the
sickening sight of the brainless freak I'm staring at, but how pathetic
you truly were in life.
"Here, I'll show you." Tom pulled up the sheet, careful not to expose
Summer's breast, merely the tattoo beneath it.
Suzanne stepped slightly, tentatively forward to peer at the mark. It
was as Tom had described. Two hearts. Each with a letter. A and E.
Only Tom was close enough to hear the sound of a breath caught in her
throat, a silent gasp of unfathomable despair. And as one hand shot up
to cover her mouth, too late to muffle the sound, the other hand came
forward, as if it was outside her control, and touched the letters, and
the beating heart beneath it.
Tom could see it in Suzanne's face. A look of recognition for certain,
but more. In her eyes, just for a moment, sheer blind terror.
She reeled back a little and spoke, barely audible, forgetting Tom was
right there, holding up the sheet.
"Oh Sam. This can't be. This can't....." her voice quivering with
emotion, and then ceasing, with Suzanne suddenly sensing Tom beside her.
She pulled her hand away, looked Tom straight in the eye, and without a
trace of the emotion from mere seconds before, stated, "It's her. Where
do I sign?"
Tom was left with two questions. He wondered what the tattoo could
possibly mean. The little A and the E. And why it had shocked Suzanne
so. He had every intent to ask, he just had to choose the right moment.
Still furthermore, and although it was a little unclear, it appeared
that Suzanne had called Summer 'Sam'. Had she once been Samantha Bryce?
It might explain her apparent anonymity in terms of records. Was
'Summer' perhaps her stage name? But on all her admittedly limited
identification documentation she was Summer. Even with her alternate
surnames. Perhaps she had changed it officially. It was probably
immaterial at this current juncture. It was the "E&A" tattoo mystery and
Suzanne's reaction to it that confounded him and concerned him much
more.
Nonetheless he felt a wave of contentment now. It may have been
fleeting, but he had seen Suzanne care. Whatever they were to each other
now, they had once been more. Sisters, sisters in law, or merely close
friends. It didn't matter. Suzanne had been reminded of that, and the
decision she was about to make was most likely coming from that place.
Chapter 3
Back in the Distressed rellies room, Tom had assembled the paperwork,
and two witnesses. One nursing and one clerical staff.
"It's all just part of the formality," he explained. "To make sure you
weren't coerced or forced or anything."
"I don't need any forcing," she said, but not coldly anymore.
"If you don't mind me asking, the tattoo, what does it mean?" Tom was
not sure if she would answer.
"Not what I thought it meant, that's for sure," she said cryptically.
"It seemed to remind you..." Tom began but was interrupted.
A mobile phone blared loudly. It was Suzanne's. She looked at the
screen.
"I'm sorry, it's my husband. I have to take this."
"Hello Stephen." She proceeded to have a conversation before them all.
But the situation didn't really allow for another option. Although Tom
was still further perplexed by her intermittently callous demeanour,
exacerbated by his enforced eavesdropping.
"I know honey I'm sorry. Did Katie explain everything?"
"Yeah I know it's a pain........Just a distant relative. They couldn't
find anyone else."
"No. No one you know. I'll explain it all to you when I get home."
"Just let Katie do all that. She can take care of everything. Just kiss
the girls goodnight for me."
"I don't know what time. As soon as I can. I promise."
"I will. I love you."
"Bye."
"He frets." She explained to Tom, watching her. "But he has the nanny."
"You have girls?" Tom asked innocently.
"Two."
"What are their names?" It was either that or 'How old are they?' Tom
thought, to show interest, to make conversation. Then it's polite to
move on.
"Ashlyn and Eleanor," stated by Suzanne like a proud mother. Rightly so
of course.
And in the moment she said it she realised what she'd done. She had
never planned to answer his question. The phone call was a perfectly
timed serendipitous interruption. But she had suddenly been exposed.
Potentially compromised. Perhaps Tom would miss it. She hoped so. But
panic rose within her as she awaited the fallout.
He had missed it. At least initially. He was busy processing whether it
was some sort of child abuse to name your daughter Ashlyn Ashwood.
Although he did know of an ED Doc called John Johnston. Whose personal
explanation was that his parents thought him so awesome they name him
twice. Which was nowhere near as funny as John seemed to think it was.
Eleanor Ashwood on the other hand had a lovelier ring to it. Ashlyn and
Eleanor indeed! Then it happened. A sudden cognitive link. Tom made the
connection and it resonated through him. Ashlyn and Eleanor. A & E.
Why would Suzanne's wayward, degenerate sister have the initials of her
nieces tattooed over her heart? Tom's mind was racing. Something was
amiss.
She wouldn't! She wouldn't tattoo her niece's initials.
But she would if they were her kids.
So that's it! Little sister Samantha starts down the slippery slope with
drugs or whatever and becomes Summer so big sister takes her kids off
her and claims them as her own. Somewhere along the way Suzanne had
taken steps to ensure her sister could never have any more either.
Although Tom hadn't asked the age question by his estimation Summer must
have been quite young when she had them. In Summer's purse there had
been nothing to confirm her age or Date of birth, like a driver's
licence, so he had gone with the estimate of the ED guys of early to mid
20s. The woman before him appeared to be in her early 30s. It seemed
more likely to Tom that there had been mental competency issues. It was
likely that Suzanne had no idea why her sister's mental abilities had
degenerated, Tom conceded. She may have done it legally, taking the
children for their safety, Tom meant, but her current behaviour
suggested strongly to Tom that she hadn't. She had stolen the children,
even if her intent had been honourable.
But now she had the chance to dispose of the evidence and no one would
ever know.
Except for me, he realised.
This woman is clearly not the right person to sign this form. She IS an
evil bitch. My first impressions were right, Tom reflected. He had since
given her the benefit of the doubt but that was a mistake. Tom's tune
had, yet again it seemed, well and truly changed.
It was time to tell her the rest of this story. Tom realised now that
all the information he had discovered in the past few hours, from his
research, needed to be shared.
This is the part she needed to hear. Deserved to hear! He wasn't going
to mince words either.
They were staring at each other then, each trying to read the others
thoughts; Suzanne wondered what was about to happen next.
"You know," Tom began in a cool tone for the benefit of the two
witnesses. "There's more to tell you."
"Like what?" The hostility was there again. Suzanne felt vulnerable. She
could tell by Tom's reaction he had made the connection between her
girls and the tattoo. She was scared.
"The tumour. That massive thing encasing her brain. Turns out it was
benign."
"What?"
"Slow growing. Doesn't spread anywhere else. Just growing in the one
spot. It would have been there for years. Slowly pressing on her brain.
Subtly expanding and causing all sorts of changes."
"What sort of changes?" Suzanne appeared anxious, and shifted nervously
in her seat.
"Oh, you know, behavioural changes. Personality changes."
"Like what?" Suzanne had an inkling then of what was to come.
"The sort that would take a good little girl and send her down a path of
drugs and prostitution. But she wouldn't have known what was happening
to her. She had a giant tumour growing in her brain, changing her,
controlling her. It was up to those who knew her and loved her to
realise something was happening, and stop her, and save her." Tom
watched her fear and confusion continue to exude from her, bubbling up
from within.
"But they didn't. Did they? They just stood by and watched as Samantha
became Summer." He watched her crumbling before his eyes, but this did
nothing but encourage him.
"If they'd realised what was happening to her, and found the tumour back
then, well we could've cut it out for sure and well, we really could
have saved her. But instead they stole her daughters, raised them as
their own and ostracised her. Allowing her to degenerate in squalor. Not
very nice really."
Suzanne was pale, her face distraught. Tom was more than satisfied with
the results he was now achieving. Squirm you bitch.
"Is this true?" she virtually screamed at him, prompting the two
startled witnesses to back towards the door, and flee in a timely
fashion. They were intuitive enough to realise any thoughts of document
signage was well and truly off the table.
"Yes. All of it," he yelled back. "And instead of helping her, you stole
her kids and abandoned her, disowned her completely. And now she's all
but dead. How can you live with yourself?"
Suzanne started shaking violently, and tears started to well, followed
by the beginnings of a sob. Her words became indiscernible as she
mumbled consecutively. "This can't be." Which is what she had said
before. Still struggling to believe what she was hearing. Refusing to
even. Followed by less certainty. "I didn't know." And still furthermore
"Oh Sam, what have I done?"
She collapsed to the ground then, right before him, and Tom was suddenly
concerned. This was not put on, he could tell. She was genuinely
remorseful and Tom feared he may have gone too far. He had been too
blunt. Too brutal. He wanted her to care, and clearly she did. She had
hated her sister bitterly, for what she had become. Perhaps she had
believed she was doing the right thing. And maybe she was. Taking the
children off someone who was no longer fit to be their mother. But now
that she knows it's something Summer, or Samantha could not control,
something that could have been prevented, she realised she can't hate
her anymore. Tom felt compelled to reach out to her and he made motions
to, but just before he was able to another nurse hurtled into the room.
"Tom! Come quick. Summer's husband's arrived. He's just barged in. He's
causing quite a ruckus."
With a sigh, Tom left then in haste, whilst Suzanne remained on the
floor, sobbing and shuddering, a mess of saliva and tears. He felt
guilty for her sudden grief. But she would now do exactly what he needed
her to do. Make a decision out of love.
Chapter 4
Calming down this Darren guy was quite a task.
He was clearly a bad dude. Well built, wild eyed, covered with tatts.
Even security were anxious.
After seeing his wife, in her current state, he wanted to kill, in his
eloquent words "Every Goddam Motherfucker in the place."
"What the hell have you done to my bitch?" Was the apparent root of his
concerns. Apparently the stripper who had reported Summer missing had
alerted Darren that it may be her, unidentified in the hospital.
He had made his way here, in his own due course.
When they explained, as simply as they could, about the tumour and the
prognosis he still wanted someone to blame, and someone to hurt.
Soon enough though, that anger was placated when he realised all he had
to was sign a piece of paper and that would be the end of the "Ugly
mutant bitch". He was well pleased. He clearly didn't care that much
about her.
He eulogised her thus: "She was never much of a wife anyway. Never would
have anything stronger than pot. Thought she was too good for hooking.
They never earn anywhere near as much just stripping. The only thing she
had was her body and her looks, dumb as a box o' hammers she was. And
now those looks are gone - trust me she'd be a lot better off dead."
Okay, Thomas sighed silently after allowing the diatribe to run its
course. Let's just get this over with. He really just wanted Summer, or
Samantha, whoever she may be, to finally rest in peace. The people in
her life were certainly not any good to her. Two different types of scum
of the Earth, but scum of the earth all the same.
"Sign here." Tom placed the paper in front of the snorting Neanderthal.
"NO!!" a voice shrilled across the ICU. Suzanne was back on her feet.
Tom looked across at her. He was tired. "But this is what you want..."
He sighed.
"It is not what I want!" she said pleadingly.
"Hey, I know you." Darren spoke up. "You're that bitch who was always
interfering. Always trying to take her away from me. Haven't seen you
since the day I made her beat the crap out of you and threaten to hurt
your kids. Scared now too huh?"
Suzanne did look scared. The facade of the woman Tom had met earlier
that day had caved in. She was flustered and frightened.
Tom was confused. Perhaps he was wrong. There was perhaps only one evil
person in the room, and he had totally misjudged the other. He walked
towards Suzanne.
"I don't understand," he began softly.
"Please Tom," she whispered. "Please don't kill her."
"What do you want me to do?" He moved in close so that only they could
hear each other.
"Save her...."
"But I told you, there's not much left too save."
"It can't end like this Tom. You think you know everything, but you
don't. If there's even the slightest chance, I want to take it. Please."
"But it's not up to you. Or me. It's up to him. Her husband. He's her
real next of kin. I'm afraid he gets more say than even her sister."
Suzanne braced. It was time. Suzanne trusted no-one. Not even Stephen.
She had kept this secret that she had expected to keep forever. As much
as it ate away at her. She could never share it. And although it had
been a long time since Summer was any part of her life she could not
escape it. It lingered in her dreams and made her life one of indolent
pain. Could she really put her trust in this Doctor. This stranger.
What choice did she have? She had to if she was to have any hope of
saving Summer. If Tom's revelations bore truth, and she had no reason to
doubt them, then Suzanne felt like she was everything he said she was.
Suzanne knew she had abandoned and betrayed Summer. Not lightly. Not
after trying so hard not to. Ultimately she had to. When her hate for
her had far outgrown any love. And the love died. Or so she thought. But
Suzanne was crying for her now. Her heart was mournfully longing for
what she had once lost. It was clear though, if Summer were to have any
chance then Suzanne would have to tell this man the truth.
"I told you Tom. I'm not her sister. I wasn't lying about that."
"Then what are you to her?"
Suzanne thought hard about the way to say it, but could not find any
better way.
"I'm ...............I am her spouse. Her wife. We're married."
Tom looked incredulous. What was she doing? What was this about? He knew
Suzanne had a husband, Tom had heard them talking on the phone.
Furthermore gay marriage was unfortunately still not legalised. So even
if they were lesbian lovers once they were never actually married. It
seemed Suzanne was embarking in a ludicrous, feeble attempt to hold
things up, but why? Was there money involved?
"Suzanne you're being ridiculous. And you still won't tell me the truth.
If you aren't her sister then her real spouse, her husband, doesn't have
to justify anything. And his wishes are pretty clear."
"Come with me please," Suzanne ushered with angst. "I don't want them
hearing. Anyone hearing. I promise I'll tell the truth."
Tom complied, although a trifle reluctantly and they moved around the
corner where no-one could see them, or overhear them.
"So Suzanne, we're alone," he began. "Now tell me the truth then!
Because up to now it's been nothing but lies, and I'm sick of them." He
was as agitated as he sounded.
Suzanne started hesitantly. "That person lying there. Summer. She's not
what she seems. And I know you know right now my feelings about her are
very conflicted. But once upon a time I loved her very very much. We are
married. Or at least we used to be."
"That's impossible," Tom began. "And ridiculous. And certainly not
legal. Even if I were to believe the far fetched notion that you ever
actually cared about her."
"No. it's not. Impossible I mean. And I did care. I do. I may have
thought I didn't but I didn't know then what I do now. So this is the
truth you need to here. The reason she doesn't have a uterus or ovaries
is because she never did. Because. I'm not sure how else to say this.
She was born male. She used to be a man. She was my husband Tom. Her
name used to be Samuel. And Ashlyn and Eleanor, they are our
children..... She's their father."
Chapter 5
Tom was silent for a long time. Suzanne looked at him intently,
unblinking.
Things had certainly gone a little sideways at the moment. Yet surely
this was just another fallacy. It was too preposterous a notion to even
consider.
Was this grief? Had she completely lost her composure? Or even her mind?
Or was this another trick that she had up her sleeve?
It occurred to him now that maybe there is money involved. Had the
prodigal daughter (used in the truest sense of the word Tom mused,
compared to when it is used 9 times out of 10, completely
inappropriately) some sort of inheritance that Suzanne didn't want to
see this evil bastard get. Whilst he could sympathise somewhat he was
resentful of more lies and more troubling, totally perplexed by what
sort of person Suzanne really was.
He grabbed Suzanne firmly but not violently around her bicep and
directed her, hissing "Back to the room....."Meaning the Interview room
from whence they'd come.
When they arrived, he allowed her to enter first and closed the door
behind himself.
"What the Fuck is all this about?" he said, as harshly as he could.
But Suzanne didn't react. She simply took a breath and started.
"The things you said. The tumour. The behaviour and personality changes.
Could it possibly make a person want to change their gender?"
Tom looked at her. She was not calm, but tense, yet she seemed much more
rational now.
He was not a Neurosurgeon or Neurologist or even a Neuropsychologist. He
was an intensive care Physician, he new heaps about physiology and
pharmacology and keeping the very sick alive, but nothing about this.
That is apart from what he'd read this very day - to help him with his
outlandish theory.
He told her so. "I'm no expert in this, by any means Suzanne, but I
believe that my theory about what happened to ......" He vacillated over
what to call her. "To Sam is certainly possible. Are you familiar with
the pop culture term lobotomy?" He now had to extend it further. He had
to, for a moment, suspend his disbelief and accept what Suzanne was
telling him.
"Yes." She had heard it.
"Ok. Well it's a procedure from the dim dark past. They used to cut out
parts of people's brains, the frontal lobes, or simply sever the
connections with the rest of the brain, to change their personality and
behaviour. Maybe you've heard someone described as a bit frontal?"
She didn't reply.
"Well, the effects of any tumour on the brain is variable. Classically
the fast growing ones cause headaches, vomiting, paralysis, seizures and
so forth. This makes them very easy to work out. But the slower growing
ones can manifest much more subtly. Some gliomas, like what Sam had,
spread so slowly, they don't tend to cause a mass effect, but slowly
press on the brain, entwining itself in it, gradually interfering with
function. They are harder to pick up."
He continued "There are many reported cases of, for example, nuns
becoming sex maniacs, or community leaders becoming serial killers. Some
believe that these people had this in them already, latent, and the
tumour just brought it to the surface, but most believe the tumour
turned them into these things."
Suzanne just stared, so Tom continued.
"The cerebral cortex, the part of the brain that makes us who we are,
that separates us from other species, was right under that massive
tumour. When the tumour grows over the frontal lobes, the part of the
brain that controls personality and behaviour, well of course it changes
people."
He drew breath to tell more but Suzanne interrupted. She had heard
enough. She appeared broken but she seemed to have an agenda.
"Tom?"
He stopped talking and waited in silence.
"I know you are not completely sure about me and my motives, but I'm
going to tell you a story. Every word of it is true, and I hope that
you'll believe me."
"Go on," he consented. It was permission for Suzanne to begin what would
be a long and mournful tale.
"I'm a very fortunate woman, Tom. I have a loving husband and two
beautiful daughters. Financially I'm very well off. Stephen is a good
man. He is a great father to the girls. But he's not their real father.
As far as he knows their real father died some years back. For Eleanor,
this is her daddy. Ashlyn has the vaguest of memories about another man,
but she doesn't understand what they mean."
"I'm 35 years old, and so incidentally is your patient, in spite of what
your records might say."
Tom did not react. The age was a mere guess.
"I'm originally from interstate. That's where I met and married my first
husband, Samuel, like I told you. We had Ashlyn when we were 27, and
Eleanor when I was 29. Things truly were wonderful. Sam had a great job,
we had a beautiful house, money was not an issue. We loved each other
very much. Or at least I thought so. Life was perfect....."
She paused for a moment, before continuing.
"He was 30 when...., when things started to change. I guess it's hard to
convey what it feels like the day, the first time I suppose, the day you
come home and find your husband in your clothes. It was not like I
surprised him either. I'd been out at a meeting, the kids were asleep
and he was just sitting there reading, dressed in my clothes, with a
butchered attempt at make up."
"Of course I was completely freaked out, what the hell are you doing and
all that, and he bluntly replied he just wanted to see what it felt
like, without appearing to be embarrassed or ashamed. So I wanted to
know if he'd done this sort of thing before, was this some sort of
desire he had. He denied all that - it was very matter of fact."
"So I didn't know what to make of it. In hind sight he'd been cranky,
moody, a little explosive for some while, but I thought maybe it was
just work stress. Turns out it was the thin edge of the wedge. I told
him I did not like or want him wearing my stuff, so he bought his own.
Then he started, umm, bringing that attire into our love making. I hated
that, but what was I to do. I loved my husband very much. He told me it
relaxed him or some such thing. I hoped and prayed it was just a passing
phase, but as time went on I realised more and more it wasn't. Soon
there were wigs, and some sort of fake breasts from the internet. His
wardrobe expanded, his make up much more expert. He'd taught himself. As
women we are used to our men always checking other women out, it's in
their nature I reckon, but he wasn't doing that any more, well not like
other men. He was studying them, learning from them."
"It wasn't long before every night, as soon as the girls were in bed,
he'd be shedding his male persona and becoming her. Ironically Tom, he
did call her Samantha."
"By this time I was sick, miserable, depressed. I couldn't really cope
with it, but I had to. My first responsibility was to the girls. I tried
telling him how I felt, but he didn't seem to care. Especially when he
was Samantha, he seemed to resent me, and was quite bitchy. We fought
heaps. Any sort of intimacy or physical contact dried up completely."
"We had lots of friends, and I had a tight network of girlfriends, and
although we would share lots with each other, this was one secret I
could not share with a single soul. I felt so alone, so isolated, and I
was becoming resentful too."
"Things continued to progress I suppose, he had laser hair removal on
his chest, arms and legs, even his armpits. He started to wear lingerie
under his work clothes, in fact he stopped wearing male underwear all
together. I guess with him suddenly being all smooth and hair free from
the laser I attributed his change in bodily appearance to that, so it
took me a while to realise he was softening up, his muscles shrinking,
and I guess, curves appearing. When I saw him adjusting what was
starting to become noticeable natural cleavage in his bra, it was like
glass had shattered, and the veil of denial had come off."
"So I challenged him. I was pretty vehement about it. I couldn't really
control myself. He calmly explained that for some time he'd been taking
medication that blocks androgen receptors, I'm sure that means more to
you then me Tom, apparently it's used in prostate cancer, and large
doses of oestrogen, like in the pill, prescribed by some dodgy quack."
"Meanwhile his work was suffering, he was having trouble concentrating,
and wasn't being much of a father to his kids. I wondered if it was the
hormones. Clearly it was more than that. The thing growing in his head,
but I had no idea. At any rate it was the last straw. He was doing
potentially irreversible damage to himself. It had to stop. So I marched
him off to a psychologist and in turn a Psychiatrist. Something I would
regret to my very core."
"Once there, he spouted out about how ever since he was very little he
had felt he was a woman trapped in a man's body and all that, and
finally he couldn't take it anymore. This flew in the face of everything
I felt I knew about him, and I couldn't believe it. But he was so
adamant, and passed all the psychological tests they put him through,
and before I knew it, they'd upped his hormones and told him he had to
live full time as a woman before they would allow him to undertake, what
they called, gender reassignment surgery."
"Well, I don't need to tell you that our reactions couldn't have been
more disparate. Sam was ecstatic, he wanted to go home and dispose of
all his male clothes and trappings right there and then. I was
mortified. I had to think for us all, and I could not live with the
shame and the stigma. So virtually overnight, like common thieves, Sam
quit, we sold up our opulent home, moved down here, and I bought a
modest but comfortable home in Black Hill for me and the kids, and a
unit in Panton, for Sam, as I knew that his kind..., well it was more
acceptable there."
Suzanne stopped mid narrative. She looked at Tom, who was attentive but
inexpressive.
"I know I'm sounding pretty transphobic right about now Tom." She
remarked almost apologetically. "Honestly I'd never considered myself to
be like that." She moved her gaze to the wall, unfocussed, almost
wistful. "I mean I would have considered myself fully supportive of
anyone struggling through that to finally get to be who they truly were.
But then when it was the man I loved I became the ultimate hypocrite. I
couldn't accept it. I couldn't believe it. I mean I did with time. I
didn't have a choice. But it truly was a stepped grieving process. So
there was anger. And maybe what I did next wasn't entirely fair, but
Sam's reaction to it made me all the madder. I can't help but think,
especially knowing what I now know, and what I saw on her body, that her
next decision was definitely governed by that tumour."
"So," she continued somewhat hesitantly, knowing how awful it portrayed
her. "I told him that I would not allow him any contact with the girls
if he was dressed as a woman. At which point he kissed them, it was a
goodbye I guess, said he would never again pretend to be a man, and
hoped I'd change my mind. He gave them up, just like that. I felt like
he'd already given me up some time ago, without even the decency to tell
me, but to so easily abandon his children. It was heartbreaking."
"I realised then, just like that too, that I didn't love him anymore. Oh
don't get me wrong; he was my husband and my best friend, and I cared
about him deeply. But the love; the love that a woman feels for her man,
I just didn't feel it any more. I tried so hard to stop this. Convince
him that this was crazy. I got more opinions, from new Drs in this city.
But they all agreed that Sam was undoubtedly transgendered, and, getting
the chop would be the best thing ever for him. I was fighting a losing
battle."
"I still didn't give up on him though Tom. I hated seeing him like this
but I had to support him."
"So here I am in a new city, a virtual single mum, all on my own. No
friends or supports. Thankfully money was still not an issue, but I had
to plan for the future."
"Which I did. With a full time nanny employed, back to work I went. I'm
an accountant Tom, in case you were wondering. Big city, multinational
firms, type of accountant, just like Sam was, but I gave it up to have
the kids. It was hard to go back. To leave them in someone else's care
but I didn't have a choice now. I was lucky I was still of value, and
the money was pretty good."
"Sam, meanwhile, was start