Grace’s Gift
This is a short story I submitted to The First Line for their fall issue. It didn’t get picked but got a “Not bad.” notation. đ So I’ll write another with the next first line …
Grace’s Gift
âMy life is a sham.â
âOf course it is.â
Graceâs head snapped up as if sheâd been hit with more than just words. Her eyes registered shock. Sheâd expected support, encouraging words, pats on the back, high fives and figurative chest bumps, followed closely by blasphemous words thrown back on her behalf.
Instead, she got agreement – plain and simple.
After twenty years, had Casey changed her mind? Best friends, since their junior year, when Grace moved to Rune, North Carolina, Casey accepted Graceâs quirk — her distinguished ability. Sheâd claimed it was cool, not bizarre like the other so-called friends sheâd met along the way.
Grace stared at Casey. She let not a remnant of her features change. If sheâd misunderstood four little words, she wasnât about to acknowledge it. Thanks to her step-mother, Catherine, sheâd become very adept at hiding emotions and thoughts, a necessity given how her mind worked.
âOf course it isâ seemed pretty clear. âGo onâ must have been written on her forehead.
Caseyâs piercing blue eyes looked deep into the green of Graceâs as if, by look alone, they would bring clarity. It wasnât like they hadnât had this conversation at least a hundred times before. This time, sheâd simply decided to try a different tact; reverse psychology.
âOur lives are nothing but perceptions, Grace. We all try to be what others want us to be. Iâve never understood why you, of all people, donât understand that.â
Casey was right of course. All her life Grace had been ten steps ahead. It wasnât because she knew everything. That would be a simpler explanation.
âListen.â Casey put her hand on top of Graceâs to reassure her. âYouâre an amazing doctor. You save countless with your research, knowledge and ability to recall so many facts within split seconds, and I know you know that.â She wagged her finger at Grace to confirm her point. âYou could have easily been a pilot, astronaut, physicist, vet or any other profession from the laundry list of those youâve studied. You chose medicine. No one did that for you.â Casey patted Graceâs hand then leaned back into her chair to sip her mimosa.
They sat together, as they did once a year, on Graceâs birthday, outside Le Bistro in Paris. Theyâd chosen the spot during their graduation trip when together theyâd toured Europe for four weeks with Paul and Scott. Four eighteen year olds with no worries, concerns or any particular ambitions; Grace the exception.
While their lives had taken a few detours along the way, Grace and Casey had returned under the pretense of reliving the glory days — Caseyâs at least.
The breeze from the Seine blew through their hair and brought with it the smell of freshly cut flowers from the cart a few feet away.
Theyâd chosen the restaurant because of its proximity to their hotel as well as the welcome theyâd always received from the owners — one of whom Grace had saved during their trip twenty years prior.
Despite her attempts to block, the terrifying memories reappeared.
While the four of them ate their first meal of the day, a husband-wife team chopped, chatted and prepared. One wrong move changed the course of their life forever.
Grace could recall the entire event, in vivid detail, along with each action she took.
Mrs. Lebeaux ran from the cafe, covered in blood screaming unintelligibly. As patrons scattered and ran from the cafe, Graceâs three friends looked at her and nodded her forward. On the spot, sheâd been forced into the role she prepared to become.
Luckily, sheâd never been squeamish.
Her body reacted quickly, with purpose. Mr. Lebeaux, visible from the doorway of the small cafe, lay in a pool of bright red as more seeped from his neck.
It had been nothing more than wrong place, wrong time for the Lebeaux couple, right place, right time for Grace.
Everyone agreed that without her, heâd have perished on the floor of his beloved cafe. Two months later she started medical school and as sheâd predicted, finished, residency and all, just three years later with Paul at her side. Dr. Grace Brooks.
âYouâre thinking about Mr. Lebeaux arenât you?â
âHow can I not? I still canât believe they both passed away a few months ago. I also canât believe you still wonât call them by their first names.â Grace smiled at her friend.
Casey simply shook her head. âItâs ingrained training Grace. You know what my momma always says.â
Grace knew. Sheâd known all her life. Sheâd gotten over the Mr. and Mrs. requirement herself, only to reinstate it once she had MD after her name. Sheâd needed it to survive the âyouâre too young to be a Doctor, please get me someone elseâ phase that began her career.
âTell me why this has come up again Grace.â Caseyâs question was sincere.
Grace turned the glass in her hand and let the liquid smoothly coat the inside. A head full of knowledge and she still wasnât able to find herself.
âMid-life crisis?â
Casey looked at her with one squinty eye. âNice try. Next?â
âPanic?â
âOver what? Youâre young. You have a great life. A good marriage. A fabulous job.â
âIâm afraid.â
As far as Casey could tell Grace was never afraid.
In high school, sheâd hidden her gift in the hope sheâd be considered just another girl; not in fear.
Sheâs been awarded numerous grants for her risky, yet flawless research in infant and fetal medicine. In turn, sheâd saved hundreds of babies, and their mothers, from untimely deaths.
When she wanted to be a pilot, she did — only to find she was an easy target for motion sickness.
âOf what?â
âSelf-fulfilling prophesies?â
âOK Grace. I give up. I have no idea what you are talking about.â
âYou know today marks two different anniversaries, right? My birth … â
âAnd your Momâs death.â Casey tried not to think about it. âI know. But I thought youâd made peace with it.â
Grace waved away the sorrow induced moisture on her lashes.
âItâs just –â Grace couldnât get the words out. Her problem seemed ridiculous. She was a trained medical doctor!
Casey leaned forward, looked straight into her eyes again. âTell me Grace.â
On a sigh, Grace closed her eyes and spoke through her thoughts. âI can learn anything I want. Iâve experienced everything but the one thing that would seem to come natural to me.â
âEverything does come natural to you, Grace.â Caseyâs only point of jealousy in their entire relationship centered on Graceâs gift — that she could remember — quite literally everything.
That gift allowed her to read and know. Touch and understand. See, smell or taste and remember — with absolute clarity and with an instantaneous ability to retell. It was why she was such a damn good Doctor. Nothing got by her.
She didnât have to research a problem — if it was out there and sheâd read it, she knew it. She didnât have to think through a conversation — all the possibilities were right in front of her, and through logical deduction sheâd get to the heart of the problem the first time.
Thatâs why sheâd been able to save Mr. Lebeaux without medical training.
âNot motherhood.â Grace looked at Casey.
Casey had become a mother just four years before, and from Graceâs estimation, loved every moment of it.
âOh. I see.â
âDo you? Really?â
âMaybe. Give me a minute. You process faster than I do.â
Grace laughed at Casey. Aside from Scott, Caseyâs husband, and Paul, her own, few people knew about Graceâs gift. It was kept under the radar as much as possible. Between the four of them it was a running joke.
âOk, I think I got it. You are a superwoman Doctor who saves moms and babies often at great risk to their lives. You care for, offer advice, encourage and promote your theories yet you havenât experienced them. Youâre a do as I say, not as I do girl.â
Grace nodded in agreement.
âSo youâre a hypocrite?â
For the second time, Grace was stunned by Caseyâs words.
She must have misheard. âIâm sorry? What?â
âYouâre a hypocrite. Your life really is a sham.â
âYou really are going to agree with me?â
âYup! Because I think youâre afraid that what happened to your Mom will happen to you. Or what happened to you will happen to your child and to Paul, despite the education you have. So instead of taking risks — which you do with othersâ lives — you live vicariously through them.â Caseyâs smug attitude irked Grace.
âAnd,â She continued before Grace could interject. âI think you are dying to be a Mom. Iâve seen how you look at your patients and at my daughter. If thatâs what you want, Grace, then you need step outside of yourself and be that normal human being you ascribe to.â
âBut -â Casey interrupted again.
âNo buts Grace. None. This isnât something you can learn from a book. Motherhood is sacred, individual and opens up new worlds. Youâve spent way too much time on the other side. Its time for you to use what youâve learned and take a step into the unknown.â
âWhat if -â interrupted again.
âDonât live in âwhat ifsâ Gracie. This is one area where you canât read ahead and wonât know the outcome. You can prepare only to a point. Youâll never be ready if you keep thinking through all the possibilities. If you want to be a Mom, thereâs no time like the present. And, itâll be the first time you and Paul will be on the same playing field.â
âHeâd get a kick out of that, wouldnât he?â Grace smirked. Knowing Paul, her desire would thrill him and would indeed make him her equal.
For the first time in her life, she be less than a hundred percent prepared, mentally blind, just another woman. Sheâd be normal. Sheâd be real. Sheâd be Mom.