Devil’s Waltz. By: Jonathan Kellerman

Reaching up, he rotated his earring.

“The strain on her’s been incredible.”

“Must be rough on you, too,” I said.

“It hasn’t been fun, that’s for sure. But the worst of it falls on

Cindy. To be honest, we’ve got your basic, traditional, sex

rolestereotyped marriage-I work; she takes care of things at home. Its

by mutual choice-what Cindy really wanted. I’m involved at home to

some extent-probably not as much as I should be-but child rearing’s

really Cindy’s domain. God knows she’s a hell of a lot better at it

than I am. So when something goes wrong in that sphere, she takes all

the responsibility on her shoulders.”

He stroked his beard and shook his head. “Now, that was an impressive

bit of defensive pedantry, wasn’t it? Yes, sure, it’s been ~ned rough

on me. Seeing someone you love . . . I assume you know about Chad-our

first baby?”

I nodded.

“We hit bottom with that, Dr. Delaware. There’s just no way to. .

.”

Closing his eyes, he shook his head again. Hard, as if trying to

dislodge mental burrs.

“Let’s just say it wasn’t anything I’d wish on my worst enemy.”

He jabbed the elevator button, glanced at his watch. “Looks like we

caught the local, Doctor. Anyway, we were just coming out of it Cindy

and I. Pulling ourselves together and starting to enjoy Cassie when

this mess hit the fan. . Unbelievable.”

The elevator arrived. Two candy-stripers and a doctor exited, and we

steed in. Chip pushed the ground-floor button and settled with his

back against the compartment’s rear wall.

“You just never know what life’s going to throw you,” he said.

“I’ve always been stubborn. Probably to a fault-an obnoxious

individualist. Probably because a lot of conformity was shoved down my

throat at an early age. But I’ve come to realize I’m pretty

conservative. Buying into the basic values: Live your life according

to the rules and things will eventually work out. Hopelessly naIve, of

course. But you get into a certain mode of thinking and it feels

right, so you keep doing it. That’s as good a definition of faith as

any, I guess. But I’m fast losing mine.

The elevator stopped at four. A Hispanic woman in her fifties and a

boy of around ten got on. The boy was short, stocky, bespectacled.

His blunt face bore the unmistakable cast of Down’s syndrome. Chip

smiled at them. The boy didn’t appear to notice him.

The woman looked very tired. No one talked. The two of them got off

at three.

When the door closed, Chip kept staring at it. As we resumed our

descent he said, “Take that poor woman. She didn’t expect thatchild of

her old age and now she has to take care of him forever.

Something like that’ll shake up your entire worldview. That’s what’s

happened to me-the whole child-rearing thing. No more assumptions

about happy endings.”

He turned to me. The slate eyes were fierce. “I really hope you can

help Cassandra. As long as she has to go through this shit, let her be

spared some of the pain.”

The elevator landed. The moment the door opened, he was out and

gone.

When I got back to the General Peds clinic, Stephanie was in one of the

exam rooms. I waited outside until she came out a few minutes later,

followed by a huge black woman and a girl of around five. The girl

wore a red polka-dot dress and had coal-black skin, cornrows, and

beautiful African features. One of her hands gripped Stephanie’s; the

other held a lollipop. A tear stream striped her cheek, lacquer on

ebony. A round pink Band-Aid dotted the crook of one arm.

Stephanie was saying, “You did great, Tonya.” She saw me and mouthed,

“My office,” before returning her attention to the girl.

I went to her consult room. The Byron book was back on the shelf, its

gilded spine conspicuous among the texts.

I thumbed through a recent copy of Pediatrics. Not long after,

Stephanie came in, closed the door, and sank into her desk chair.

“So,” she said, “how’d it go?”

“Fine, outside of Ms. Bottomley’s continuing antagonism.

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