Home>>read On Second Thought free online

On Second Thought(4)

By:Kristan Higgins


"Gram-Gram, this is my boss. Jonathan, my grandmother, Lettie Carson."

"Hello!" she said, taking his hand and kissing it.

He glanced at me, alarmed, then said, "Very nice to meet you."

"You, too! Ainsley, I was wondering if you could help me, honey. I'm on a  dating website, but I can't seem to swipe. How do you swipe on your  phone? My swipe is broken."

"Um...well, show me, and I'll help you." She handed me her phone.

Jonathan didn't seem compelled to move on. He watched us, expressionless.

"Tinder, Gram-Gram? It's kind of...trashy. And hey, that's my picture!  Not yours! You have to use a picture of yourself, you know."

Gram-Gram humphed. "I hate pictures of myself. Besides, you're so pretty."

"Well, you're misleading people."

She winked at Jonathan. "Maybe they'll date me if they think I look like her."

"Shame on you," I said. "Here. Smile!" Before she could protest, I'd snapped a shot, opened Tinder and changed her profile shot.

"Fine," she grumbled, scowling at it. "Thank you, I suppose. I'm getting more champagne! Nice to meet you, young man!"

"Go easy on the booze, Gram-Gram." She wandered away, patting people in  her wake. I force-smiled at Jonathan. "She's quite a character."

"Yes."

I suppressed a sigh. Though my boss was somewhere around my age, he gave  the impression of being a seventy-year-old minor British lord, an  ivory-topped walking stick firmly impacted in his colon. In the two  years I'd worked at his little magazine, I had yet to hear him laugh.         

     



 

"Well, thank you for coming, Jonathan, and for the wine. That was very  thoughtful. Here, come talk to my sister. I don't think you've met her.  Kate! This is Jonathan Kent, my boss."

Yes. Let Kate have to deal with him. Like Nathan (and now Kate),  Jonathan, too, was a platinum member at the Cambry-on-Hudson Lawn Club.  From the corner, Rachelle, who answered phones at the magazine, made a  sympathetic face. To be honest, I'd invited the boss only because he  overheard me talking about the party this very morning. Jonathan was, to  put it kindly, a downer.

But he had given Eric the online column-just a WordPress spin-off that  Eric posted himself, the magazine's website providing a link and a  byline. Eric loved writing The Cancer Chronicles, so I guess we owed  Jonathan for that, though it hadn't been easy convincing him to say yes.

"Nice to meet you," Kate said. "This is my husband, Nathan Coburn."

Being that it was Cambry-on-Hudson, Nathan and Jonathan had met sometime  in the past. Ah, yes. Hudson Lifestyle had done a feature on Nathan's  house a few years ago, before my time.

I wondered if I'd ask Kate to be my maid of honor, even though she'd  eloped and hadn't even asked me to come as a witness. If I asked, would  she somehow make me feel dumb? Then again, she was my sister...well, my  half sister, but still. Nathan could be in the wedding party, too. He  was a sweetheart, that guy. He caught me looking at him and gave me a  wink. In some ways, he felt more like a brother than Sean, who was  eleven when I was born, fourteen when I came to live with them.

Kate was lucky to have Nathan, though I never would've put them  together. At least she seemed to know it. She and Nathan were holding  hands, which was sweet.

"Hey, Ains!" said Rob, one of Eric's fraternity brothers. "What kind of cancer was it again?"

I bit down on my irritation. If Rob had been a true friend, he'd have  read The Cancer Chronicles (or the CCs, as Eric called them). Or maybe  even called during the past year and a half. Like a lot of Eric's  friends from college, he was something of a dolt.

I picked up Ollie and petted his fluffy little head. "It was  testicular," I said, still wishing I didn't have to name boy parts. They  all sounded so ugly. Penis. Scrotum. Sac. Girl parts, on the other  hand, all sounded rather exotic and beautiful. When I was at NBC and we  did a story on teenage pregnancy, there was a girl who wanted to name  her daughter Labia. I could almost see it.

"Testicular? Shit!" Rob winced comically and turned to Eric. "Dude!" he bellowed. "Your nuts? Ouch, brother!"

"That's the good cancer, isn't it?" asked Rob's wife.

"There is no good cancer," I said sternly.

"I mean, the cure rate is really high. Like 98 percent?"

Her statistics were accurate. "Yes."

"So it wasn't like Lance Armstrong, then? The really dangerous kind?"

What was this? An interrogation? "It was the same type Lance had, but  thank God, we caught it earlier. And all cancer is dangerous. I hope you  never have to find that out."

Sure, sure, I sounded sanctimonious, but really, people could be such  jerks. Eric had talked about this in his column, how people threw around  terms like "good cancer" and "great odds" and just didn't understand.

No matter what, Eric had been afraid of dying.

There was part of him, I knew, that had wished his battle had been a  little...well, a little more dramatic. He'd been prepped to be noble and  uncomplaining. That was why he asked me to get him the column at Hudson  Lifestyle. His journey, he said, would inspire people.

And it did. Well. I was inspired, of course. The blog didn't get a lot  of traffic, and Jonathan was irritable about it, so I lied to Eric about  the statistics. He'd been fighting cancer. He didn't need to know his  views were in the dozens (sometimes not even that).

The truth was, the CCs were kind of...bland. Eric wrote about finding  silver linings, living in the moment, being present, the transformation  of the caterpillar to butterfly. There was a lot of detail about his  treatment. Even a picture of the pre-and postoperative scrotum, which we  had to take down as soon as Jonathan saw it, since it violated the  magazine's pornography rules (that was an awkward meeting, let me tell  you).

Eric liked to use quotes: Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather  the realization that there is something more important than fear...  Live to fight another day... You are braver than you know, stronger than  you think... It's always darkest before dawn. (That one made even me  wince.)         

     



 

It wasn't exactly new territory, or great writing. Every Monday morning,  Jonathan would fix me with a dead-eyed stare after he read the blog. I  didn't care. It wasn't like Hudson Lifestyle was Newsweek. And besides,  Eric was always very flattering when he referenced me. He called me  Sunshine on the blog, rather than using my real name. To protect my  privacy, he said, though I wouldn't have minded being outed.

"Why doesn't anyone comment?" Eric asked a few weeks after he started,  and that was when I made up a bunch of fake usernames and started  posting. Lucy1991, CancerSux9339, EdouardenParis, LivefromNewYork28,  DaveMatthewsFan! and LovesToRead288 were actually all me.

There'd been this one woman who'd had chemo at the same place Eric went.  Noreen. She'd been so, so sick, so thin it was a wonder her legs held  her. No hair, no eyebrows, sores at her IV sites, yeast infections in  her mouth, bleeding gums, yellow skin and slack, hollow eyes, a cough so  hard I was surprised she didn't bring up her large intestine. It was  her third time around with cancer. The odds were not in her favor.

But Noreen always smiled, asked after the nurses' kids by name,  sometimes even crocheted little blankets for the preemies in the  neonatal unit when she had the strength. Never lost her sense of humor,  wore funny T-shirts that said My Oncologist Can Beat Up Your Oncologist  and Does This Shirt Make Me Look Bald? She was never anything but  gracious, kind and happy. Every time I went in to sit with Eric, I was  terrified Noreen wouldn't be there, that the cancer finally devoured  her.

Against all odds, she made it. In fact, she ran a half marathon last  month and raised more than twenty-five grand for cancer research. That  was when Eric started training for one, too.

But Eric's cancer journey had been...well, it had been easy. Easy as  cancer journeys go, that is. No hair loss (though he did shave his  head). Only two days of puking and diarrhea that might've been caused by  some iffy sushi. He lost fifteen pounds, but then again, he needed to,  and it was more through our new macrobiotic diet than because of chemo.  There was one week where he took a nap every day.

So what Rob's wife had said was true. If there was a cancer you had to  have, testicular was the way to go. And Eric had sailed through it like a  champ.

I knew he exaggerated on his blog, but I didn't bring it up. He had cancer, for the love of God.

And he won. Maybe his battle wasn't as tough as other people's, but he won.

My throat was tight with happy tears. I set Ollie back on the floor so  he could win more hearts and minds, and took a breath, wanting to press  our night into my memory forever. Three Wall Streeters were laughing in  the corner. Lillie, my college roommate, was giggling with her fiancé.  Everyone looked so happy.