: Part 3 – Chapter 10
If Only I Had Told Her
âEverything looks good,â the doctor says as she scans my chart. âIf you could try again to pee for us before you goâ¦â
âSorry,â I say. âItâs like all I do is pee, and then I canât when Iâm supposed to.â
âHappens all the time,â she says. âJust try again because it is the best way to predict preeclampsia. Do you have any questions before the organ scan?â
âThe what?â
âThe ultrasound.â
âUh, no.â The room is cold, and Iâm anxious to put my new maternity jeans back on.
âThatâs scheduled for next week, right? No, week after next.â She pauses, makes a note, and looks up at me and smiles. âLetâs see about peeing again, okay?â
In the restroom, crouched over the toilet with a cup between my legs, I think about what Dr. Singh said about love being an action and how my actions say Iâm doing the best I can to love myself and the baby I donât quite believe in. I wonder if trying to urinate for the preeclampsia test counts as an act of love, which makes me giggle, and then I finally pee.
When the nurse takes the cup from me, I ask, âSo theyâll make sure the baby has all its organs and stuff week after next?â
âYup. Iâm sure itâll be fine.â
I say, âIâm not worried. I was just surprised when the doctor called it an âorgan scan.â I mean, it makes sense, but I never thought of it that way.â Iâm babbling and not exactly sure what Iâm talking about. The poor nurse smiles tightly at me and says something about needing to get thisâwith a nod to the urineâinto the back.
I check at reception to see if they need anything more from me, but Mom has already made my next appointment and paid the copay with the little gold card, so weâre on our way.
âEverything good?â Mom asks. âYou were in there awhile.â
âI couldnât pee.â
âBut all you do is pee, Autumn.â
âThatâs what I said!â I lean my head against the window. Thereâs a fluttering in my middle that could be Finnyâs baby, or it could be yesterdayâs lunch. I still canât tell.
.
Theyâll scan for the organs and make sure theyâre all there, all in the right places, all in the right sizes and shapes, because sometimes they arenât.
Sometimes the kidneys arenât there, or the brain isnât the right size, or the heart isnât the right shape.
Sometimes babies die in their sleep for no reason, and with a gasp of breath, I realize that someday this baby will die.
Hopefully, this baby will live for a hundred years, but someday it will die, just like Finny. Just like I will.
The best I can do is hope that I will die before the baby.
The absurdity of it all.
âAre you okay?â Mom asks.
âThinking about the ultrasound,â I say. âI hope everything is okay.â
âIt probably will be,â she says, but nothing more, because she knows that for eighteen years, Angelina believed that Finny would outlive her. She knows that sometimes babies die in their sleep.
And neither of us is foolish enough to believe that lightning doesnât strike twice.