![]() The following is an excerpt from the book Saving Graces: Finding Solace and Strength from Friends and Strangers by Elizabeth Edwards Kenosha October 21, 2004
My face was tilted toward the stream of water from the
shower-head. Water spilled from the corners of my closed eyes as my fingers
outlined the unfamiliar lump in my right breast. Around and around again,
I traced its edges. Try as I might, it wouldnt go away. How could I
have missed something this size when I showered yesterday? Or the day before?
Or . . . but it didnt matter. Id found it today, this lump, firm
and big on the side of my breast. I kept my eyes closed and finished rinsing
my hair.
Until that momentuntil the lumpOctober 21,
2004, was meant to be an ordinary day, if such a thing can exist on a campaign
trail two weeks before a presidential election. An 11:00 A.M. town hall meeting
at the Kenosha United Auto Workers hall. A rally later that day in Erie,
Pennsylvania. Scranton in time for dinner, and Maine by sunrise the next
morning. I would speak to at least two thousand people, prepare to tape a
segment for Good Morning America, discuss Medicare premiums with senior
citizens, talk college tuition with parents, and, if it was a very good day,
influence at least a few undecided voters. Just another ordinary
day.
But I had learned long ago that it was typically the
most ordinary days that the careful pieces of life can break away and shatter.
As I climbed out of the shower, I heard the door to my hotel room click shut.
I knew instantly who it was, and I was relieved. Hargrave, I
called out from the bathroom, wrapping myself in a towel, come feel
this. Hargrave McElroy was my dear friend of twenty-three years, my
daughter Cates godmother, a teacher at the high school my children
had attended, and now my assistant and companion on the road. She had agreed
to travel with me after John had been named the Democratic vice presidential
nominee. I had previously chased away a couple of well-intentioned young
assistants who aroused my desire to parent them instead of letting them take
care of me, which was wearing me out. I needed a grown-up, and I asked Hargrave
to join me. She had no experience on campaigns, but she was a teacher and
whats more, the mother of three boys. Thats enough experience
to handle any job. Choosing Hargrave was one of the best decisions I would
make. She instinctively knew when to buy more cough drops, when to hand me
a fresh Diet Coke, and, I now hoped, what to do after one discovers a lump
in her breast.
Hargrave pressed her ngers against the bulge on my right
breast, which felt as smooth and rm as a plum. She pressed her lips together
and looked at me directly and gently, just like she was listening to a student
in one of her classes give the wrong answer. Hmmm, she said,
calmly meeting my eyes. When was your last mammogram?
I hated to admit it, but it had been too long, much too
long. For years, I had made all the excuses women make for not taking care
of these thingsthe two young children I was raising, the house I was
running. We had moved to Washington four years earlier, and I had never found
a doctor there. Life just always seemed to get in the way. All lousy excuses,
I knew, for not taking care of myself.
We better get that checked out as soon as we
can, Hargrave said.
I had a feeling she meant that very morning, but that
was not going to be possible. We had less than two weeks before the election.
Undoubtedly people had already gathered in the union hall to listen to the
speakers scheduled before me, and there were young volunteers setting up
for a town hall in Erie, andas the King of Siam said in the
musicalet cetera, et cetera, et cetera. My lump would have
to wait; the ordinary day would go on as scheduled. Except for one thing.
Today, I planned to go shopping.
The previous evening, I had spotted an outlet mall on
our way to the hotel. We had spent the night in a Radissona fact I
discovered that morning when I read the soap in the bathroom. Since I started
campaigning, it had been a different hotel in a different city each night.
We would arrive late, traveling after it was too late to campaign, and we
would enter and exit most hotels through the same back door used to take
out the trash. Unless the trash dumpster bore the name of the hotel, Id
figure out where we were only if I remembered to look at the soap in the
bathroom.
As soon as we spotted the outlets, Hargrave, Karen
Finneymy press secretaryand I started calculating. The stores
would open at ten, and it was a ten-minute drive to the UAW hall. That left
about forty-five minutes to shop. It wasnt a lot of time, but for three
women who hadnt been shopping in months, it was a gracious plenty.
Despite the lump and everything it might mean, I had no intention of changing
our plan. We had all been looking forward to the unprecedented time devoted
to something as mindless, frivolous, and selfish as shopping. The clothes
I had in my suitcase that day were basically the same ones I had packed when
I left Washington in early July, and it was now nearing November in Wisconsin.
It was cold, I was sick of my clothes, and, to be honest, I wasnt
particularly concerned about the lump. This had happened before, about ten
years earlier. I had found what turned out to be a harmless brous cyst.
I had it removed, and there were no problems. Granted, this lump was clearly
larger than the other, but as I felt its smooth contour, I was convinced
this had to be another cyst. I wasnt going to allow myself to think
it could be anything else.
In the backseat of the Suburban, I told Hargrave how to
reach Wells Edmundson, my doctor in Raleigh. With the phone pressed to her
ear, she asked me for the details. No, the skin on my breast wasnt
puckered. Yes, I had found a small lump before.
At the Dana Buchman outlet, I looked through the blazers
as Hargrave stood nearby, still on the phone to Wells. I spotted a terrific
red jacket, and I waved to Hargrave for her opinion. The lump was really
pretty big, she said into the phone while giving me a thumbs-up on
the blazer. There we were, two women, surrounded by men with earpieces,
whispering about lumps and flipping through the sales rack. The saleswomen
huddled, their eyes darting from the Secret Service agents to the few customers
in the store. Then they huddled again. Neither of us looked like someone
who warranted special protectioncertainly not me, flipping through
the racks at manic speed, watching the clock tick toward 10:30. Whatever
worry I had felt earlier, Hargrave had taken on. She had made the phone calls;
she had heard the urgent voices on the other end. She would worry, and she
would let me be the naive optimist. And I was grateful for that.
She hung up the phone. Are you sure you want to
keep going? she asked me, pointing out that our schedule during the
remaining eleven days until the election entailed stops in thirty-five cities.
It could be exhausting. Stopping wasnt going to make the
lump go away, and exhaustion was a word I had long ago banished from my
vocabulary.
Im fine, I said. And Im
getting this red blazer.
Youre braver than I am, she told me.
From now on, I will always think of that blazer
as the Courage Jacket. Within minutes, she was back on the phone with
Kathleen McGlynn, our scheduler in D.C., who could make even impossible schedules
work, telling her only that we needed some free time the next Friday for
a private appointment.
While I bought a suit and that red jacket, Hargrave set
up an appointment with Dr. Edmundson for the next week, when we were scheduled
to return to Raleigh. Through the phone calls and despite her worry, she
still found a pale pink jacket that suited her gentle nature perfectly. All
the plans to deal with the lump were made, and the appointments were days
away. I wanted to push it all aside, and thanks to Hargrave and the thirty-five
cities in my near future, I could. We gathered Karen and headed out for that
ordinary day.
The town hall meeting went wellexcept at one point
I reversed the names of George Bush and John Kerry in a line I had delivered
a hundred times, a mistake I had never made before and never made after.
While John Kerry protects the bank accounts of pharmaceutical companies
by banning the safe reimportation of prescription drugs, George Bush wants
to protect your bank account. . . . I got no further, as the crowd
groaned, and one old man in the front good-naturedly shouted out that Id
gotten it backwards. Oops. I said it again, right this time,
and we had a good laugh. I looked at Hargrave and rolled my eyes. Was this
how it would be for the next week? Fortunately, it was not. We ew to an
icy Pennsylvania, where the two town halls went well enough, or at least
without event. I had my legs again. And then on to Maine for the following
day.
I could tell by the look on the technicians face
that it was bad news. Hargrave and Iand the Secret Service agentshad
ridden to Dr. Edmundsons office as soon as we landed back in Raleigh
the following week, just four days before the election. I had told Karen
and Ryan Montoya, my trip director on the road, about the lump, and the Secret
Service agents knew what was going on because they were always there, though
they never mentioned a word about it to me or to anyone else. Ryan had quietly
disappeared to my house in Raleigh, and the Secret Service agents respectfully
kept a greater distance as Hargrave led me inside. I was lucky because Wells
Edmundson was not only my doctor, he was our friend. His daughter Erin had
played soccer with our daughter Cate on one of the teams that John coached
over the years. His nurse, Cindy, met me at the back door and led me to
Wells office, dotted with pictures of his children.
I dont have the equipment here to tell you
anything for certain, Wells said after examining the lump. Ever the
optimist, he agreed that the smooth contour I felt could be a cyst, and ever
the cautious doctor, he ordered an immediate mammogram. His attitude seemed
so very positive, I was more buoyed than worried. As Hargrave and I rode
to a nearby radiology lab for the test, I felt fine. One thing I had learned
over the years: hope is precious, and theres no reason to give it up
until you absolutely have to.
This is where the story changes, of course. The ultrasound,
which followed the mammogram that day, looked terrible. The bump may have
felt smooth to my touch, but on the other sideon the insideit
had grown tentacles, now glowing a slippery green on the computer screen.
The technician called in the radiologist. Time moved like molasses as I lay
in the cold examining room. I grew more worried, and then came the words
that by this point seemed inevitable: This is very serious. The
radiologists face was a portrait of gloom.
I dressed and walked back out as I had walked in, through
a darkened staff lounge toward a back door where the Secret Service car and
Hargrave waited for me. I was alone in the dark, and I felt frightened and
vulnerable. This was the darkest moment, the moment it really hit me. I had
cancer. As the weight of it sank in, I slowed my step and the tears pushed
against my eyes. I pushed back. Not now. Now I had to walk back into that
sunlight, that beautiful Carolina day, to the Secret Service and to Hargrave,
who would be watching my face for clues just as I had watched the image on
the ultrasound monitor.
Its bad, was all I could manage to
Hargrave.
As the Secret Service backed out onto the road for home,
Hargrave rubbed my shoulder and silent tears snuck across my cheeks. I had
to call John, and I couldnt do that until I could speak without crying.
The thing I wanted to do most was talk to him, and the thing I wanted to
do least was tell him this news.
I had mentioned nothing to John earlier, although I spoke
to him several times a day during the campaign, as we had for our entire
marriage. I couldnt let him worry when he was so far away. And I had
hoped there would be nothing to tell him. Certainly not this. I had promised
myself he would never have to hear bad news again. Heand Cate, our
older daughterhad suffered too much already. Our son Wade had been
killed in an auto accident eight years earlier, and we had all been through
the worst life could deal us. I never wanted to see either of them experience
one more moment of sadness. And, after almost thirty years of marriage, I
knew exactly how John would respond. As soon as he heard, he would insist
that we drop everything and take care of the problem.
Sitting in the car, I dialed Johns number. Lexi
Bar, who had been with us for years and was like family, answered. I skipped
our usual banter and asked to speak to John. He had just landed in
Raleighwe had both come home to vote and to attend a large rally where
the rock star Jon Bon Jovi was scheduled to perform.
He got on the phone, and I started slowly.
Sweetie, I began. Its how I always began. And then came
the difference: I couldnt speak. Tears were there, panic was there,
need was there, but not words. He knew, of course, when I couldnt speak
that something was wrong.
Just tell me whats wrong, he
insisted. I explained that I had found the lump, had it checked out by Wells, and now needed to have a needle biopsy. Im sure its nothing, I assured him and told him that I wanted to wait until after the election to have the biopsy. He said hed come right home, and I went there to wait for him.
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