Reconstructing Natalie
Praise for Reconstructing Natalie
“Laced with refreshing wit and stunning insights, this memorable tale will lift your spirits!”
—Robin Jones Gunn, author of Gardenias for Breakfast
and the Sisterchicks® novels
“No way can you read Reconstructing Natalie without laughing, weeping, cheering, wincing, and above all, rooting for this feisty young woman in her battle to overcome a disease that has claimed far too many of our friends. Be prepared for unflinching descriptions of what it’s really like to deal with breast cancer on a daily basis, including all the highs and lows—the goofy, the icky, the embarrassing, and the tragic moments—shared with honesty, humor, and heart by a talented author who has truly been there.”
—Liz Curtis Higgs, author of Mixed Signals
“Reconstructing Natalie is a funny, heartwarming tale . . . Bravo!”
—Kristin Billerbeck, author of With this Ring, I’m Confused
and She’s All That
“I’m crazy about Natalie! She’s funny. She’s smart! She’s real! She has a crush on Johnny Depp for heaven’s sake! And, by the way, she just happens to have breast cancer. Laura Jensen Walker doesn’t dodge real-life issues. Bad stuff happens, but it doesn’t consume her characters. On the contrary! It makes them more interesting! There’s an energetic flow that moves Natalie (and the reader) joyfully beyond the crisis to experience sweet romance and deep fulfillment.”
—Sue Buchanan, author, speaker, cheerleader,
and a breast cancer survivor
“Reconstructing Natalie strikes heart, soul, and funny bone!”
—Cindy Martinusen, author of Eventide
“[T]he poignancy/humor mix . . . INCREDIBLE!”
—Tamara Leigh, author of Stealing Adda
“Laura Jensen Walker is one of the funniest women I know, and she has an amazing talent for bringing humor into situations that seem void of anything funny. She’s walked the road she writes about, and it shows through every page.”
—Rene Gutteridge, author of My Life as a Doormat
Also by Laura Jensen Walker
FICTION
Dreaming in Black and White
Dreaming in Technicolor
NONFICTION
Thanks for the Mammogram!
Girl Time
God Rest Ye Grumpy Scroogeymen (with Michael Walker)
A Kiss Is Still a Kiss
When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Ice Cream
Copyright © 2006 by Laura Jensen Walker
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by WestBow Press, a division of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
The following Scriptures are quoted in this book:
Chapter 18: 2 Corinthians 5:1 NIV
Chapter 19: Song of Solomon 1:2, 4 NIV
Chapter 22: 2 Corinthians 4:17 KJV
Chapter 25: Psalm 91:15–16 KJV; Psalm 23:1–6 KJV
Chapter 30: Psalm 139:14 NIV
Scriptures marked NIV are from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION‚
Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved.
Those marked KJV are from the King James Version of the Bible.
Publisher’s Note: This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Walker, Laura Jensen.
Reconstructing Natalie / Laura Jensen Walker.
p. cm.
ISBN 1-5955-4067-9 (softcover)
1. Single women—Fiction. 2. Cancer—Patients—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3623.A3595R43 2006
813'.54—dc22
2006003102
06 07 08 09 RRD 6 5 4 3 2 1
Information about External Hyperlinks in this ebook
Please note that footnotes in this ebook may contain hyperlinks to external websites as part of bibliographic citations. These hyperlinks have not been activated by the publisher, who cannot verify the accuracy of these links beyond the date of publication.
For my mother, Bettie J. Eichenberg, a longtime breast cancer survivor who’s always been my biggest cheerleader, with all my love and gratitude.
And in memory of Linda Gundy and Jane Valenzuela, who fought the good fight for so long and are now at home with their Lord, not having to fight anymore.
To God be the glory.
But those who suffer He delivers in their suffering; He speaks to them in their affliction.
—JOB 36:15
It is never too late—in fiction or in life—to revise.
—NANCY THAYER
Contents
chapter one
chapter two
chapter three
chapter four
chapter five
chapter six
chapter seven
chapter eight
chapter nine
chapter ten
chapter eleven
chapter twelve
chapter thirteen
chapter fourteen
chapter fifteen
chapter sixteen
chapter seventeen
chapter eighteen
chapter nineteen
chapter twenty
chapter twenty-one
chapter twenty-two
chapter twenty-three
chapter twenty-four
chapter twenty-five
chapter twenty-six
chapter twenty-seven
chapter twenty-eight
chapter twenty-nine
chapter thirty
chapter thirty-one
epilogue
acknowledgments
Reading Group Guide to Reconstructing Natalie
chapter one
I’m obsessed with breasts.
Not in the lesbian sense. I’m a card-carrying heterosexual woman with a serious crush on Johnny Depp. And I never really noticed them before. Breasts, I mean. They were just a fact of life. Like day and night. Sun and rain. God. And Krispy Kremes.
But now that I’m about to lose mine, I can’t stop staring at them everywhere I go. The mall. Work. Church. The gym. Even my parents’ house. (Sorry, Mom.)
Large ones, small ones, black ones, white ones, perky, even sagging—to me, they’re all a thing of beauty.
My name is Natalie. I’m twenty-seven years old. And I have breast cancer.
Oh yeah. And I’m single. There goes my dating life down the toilet.
I never dreamed I’d get breast cancer. That was for older women. Right? I mean, you can’t even get a routine mammogram until you’re forty. There’s gotta be a reason for that.
Right?
I discovered the lump by accident.
Wish I could say it was during my regular self-exams, which I learned how to do during a women’s health class in college. But my monthly self-exams were more irregular than regular. And I never could tell one lump from another anyway. They all felt the same to me. Squishy.
Like more than half the women on the planet—including my sixty-seven-year-old mother, I had fibrocystic breasts. Lumpy, in other words. But to my knowledge, there’s no history of breast cancer in our family, so I really wasn’t worried when I felt the lump while tryi
ng on a gel bra at Victoria’s Secret.
My best friend, Merritt, and I were goofing around one Saturday at the mall, wondering how we’d look if we were both a little bigger in the boob department.
Although I needed more help than she did.
We each tried on one of those padded gel and water bras like they use in Hollywood all the time. And Merritt, who’d grabbed a black double-D, was vamping for the dressing-room mirror, sucking in her cheeks, making her lips all pouty, and trying to look appropriately sexy as she admired her now-bountiful cleavage beneath her straining white poet’s blouse.
I shook my head. “Too Anna Nicole Smith.”
She swung her tomato-red (this week) mane and examined her double-basketball profile. “But they helped her marry a millionaire. Who knows? Maybe they’ll do the same for me.”
“Right. And then you’d have to sleep with a guy who’s as old as your grandfather. Correction, great-grandfather.”
We scrunched up horrified faces. “Eew!”
Faster than a Hollywood marriage, Merritt whipped that bad boy off from beneath her blouse and dropped it on the reject pile. Then she glanced at me and did a double take. “Hey, whaddya know? You’ve got boobs!”
“I know! Can you believe it?” I turned sideways and scrutinized my B-cup self. “The double-fried-egg girl finally has curves.”
“You’ve always had curves. They’re just small.” She stared at my basic black T-shirt as I pirouetted in front of the mirror. “But, honey, those double fried eggs are now a couple of blueberry muffins. You have to buy that miracle-worker bra.”
“Nope.” I took a last regretful look at my curvy front. “With me, what you see is what you get.”
“I know. I know. Little Ms. Candid and Up-front. But what would it hurt to be a little mysterious every now and then?” She twirled in her gauzy Indian broomstick skirt over leggings, lowered her head, and made her eyes all exotic and inscrutable. “Men like that in a woman.”
“Well, they’re not going to get it from me. I wouldn’t know how to even begin to be mysterious.” I turned my back and unhooked the lacy pink bra while Merritt busied herself collecting all the lingerie we’d tried on. As I lowered the straps off my shoulders, my hand grazed my left breast and I felt something.
A lump. Not squishy.
Time to cut down on my caffeine intake. I’d read somewhere that too much caffeine can increase fibrocystic lumps.
“Hey, heads up!” I tossed the bra over my shoulder to join the others on the reject pile.
Pushing open the door of her midtown Victorian apartment half an hour later, Merritt sang out, “Honey, I’m home!”
“Me, too, honey,” I echoed, even though I didn’t live there.
Jillian raised her shaped-and-waxed eyebrows over her cappuccino. “So what’d you buy?”
“A T-shirt.” I raised my lone shopping bag high. “It’s this great coral color. And only $9.99 at Target.”
She rolled her eyes. “Nat, one of these days you’ve got to branch out from your discount stores.” She glanced at my jeans. “And your jeans and T-shirt uniform.”
“You’re such a snob, Jilly.” I gave her an affectionate grin. “Besides, I do so branch out. At work I wear khakis or dress pants and the occasional skirt. And I have a tailored jacket for meetings.”
“Whoa. Really pushing the fashion envelope there.”
Merritt was trying to skulk behind me in an evasive maneuver. But Jillian spotted her.
“Not so fast, roomie. Show me what you got for your date tonight.”
My best friend exchanged a resigned look with me, shrugged her shoulders, and lifted her hands, empty palms up. “Nada.”
“You two! What am I going to do with you?” Jillian slid her slim, designer-clad self off the retro kitchen bar stool and advanced toward us. “How do you expect to get a guy if you don’t even make a little bit of an effort?”
“Uh, have you forgotten? I’ve already got a guy.” I popped an Altoid into my mouth, enjoying that heady peppermint rush. “And Jack doesn’t seem to have any complaints about my casual style.”
“That’s right,” Merritt said. “And you guys have been together— what? Two months now?”
I thought back to our first date and did some mental calculations. “One month and seventeen days. But who’s counting?”
“Whoa, I’m impressed, math girl. You’re usually not good with numbers.” Merritt turned a dazzling smile on Jillian. “And speaking of numbers, I’m not even thirty yet. You know what they say—forty is the new thirty, which goes to follow that thirty must be the new twenty, which means I’m really only eighteen. Besides . . .” She waved her hand airily. “If a guy’s hung up by how I dress, he’s not for me.”
“At least tell me you’ll change out of those paint-spattered leggings.” Jillian raised a French-manicured hand to her brow, her sparkling new solitaire winking in the light, and shook her head in dismay. “I can’t believe you went out in public like that.”
Jillian’s the fashionista in our trio of friends. A personal shopper at Nordstrom, she lives, breathes, and eats what’s in and what’s out, what works and what doesn’t in the world of fashion.
Merritt and I, not so much.
I’m more a Target and Old Navy girl myself. In fact, the first time Jillian said “Jimmy Choo,” I said “Gesundheit.” But I’m willing to spend a little more money on a fabulous accessory to pull a whole outfit together, like a brooch or a designer belt. I might be casual, and I might be thrifty (Jillian has another word for it), but I do have flair if I say so myself.
And Merritt? Well, Merritt’s an artist, so she has this funky, bohemian, retro, thrift-store vibe goin’ on. She gravitates toward long, flowy skirts over tights or leggings and boots (combat or cowboy), often paired with a men’s jacket over a billowing blouse or tank top. She’s a modern-day Annie Hall. (Or Mary Kate Olsen with a little more padding. But don’t ever tell her I said so.)
“I can’t help it that someone in this room”—Merritt wriggled her eyebrows at me—“woke me up at the crack of dawn. Since I got dressed in my sleep and without benefit of caffeine, I just threw on the closest thing.”
“Ten o’clock is not the crack of dawn, Batgirl. Maybe it’s time to leave your cave and enter the sunshine.” I beckoned to her. “Don’t be afraid. Come to the light. Come to the light.”
“I’ll light you.” Merritt grabbed an Art Deco lamp from the end table and brandished it at me.
“Watch out!” Jillian yelped.
Too late. The lamp cord caught on a can of Diet Pepsi and tipped it over onto the cream-colored carpet.
Jillian yanked some paper towels from the kitchen and raced to mop up the spill. “How many times have I asked you not to leave your half-full cans of soda lying around?”
“Sorry.” Merritt grabbed the can of spot remover she kept in the end-table cabinet, and the two of them tag-teamed to clean up the mess.
“Good work, guys.” I strode to the table. “But if I might make a humble suggestion? If you move the lamp to the back of the table like so”—I pushed the lamp to the back corner and angled it—“that won’t happen again.” I stood back and surveyed the table with a critical eye, then adjusted the coasters and angled the magazines as well. “There.”
Merritt smirked. “Well, thank you, Ms. Home Makeover.”
Jillian shook her head. “Actually, it looks a lot better. You have a great eye, Nat.”
“And you can cook,” Merritt added. “If Jack doesn’t marry you, maybe I will.”
I stuck out my tongue at her and looked at my watch. “Whoops, gotta go.” I winked at Merritt. “Have fun on your date tonight. Call me later.”
Merritt, Jillian, and I have been friends since the eighth grade. We bonded in girl-power solidarity when Doug Anderson, the captain of the junior varsity football team, slipped me a note in art class that said, “What color undershirt are you wearing today?” As my flat-chested, undeveloped self cringed and tu
rned every shade of red, Doug and several of his jock pals sniggered. Merritt, who sat next to me and whose hair was then a two-toned blue, saw the note. She didn’t say anything. But a few minutes later, she accidentally tipped a container of thinned-out orange acrylic paint into my tormentor’s lap.
“Hey!” Doug jumped up as the class exploded in laughter.
“Oops. Sorry.” Merritt widened her eyes and looked all innocent. “Guess I wasn’t watching what I was doing.”
The bell rang then, and Jillian, the head of the JV cheerleading squad, who at thirteen already filled out her perky cheerleading uniform in ways I never could, shot Doug a withering glance and linked arms with me and Merritt. “C’mon, girls, let’s go to lunch. I’m starving.”
We were fast friends from that moment on. Which is kind of strange considering how we were all so different.
Jillian came straight out of Central Casting as the pretty and privileged yuppie blonde cheerleader—except she never had that mean-girl thing going on. She is now engaged to Bill, a successful real-estate wheeler-dealer she met when she helped him upgrade his wardrobe.
Merritt, who was abandoned at birth and raised in a series of foster homes, is kind of a cross between Pink and Gwen Stefani with a voluptuous dash of Kelly Osbourne thrown in. On her own since sixteen, she is a fabulous artist—her oils are as bold and colorful as she is—and I just knew she’d make it really big someday. But until then, she was working as a graphic artist for a PR firm here in downtown Sacramento.
And me? I’m somewhere in-between.
After getting my B.A. in business, I worked my way up to executive assistant to one of the partners of a major capital city accounting firm. I was the go-to girl for everything in that office. And I was a sure bet for the office-manager position that would open up pretty soon, when the current manager retired.
Impressive, huh?
Okay, so the partner was my dad and the current office manager was my mom. So what? I still had to start at the bottom like everyone else.
After twenty years of marriage, my career-minded mom got pregnant at the age of forty. What she thought was early menopause was actually me. So to say my folks doted on me would be putting it mildly. But I couldn’t have asked for better parents. Dad’s a doll, and Mom—okay, Mom can be a tad, well, opinionated. In the same way that a Mack truck is opinionated. If I didn’t know that she’s gone to the same neighborhood church all her life, I’d swear she was Jewish. Oy.