through pieces of paper.
“Anything?”
“Hmm, no,” she replied. “Nothing out of the ordinary. Terrific student. Looks like you’ve got yourself some serious talent, Gabe.”
“Mmm, hmm. Okay. No unusual details, though?”
“Umm, no. I’m not seeing anything here…” her voice trailed off for a moment. I almost interrupted her to cut the call short. But then, she spoke up once again. “Wait, here’s something.”
“What?”
“Well,” Danielle said as she began to summarize snippets of text from the file. “It looks as if she received treatment for depression and anxiety at various times while she was a student here. She also experienced a good bit of illness which forced her to complete some of her classwork from home.”
“I see. Is there any mention as to the reason for the anxiety and depression?”
Danielle stopped shuffling paper as I asked my question.
“Now Gabe, you know I can’t reveal that information to you.”
“What’s wrong Danielle? Don’t you trust me?”
“Of course I do. That’s not the issue. It’s confidential.”
“I understand.” I said as I turned my back and leaned against the sun warmed glass of my twentieth floor office window. “Well, if it's any help, the project she’s involved in here will likely require some government clearance. If that’s the case, I’ll have to get access to the records anyway.”
Danielle moaned. “Ugh, really?”
“Yes. Really. If there’s something serious in the file, I need to know, Danielle.”
She hemmed and hawed for another moment or two. Finally, she let out a deep exhale before she continued, “I wouldn’t do this for anyone but you, Gabe. This doesn’t go any further than us okay?”
“Of course.”
“All right.” She said. “Well according to what it says here, the issues underlying her anxiety related to health care costs for her grandmother.”
“Oh?”
“Mmm, hmm. Apparently she’s been dealing with cancer off and on for the better part of two decades. At some point, Fiona assumed financial responsibility for her care.”
“Wow. That’s rough. How much debt are we talking about here?”
“Doesn’t say. Something like that though… It’s got to be hundreds of thousands, at least. If not more.”
“Hmm, true.” I said, as I nodded in agreement. “Well, I could see why she’d be anxious. What about the depression?”
“Um… let’s see.” Danielle leafed through a few more pieces of paper until at last, she gasped. “Oh dear. Oh my, this is so sad. Poor thing…”
“What?”
Danielle stifled an audible swallow. After clearing her throat, she continued, “Well, it seems her entire family, her parents and two brothers were killed in a boating accident when she was young.”
“Jesus.” I replied. Well that certainly explained the depression. I mean, losing your entire family at such a young age. It’s understandable. “So she survived somehow?”
“Um, it doesn’t mention anything about what did or didn’t happen to her.”
We both fell silent for several seconds. I’m sure Danielle thought of her own family in the moment and as for me, well, I had a new understanding of my bright young lab hire, Fiona Matthews.
FIONA
Since I’d been caught in the midst of staring Gabe up and down as if we were little more than a piece of meat in the conference room the other day, I’d buried myself in my work, keeping to myself as much as possible. Even so, the women who’d caught me ogling him, a couple of my co-workers in the lab, Amanda and Melissa, prodded me about him and what, if anything, was happening between us.
I can’t explain it but something about the two of them made me uneasy. Anyway, despite my misgivings, I made the decision to reserve judgment about them, for the time being.
I put their annoying inquiries off until doing so any longer would make them unduly suspicious, so when they asked me to have lunch with them a couple of days later, I really had no