A moment later the screen door whacked shut, and Jessie jumped as though it had hit her. She closed her eyes, body tensed and waiting. It was only when she heard the
It was late when Jessie heard the BMW's well-mannered thrum again. She was in bed but not asleep-Momma'd gone to bed hours ago-and the clock radio on the nightstand had just flipped from p.m. to a.m. She watched the pattern the single headlamp cast on her bedroom wall, and her heart thumped heavily in her chest.
She lay like a board, listening for the quiet sounds of doors opening and closing…someone moving around in the kitchen…footsteps coming up the stairs. The footsteps passed her door and a moment later she heard the click of a door closing farther down the hallway. Tristan was sleeping in the spare room again.
Jessie put an arm across her eyes and let out a breath she didn't know she'd been holding. Her whole body seemed to be vibrating…aching…and she didn't know whether it was with disappointment or relief.
Tristan was still asleep when Jessie left for work the next morning, which surprised her a little; he'd been getting up faithfully at the crack of dawn to go running. It was probably just as well, she thought. They needed to have a good long talk, which there wasn't going to be time for before she had to leave. And with things the way they were between them, it was bound to be awkward and uncomfortable. She was sorry about that, she really was.
But even as she thought it, a bleak little kernel of hopelessness was forming in her belly.
It was 11:36 that morning when Irene, the NICU receptionist, came to tell her she had a phone call. She knew that because she glanced up at the clock before she said, 'Take a message for me, will you, hon'?' She was showing the Johnsons how to hook up Rosie's heart monitor and oxygen tubes, and Rosie wasn't at all happy about it.
'Uh…you might want to take it,' Irene said. 'It's Alysha, down in the E.R.?'
'Okay-be just a minute…' Jessie motioned to Ray, one of the staff nurses, to come and take over for her. A call from the E.R. wasn't unusual, and meant she'd most likely be getting a new patient soon-anything from an abandoned infant to an unexpected delivery in somebody's car or maybe the EMS wagon.
At her desk she stripped off her gloves and picked up the phone. 'Hey, 'Leesha, whatcha got for me today?'
'Jessie?' The E.R. supervisor's voice sounded unusually restrained. 'Honey, can you come down here, ASAP?'
'Uh…sure. What-' It took that long for something in the other nurse's tone to set off warning sirens in Jessie's head. Shocks, like electrical charges, zapped through her and sizzled inside her skin. She sucked in air. 'Oh God. What's happened?'
'Honey, it's your husband. EMS just brought him in. There's been an accident.'
Chapter 14
After being interrupted by Jessie's gasp, the E.R. nurse rushed on. 'Don't be upset, now, okay? It looks like he's gonna be all right.'
'What…what
'MVA-motorcycle. Paramedics who brought him in said apparently somebody cut him off, he was going too fast to stop and went into a ditch. Or at least, the motorcycle did. Your husband went airborne.' Jessie gasped; a giant hand was squeezing her heart. Then she heard Alysha's rich dark chuckle. 'He was lucky-wasn't wearing a jacket or a helmet, but there don't appear to be any serious injuries-they're running a head CT right now, but he was seein' the right number of fingers. You might want to prepare yourself, though. Honey, the man is not a pretty sight. Seems he landed in a big ol' bank of blackberry bushes. Paramedics had a devil of a time getting him out. They look worse than he does. Anyway, honey, I thought you'd want to know.'
'Yes…thank you-' Jessie's legs gave out and she sat down abruptly-and thank God her chair was where it needed to be. 'I'll be right down.' But as she fumbled the receiver back into its cradle she felt hollow and sick and cold. There was a rushing noise in her ears, and she knew better than to try to go anywhere until the blood that had drained from her head found its way back again.
And yet…she remembered the autobahn, and that strange, wild light in his eyes. She remembered, from too many other times, the bleakness there, as well. And the painful, bitter irony of his smile.
Remorse and helplessness overwhelmed her, and she lowered her forehead into her hand and closed her eyes.
And then, as if those words did have the sort of magic fairy tales so often ascribe to them, it came to her that she
She sat up straight. Yes, she thought.
She didn't expect anyone to answer. She expected voice mail, or a recording instructing her to dial her party's extension, or press one for this or that option. Instead, after three rings, she heard a vaguely familiar voice say briskly, 'Cory Pearson.'
'It looks worse than it is,' Tristan muttered, squirming under Jessie's unwavering gaze. She hadn't said a word to him, yet, just stood there in the doorway of his E.R. cubicle with her hands tucked in the pockets of her smock and looked at him. He'd expected her to be upset-angry, or crying, maybe-but as far as he could tell, she wasn't any of those things. He couldn't read her at all. Once he'd been able to, like a book. But now he couldn't. He'd have better luck trying to figure out what a stranger was thinking.
But then, he reminded himself, that's what she was now. A stranger.
She came toward him, her face calm…almost serene, and he found himself experiencing rather childish twinges of pique. He'd been in a motorcycle accident, for God's sake, she ought to be a