— You have to let him know you're interested, — Henry had told her. — He thinks you're not. —
Trapped on the turnpike, she watched the minutes tick past. She thought of what Rose had risked for love. Had it been worth it? Did she ever regret it?
At Brookline, the turnpike suddenly opened up, but by then she knew she would be late. By the time she ran into Logan Airport's Terminal E, Tom's flight had landed, and she faced a crammed obstacle course of passengers and luggage.
She began to run, dodging children and carry-ons. When she reached the area where passengers were exiting customs, her heart was pounding hard. I've missed him, she thought as she plunged into the crowd, searching. She saw only strangers' faces, an endless throng of people she did not know, people who brushed past her without a second glance. People whose lives would never intersect with hers. Suddenly it seemed as if she'd always been searching for Tom, and had always just missed him. Had always let him slip away, unrecognized.
— Julia? —
She whirled around to find him standing right behind her, looking rumpled and weary after his long flight. Without even stopping to think, she threw her arms around him, and he gave a laugh of surprise.
— What a welcome! I wasn't expecting this, — he said.
— I'm so glad I found you! —
— So am I, — he said softly.
— You were right. Oh, Tom, you were right! —
— About what? —
— You told me once that you recognized me. That we'd met before. —
— Have we? —
She looked into a face that she'd seen just that afternoon gazing back at her from a portrait. A face that she'd always known, always loved.
She smiled. — We have. —
AUTHOR'S NOTE
In March 1833, Oliver Wendell Holmes left Boston and sailed to France, where he would spend the next two years completing his medical studies. At the renowned Ecole de Medicine in Paris, young Holmes had access to an unlimited number of anatomical specimens, and he studied under some of the finest medical and scientific minds in the world. He returned to Boston a far more accomplished physician than most of his American peers.
In 1843, at the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, he presented a paper titled — The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever. — It would prove to be his greatest contribution to American medicine. It introduced a new practice that now seems obvious, but which, in Holmes's day, was a radical new idea. Countless lives were saved, and miseries avoided, by his simple yet revolutionary suggestion: that physicians should simply