Read (2008) Down Where My Love Lives Online
Authors: Charles Martin
Tags: #Omnibus of the two books in the Awakening series
Lord, I love my wife.
She walked up and leaned against me, her head to my chest. Then she dropped the pages in her hand, threw both arms around me, gripped me like a vise, and clung there while the sobs exited her chest. We stood there a long time. I wanted to tell her I had lied to her, but given the opportunity, I would do it again, so I said nothing. She wiped her face, brushed the hair out of my eyes, and tried her best to smile. She swallowed, fought for words, and then kissed me-her wet face pressed hard to mine. Finally she drew back and nodded. That was all she needed to say.
Since she'd been home, parts of Maggie's soul-down where her love lives-had been tied up in knots. Waking up from the coma didn't untie them; it just helped expose them to the daylight. We'd spent the last several months trying to get at each one. Sometimes we had to back up and start over, only to back up and start over again. But when you're untangling the rope that holds your anchor, you take all the time you need.
There in the cornfield, draped in rain, tears, tenderness, and uncertainty, her eyes told me that many of those knots had loosened. I'd like to think my story did that, but I imagine that was only part of it. The bigger part was the miracle that is Maggie.
That night we sat in the tub, floating in bubbles and laughter, soaking until our fingers grew white and prunelike while reading her favorite parts. Finally she just shook her head and slid up next to me. We sat there a long time, long enough for the water to get cold.
Awhile later, she stepped out, toweled off, took me by the hand, and led me across the room, where she hung her arms about my neck. I don't how long we swayed atop those magnolia planks, but somewhere in that dance, we lost track of time. Later, soaked in a sweet South Carolina sweat, she pressed her chest and forehead to mine and managed, "Thank you ... for waiting for me."
I locked my hands behind her waist and tried to smile. "I'd do it again."
Outside, the ancient gnarled oaks, covered in Spanish moss and crawling with red bugs and resurrection fern, stood like silent sentinels guarding us from the world that began just beyond the edge of my tractor rows. The quilted patchwork of South Carolina that had sewn itself into the fabric of us, with soybean and watermelon, corn and kudzu, cotton and tobacco, hay bales and barbed wire, old tractors and hand-dug ditches, rivers and moonlight, sweat, blood, tears, tombstones, and worn magnolia floors, rose up out of the dirt and covered us like dew before the dawn. And where God had once doused us with the other end of the rainbow, now He painted us in starlight and all the wonder of the Milky Way.
EVIDENTLY MAGGIE'S EMOTIONS WERE IN TUNE WITH HER clock.
Early in June-six weeks later-I hopped off my tractor and walked up the steps, smelling worse than any man should but led by the smell of pot roast and the promise of gravy and a stack of biscuits. Maggie met me at the door in a turquoise colored sundress held up behind her neck with a single spaghetti strap. She led me to the kitchen, where the table was covered in a white tablecloth, candles, my grandmother's silver, and a small package-about the size of a Cross pen box set-tied with a bow.
I looked at the table, sniffed my yellowing shirt, and said, "I'm not sure we can live with me right now."
She pointed at the seat and half closed one eye. "If you don't open that box in the next sixty seconds, I'm going to blow a gasket." She pulled my chair out, sat beside me, and set the small box in front of me. In the background, Celine Dion and Frank Sinatra were singing "I've Got the World on a String."
Maggie was one big fidget. She pushed her hair behind her ears, crossed her legs, uncrossed them, crossed them back, and then crossed her arms. I studied the box, then untied the bow and lifted the lid. Inside sat four small, familiar white sticks with four unmistakable pink lines-all pointing directly at me. They were lined up in a row and dated-one for each of the last four weeks.
I'll never understand how she kept it a secret.
I held the four sticks, their meaning slowly registering somewhere back in my mind and then hitting me like a lightning bolt to the brain. I looked at Maggie, then at her tummy and our child growing inside and nearly six weeks old. I hit my knees, stuck my ear to Maggie's stomach, pressed in, and listened, wondering if he was a boy or she was a girl.
I've never been a fearful man. That does not mean I've never known fear; God knows I have. There's no S pinned on my chest. I just mean it's not something that stays with me all day perched atop my shoulder and whispering in my ear. In the months after Maggie woke up, I wrestled-even battledwith a long litany of what ifs that scared me. But her waking every morning had put that whisper to rest.
But the moment I leaned in and listened, tasting the trickle of hope and wondering at the unfathomable enormity once again, that whisper echoed. It smelled like the air behind a trash truck, the soil in Pinky's stall, or the floor of the delivery room. Its breath alone could gag a maggot.
Whereas hope had returned only after I'd cornered him in the barn and extended an invitation, what if reached up out of the floorboards, threw his bags on the couch, and made himself at home without so much as a peep. And unlike hope, who was tidy and neat, what if was a slob, seldom cleaning up after himself, and made it his point to throw remnants of his life in every nook and cranny of the house. Polar opposites, hope never raised his voice, while what if never lowered his. Not compatible roommates, they charged the air with a tension that even Blue picked up on.
That night as we lay in bed and Maggie twirled her finger through both of my chest hairs, I closed my eyes and saw the giant patchwork that had enveloped us. Once perfect and without blemish, it had begun to fray along the edges.
Within weeks, it would be coming apart at the seams.
DAYLIGHT FOUND ME AT THE KITCHEN TABLE NURSING some Maxwell House, reading the paper, and trying to erase the constipated look off my face. My snow angel was still zonked out with Blue, and if the last couple of months were any indication, she'd miss breakfast and brunch entirely. Don't get me wrong; every moment Maggie slept meant energy stored in reserve, so on the one hand, I was grateful. On the other, we used to eat eggs, grits, and toast off the same plate.
Since Maggie could spot a fake-especially in me-a mile away, I was trying to find a legitimate reason to get out of the house before she woke up. The moment she walked into this kitchen, she was going to take one look at my twisted face and say, "You want to talk about it?"
After sitting a long while at the breakfast table, skimming both the business and metro sections of the Charleston paper, I was no closer to knowing how to answer. In fact, my mind was swimming in questions. All I knew was that the most precious person in my life, who thought I actually had something to do with hanging the moon, who-maybe more than anything in life-wanted to be the mother of my children, was wrestling with stuff way down deep in her soul and needed me more than ever.
I was right back where we started-I couldn't protect her, nor could I wave a magic wand and make life all better. And though her doctors had not mentioned it, what if had echoed back into my head. I might have been staring at the newspaper, but the headline my mind read was WHAT IF SHE HEMORRHAGES AGAIN? I stared at the columns and knew one thing for sure: there was no easy way around. Like it or not, we were going to have to live through this.
My skin was crawling, my heart was racing, I'm sure my blood pressure was elevated, and I had no defense. I needed some time alone.
The phone rang, bringing me my chance.
"Dylan, good morning. How are things?" It was Caglestock. "I'm calling about Bryce," he continued.
Usually that meant a stock transaction, but his tone of voice told me he hadn't called to talk about money. "We've had no contact with him in over a month. Neither have the couriers we've sent for signatures. You mind checking on him?"
"No worries. I'll phone you as soon as I know something."
I scrambled some more eggs, browned a few pieces of toast, and then slopped that, along with a spoonful of cheese grits, onto a plate that I covered with foil and placed in the oven. I left a note on the kitchen table, grabbed the keys and my FM scanner, and headed out.
The scanner was a small black digital radio, covered in buttons and a single antenna, which Mr. Carter-Amos's dad and chief of the Digger Volunteer Fire Departmentgave to all department volunteers. Not much happened from Charleston to Walterboro and surrounding parts that I didn't know about.
The DVFD No. 1 is Mr. Carter's baby. He put it together from nothing. He even petitioned the state for a grant that built us our own firehouse and got us a couple of trucks and all kinds of gear. We handle mostly local calls, and in truth, we're support personnel for the guys who really know what they're doing.
They don't let me drive the truck yet, and I haven't saved anybody's life, but I do have my own suit, complete with helmet, boots, ax, and air tank. I've used the jaws of Life twice, though only in drills, and they let me blow the horn whenever we're racing through traffic. That might be my favorite part. Amos says I'm the most obnoxious horn blower he's ever heard, but he can't complain because people get out of our way. Every time I put on my suit and go running out the door to meet the rest of the team, Maggie takes one look at me and falls on the floor, laughing.
To keep us up on the latest information and techniques, and give us an excuse to practice or drive the truck, Mr. Carter holds weekly safety meetings where we learn stuff we've never even thought about. He travels all around the state getting trained and certified, then brings all that back to us.
I slid the scanner into my pocket and whistled softly for Blue, who did not appear. I walked around the house and looked through our bedroom window and saw him cuddled up at Maggie's feet. When I motioned for him to load up, he laid his head back down and covered his nose with his paw.
I could hear Pinky snorting and kicking her stall in the barn, mad that I hadn't appeared earlier. I stepped into the stall, spread a bucket of corn, and offered to give her a scratch. She ignored me and crapped on my boot.
"Hey," I said, tossing her a kernel of corn and shrugging my shoulders, "I thought we had an agreement."
Pinky grunted, buried her nose in the dirt, and then flicked a shovel's worth of mud and manure high into the air, where it umbrellaed about me.
"Thanks," I said. "Love you too." I hung up the bucket, pulled the gate behind me, and showed my heels to Pinky.
As I backed up the van, the flash of the screen door caught my eye. Maggie came stumbling over the threshold, her hair sticking up and eyes half closed, wrapping my pajama shirt around her. She jogged down the porch steps and stepped up to the window. "You okay?"
I nodded.
"You sure?"
I lied again.
She narrowed her eyes and folded her arms. "You've been kind of quiet since last night."
I shrugged and stumbled for words.
She put a hand on my shoulder and then ran her fingers through the back of my hair. "Hey ... it's just me. I know you." She grabbed my hand and laid it flat across her tummy. "We're doing this together, same as last time. I'll be the mommy; you be the daddy. Right?" She smiled and shrugged. "All except the little hitch in the delivery."
I am such a pile of crap. How does a woman like that love a man like me? I cussed myself and nodded. "Coffee's probably cold by now."
She tugged on my sleeve, pulling me closer. "Are you lis tening to me?" Her lips were warm and wet. "Dylan Styles, I'm not talking about coffee. I'm talking 'bout us. All three of us."
"Maggs." I took off my cap and made a pitiful stab at the truth. "I lost you once. I don't want to ..."
She smirked. "Well, we should have thought about that"she pointed to the window of our bedroom-"in there."
.." "I know, but.
She held her finger to my lips and said, "Shhh . . . " Her eyes filled around the edges, and she shook her head. Evidently what if had been whispering in her ear too. And here I was worried about me. I really am a pile of crap.
The tears broke, and I opened the door and stepped out, wrapping her tight. "I don't know how you do it."
She whispered, "Because you love me-and because you're there when I wake up."
"Honey, I'll always be there when you wake up."
"You weren't this morning."
I laughed. "Well, I do like to get up before lunch."
She hit me in the chest. "That's not funny. I just need more rest than I used to."
We swayed a moment more.
"Caglestock called, said Bryce has been AWOL for a month."
Maggie wiped her tears and looked concerned. "You think he's okay?"
"Don't know, but I'm going to find out. I left you some breakfast in the oven."
"Doesn't taste as good when you're not there."
"Tell me about it."