Caribou Crossing (7 page)

Read Caribou Crossing Online

Authors: Susan Fox

Chapter 7
Rose hadn't returned yet, and Wade guessed she was calling her husband to give him an update. Henry'd been at the hospital earlier, after dropping Jessie at school, but then had gone to work. This afternoon, he'd pick Jessie up from school and take her to his and Rose's house, where Andie would baby-sit.
Alone with Miriam, Wade leaned forward to kiss her forehead and murmur, “I love you, honey.”
Her lashes fluttered and she smiled, but she didn't open her eyes.
She was in a world of her own, one where he couldn't join her.
He rested his head on the pillow beside hers. Just for a moment. Just to breathe her in, to feel the tickle of her hair against his cheek. He wished he could take off his clothes and slip into bed with her, to cradle her in his arms and keep her safe.
She made a little “mmm” kind of sound.
It reminded him of last night, when they'd been naked together in bed. He closed his eyes, remembering. So good . . . Making love with Miriam was always so good....
And last night, man had it been special.
In the dark world under the covers, Wade gave himself over totally to sensation. The world held only him, his wife, and their love. There wasn't a single thing to worry about.
With the taste of her climax sweet on his lips, her slender hand pumping his swollen shaft, and her warm, wicked tongue and lips licking and sucking him, pressure built quickly. He had no reason to hold back, so he didn't, letting his own orgasm pour through him and into Miriam's mouth.
After, he could barely move. Exhausted and boneless, he somehow managed to drag himself back up the bed so his head was on his pillow. “Love you, honey,” he said. “Sleep well.”
“Love you, too, sweetheart.” She yawned, then turned and wriggled herself into the curve of his body as he spooned her. “Morning's going to come far too soon.”
He kissed her shoulder, yawned widely, closed his eyes . . . and he was gone.
How much later was it when he woke in the darkness, feeling the bed shift as Miriam climbed out? He didn't bother checking the clock, just rolled over, ready to go back to sleep. When she was pregnant, she often had to pee in the middle of the night.
A few minutes later, his wife's voice called from the bathroom, bringing him to alertness. “Wade? Are you awake?”
“Yeah. Are you okay?”
“I . . .”
That hesitation had him whipping back the covers and climbing out of bed. “Miriam?” He strode to the closed bathroom door. “Can I come in?”
“Yes.”
When he did, she was standing by the toilet, clad in flannel pajamas, one hand across her middle. Her face was white and she gestured wordlessly to the toilet.
He looked inside and saw that the water had swirls of red. “Jesus, you're bleeding!”
“Spotting. It's just spotting. I think.” But her eyes were huge and scared, and her voice was uncertain. With a gasp, she curved forward suddenly, hunching over the way she'd done when she was in labor with Jessica.
He put his arm around her shoulders, steadying her. “Miriam, what's going on? The baby's acting up?”
“I guess. It's like cramps. Or c-contractions. Like when I went into labor. It's probably normal, right?”
“It didn't happen when you were pregnant before.”
“The doctor says each pregnancy's different.” She straightened. “It's eased off now. I have an appointment with Dr. Mathews in a couple of days. I'll ask her.”
Wade felt inexperienced and helpless. His wife was in pain. She was bleeding. He hated asking for help, always figuring he should handle things himself. But what did he know about pregnancy? “We should call her now.”
“We can't do that. It's the middle of the night. It's not an emergency.”
How did they know whether it was? “I'm calling your mom.”
Miriam put a restraining hand on his arm. “We shouldn't wake her up.” But he could tell from her tone that she'd love her mother's reassurance.
“She won't mind. It's not negotiable, Miriam.”
“Okay,” she said softly, sounding relieved.
He helped her back to bed and got her settled, then yanked on his pajamas and dialed the phone. When her dad answered, sounding sleepy and worried, Wade said, “Miriam's feeling a little under the weather. Could we talk to her mom? We have some pregnancy questions.” His mother-in-law had given birth to four kids, which to his mind made her an expert.
When Rose came on the line, he passed the phone to his wife, who described the pains she'd been having. Miriam listened, then said, “If you're sure, Mom. Yes, we'll call you back.” She hung up and turned to him. “She says to call the doctor.”
The number was programmed into their phone. When she made the call, Wade listened to her side of the conversation, gnawing on his bottom lip as he saw the worry on Miriam's face. Wordlessly, she handed him the phone.
“Wade,” Dr. Sonia Mathews said calmly, “as I told Miriam, it may be nothing at all, but I don't think we should wait until morning to find out. Bring her to the hospital and I'll meet you there.”
“Sure. Of course. But you think it's nothing?” He begged for reassurance.
“We'll hope. She's healthy, and her last pregnancy had no complications, at least not until she was in labor.”
That had been a little scary. They'd planned for natural childbirth, but Jessie's umbilical cord had slipped into the birth canal. Dr. Mathews said it would be compressed during birth and cut off the oxygen supply, so she'd had to perform a C-section. But mom and baby had both come through beautifully.
While he'd been talking to the doctor, Miriam had climbed out of bed again and was pulling warm clothes from the cupboard. After making sure she looked steady on her feet, he dialed her parents back. “The doctor says it could easily be nothing,” he told Rose, “but we're going to the hospital. We'll have to take Jessie with us, but—”
With relief, he listened to his mother-in-law say that they'd come to the hospital and her husband would take Jessica home to their place while Rose stayed with Miriam and Wade.
He thanked her, then hurriedly threw off his pajamas and dragged on clothes. “I'll get Jessie,” he told his wife. “Don't go downstairs by yourself. Wait for me.” The baby might kick and Miriam might slip.
He'd do everything in his power to look after his family. . . .
Wade snapped out of his daydream as Rose returned to the room. He lifted his head from Miriam's pillow and settled back in his chair as Rose reclaimed her own.
He remembered his promise to himself that he'd do anything to look after his family. Well, he'd done a shitty job of it, hadn't he?
Anger—at circumstances, partly, but mostly at himself—burned through him, bringing him to his feet. Though he was exhausted, he had to move. To walk, to get out of this room, to . . . “Back in a few minutes,” he said gruffly, and strode out the door. He headed down the long corridor, toward the entrance to the hospital. Hell, he wanted to run, to open the door and head out into the snowy day. To escape.
To return to the ranch and ride out into the snow, where the world was cold and pure and simple. Where nothing existed but the crunch of a horse's hooves breaking the snow, the jingle of the bit, the creak of the saddle, his breath and the horse's puffing out in clouds. It was damned hard to feel crappy when he was riding.
But he deserved to feel crappy. And he couldn't abandon Miriam. He loved her more than life itself. He had to be there when the going got tough, and right now it was about as tough as he could imagine.
Just a few minutes to himself, though.
When he reached the hospital door, he opened it and stepped outside. Clad in only a flannel shirt and jeans, he was immediately chilled by air that was many degrees below freezing. But that icy bite was fresh and invigorating.
He glanced past the plowed, slushy parking lot in the direction of the ranch. The hills east of town were clad in snowy blankets. Gaze fixed on the hills, ignoring everything else around him, he stood and breathed in and out, slowly. His nostrils and throat tingled with a sensation like burning, his lungs expanded, and a sense of calm filled him.
Miriam was alive, and so was Jessie. Their family would return to Bly Ranch and they'd heal.
He took one last bracing breath, squared his shoulders, then opened the door and returned to the heat, the noise, the smell of the hospital.
Chapter 8
The cocoon was thinning and Miriam struggled to hang on to it, to still her fluttering eyelashes and keep her eyes closed. Instinct told her that she was safe inside, that something bad waited for her if the cocoon dissolved. Yet her body had its own ideas, and her eyelids lifted of their own volition. Vision blurry, eyes sore, she blinked. Where was she?
Her mom's face sharpened into focus. “Hello, baby,” she said, and squeezed Miriam's hand.
“Mom?” Miriam gazed around, taking in her surroundings, and realization sank in bit by bit, in fierce jabs of agony. The contractions, the rush to the hospital, her doctor examining her. The sadness and pity in Dr. Mathews's eyes when she said there was a serious problem with the baby.
Miriam's eyes filled and her voice quivered. “I lost the baby?” She didn't really have to ask; the sense of an aching void inside her told her it was true.
Her mom's eyes squeezed shut for a moment, and when she opened them again they were glazed with moisture. “I'm afraid so.”
“Why?” she asked plaintively, not bothering to wipe at the tears that streaked down her cheeks. “What did I do wrong?” She wanted her husband. Where was Wade? He should be here, holding her. How could she get through this without him?
“Nothing. But there was a problem with the baby. You couldn't have prevented it.”
A nurse came in and checked the monitors. “Your doctor's in the hospital, Mrs. Bly. I'll let her know you're awake and she'll come see you as soon as she can.”
When she left, Miriam turned back to her mom. “Where's Wade?”
“He just stepped out for a minute. He's been here by your side.”
Reassured, she returned to the one thing that most mattered. Trying to understand, she said, “But I was past the first trimester. You're supposed to be safe then.”
Her mother bit her lip. “Sometimes miscarriages happen later.”
“My baby,” she sobbed. Her abdomen hurt, but the real pain was in her heart. “Was it a boy or a girl?”
“A boy.”
Two girls, two boys. That was what she and Wade wanted. All their dreams had been coming true and now they'd lost their son. A quick stab of anxiety made her ask, “Jessica? Is she all right?”
“She's fine. Your dad took her to school and he'll pick her up this afternoon and take her to our house. Andie will baby-sit.”
Reassured, Miriam said, “Thanks.” For the first time, she realized how tired and worn her mom looked, though the love and concern in her eyes touched Miriam's broken heart. “I want to go home, Mom. I just want to go home.” Actually, she wanted to go to her parents' house and have her mother look after her. But she wanted Wade there, too. “When can I leave the hospital?”
“Not quite yet.” She seemed about to say something else when Wade stepped into the room.
His eyes widened and he rushed to the bed. “You're awake.”
Miriam had seen him after he'd been up all night with ranch emergencies, but never had he looked so drained. When he took her hand, she gripped his fiercely. “We l-lost our son,” she wailed, fresh tears sheeting down her cheeks.
He leaned over and kissed her on the forehead. Rather than lift his head again, he rested it on the pillow next to hers. “I know, honey.” His voice was choked. Slowly, as if it took superhuman effort, he raised his head and glanced at her mother. “Have you . . . ?”
She shook her head. “The nurse says her doctor's coming.”
“Okay.” He sank down in the chair on the other side of the bed, still holding Miriam's hand. “You're going to be all right. That's the most important thing.”
He didn't think losing their son was important? But no, that was unfair. Of course he did. He was just trying to make her feel better. As if anything could.
“I love you, Miriam,” he said. “Our love's strong enough to get us through anything. Right?” His deep brown eyes looked wounded and pleading.
Could they—could she—get through this? Women did. Miscarriage wasn't all that uncommon. But she'd made it past the first trimester. She'd felt the baby move. “Right.” She hoped that saying it would make her believe it, but grief, pain, drugs had muddled her brain. Except for the one thing she was sure of. “I do love you, Wade.” She squeezed his hand, gently this time. “And our Jessica.” Then she turned to her mom. “And you and Dad, and my sisters and brother.” Right now, that love was the only thing holding her together.
Darn it, she was an optimistic person who tried to see the bright side of life. She really would get through this and, somehow, life would get back to normal. There'd be another child. Not one to replace the little boy they'd lost, but a new, unique individual.
Her mind could recite those facts, and one day, surely, her heart would believe them and start healing.
Dr. Mathews, dressed in blue scrubs, walked into the room. She was so beautiful, with gorgeous red hair and emerald green eyes, she could have been a model. When Miriam had told her that, she'd laughed and said that as a toddler she'd plastered Band-Aids over her dolls' imaginary wounds, and her fate was determined. She was a warm, caring doctor who always took the time to explain things and to listen to patients' concerns.
Now her green eyes were shadowed, and her face was strained as she touched Miriam's shoulder. “How are you feeling, Miriam?”
“Sad. And sore. I want to go home.”
“I'm sure you do, and we'll get you there as soon as we can.” Her gaze shifted to Miriam's mom, the doctor's raised brows conveying a question.
Miriam's mom shook her head, her throat moved as she swallowed hard, and tears seeped from her swollen eyes.
The doctor nodded. She pulled up another chair, beside Wade's.
“What went wrong?” Miriam asked. “Was it something I did?”
“No, not at all. These things happen. You couldn't have prevented the miscarriage.”
The words confirmed what Miriam's mom had said, but how could she not feel guilty? She'd carried this child, and she'd lost it. “If I'd called you earlier?”
“The baby had problems. He wouldn't have made it, no matter what you did. I'm so sorry.”
More tears slipped down. So sorry. They were all so sorry. And none of that “sorry” could save her little boy.
Dr. Mathews began to describe what had happened, but Miriam couldn't take it in, or maybe she just didn't want to. Perhaps one day she'd want to understand, but for now, only one thing mattered: Her baby was dead.
The doctor was talking about the surgery they'd done, and Miriam's brain slowly grasped that something had gone wrong. “You had a rare condition called placenta percreta,” the doctor said. “The placenta had penetrated the uterine wall and attached to your bladder.”
Miriam's brain couldn't make much sense of this. It didn't sound good, though. Her insides were messed up. Not just her insides, but her reproductive organs.
She was vaguely aware of both Wade and her mom gripping her hands tightly, but she focused on Dr. Mathews's face.
The doctor leaned forward, her expression sympathetic, and again rested a hand on Miriam's shoulder. “It's a serious condition, Miriam. And during surgery, the placenta ruptured. There was a hemorrhage and”—she stopped, took a breath, then went on—“we had to do a hysterectomy. I'm so very sorry.”
Miriam's breath caught in her throat. Hysterectomy? Women with uterine or cervical cancer had hysterectomies. A hysterectomy meant that they took out . . . No. No, it wasn't possible.
Wade made a choked sound and there was a rushing in Miriam's ears like busy traffic on a wet highway, almost drowning out the doctor's next words.
“You won't be able to get pregnant again.”
And then, mercifully, Miriam's world went black.

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