I step slowly closer to him, wondering if he’ll send me away. When he doesn’t—just looks at me with his pain-dazed eyes—I lean down and stroke his hair and cheek. His gaze lifts slowly up to mine, eyes rolling for a second as he struggles to keep them open.
Finally, in a scratchy voice, he whispers, “Evie…are…my legs okay?” He inhales, wincing, and fresh tears sting my eyes. I nod quickly. “You’re okay. Your tone and reflexes are okay. Try not to talk, Landy. I know you can’t feel much, but you’re just out of surgery. Did someone talk to you already?”
He blinks, then sinks back into his sedation. I spend the day beside him, stroking his hands and cheeks—seemingly the only parts of him that aren’t hurt—and pouring over his labs and his vitals like the psycho cross-breed of a helicopter spouse and overzealous doctor.
I test his reflexes myself and spend hours analyzing every fresh scan, particularly the MRI he gets toward the afternoon to check the innervation near L1. His nerves are fine. His nerves are fine. He’s breathing fine. His chest tube’s fine.
For the next two days, Landon sleeps, and I work in a kind of numb, efficient stupor, stopping by his room all through the day and playing with his hair, kissing his hands, kissing the bridge of his nose.
I can tell he won’t remember any of it. He’s pale and sweaty, his eyes dazed from painkillers. He hasn’t even gotten up yet. When he does, he might tell me he hates me. How selfish that I even think about that.
If only I hadn’t been so selfish. If only I’d just told him when we first talked. My punishment is every second he’s in bed.
On the second night, his eyelids lift a little. His eyes roll around the room, and when they land on me, he croaks, “Which…one?”
“It was L1,” I say quietly.
He nods once, and I can see him struggle to re-focus. “Evie?”
“Yeah?”
His mouth goes sad and soft. “I’m…sorry that…I didn’t…stay.”
For just a second, he gives me this pointed look, and I know without a doubt what he means.
That’s how I know all hope’s not lost.
The third day, Eilert lets me know they’re going to cut back on Landon’s morphine and try to get him out of ICU. She gives me the day off, and I’m so grateful, I cry in the donut room over a strawberry cruller.
When I get to Landon’s room, his bed is elevated more than I’ve seen it since surgery. He’s sitting mostly upright, with his middle wrapped in bandages, and over those, a hard brace. He looks heavy-lidded and tight-jawed, the way that people only ever look when they’re in pain, and taking big-gun drugs.
I stop there in the doorway, my body freezing as his gaze finds mine. When one side of his mouth twitches in a small-smile greeting, I nearly faint with relief. The sensation is followed by a heavy wave of guilt. I step slowly inside the little glass room, folding my arms around myself.
Landon rests his head against the back of the bed and shuts his eyes. His lightly bearded face is tight. I can see pain in the tension of his shoulders, in his shallow, careful breaths.
When I murmur, “Hi,” his eyes peek open, and the misery I see there…
I swallow as tears sting my eyes.
“You had a baby.” His voice is rough and monotone, with no inflection. His eyes on mine are flat, his pale face a mask of apathy. I think of what he must be thinking—I did this to him, me with my horrible lie—and I feel like I might be sick.
I want so much to say I’m sorry—more than anything, I want to throw myself at his feet and beg forgiveness, not just for letting someone have our baby, but for letting years pass without telling him it happened. I’d do anything to be forgiven, but everything I have to say is meaningless. What good will it do now? I wipe my eyes and nod slowly.
His eyes shut. “What…was it like?”
“What part?” I rasp. I step a little closer to his bed, inhaling deeply.
Landon looks down at his blanket-covered lap, and then back up at me. His face looks neutral. So impassive that I know he’s schooling it. “Did you hold her?”
“Yeah.” I press my lips together, blink my leaking eyes. “I fed her. For the first night.” My voice wobbles.
Landon swallows, the corners of his mouth tugged sharply downward for a second.
“She was perfect, Landon. I loved her more than anything I’d ever seen…except for you.” My voice cracks, and I shake my head, breathing deeply so I don’t break down completely. “We looked for you…during the pregnancy. So I could get your take on things. We even ran an ad in the newspaper,” I say thickly.
Landon bites the inside of his cheeks, tears welling in his eyes, and I close the distance between us. I sit in the chair beside his bed, then stand and move the bed rail down. I sit there on the edge of his mattress, wanting to touch him but not sure if I still can.
When he doesn’t recoil, I take his hand in both of mine. With my sweaty fingertips, I stroke his knuckles. I can feel his guilt. It’s loud like mine, expanding in the air between us.
“It’s not your fault,” I murmur, looking at him so he can see I mean it. His eyes look so damn sad. I sigh. “Landon…when you got to the ER—when you first got here the other day—do you remember being upset?”
He nods once, eyes closing. The man from the group home Landon ran away from tried to hold him down and hurt him once, when he was sleeping. Before that, the man had kicked him. One of his currently broken ribs has been broken before. So it’s no wonder the restraints on the backboard bothered him.
“I’m so glad you left, and I get why you ran.” He would have been punished from leaving the awful group home, sent to juvie, probably. I kiss his fingers, then settle his arm in my lap, with my arm over his, so I feel like we’re snuggled up together.
“That was the right thing—what you did. It’s what I would have wanted, had you asked. But since my parents held your letters,” my voice cracks, “I didn’t know that you had written. That’s the only reason I didn’t write you back. And since I didn’t…” I breathe deeply. “How would you have known to come to my house? How would you have known? You didn’t know.”
He shakes his head, a ghost-slight movement.
“I hate it that you had to run like that. And that I wasn’t with you,” I whisper. “But you don’t ever have to say you’re sorry. Ever.”
His face looks tired as he says, “Why, Evie?”