“Excuse me?” Mason whirled to pierce him with a glare.
He lifted his hands. “Hey, sorry. No offense. I’m just overly giddy not to be the one nailing the little sister this time around.”
“Well, it wasn’t funny.”
“Really? I thought it was pretty damn cute myself. Maybe a little inappropriate, but—”
He never got to finish his sentence because Mason’s fist swung out and cracked him hard in the jaw.
“Ouch! Fuck!” Gripping his jaw, Ten danced away before shaking it off. “Dude.”
Mason kept his hands curled into fists as he glared. “Sarah almost died, and you’re cracking jokes? Really?”
“Damn, I was just trying to help relieve a little tension.” Turning to Caroline for sympathy, he murmured, “I totally should’ve seen that one coming, huh?”
Prodding his tender jaw and making him wince, she nodded. “Probably.”
Still seething, Mason whirled toward me. I ducked away, thinking he’d go after me next. I was really the only person in the room who deserved a fat lip. But all he did was narrow his eyes and mutter, “Well? Get your ass cleaned up and let’s go already.”
So I got my ass cleaned up. I would’ve gone straight to Sarah first, but everyone insisted I’d freak her out if I went in looking the way I did. I had no idea what they were talking about until I stepped into the bathroom and saw myself in the mirror. My clothes were rumpled badly as if I’d slept in them, and even the cloth was torn in the neckline of my shirt. I wasn’t sure how that had happened; it wasn’t as if I’d gotten into a struggle with anyone.
Or had I?
I guess there’d been a while there where I’d blacked out, and I didn’t remember what had happened or how I’d made it home from the hospital.
My face was the scariest sight, though. It was pale white with red-rimmed, bloodshot eyes and a red nose. I splashed water onto my cheeks, then rushed to put on a new shirt. Mason waited for me as if he thought I’d flake out on him. I have no idea why; with Sarah was the only place I wanted to be.
But then we made it to the hospital, and suddenly, the nerves set in.
Earlier, they hadn’t been able to keep me away from her. I’d needed her that bad. But now...now, she needed me. And that petrified me. She was the emotionally strong one, not me. How the hell was I supposed to support her when I just wanted to fall apart?
The closer we got to her room, the more terrified I became. If she’d been asking for me that meant she probably didn’t blame me. But I blamed myself, and I wasn’t sure how to face her without bawling through an apology...which was probably the last thing she needed.
God, how was I going to do this?
Mason held back after he pointed out her room. I glanced at him, uncertain, but he waved me forward with a frown. So, gulping, I turned and moved forward.
The door stood open. When I stepped in front of it, I slowed to a stop, unable to enter. Inside the dim room, I instantly made out Knox and Felicity standing on one side of the bed while Asher and Remy stood on the other side. Damn, what time was it? It had to be after two in the morning and the bar was closed if they were here and off work.
I waited through another inhale and exhale before I took in the vision on the bed lying under a layer of white sheets.
Oh, God.
Relief rushed through me when I saw her sitting upright. A clear oxygen tube ran directly under her nose and an IV was plugged into her arm, but other than that, she looked healthy. Alive. Tired but otherwise okay. She had color and was smiling sleepily as she answered something Felicity had just said to her.
As if feeling my presence, she glanced toward the doorway.
My heart thumped hard. I swallowed.
“Hey,” I said softly. One heavy step after another, I drifted toward her. When I reached her side, I leaned in and pressed a soft kiss to the center of her forehead.
The sadness in her eyes as I pulled away almost did me in.
Feeling like the lamest of lame, I asked, “How’re you feeling?”
She shrugged shakily. “Okay. It was a mild stroke so...there was very little damage.”
I nodded, unable to speak. Little damage meant something had still been damaged. I didn’t care if it was a little or a lot, any damage was more than there should’ve been.
“What...what...?” I tried to ask but ended up being unable to finish the question. I was too scared to learn what I’d damaged.
Around me, the other two couples shifted toward the exit, Asher squeezing my shoulder supportively before they were gone. I watched them go and then turned back to Sarah.
“It’s really not that bad,” she reassured me. “Right now, there’s just a dull headache and some numbness and rigidity in this arm and leg. But the good news is it won’t spasm as much anymore.”
She grinned, but her eyes looked too bruised for me to find anything positive from what she’d just said.