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Cherish
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CHERISH
Tracey Garvis Graves
Visit Tracey Garvis Graves’s official website at
www.traceygarvisgraves.com
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Copyright © Tracey Garvis Graves, 2014
Cover Design by Sarah Hansen at Okay Creations
Interior design and formatting by Guido Henkel
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to real persons, either living or dead, businesses, companies, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
For my twin sister Trish, who knows a thing or two about recovering from a traumatic brain injury.
“After you have wept and grieved for your physical losses, cherish the functions and the life you have left.” ~ Morrie Schwartz
CHAPTER ONE
JESSIE
I’m sitting on the couch reading a magazine when the buzzer to my apartment sounds, signaling that I have a guest. I don’t receive many visitors because if you close yourself off from people long enough, they’ll eventually stop coming around. Deciding someone must have pushed the button by mistake, I ignore it. But then it buzzes again, and whoever it is seems to be holding the button down as if to convey urgency.
I cross the room and speak into the intercom. “Yes?”
“Good evening. This is Officer Eric Spinner. I’m looking for Mrs. Jessica Rush.”
Eric Spinner. The name sounds familiar. I think it’s one of the officers Daniel worked with occasionally who must not be aware of our divorce. Why would he be at my apartment? “This is Jessica Rush.” I may no longer be Mrs. Rush, but I’m still Jessica Rush. I never got around to changing my name after the divorce. There was no reason to keep Daniel’s last name, the way I might have if we’d had other children. I even went so far as to inquire about the steps I’d need to take back my maiden name, but I’d never actually followed through.
“I need to speak to you, ma’am. Can you please buzz me in?”
“Sure,” I say, still not quite sure what’s going on. It’s only after I buzz him into the building, hear the footsteps outside my door, and open it wide that I realize there are two of them.
Two uniformed police officers wearing somber yet anxious expressions.
Every woman who is married to a police officer fears this scenario, and the fact that Daniel and I are no longer married only marginally lessens the impact. Something has happened to Daniel that is serious enough to warrant this visit. I have no idea why they’ve chosen me to be the recipient of such devastating news, but for a split second I’m glad it’s me and not Daniel’s parents who will hear it. I know what it’s like to outlive your child.
Time stands still, but before I can choke out a sound, one of them begins to speak. “I’m Officer Spinner, and this is Officer Shaw. Your husband has been injured in the line of duty and has been taken into surgery. We’re here to transport you to the hospital.” His words sound hurried but also rehearsed, as if he’s following some sort of protocol.
Injured.
Not dead.
My relief is profound but short-lived because Officer Shaw says, “We need you to come with us right away.”
I gather my purse as memories of Daniel flash before me in brilliant blues and screaming pinks. My heart pounds, and I’m thankful I don’t have to drive myself because I’m not sure I would be capable.
“Where is he?” I ask.
“University of Kansas.”
I lock the door and follow the officers down the hallway and out the front entrance. They’re moving very quickly, and I have to walk fast in order to keep up.
The cool night air smells of fresh-cut grass, and there are hints of the approaching summer everywhere: people gathering on the building’s small balconies in groups of two or three, the sizzle of meat on a charcoal grill, the strumming of a guitar coming from someone’s classic-rock station. Will these be the sounds and smells I’ll recall later when I think back to this night?
They hustle me into the squad car, turn on the lights, and sail through the intersections, sirens blaring. The chatter on the radio, loud and punctuated with static, prohibits conversation.
When we pull up in front of the hospital, Officer Spinner accompanies me inside and identifies us, speaking in hushed tones to the woman sitting behind the desk just inside the door.
Her eyes open wide in recognition, and she picks up the phone. “Please have a seat,” she says, gesturing to a row of plastic chairs. “I’ll let them know you’re here.”
My stomach churns in nervous apprehension. “Do his parents know?” I ask after we sit down.
“You’re the only one we called,” he says. “You were listed as his emergency contact, but it took us a while to find you. The address wasn’t current.”
Of course. Daniel probably forgot to designate a new contact after the divorce. Because he never updated the information, they must have gone to our old house.
“Should I call them?” I ask.
“You’re welcome to call whoever you’d like,” he says, giving me a gentle smile.
With shaking hands, I dig my phone out of my purse and call Mimi and Jerry. I used to speak to Daniel’s parents almost as much as I speak to my own, but it’s been over a year and a half since I’ve heard either of their voices. The phone rings and rings, and I wait for the answering machine to pick up, expecting Mimi to ask me to leave a message. But the answering machine never clicks on, and after ten rings I give up. I call their cell phone next, the one they share because they are rarely apart, but the call goes straight to voice mail.
“It’s Jessie,” I say. “Please call my cell as soon as possible.” I rattle off the number in case she’s forgotten.
It suddenly dawns on me that if Mimi had answered, I don’t know what I would have said to her. “What happened?” I ask. “Why is he in surgery?”
Daniel has been injured before when a man stabbed him in the stomach. But that time he called me from the hospital himself while they were stitching him up.
Officer Spinner takes a deep breath. “He was shot during a routine traffic stop.”
My brain processes the information clumsily.
Shot.
Surgery.
The somber expressions.
The officers’ sense of urgency.
I wait for him to tell me not to worry, that everything will be okay. But he doesn’t. Wrapping my arms around myself does nothing to alleviate my trembling.
“Can I get you anything?” he asks. “I’d be happy to track down some coffee.”
“No thank you,” I say, wishing desperately that Mimi or Jerry would call me back. I clasp my hands together and lean forward, resting my forehead on my knuckles. Please, Daniel, please don’t die.
Time passes slowly. The last time I waited at this hospital it was for our son to arrive. After thirty hours of labor, the doctors took him by C-section. Gabriel seemed reluctant to come into this world and, for reasons I’ll never understand, was not destined to stay for long.
I get up and pace. Aware that the woman behind the desk is watching me and not wanting her to confuse my anxiety with rude impatience, I make myself sit back down. Several police officers, including Officer Shaw, are now keeping vigil nearby, which sends a fresh ripple of unea
siness over me.
Finally, a half hour later, a woman wearing blue scrubs walks briskly toward me, and I stand because I can tell by her stride and her worried expression that she’s come for me. “Mrs. Rush?”
I’m so desperate for information that I don’t correct her. “Yes. Is he okay?”
“The doctor will see you now.”
“Would you like me to come with you?” Officer Spinner asks, but I’m already shaking my head and saying no thank you as I take off after the woman.
I follow her down several hallways, into an elevator, and finally to a small, empty room with nicer chairs that have wooden armrests and upholstered cushions.
“Please have a seat. It will be just a moment.”
My heart starts to pound. What if the doctor is coming to tell me Daniel didn’t make it? Maybe that’s why I’m in this empty room. Maybe I should have let Officer Spinner accompany me so I wouldn’t have to bear this alone.
The door opens, and a man wearing scrubs enters. I hold my breath, and he reaches his hand toward me and gives mine a quick shake. “I’m Doctor Seering. Your husband suffered a gunshot wound to the head but has made it through the surgery, Mrs. Rush.”
I lose it then, sobbing, gasping, trying to remember how to breathe, how to speak. Whether it’s the shock of finding out the location of Daniel’s injury or the relief that he’s successfully cleared this momentous hurdle, I can’t say. All I know is that I’ve been laid flat by the wave of emotion that’s been building behind me since the officers showed up at my door.
“He’s alive,” I say, tears pouring down my cheeks.
But Dr. Seering’s expression is somber, and before I can rejoice that Daniel is still with us, he proceeds to tell me just how bad it is.
CHAPTER TWO
JESSIE
I try to get myself under control so I can give Dr. Seering my full attention as he explains the findings of Daniel’s CT scan and his score on the Glasgow Coma Scale, neither of which were as promising as they’d like. There’s a box of tissues I hadn’t noticed before, and I pluck several of them out and dab my eyes and wipe my nose.
“I was able to stop the bleeding and perform a decompressive hemicraniotomy, which will relieve the pressure that’s building inside your husband’s skull. Monitoring this pressure will be our biggest concern, and how he fares during the next twelve to twenty-four hours will be crucial to his survival. His condition is grave, Mrs. Rush. If there are any family members who need to be notified, I suggest you contact them as soon as possible.”
“I’m trying to get ahold of his parents.”
Dr. Seering nods. “Tell them to hurry.”
I call Mimi and Jerry again, but no one answers at either number, which surprises me. I’m half-tempted to get in my car and drive to their house, but Dr. Seering told me I’ll be able to see Daniel as soon as he’s out of recovery, and I don’t want them to wonder where I’ve gone. I think about calling my mom or my sister, but I don’t. I sit there, silent and teary-eyed and shivering, and I wait.
An hour and ten minutes later, a nurse pokes her head into the room and says, “Mrs. Rush? Please come with me.”
I follow her with trepidation because I’m scared to see the condition Daniel is in.
We walk into a large, brightly lit space, which has rooms lining three walls of the perimeter. There are no doors, which I assume makes it easy for the medical personnel to enter quickly. Daniel’s in the third one down, and my breath catches when I see him.
I don’t know this Daniel, the one who is breathing with the aid of a ventilator, with tubes and IV lines running in and out of him and a bandage wrapped around the top of his shorn head. One of the machines makes a horrifying sound, which is clearly an alarm of some sort because two people—a man and a woman both wearing scrubs—walk briskly into the room and begin pressing buttons on one of the machines next to the bed. Once they quiet the alarm, I ask the nurse what happened.
“ICP monitor,” she says. Noticing my blank look, she clarifies. “Intracranial pressure. It’s okay. It was a false alarm.”
Pressure. Right. That’s the thing the doctor said was the biggest concern.
“I know it’s unsettling to see him like this, but we’re doing everything we can,” the nurse says as she pats my hand and gives me a kind smile.
“He’ll be fine,” I say.
Daniel appears lifeless on the bed and about as far from fine as a person can be. She probably thinks I’m in denial, that I just don’t want to face the facts. But that’s not why I said it.
I said it because the Daniel I know is invincible.
There’s a chair in the corner of the room. I’m not sure what the rules are in the ICU, but I perch lightly on the edge of it, hoping they’ll let me stay if I don’t get in their way. They bustle in and out, checking, poking, prodding, adjusting. I’ve turned my phone’s ringer to vibrate, and when I feel it moving against my leg I hurry to pull it out of my pocket, hoping to see Mimi’s name. But it’s not Daniel’s mom, it’s mine.
“Hi, Mom,” I whisper.
“Oh my God, Jess. Did you hear about Daniel?”
“Yes. I’m actually here at the hospital. Two officers came to my apartment because I was still listed as his emergency contact. How did you find out?”
“I saw it on TV. One of those breaking-news bulletins. How is he?
I look over at Daniel and choke back a sob. “It’s pretty bad.”
“Do you want me to come down there?”
“No. I don’t think they’ll let you in anyway. I’m trying to reach Mimi and Jerry, but they’re not answering. I’m going to stay here if they’ll let me. I’ll call you in the morning, okay?”
“Okay. Give Daniel my love. Call me if you need anything.”
Finally at midnight, I ask the nurse who came on duty around eleven if I have to leave. I can’t bear the thought of Daniel waking up alone.
If he wakes up at all.
“You’re welcome to stay, Mrs. Rush.” She points to a small alcove I hadn’t noticed before, which has a sofa built in to it. “The sofa converts to a bed if you’d like to lie down.”
“Thank you. I’ll just use the chair.”
“Your husband may be able to hear your voice. You should tell him you’re here. I’m sure that would be of great comfort to him.”
It would probably be very confusing to him.
My thoughts drift back to something that happened toward the end of our marriage. I’d crawled underneath the covers after telling Daniel that I wanted to be left alone. Taking to my bed was something I’d been doing with increased frequency during the preceding six months. It seemed that the only way I could manage my grief and anger, the only way I could get through it, was to shut myself off from everything and everyone around me. Whenever this happened, Daniel would struggle to honor my wishes. The door would creak open, and a sliver of light would spill into the room, piercing the darkness, hurting my eyes.
“I made you something to eat,” he’d say. “Come on, Jess. You need to get out of this bed.”
His pleas would be met with silence until he finally retreated.
This time, when he’d tried to rouse me after I’d been in bed for almost three days, his voice carried an edge of frustration and desperation.
“Jess,” he said imploringly. “Enough is enough. You can’t do this anymore.”
Angry tears rolled down my face as I yelled at him. “Why is it so hard for you to leave me alone? I asked you to do one thing for me, and you can’t even do that!”
He’d slammed the door hard enough to rattle the frame on his way out.
When I finally emerged, I found him in the backyard raking leaves. Teeth clenched and jaw rigid, he jabbed at the earth as the sweat ran down his face. He wouldn’t even look at me, so I went back inside.
At the time I felt very justified in my anger, my sadness. Now I know I was just being selfish. That’s the thing about h
indsight. You can learn from it, but it can’t help you when you need it the most.
After the nurse leaves, I approach Daniel’s bedside and reach for his hand, careful not to jostle his IVs. Tears pour down my face as I look at this man I loved for so long. A man who now needs all the help he can get.
“Hey. It’s Jessie. I called your mom and dad, and they’ll be here soon,” I say, feeling that the white lie is justified if it calms Daniel to know his parents are on their way. “You’re in the best of hands, and everything is going to be okay.”
It’s not that I expect a response, and it would be impossible for Daniel to answer me with the tube down his throat. But I’d give just about anything to hear his voice.
I try to sleep, but it’s nearly impossible in the ICU. The hours pass in a cacophony of noise as the machinery monitoring Daniel emits a series of sounds: buzzing, swooshing, and beeping. The ICP monitor gives another false alarm around three in the morning, and it startles me so badly I almost fall out of the chair. Nurses wander in, taking vital signs, observing, and speaking in low, soothing tones. When I ask how Daniel is doing, they say he’s holding his own and that Dr. Seering will give me an update in the morning.
I doze in fits and starts and wake completely when Dylan walks into the room at six. Dylan and I have never seen eye to eye, but right now he’s the only link I have to Daniel’s family, so I’ll take what I can get. For once, his signature smirk has been wiped clean and replaced with a blank, shell-shocked look, and I feel sorry for him. No matter how tempestuous his relationship with Daniel is, it can’t be easy for him to see his brother in this condition.
I reach out to him, and he pulls me in for a hug.
“Hey,” I say. “I would have called you, but I don’t have a current number.” The truth is I deleted him from my contacts after the divorce because I was certain I’d never need to call him again.
“It’s the same number I’ve always had,” he says, just to let me know he can see right through my bullshit. “A friend called me this morning. She saw it on the news.”