Love on Call (18 page)

Read Love on Call Online

Authors: Shirley Hailstock

BOOK: Love on Call
12.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I can't,” she said. She didn't elaborate. And she hoped he wouldn't ask.

“I could use your hands.” He held up his, which were now completely covered in white gauze. “I
can't even get undressed with these on.” He'd been given a painkiller and Mallory could see it was affecting his speech and his mind. He was flirting with her openly, something he'd never done.

“I suppose I could drive you to the hospital. You really ought to see a doctor, anyway.”

“See a doctor,” he laughed. “I
am
a doctor.”


You'd
better lie down,” she advised. Mallory pushed him down on the sofa and left him there to sleep, while she cleaned the room. It took her nearly an hour to dispose of all the waste and disinfect everything. Cleaning gave her a new respect for the crews who came in after an operation and made a room ready for the next one.

Brad was sound asleep when she returned. The sedative had taken effect, otherwise he would be in excruciating pain. Mallory needed to get him to the hospital. When the pain medication wore off he would need additional care.

For a long moment she gazed at him. He looked like such a little boy in sleep. He didn't have the weight of the world on his shoulders, and his eyes weren't hooded or closed. She sat next to him, feeling the warmth of his hip next to hers. She touched his forehead and ran her hand down his cheek.

This was the man she loved. The one who knew her secrets and with whom she was willing to share more. But he was also leaving her in just a few weeks.

Like a cloud moving in over the mountains, tears filled her eyes, distorting her vision.

 

“Dr. Russell.”

Mallory jumped at the sound of her name. She sat up with a start and rubbed her face. Disoriented, she looked around. Dr. Carter stood in front of the chair where she'd fallen asleep.

“What is it?”

“I'm afraid he's lapsed into a coma.”

“Are you sure?” she asked, knowing Dr. Carter was the best there was.

“I'm sure.”

Brad hadn't awakened when she'd tried to get him to her truck. He was heavy, but she'd managed to get him in the seat and buckled in. His skin had turned red and blotchy, symptoms Mallory recognized as an allergic reaction. He was reacting to the medication he'd been given.

With her heart in her throat she'd called 9-1-1 and rushed him to the hospital. The staff had taken over then, giving him whatever was needed. Mallory was pushed back, relegated to the secondary role of giving information on what had happened. What he had taken and how long ago.

“Do you think he'll…”

“Doctor, you know there's no way to tell in these cases. He's a strong man, healthy and in good physical condition. He's got those things going for him. How long he remains in this state would only be a guess.” Dr. Carter was a compassionate man. His voice was caring and concerned.

“May I see him?”

He nodded.

Mallory got up. Brad's room was just down the hall from where she'd been waiting. She went in. The light over the bed was the only illumination. Because of his severe burns, Mallory couldn't take his hand the way she often did with coma victims. Nor did she know what to say to him.

“Brad, I'm so sorry,” she finally murmured. “This is my fault. I didn't notice you were distressed. I thought you were just sleeping.” Her voice cracked, and when she touched his arm, he was totally unresponsive. Mallory wasn't used to him being so still, so inert. Whenever she touched him, he always responded in some way.

“Brad, you have to wake up.” Mallory took a seat next to the bed. She kept hold of Brad's arm, hugging it between her hands. “There's so much I need to tell you. I know you're leaving to go back to Texas, but I have to tell you I'm in love with you.” She stopped, taking a breath and pushing back tears that threatened to fall from her eyes.

She went on with a less emotional topic, talking about the pediatrics ward. She told him he needed to wake up because the shelter needed him. The kids he pulled off the streets needed him and
she
needed him. She kept at it for hours, until a nurse came in and told her she had to get some sleep herself or she'd be no good for her own patients.

Mallory left and went home. The house felt more silent tonight than it had in previous nights without Brad being there. She looked at the phone and thought
of calling the hospital to check on Brad's condition. But she'd only left there half an hour ago. If anything had changed she was sure someone would notify her.

There was one call she needed to make. She had to phone Brad's brother Owen and the rest of the Clayton family.

 

Rosa was the first to arrive, followed by Owen, Digger, Dean and Luanne. The entire family descended on the hospital. Mallory explained what had happened, and they took turns staying with him. All day and all night there was someone in Brad's room.

Mallory couldn't help resenting them for usurping her place. She wanted to sit with Brad, touch his arm and talk to him, but she couldn't.

Brad wasn't in the coma wing. His condition wasn't long-term, at least not yet. And his family was there. He didn't fit her profile of people who had no one—the patients she talked back to life. Brad had that kind of support. He had his family, people who loved him. Mallory tried to convince herself that everything that could be done for him was being done, but it wasn't working. She loved him, too, and wanted to be there, talking to him, bringing him back to her.

On the third night she ran into Rosa coming out of the room. Brad's sister looked tired and run-down, nearly bumping into the wall as the door closed behind her.

“Rosa, are you all right?”

She turned and recognized Mallory. “Hello,” she said. “I was just going to get some coffee. Want to join me?”

“You don't need coffee. You need sleep,” Mallory answered, but she walked with Brad's sister toward the cafeteria.

“I tried. I just can't seem to sleep.” Rosa pushed her hair back. “It's so unfair, Mallory. He spends twenty years trying to find his birth mother and then this happens. Who knew he was allergic to a drug?”

“It's no one's fault,” Mallory murmured comfortingly. “And he'll recover.”

Rosa turned and gripped her arm. “Are you sure?”

“With you all here talking to him constantly and the support he's getting, I'm certain of it.” Mallory prayed she was right. Not all her coma patients pulled through. Even some that were visited regularly by family and friends were still in comas, but Brad was different. Brad was hers.

“Could we sit down a moment?” Rosa said when they'd gone through the line and had cups of coffee in their hands.

“Sure.” Mallory took a seat at a nearby table and sipped her coffee.

“Are you in love with him?”

Mallory managed to avoid choking. It was the last question she'd expected Rosa to ask. And she didn't know how to answer it. She was in love with Brad; of that she had no doubt. But she hadn't told Brad and she didn't know if he loved her. Should she tell his sister?

“I saw it in your eyes that day I came. When you two were in Texas it was obvious to all of us. Maybe Brad hasn't seen it yet. He's such a blockhead.”

Mallory laughed. She hadn't laughed in days and the release felt good.

“So answer me,” Rosa demanded.

“Where is this going?” Mallory hedged.

“If the doctors tell us they think he's going to be in this state for a long time, we're planning to move him to a hospital in Dallas.”

A lightning bolt of pain shot through Mallory. Had she no control? She'd thought the worse that could happen would be to have him moved to the coma wing.

“He was leaving, anyway,” Mallory said. She was amazed her voice sounded so calm. “He'd already resigned from the hospital and planned to return to Dallas at the end of the month. Whether I'm in love with him or not makes no difference.”

“It's a defense, Mallory.”

“What?”

“Brad feels everyone he ever loved left him.
He's
leaving so he won't be hurt.”

Mallory thought a moment before answering. “Even if that is part of his reason for leaving, I can't change it.”

“So you're just going to let him go without a fight?”

“Rosa, what do you want me to do?”

“Tell him how you feel.”

“What difference could it make? If he had the same feelings for me, would he have resigned without even speaking to me about it?”

Rosa looked into her coffee cup.

“You know he would,” Mallory continued. “He might be fighting his feelings, but if he is, I can't make him love me if he doesn't want to.”

Rosa nodded and Mallory's heart sank even lower. Even so, she murmured, “Would you mind if I sit with him for a few minutes?”

Mallory left Rosa nursing her coffee. She didn't know how long she had. Any one of the family could show up to relieve Rosa at any time. His room was bright and filled with flowers, yet he lay as still as he had for the last few days.

She approached him slowly. Taking the chair where she'd sat the first night, she gently grasped his bandaged hand and held it to her cheek. She hadn't slept much in the last three days, either. She laughed, thinking Brad was sleeping for the both of them.

“Brad, I know you can hear my voice. You might not understand the words, but I'm going to say them anyway. This may be the last time I get to talk to you alone.” Her voice cracked. She'd never been this attached to any of her coma patients. “I love you. I never thought I wanted to marry and have children, but I do. I want to marry you. I want us to have children together.”

Tears gathered in her eyes and spilled down her cheeks. “I know you don't believe women have staying power where you're concerned. Rosa told me everyone you loved left you. I'm not like the others, Brad. I can't predict the future, but I promise you, I'll love you forever.”

Mallory put her head down on the white sheet and
wept. “I need you, Brad. And you need me. Please wake up. Please come back.”

She stayed like that, holding his hand, her tears wetting the sheet, until she heard the door open. Mallory lifted her head, using her fingertips to wipe away the tears. She stood and turned to Rosa.

“There's no change,” she said, as if she were only his doctor reporting on his progress.

The two women passed each other, both knowing this was goodbye. It didn't matter if Brad woke up tomorrow or if he never woke up. He wouldn't stay with Mallory. And there was nothing she could do about it, except get used to the idea.

Chapter Twelve

S
heer exhaustion had Mallory asleep the moment she reached her bed. Days had passed since she'd talked to Brad, and his condition was no different. She hadn't been able to sleep or eat, and the nurses were beginning to comment on how tired she looked.

The ringing telephone woke her. It was dark and she was disoriented. Her head was heavy and her mind groggy. What time was it? she wondered. The digital clock showed it was after midnight.

“Dr. Russell,” she said into the receiver.

“Brad woke up.” Rosa's voice was unmistakable. She was greatly excited, shouting into the phone. Mallory's heart thudded, then hammered against her rib cage. Her breath came in short gasps, so fast that she thought she might hyperventilate. She concentrated on controlling it.

“Are you still there?” Rosa asked.

“Yes, I'm here.” Mallory didn't know what to say. “Is he…is he all right? Has Dr. Carter seen him?”

“He left a few minutes ago. He said from what he can tell Brad should recover completely.”

That's the way comas worked, Mallory thought. No one knew why they happened. There was speculation that they could be a healing process, an instinctual function that kicked in when the body needed to repair itself, shutting everything down until the process was complete. Only sometimes it never was and it claimed the victim. Thankfully, Brad wasn't one of them.

“I'm glad,” Mallory told her. “Your family must be overjoyed.”

“We are. Everyone's on their way over. Aren't you coming?”

Mallory tried to speak, but words didn't come out easily. “Brad and I…have said our goodbyes. Saying them again would be pointless.”

“You know, Mallory, there comes a time when you have to fight for what you want.”

Rosa hung up then. Mallory dropped the phone back in the cradle and slumped against the headboard.

“Brad is awake.” She repeated it over and over, through the hands that covered her face, through the tears that ran down her cheeks. “He's awake.”

 

Mallory opened the door and entered her kitchen. She dragged herself through her days, amazed that she could function as a doctor with the way her heart
felt. Brad was gone. It was amazing how fast patients were sent home from the hospital. Three days after waking up he was released, and left for Texas with Owen almost immediately. Mallory hadn't seen him at all.

She put on water for tea. She lived these days on tea and coffee. She stared at the kettle, watching the spout as if she could predict when the steam would come out.

Her mind went back to Brad. She'd avoided his room at the hospital. Knowing he was going to recover was a relief. Seeing him again would only break her heart further.

She was glad there was no longer any chance of running into him during her working hours. Mallory wondered how long it would be before the pain in her heart went away.

“Mallory.”

She jumped and turned around, a scream coming from her throat. Then she saw him.

“Brad, what are you doing here? You scared me to death.” She put her hand to her chest where her heart was beating double-time. Brad held up her key.

“I found it in the open door.”

Mallory had forgotten it. She opened her hand and he dropped the key in it.

“I can't live without you.”

Did she hear him right? The water had begun to boil and the whistle of the teakettle muffled his voice. She glanced at the kettle and at the man, unsure which one to react to.

“What did you say?” Deciding on Brad, she faced him, ignoring the pot. He moved around her, took it from the burner and turned off the flame.

“I said I love you and I can't live without you.”

Breath left Mallory's body and her knees weakened at the same time. She bent over.

Brad caught her and pulled her close.

“I didn't expect this reaction.”

Mallory grabbed hold of him, but struggled to keep her mind clear and logical. “Brad, you're leaving. I have a commitment here.”

“I know you do. I'm not leaving. I'm staying here.”

“What? When? How?”

“I went back to Texas, and I missed you.” He dropped a kiss on her lips. “You didn't even come and see me in the hospital.”

“I did.”

“But not when I was awake.”

Mallory said nothing. She tried to pull herself out of his arms, but he tightened them.

“I got my job back at Philadelphia General.”

Her heart nearly burst, then she remembered his mother. “What about your mom? You were going back to be close to her.”

“She's only a three-hour plane ride away. And I've arranged with a local university to take me on as a teaching assistant. I'll be there two days every two weeks. I can see my mother then. The rest of the time I can spend with my wife.”

“Wife? Brad, are you sure?” She could hardly get the words out.

“I'm sure.” He kissed her forehead. Mallory struggled to keep hold of her senses.

“What about—” Her words were cut short by the pleasure that ran through her as his mouth settled on her neck. “What about people leaving you?”

“Rosa told me she talked to you about that.”

“I can't guarantee you that this will last forever, that we won't grow apart.”

“I can't promise you that, either,” he said. “But I can promise that if you'll marry me, I'll try my best to make it forever.” He looked deeply into her eyes. “What do you say?”

Mallory showed him. She kissed him, saying yes with each kiss she rained on his face.

“By the way,” he said when she released his mouth for a moment. “That thing you said about us having children together. I want five.”

“You said you didn't hear me!”

“I lied.”

Mallory swung at him. He caught her arms and pushed them behind her, imprisoning her body against his. His mouth took hers and history began.

Other books

The Chocolate Lovers' Club by Matthews, Carole
Funhouse by Michael Bray
Fascination by William Boyd
Why Resist a Rebel? by Leah Ashton
The Innocent by David Baldacci
The Blue Ice by Innes, Hammond;
Cloudburst Ice Magic by Siobhan Muir
Stepbrother Jerk by Natasha Knight
Chaingang by Rex Miller