Read The Promise of Stardust Online

Authors: Priscille Sibley

The Promise of Stardust (37 page)

BOOK: The Promise of Stardust
6.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Day 22

I lost my bearings and stumbled at Elle's bedside.

Her attending physician, Clint Everest, eyed me. By way of explanation for my clumsiness, I said, “I haven't slept more than an hour or two in days. I want to see her X-ray.”

Hank interrupted. “You went home. Why didn't you sleep?”

“We can talk about that later. You should have called.”

“Once I understood there was a problem,” Hank said, “I asked the nurse to phone you. I figured you'd have questions, and she could answer them better than me.”

“Okay.” I turned to Clint.

He shoved Elle's film up on the light box. “It's a lower-left-lobe infiltrate. See? Pneumonia. We started antibiotics.”

“And the baby?”

He set Elle's lab work in front of me. “I called your wife's perinatologist. She's coming over to do an ultrasound after she delivers a set of triplets who don't want to wait. You're really pale, Matt. Go catch a couple of z's in the on-call room. I'll come get you if anything happens.”

I kissed Elle's cheek, put my palm on her belly, and said a silent prayer.
Please, God
. I'd found myself doing that, heathen that I was. Smoke and mirrors. Self-delusion. Anything.
God, please
.

“Go. Sleep. I'll stay awhile longer,” Hank said.

I woke two hours later when Hank tapped on the door. “Dr. Clarke asked me to get you. She's doing the ultrasound.”

I didn't remember passing through the ICU to arrive at Elle's room, but my gut said the baby would have no heartbeat. Elle and I had done that dance before, and I was afraid this would be our last waltz.

Through the glass wall, I could see Blythe's white hair complete with the pink ribbonlike headband peeking over the ultrasound machine. Her conciliatory smile prepared me for the next words, but she didn't deliver the expected line. Instead she beckoned me over.

Keisha was standing close by. Her hand was pressed hard up against her mouth as she peered at the ultrasound's monitor. She was supposed to sit with Elle while I went to court today and she must have arrived while I was sleeping.

In the flash of faces I tried to ascertain the verdict. “Do you want to see him?” Blythe smiled at me.

Keisha took my arm and pulled me toward the machine. “Come see him,” she said.

“See him?
Him?
” I asked.

“Well, it's too early to tell gender,” Blythe said. “But he or
she
is awake, and evidently, he or
she
wants to be an acrobat. He's doing somersaults.”

“That's my grandchild?” Hank pushed forward.

Blythe nodded.

Through the static, my child was indeed spinning around as weightless as his mother had once been when she orbited the earth. “He's alive,” I whispered. It was as if Elle had taken my hand and placed it on her belly to feel the baby kick. I looked over at Elle's face, somehow expecting recognition. It wasn't there. And my sense of responsibility shifted to the baby. Our baby.

Hank squeezed my shoulder.

“It could as easily be a girl.” Blythe popped a disk in the machine and hit record. “Seeing the sonogram might help the judge decide. Or to convince Linney.”

“I love you,” I said aloud. I meant the baby. I meant Elle. I would always love her. I loved Blythe, too, because she offered hope.

“You think I'm right?” I asked.

“It's not my place to say. You know that, but given Elle's reaction the night you lost the last baby, I'm pretty sure she would insist you try to save the baby.” Blythe turned off the machine. “Her heart is beating, but Elle's already—brain-dead. Sorry, I don't mean to be brutal.”

“It's all right,” I said. Fate or God had already determined that Elle would not survive. The baby had to live.
God. Please
.

“Keeping Elle's body alive over the next months, few days even, is iffy, you know, this pneumonia—” Blythe pulled her pager from her hip and looked at it. “I'm sorry but this is a stat page. I have to go.” She left the ultrasound machine in its place and darted out of the room.

Hank dropped into the chair, silent and pale. Keisha quietly retreated to the window side of Elle's bed and whispered something about being a mother into Elle's ear.

I checked the ventilator. Since I'd left Elle to take a nap, her oxygen requirement had doubled. Keeping her alive might take a miracle. Although I'd stopped believing in those the night of Dylan's stillbirth, I was suddenly willing to pray one more time. I didn't even care if it was smoke and mirrors—or electronic altar candles.

   38   
Eighteen Months to Six Months

Before Elle's Accident

Many women miscarry. Usually, though, once a heartbeat is evident, the pregnancy will make it. Elle's hadn't. We had heard all three babies' heartbeats and lost each one. Elle was thoroughly bereft. I needed to understand what was going wrong. Blythe discovered Elle had an autoimmune disorder called antiphospholipid syndrome, which caused abnormal blood clotting.

Elle said, “I don't understand why NASA didn't pick this up. I mean, they tested me for everything.” She dropped her hands to her lap and laced them together, a gesture she used to control her trembling when she was afraid.

“It may be new or even pregnancy induced,” Blythe Clarke said. “It is, however, very easy to treat with a baby aspirin once a day. I'm going to have you see someone who specializes in autoimmune disorders. He may want to put you on something more aggressive, but make sure you tell him you're trying to conceive. As soon as you get pregnant again, we'll put you on heparin.”

“That's a blood thinner, Peep. And unfortunately it's a shot that you have to take every day,” I said, knowing how much she hated needles.

Elle cringed. After drawing a deep breath, she said, “All right. Shots.”

The OB bit her lip. “Actually, the heparin is twice a day.”

“I was trying to break the news to Elle gently,” I said.

Elle's eyes widened. “Twice? A day? Damn. Okay. I want a baby. We—” She met my eyes. “We want our baby to live, so I'll do anything, anything for that. Just—how big are these needles?”

I gestured about a foot.

She reached across the arm of her chair and grabbed my hand then squeezed her eyes shut. “Okay, no problem, but you are joking, right, Matt?”

“They're little. I promise,” I said, almost smiling.

We lost a baby, but a little heparin would ensure a new baby would receive the blood supply it needed. We found our answer, or I thought we had.

Elle started taking a baby aspirin every day, and the next time we found out she was pregnant, her doctor put her on a heparin regimen.

“It's really not so bad,” she said, although she flinched as she injected her thigh.

I assessed all the bruising she'd developed. Not only on the injection sites, but here and there, on her elbows, on her hip. “We need to make sure your blood-clotting times aren't getting too far out of whack,” I said.

“I love it when you use medical terminology. ‘Out of whack,' ha!”

“Peep, you need another test to make certain we aren't thinning your blood too much.”

“Okay, that'll mean more needles, right?” But before I could answer, she added, “No big deal.”

I didn't want her to hemorrhage, so I did what any controlling spouse with a medical degree would do: I watched her and her lab results, took her to the best perinatologist and best rheumatologist in the area. I made sure she didn't do one single dangerous thing, worrying that while on the blood thinner she could bleed from the most minor injury. Hell, I had Mike, my brother the mechanic, check the brakes on her car every frigging week.

“All good,” he said, rolling out from the undercarriage. “You've got to relax, Matt. You're going to have a fucking heart attack before you're forty like Dad.”

“No. I'm good. I watch my diet. I run.”

“You stress.”

I reached out my hand to him and pulled him up. “I'm healthy as a horse.”

“The oldest in the family is supposed to be the control freak. You're the baby. You're supposed to be the comedian. What happened to you?”

I slapped him on the back and joined him for a beer in the kitchen.

Snow was falling lightly when I arrived home. Elle had just finished adding a log to the fire, which was snapping and hissing. She poked it and closed the woodstove's door. “Come here and feel this.” She beckoned, reaching out with her hand. There was another black bruise.

“Peep, Jesus, what happened?”

“Nothing, I just bumped it. It doesn't even hurt. Forget about that. Here, feel the baby,” she said, grabbing my hand. “He's jumping all over the place.”

I placed my palm on her belly. “In nine days, we'll get a face-to face, kiddo. Your mother wants to call you Vladimir because of all the blood she's had sucked out of her on your account.”

“Shush, don't tell him that. Dylan. We want to call you Dylan after the poet from Wales. Your daddy saw his house and lived in Swansea for a while.”

“Sit down.” I tried to lead her to the couch, but she stopped in the middle of the room, clenching my hand so tightly the bruise on her hand blanched. “What is it?”

Elle answered, “My back. It's killing me today. Since I woke up this morning. I must have slept badly.”

“But you stopped all of a sudden. Is the pain coming and going?” I thought of preterm labor, but I held back. Those were the days when everyone was telling me to relax and to stop worrying. Even I knew I was on the brink of a neurosis.

“No, not really. It's more like when I move certain ways. It's muscular. I'm so fat; everything's out of alignment.”

“You're not fat. You're in your eight month.” I smiled at her. I didn't enjoy seeing her in pain, but I was so grateful we'd come so far this time. “Come over here. I'll rub your back. Lie down.”

We walked to the seat by the bay window. She loved to read there on the wide bench, and I thought she would enjoy watching the snow fall. I had her lie on her side, and I massaged her lower spine for a long time, settling against the wall beside her. After a while Elle's breathing became regular; she'd fallen asleep.

I rose and covered her with an afghan.

The wind had picked up and the petal-soft flakes had morphed into pellets that battered the windows. I stoked the woodstove while I considered how much snow had already fallen. A few inches, maybe more.

I tromped out to the barn and tugged the snowblower outside, but it wouldn't start. Instead of having my brother fix all my mechanical problems, I needed to learn how these things worked. I played with the spark plugs. And fiddled with the primer. I checked the gas, which was full. Nothing worked. It was dead. Time of death, I looked at my watch: 10:43. In a halfhearted effort, I cleaned up the stairs and threw rock salt on the walk. My father had his first heart attack on a night like this with wet snow. That's why I'd bought the blower; but it looked like I'd have to clear the driveway the old-fashioned way this time in the morning.

BOOK: The Promise of Stardust
6.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Divided Inheritance by Deborah Swift
Justice Incarnate by Regan Black
The Unseen by Jake Lingwall
Steppenwolf by Hermann Hesse, David Horrocks, Hermann Hesse, David Horrocks
House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday