Read Wide Spaces (A Wide Awake Novella, Book 2) Online

Authors: Shelly Crane,The 12 NAs of Christmas

Wide Spaces (A Wide Awake Novella, Book 2) (8 page)

BOOK: Wide Spaces (A Wide Awake Novella, Book 2)
7.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

He got hurt for me
even while he thought I was so angry I was going to leave him forever.

I heard the door close somewhere behind him, but we stayed like that. When he felt my tears on his hand, his intake of breath was slow. "Baby," he soothed. "Shh."

He pressed and rubbed my entire body in intervals of warm pressure. He even rubbed down my legs and back up again. With my face buried in the crook of his neck, and my arms around him as much as I could get them with wires and tubes, I cried for the way he loved me and somehow always found blame within himself that he wasn't good enough. I knew right then he was blaming himself, thinking that was the reason that I'd been driving around. I could tell in the way that he confessed, and it all made sense. I pulled back, the nurse long gone, and looked up into his hazel eyes.

"I wasn't driving around because I was angry."

His brow furrowed and he spoke softly. "What do you mean?"

"I wasn't blowing off steam because I was upset. That wasn't why I got caught in the storm." And then my heart ached because I knew his present was still in the car, and I didn't k
now if it was even usable now. "I was…" I gasped with my realization. It didn't matter. He would still blame himself. Whether I was out because I was angry at him or out because I had been getting his Christmas present, the point is that I was in that storm because of him, one way or another. Dang, Mason still was going to feel guilty either way.

"What is it?"

"I was coming home from…getting your Christmas present."

His lips fell open and he took a deep breath. "What?"

"It's in the car. That's why I was out. Not because I was angry." I chuckled wryly. "I was trying to surprise you."

I expected his face to fall, his breaths to turn angry, and his fist to clench with hatred for himself. But he half-smiled. "Really? I was so worried when you weren't at your parents
'. I thought…I had messed everything up. And then when Adeline called and said she called you, I thought you'd never take me back. I thought I'd never get to clean up all this mess. And then she said that the line went dead and there was so much noise..." He shook his head, his hair a mess on his head. A sexy mess. "I thought I had lost you forever."

"I'm right here," I promised
and gripped the nape of his neck tighter.

He pulled my hand up. The left one. "Is there anything else you want to ask me? Anything at all? I promise I'll tell
you the truth, the whole truth." He kissed the ring on my finger, his eyes closed.

I shook my head. "No, Mason. I trust you."

He squinted up at me and spoke against my fingers. "Why?"

"Because you came for me." I could taste the fresh tears that fell over my lips. "You saved me. Again."

"Again?" he said confused but adorably hopeful as he leaned toward me.

"You saved me the first time when I opened my eyes and you were there in the hospice, taking care of me, fighting for me, always waiting for me to wake up."

"I had to," he said vehemently against my cheek. "Because you saved me first. At that party when I looked into your sad eyes and saw how much a person can want to change...it not only makes them able to, it makes them worthy of it. For the first time since my mom's accident, you gave me a piece of hope that I could one day be worthy of it, too."

"You are," I insisted and kissed his jaw.

He pressed his lips to my ear. "I love you so much, Em."

When he looked back at me this time, it was a quick glance before closing his eyes and touching his lips to mine. It was bridled and I didn't want that
right then. My body was sore and ached in a strange way, but I wanted to feel his passion all over me, crawling through my veins and under my skin. I licked at his lips before pressing closer. "Whoa," he said gently. "Easy, baby." He gave me a stern look. "I just got you back. You need to rest and—"

I was having none of the
"rest" talk. I had spent six months of my life resting. I leaned back onto my pillow and took him with me. He groaned, a small protest that carried no real punch, and leaned over me, his palms on either side of me. This time when I opened my mouth to him, he dove head first. Moving my favorite hand up to my face, he held me in place for a series of kisses and licks and bites that had me forgetting me were at a hospital and wanting it to be our honeymoon.

When he pulled back with a small laugh, I scowled. "I wanted to kiss you so badly that day in your room at the h
ospice on your bed. The day we were supposed to have a date and I was late."

"The day you teased me with your 'I just wan
ted to taste that coconut' line," I said in my best Mason voice.

He smiled, full-wattage. "Yeah. That."

"Why were you late?"

"Mamma had a doctor's appointment that day and the nurse's son got sick at the last minute, so she couldn't take her."

I frowned and chided softly. "You could have just told me."

"I kno
w." He nodded. "I wish I had. I just loved the way we were and I thought if you found out about me you'd want nothing to do with me."

"But you didn't know that it would make me love you even more for it, did you?"

He smiled bashfully, but right into my eyes. "I should have. I'm sorry I didn't trust you."

"Mason, you
got hypothermia for me." Even saying it brought on a fresh round of tears. I smiled through them. "It's all forgotten."

He sighed and leaned his forehead to mine. "Tell me you
still love me."

"I never stopped," I whispered.

He lifted his head just barely, just enough to see my face. He groaned, "I love you, Em."

"I love you."

He scooted as close as he could and held my face gently. "Thank you for not leaving me here without you."

I felt a sob break free of my lungs as the fact of how close I'd really been to death sank in. The nurse
said they had to bring me back…

I didn't want to know right then what exactly that
entailed. But soon I'd get Mason to tell me the story.

"Thank you for coming to get me."

His thumbs caressed achingly slow across my cheeks. "I will forever do that." He smiled and glanced out the window. It was bright and white. The storm had calmed, leaving a peaceful, quiet morning behind. Funny how that seemed to be the theme of our lives."Merry Christmas, baby."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dolly Parton
once anonymously entered a Dolly Parton look-alike contest…and lost to a drag queen.

 

 

Mason

 

 

 

Emma's parents were relieved, to say the least. They were also very upset with me that I hadn't gotten in touch with them sooner.
I didn't tell them the extent of Emma's situation. They thought I went out and found her right away. They didn't know their daughter almost died again. I didn't have the heart to tell them over the phone. They didn't know that I'd stayed in bed with Emma all night to keep her warm and stave off hypothermia, and then long after that because I couldn't make myself leave her. I stood at the desk of the nurses station, the landline phone to my ear, and wanted to laugh at them the way they handed the phone back and forth, grilling me, laying into me, and then thanking me within seconds of each other.

Emma couldn't go home today, but s
he was in excellent spirits. It was Christmas after all. Her family was bringing the Christmas to her as soon as the roads were cleared.

And they said they would check on my mom before they came
there since my truck got towed from the ambulance bay this morning with a dead battery. But that was OK. It was worth it.

I went back into the room with her and watched her sleep as I waited
in my green scrubs. The news had said we were in a state of emergency from the storm, so there were plenty of things still not working properly, cell phones being one of them.

I sat t
here, waiting and watching until her family showed up. I wondered what Rhett and Isabelle were going to think of my small, normal house. They'd never been there, but they were going to be my in-laws, so they better get used to it.

However,
I was shocked when I saw the officer from last night come through the doors and head right for me. He stared at me expectantly and then sighed. "Well? You found her, didn't you? How is she?"

"I found her." I crossed my arms
and pushed through Emma's door open for him to follow me. "I thought you said no one would come out on Christmas to check on people?"

"Well," he twisted his mustached lips, "my girls understand that Daddy has to go help people sometimes. They think I'm a
superhero for it."

"You came up here just to see if Emma was OK?"

"Yeah." He handed me a cup of coffee I hadn't even seen him holding because I'd been so surprised as he looked at her. "She doing all right?"

I told him everything that happened after I'd left him. He kept whistling and hissing in sympathy. I thanked him for the coffee and he
said for us to take it for what it was—a Christmas miracle. He also said he'd look around and find out who the snowplow driver was on that road, find out why he left the scene, and if he got the make and model of the truck who ran Emma off the road. He said it was a long shot. Since the plow hadn't stopped, he probably hadn't seen or heard anything in the cab of that big truck with the piles of snow flying up. I agreed, hating it but accepting that he was going to look into it, and shook his hand before he left.

I gave him Adeline's phone number, but he said the line had been disconnected. He said he didn't think any criminal charges would be brought up on her. She hadn't officially been harassing us. Keeping photos isn't a crime, he said. The texts were annoying, but since the ph
one had been disconnected, no criminal charges were possible unless she called again from another line. Her apartment was almost empty when they went there. I doubted that we'd ever hear from her again. It looked like she had skipped town, and that was just fine by me.

I knew it wasn't
Adeline's fault directly, any of it, but I couldn't help but hold a piece of blame in my gut for her. They were my actions though. I had left my phone that day and I had chosen not to tell Emma about Adeline and the one date we'd had. So, I shouldered that and decided it was way past time to move on.

When I heard Isabella call through the door that they were there
, I reached over to rub Emma's cheek. "Wake up, baby."

She did, almost immediately
moving her fingers to press the buttons on her bed to sit up. She looked up and smiled. "Mrs. Wright."

I turned, confused, to see my mom in her wheelchair, Emma's dad with his hands on the
handles, and the nurse beside them. They had brought my mom for me? He smiled and shrugged over her shoulder. "It's Christmas."

Before I could look back, Isabella was engulfing Emma and then apologizing for squeezing too hard. They brought a couple of presents and hot apple cider. Or what was once hot. Now it was lukewarm, but it didn't matter. We were all toget
her and that was all that
did
matter.

When Emma asked
about her brother and sister, her mother said the airports were closed. She was sure they weren't able to fly in, but couldn't get a hold of them. So they wouldn’t be there for Christmas, and with the way things looked, maybe not the wedding either. Emma was bummed, I knew, because she felt the need to get to know them, to have them there, being their sister, remembering how to be.

W
hen Isabella pulled a few small gifts from her bag and laid them on Emma's lap, I recognized them immediately. And so did Emma. They were the Christmas presents her parents had brought to the hospice for her the year before, the ones that sat in the window. She refused to open the presents before. She said that her parents had bought those for the "other" Emma and it didn't feel right to open them. But Isabella had gone up into her room and gotten them on purpose.

Emma looked at them and up at Isabella. She shoo
k her head. Isabella touched her hand. "We bought them for you. Old you, new you, doesn't matter. We bought these for our daughter. It's time you see what we gave you, Emmie."

It was the first time they called Emma
Emmie
and she didn't flinch or make a face. I thought she was going to refuse, politely, but she surprised me. She surprised us all by picking up the biggest of the small packages and twisting it in her fingers. She smiled and put her finger under the crease of that pretty paper, but before she pulled it free, she looked up at me.

I leaned back into the door
with the force of that gaze. I felt my breath fall in and out as we stared at each other.

I smiled, knowing it was crooked and my adoration for her was right there on my face. She smiled back and ripped the paper before looking down at it.
Peeling it open and seeing the small box, she laid the paper down gently. She glanced up at her mother and opened the maroon box to reveal a locket. She lifted it from the satin. It was a silver oval on a long chain. She turned it over and smiled. Her mom sat on the bed beside her and took it from her. She helped her put it on and leaned back, lifting it in her fingers. "Remember my mom's necklace?" She showed her the one around her own neck. "We got you one to match. E. It stands for Emma, Em, Emmie. All of it. It doesn't matter what we call you, what you remember, or who you marry. You are our daughter," she said and smiled, letting the tears fall. Emma pressed her lips together, her own eyes glassy."Always have been, always will be."

They group-hugged with Rhett, so
I went and knelt in front of Mom while they talked. "Hey."

"Mason," she said in her usual confusion. I coaxed her into the present and I took her with me to get everyone something hot to drink. In the small vending room we rounded up cups of hot chocolate. Emma was going to have to get use
d to my love for the hot brew. Mom used to make it for us when we were kids. We'd chop wood on the weekends for the fireplace and then come in and she'd have it ready for us. We'd sit by the fire and get warm by the wood we worked so hard for, back when Milo was still around.

I took a deep breath as we walked back, a tray of cups in my hands. I hadn't heard anything about Milo or from him in a while. Weeks. It had never been this long before and it didn't make me feel better to not have to go save him all the time. It made me worry why I didn't need to. Was he in jail? Did he move away? Something worse?

I pushed all that away and pressed my hip to the door to push it open. I held the door open for Mamma with it and let it close behind us softly. Rhett and Isabella were back to sitting in the chairs on the other side.

I went to give them both a cup and Isabella reached up, taking my face in her hands. Her lip trembled as she pulled me to her. I held the cups off to the side and wondered what in the world was… Ah. I peeked over at Emma and saw her face, adoration spelled plainly across it. She told them about me finding her.

She released me. "We love you, Mason. I'm so glad you were brought to us. Thank you for what you did."

"Yeah, son," Rhett continued and shook my hand. It was like it used to be, back whe
n I was just Emma's therapist, back before she stole my heart and they no longer wanted me to have anything to do with her. Back when they respected me and knew I'd take care of their daughter, no matter what. Finally, after months, I could see that respect back in his eyes. It was surreal because I had been sure I'd never see it again.

"You don't need to thank me.
" I chuckled. "It was completely selfish. I can't imagine living without her. I just…had to find her."

"And you had to risk your life
, huh?" Isabella asked.

I shrugged, rubbing my neck self-consciously. "I had to."

I felt Emma's stare on my face and turned to her. She lifted her hand and beckoned me to her. I started to sit in one of the hideous brown chairs, but she shook her head and tugged me to sit on the bed with her. "Right here," she commanded.

We stared at each other and everyone else fell away. She smiled coyly and toyed with my fingers in her hand as s
he let me see how happy she was, the long chain and locket hanging from her neck. A yellow scarf and a sparkly headband also lay in her lap.

If I ever wondered if she really loved me before, that thought was obliterat
ed by the absolute love I saw in her eyes as she looked up at me.

I answered her smile and she raised it with a grin. A tired grin
because she had been through the wringer, but a grin nonetheless. I cupped her cheek. "You need to rest, sweetheart."

She nodded. "I'm about to fall over. I'm sorry."

"Don't be. You earned it."

I went to move away and she gripped my arm tighter. "Please don't go."

I leaned into her. "Not for the world," I whispered into her ear and then pressed my lips to her forehead while simultaneously pressing the button to make the bed lay flat.

Her dad glanced over at me and back to her, knowing there was something epic going on, but as much as I liked her dad, he'd never understand. Emma and I had saved each other in more ways than one. The way I loved this girl
was epic
and it changed the air around us with its sparks. Shakespeare could write a sonnet just for her and it still wouldn't capture all the things I wanted to say.

"
I'll be here when you wake up. Sleep, you."

She smiled, her eyes closing. "Bye, you."

I tucked the blanket up to her chin and around her shoulders and sat at the foot of her bed. I pushed the blanket back a little and began to rub her leg for her as she slept. It was that one thing that I felt like I had control over. This had been my job when she was in a coma; it was my job when she was healing, it was my job when she was running from the old her, and it was my job now, to take care of her always. Our parents were deep in conversation, and I was paying them very little attention. I lifted her leg, kissing the top of her foot, before tucking it under the covers and starting on the other one.

Emma would be making a joke right now about me being a legs man. I chuckled under my breath. That was absolutely true, but this was just one way I knew to show my love for her, to take care of her. It was nothing but an act of service and love, and Emma would have a lifetime of this to look forward to.

Our parents and I talked for a while. Em's parents enjoyed immensely the stories my mother conjured of our past Christmases. When they agreed to take my mom home, they tried to take me with them. I needed a shower, I needed clean clothes, Isabella could stay—they tried it all.

I refused
, gladly. I promised Em I would stay and I planned to. I wasn't leaving until she could come with me.

BOOK: Wide Spaces (A Wide Awake Novella, Book 2)
7.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

A Scarlet Bride by McDaniel, Sylvia
Dangerous Secrets by Jones, Lisa Renee
Fever City by Tim Baker
Cold Heart by Sheila Dryden
Control by Glenn Beck