Chapter Sixteen
After a mostly sleepless night, Tilly climbed out of bed a little after five and went to work out.
She started to make coffee on the way through the kitchen, then decided against it. Landry could only have a few sips of water, since they didn’t know when his surgery would be, up until seven a.m. It would be cruel to taunt him with the smell of the brew when he couldn’t have any.
Then again, he is a sadist. He might appreciate the irony.
She still couldn’t do it.
After her work out, she glanced at her cell phone charging on the counter. She checked it, but no messages from Cris. Would he really show up?
Of course he would. He was Cris.
She didn’t know how much she could handle today, emotionally. In some ways, it’d be nice to have Cris there for support.
On the other hand, having Cris there would be a strain on her maintaining appearances.
Despite her repeated offers, Landry insisted on driving. “Allow me this, love,” he said.
“Please?”
She nodded. He also took her small tote bag holding her Kindle, mp3 player, and crossword puzzle books and carried it, along with his own overnight bag, out to the garage. They arrived at the hospital a little before eight that morning.
As he had before the biopsy, he held her hand and continuously stroked her with his thumb.
They checked in and were shown back to a pre-op holding area where Landry changed into a hospital gown, received his IV, and the wait began in earnest.
It took every bit of strength she had not to check her phone, which she’d put on silent mode, for messages from Cris.
They’d been warned upon their arrival that it might be late afternoon before they took Landry.
By nine-thirty Tilly was ready to slip out to the bathroom and text Cris with an update, but then the surgeon’s surgical nurse came in with the anesthesiologist.
“Hello, Mr. LaCroux. Looks like you get bumped to the top of the class. Our second surgery of the day was cancelled because the patient caught a cold. Dr. Evans wants to take you next.”
Tilly’s nerves neared the breaking point. Landry grabbed her hand and pulled her in for a kiss.
“Steady, love,” he whispered. “I’ll be right back.”
She smiled and kissed him again. “I love you. Remember the rules. You’ll fight to come back to me.”
His beaming grin nearly broke her heart. “Absolutely. And I love you, too.”
She managed not to cry as she watched them wheel him away. On unsteady legs, she found the bathroom before making her way to the waiting room. How had Cris gone through this alone? Well, he hadn’t been alone, probably. Surely they’d had friends he could lean on for support.
Then again, so did she. She could always call Loren, didn’t know why she didn’t think of that before.
Her fingers hovered over her phone’s keypad. Then again, hadn’t she asked Loren and Ross to do more than their fair share over the years? After an hour, a cup of coffee, a stale danish from a tray of them in the waiting room, and one update from the OR to let her know Landry was doing fine, she decided she couldn’t be as strong as she thought she was. She pulled out her cell, ready to call Loren, when Cris ran through the waiting room door.
She’d never been so glad to see someone in her entire life.
His eyes immediately locked on her. It felt natural to stand and let him engulf her in a hug.
She’d consider the ramifications later. For now, she welcomed his support.
“How is he?” Cris asked.
“They said he’s doing good. Stable.”
He guided her back to her seat and together they sat without talking, Tilly leaning against his shoulder for a little comfort.
The nurse updated them an hour later. Still doing fine, the doctor was just making sure there were no other places to remove before he closed Landry up. Between that and post-op recovery, it’d be at least another two to three hours.
Cris carried her tote bag for her as they walked to the cafeteria. “Did you eat?” she asked.
“No. I had to change planes in Dallas. I didn’t have time to eat.”
Tilly’s emotions, already stretched to the snapping point, wouldn’t allow her to open up to Cris too much. She opted for a distraction. “What’d you mean yesterday that it wouldn’t be the first time you’d gotten in trouble?”
He smiled and looked down at the table. This time not in slavish deference, but in amusement.
He glanced up and around, to confirm no one could hear, and lowered his voice. “I’m not a brat. I never have been. But no way in hell will I sit back and not be there for him when he needs me. One time, I had to fly up to Seattle for a series of training meetings. One of his procedures was moved up nearly a week because the surgeon had to go out of town. I flew home immediately, and as soon as he was able to hold a riding crop again, he tanned my ass.” He smiled. “But then he cuddled me in bed with him all night long and thanked me for being there.”
He played with his coffee cup. “Landry and I have a different dynamic than you and I had,” he said as he eventually met her gaze. “I’m not a masochist. I mean, I know you weren’t either. But I get what I need from our relationship by serving him. If that means I have to endure punishment or painful play, I’m okay with that.”
“You never made me do anything like that. You never punished me. You never hurt me.”
He smiled, but she’d swear it looked sad. “Remember that time you scared the crap out of me by forgetting your cell phone and you went out all day with Loren to get massages and see a movie?
Neither me nor Ross could find the two of you. She got spanked too, he told me.”
She snorted. “Oh. I’d forgotten about that.” How could she? She couldn’t sit comfortably for two days after he spanked her with his bare hand. That was the only time he’d ever punished her like that. There were times he’d made her stand in a corner for thirty minutes for forgetting to do something like eat a healthy breakfast when he’d told her to, but he’d never used corporal punishment.
How could she have forgotten the fear on his face, followed by relief, then anger, when she walked in the door that night? How he’d hugged her, desperately, before he dragged her over to the couch, bent her over his knee, and spanked her.
She’d never forgotten her cell phone again. “That’s nothing like he does to you.” She’d enjoyed impact play with Cris, his touch with the implements always on the sensual side, never what she’d classify as painful.
He nodded. “I know.” He took a deep breath and let it out as he slowly turned the coffee cup around in one direction, then reversed it and started rotating it the other. She didn’t speak because she sensed him working up to his next comment.
Some things never changed. That was an old habit he’d had, unconsciously turning his cup or water bottle or whatever it was in front of him back and forth as he tried to think.
His gaze dropped to his hands again. “If…if I start saying anything you don’t want to hear, please tell me to stop.”
“Don’t worry. I will.”
He smiled again, but didn’t make eye contact. “Please don’t take anything I’m about to say the wrong way. I was ready to spend the rest of my life with you. You know what happened. I don’t need to rehash it.” He sighed. “Yes, I went back to him. But I love him. And I’m not an idiot. I know that he still thinks about how I left before, and while he blames himself, he’s only human. In the back of his mind is that ‘what if’ memory. Every beating I take, everything I endure, it’s the only sure way I know I can prove to him I love him. I will take it. Because I love him. As whacked as it sounds, the more I take, the more he feels secure that I’m here for the long haul.”