My eyes burned, my lips went dry, and my ability to speak escaped me. There were no words to speak, and nothing would make any part of this situation any better. I wasn’t quite sure what to say or if she could hear me anyway, so I sat in the chair next to her bed, holding her hand and listening to the beep of the machines that I presumed were keeping her alive. I sat there for a solid five minutes, kissing and rubbing her hand before Adriana and my grandma came into the room.
They both silently took their seats, their eyes just as bloodshot as mine, looking as if they had cried themselves out as well. We all made eye contact with one another, but no one said a word for fear of bursting the emotional dam that entrenched us. It was a cruel fucking thought to think that I’d be leaving this hospital with a piece of my life forever gone. A piece that I could never get back.
“Excuse me,” the doctor whispered. “I just wanted to let you all know that although Imelda is heavily sedated, she can hear you.” He smiled, then quickly walked away, leaving us with the impossibility of trying to say our last words.
“Mommy, I love you so much,” Adriana poured out, taking our mother’s other hand and allowing her tears to fall onto it. “I love you more than anything. Abel loves you. We all love you.” By the end of her proclamations, her words were nearly inaudible. Her emotions had taken over, and the tears poured from her eyes again.
My grandmother hugged Adriana from behind, crying her own set of fresh tears. They traded positions, allowing my grandmother to take her daughter’s hand in her own as she poured her heart to her.
“My dear, Imelda. I love you too much, but not to keep you here, suffering,” she choked out in Spanish. Her raspy cough came roaring back, effectively ending her ability to go on. She held my mother’s hand up to her face and cried as Adriana took her turn consoling her.
My mouth opened to speak three times, each time closing because nothing that I wanted to say felt right. I rested my head on my mother’s hand until the words finally spoke to me.
“Mama, you mean so much to everyone you’ve ever come in contact with, but none more than me. You’ve made me who I am, and I owe my life to you.” A heavy lumped formed in my throat, forcing me to stop and work past it before I could continue on. “You don’t deserve any of this, Mama, and I’d trade you places in a heartbeat. I really would.”
“Alex, she needs uplifting words,” Adriana sniffled.
I nodded my head, unsure of what I could say that had any sort of promise.
“The baby, Alex. Tell her about the baby.”
That surprise had moved to the background as soon as the devastating news about my mom was announced. Cassie was pregnant with my baby, and my mom wouldn’t be here to see him or her. Another round of emotional trauma swept in and sucker punched me as I stared at her beautiful figure knowing that none of my kids would ever know their grandmother.
I managed to push the morbid thoughts aside, and at least try to give her the news, hoping it would make us all feel better. “Mama, your boy is going to be a dad. Cassie is pregnant with our baby.”
The words came out smoother than I had anticipated, and miraculously, my mother squeezed my hand, drawing all attention to it.
“Adriana, go and get Cassie. Hurry!” I ordered.
Adriana returned a minute later with a very sick and timid looking Cassie in tow. How I had managed to miss the ashen look of Cassie’s face was mind boggling. And I’d blown up on her as if it were her alone that caused the pregnancy. My mind was in a state of shock. I had seen and dealt with too much shit, and now everything was running together on me.
“Cassie, Mom knows you’re expecting, and she squeezed my hand upon hearing the news.”
Cassie smiled meekly, strolling over and rubbing my mom’s arm. I softly stroked Cassie’s arm with my free hand, hoping the apologetic gesture wouldn’t go flying over her head. She looked down at me, her face warming a bit, but never allowing the smile I was hoping to see come through
“I love your son, Imelda. I plan to take good care of him and make sure he’s the best daddy he can be. Just like you would do.”
Mom’s hand squeezed again, drawing smiles from everyone in the room. We sat together, lightly speaking, reminiscing about the good times we’d had together. At certain points, we even laughed because recalling my mother’s free spirit seemed to bring that out of us.
I sat with Cassie on my lap, stroking her neck as she lay with her head resting on my shoulder. She dozed off, lightly snoring into my ear. My grandmother, Adriana, and I sat and watched my mom sleep peacefully, hoping that she knew just how loved she was.
A couple hours later, machines started beeping and nurses ran into the room, followed by the doctor.
“What’s going on? What’s wrong?” I frantically asked, feeling panic beginning to set in.
“Your mother’s body is going into shock,” a nurse announced, moving rapidly as she unplugged and reset various machines and instruments.
I watched in horror as my mother’s heartbeat continuously dropped, the lines no longer making those mountainous figures, but slowly flattening out. Within a minute, there was a continuous line moving across the screen and a loud, solid noise filling the room. My heart burst at the sight of my mother taking her last breath, then lying motionless on the bed.
The nurses gathered us up and led us out of the room, where my grandmother completely broke down, screaming at the top of her lungs as Adriana and I worked tirelessly to try and console her, but there was nothing we could do. Her baby was gone, and I felt every bit of her anguish as we stood there crying.
Cassie walked over to us and made her way into our circle, shedding her own fresh set of tears. She turned to my grandmother and held her, allowing both of them to cry out their hurt, their mistrust, and their devastation. When my grandmother wrapped her arms around Cassie and held her tightly, I reached out for Adriana, needing to feel the warmth and comfort of family in that moment. We stayed that way until we physically had to move, and with each step we took, a new piece of us slowly faded away.
++++
I elected not to go back to the family house that night. It was much too soon for me to be in my mother’s home and around her things, so I took Cassie to a nearby hotel. We checked in and showered, then I ordered room service and attempted to eat, though neither of us was able to get much down.
We lay together in silence for a bit, my head resting of Cassie’s chest as she ran her fingers through my hair. That sensual vanilla smell lit me up, finally giving me a reason to smile for the first time in weeks. My hand rested on her belly, and I remembered that she had life—life that I had created, growing in there. The idea of becoming a father so soon scared me shitless, and all of my guilt from Iraq and the death of that young boy filled me.
How was I supposed to be a father when I had taken someone’s child away from them? Regardless of the fact that I had killed in self-defense, I had killed, and I was gaining what I had so easily taken away from another man.
“Why didn’t you tell me about the pregnancy?” I whispered.
She sighed. “I wanted to. I tried to, but you were rushed off the phone and I never got to tell you. Plus, your reaction…I was scared of that.”
Shit! “I’m sorry, Blondie. There’s been so much shit going on, and it was the last thing I expected to hear.”
“I know.” She paused, thinking hard before speaking again. “You mentioned getting shot at when you were yelling at Adriana. What happened?”
Her question was like a knife to my flesh. The pain was unbearable, damn near unspeakable, and I immediately tensed up, unwilling to drag myself back into that hell.