“What, honey? I don’t think I follow,” Mae said.
Jordan went back to the table, where Emmett doodled on the paper instead of solving the next equation.
“It’s nothing,” Jordan said. “Come on, Emmett, let’s get this work done. Time’s wasting, and one thing I learned from prison is that you don’t waste time.”
CHAPTER 15
Numb.
That was the word Julie used to describe her feelings to anyone who asked. She was simply numb. With her mother and Lucy, Julie could be more candid, admitting to an unshakable malaise, loss of appetite, physical aches and pains, tears at unexpected moments. It had been a week since Sam’s accident and Julie wondered if she was still in a state of shock. Some nights she would wake up confused, forgetting for a few blissful seconds how one person’s careless actions had altered the life she and Sam had together so dramatically. She would close her eyes and wish it were a dream, but images of the horrific crash would come at her as fast as an out-of-control pickup truck.
For now, Julie could do nothing but battle through each day and try her very best to stay positive. It was not easy. Sam had shown minimal signs of neurologic recovery, but no miracles. His eyes came open only for brief periods and he had yet to be weaned from the ventilator, but that could happen any day now. Fortunately, he had been in excellent shape prior to the accident. This would help him in his recovery.
As chaotic as the past week had been, Julie had fallen into a rhythm of sorts. Work. Sam. Home. Repeat. She would have been at the hospital right now, at Sam’s bedside, but Paul had gone out of town to visit with a gallery owner who had expressed interest in his work and Julie needed to be home for Trevor. She was happy to have the time with her son and grateful Paul had stepped up to spend most evenings with Trevor, doing everything he could to be helpful. This was a critical time, and everyone was on edge while also trying to be supportive and useful. Sam’s parents had flown in from Michigan. They were staying at a hotel near the hospital. Julie would have let them stay with her had they asked, but was glad she did not have to play hostess.
The clock on the cable box let her know that soccer practice had ended twenty minutes ago. Trevor would be showing up any moment. Slumped on her sofa, Julie nursed a white wine, while on the television three strangers were marrying three other strangers at first sight. Julie preferred programs like Downton Abbey to reality fare like Married at First Sight, but these days her choices drifted toward the mindless. In that regard she thought nothing could surpass this program.
The viewing served no other purpose than as reprieve from Julie’s endless worry, her regular bedside vigils. The police were still investigating the accident, and the insurance companies were on the case. Also on the case were a number of attorneys who wished to represent Sam in litigation. That would have to wait. Much would have to wait, including Julie’s marriage to the man she loved.
Julie took another sip of wine and returned to the show. Susie cringed at the sight of Andre. Maybe it was his ghastly teeth that did her in. Julie thought about her own wedding plans and wondered if she and Sam would ever marry.
She knew Sam well enough to know he would not want her to commit to him should he be dependent for life. He had talked in the abstract about this very thing, because he knew another rider who had suffered a debilitating head trauma. Sam had seen the life-changing impact of the injury on the rider’s wife and family. When it came to accidents, motorcyclists could do the Kevin Bacon six degrees of separation game. They all knew someone who knew someone who had been in one.
Sam would want a wife, not a caretaker. That was what Julie imagined he would say. But his broken body in no way severed her feelings for him. He was still the man she loved, in body, mind, and spirit. The Internet was full of stories of people who had married quadriplegics and made it work: blogs, message boards, Reddit. Julie knew this, because she had read them all.
A few minutes after her last time check, Julie heard the front door open. In shuffled Trevor. She listened to the familiar sounds of her son reentering his home. First came the thud when he dropped his backpack on the floor. Then the closet door swung open with a creak, followed by a clatter of hangers as Trevor hung his coat. Then she heard the bathroom faucet running while he washed his hands.
“Hi, sweetheart, I’m in the living room. Dinner is in the oven.”
The apartment-fifteen hundred square feet of living space consolidated on one floor, with three bedrooms and two baths-smelled of chicken curry, a recipe Julie had stumbled on while browsing Pinterest. It was the first real meal she had cooked since the accident.
“I’m going to put Winston in his ball,” Trevor said. “And I don’t have any homework.”
Winston was the family guinea pig, a woeful substitute for the dog Trevor had begged for since his eighth birthday. Julie was sorry she could not accommodate her son’s wishes, but a dog simply did not fit their lifestyle.
“Come in here and talk to me. I want to look at your folder.”
“It’s fine.” Trevor had perfected the “leave me alone” tone and gave it just enough edge not to be totally rude.
“It’s not fine. We have an agreement.”
No response. Bad sign.
The agreement was for Julie to review Trevor’s schoolwork and check over his grades until he pulled them from Cs to Bs. She’d stop when it looked to her as if he was performing at or near his potential.
“Trevor?”
“I’ll be there in a minute.”
A rolling rattle alerted Julie to Winston’s imminent arrival. Sure enough, his plastic ball came skirting across the hardwood floor in front of the television at a high rate of speed. The mostly white-furred guinea pig had spots of brown and black and dark eyes and a very cute little face. Julie had taken quite a liking to Winston.
Eventually Trevor came shuffling into the living room, still wearing his dirt-splattered practice uniform and looking a bit ragged.
“How about a shower before dinner,” Julie said.
Trevor plopped down on the couch and tossed his school folder onto the coffee table. He had a tentative air that gave Julie pause. Had he failed a test? Possible, given the week they had just endured.
Julie set down her glass of wine as Trevor turned the channel from A &E to ESPN with speed that belied human capability. Trevor could have what he needed; he had done her a favor.
“How’s Sam doing?” Trevor asked.
Julie gave her son an appreciative glance and pulled him in for a little hug. “Thank you for asking. He’s not getting worse.”
“But he’s not getting any better, is he?”
Julie bit at her lip. “If by better you mean moving his arms or legs, then I’m afraid the answer is no.”
A week of healing had mended the gash to Sam’s chin, but his arms remained encased in casts with pins in the bones. His left leg, also in a cast, was suspended above the bed in a traction pulley system. His head CT read negative, and several neurosurgeons who had evaluated Sam had reached the same conclusion: the outcome could not be improved. Parts of his spine had been cut into pieces by shards of broken bone that acted as machetes.
There were more MRIs, more exams, and more tests, including electromyography, where multiple needles were inserted into Sam’s body to assess electrical activity of his skeletal muscles and motor neurons. Every result disappointed.
“I’m sorry, Mom.”
Winston came rolling by, his little legs churning furiously. Trevor giggled, and the sound of her son’s laughter brought a smile to Julie’s face. Her first, it felt, in ages.
Julie redirected her attention to the folder and got her second smile of the week. Trevor had gotten As on both his history and science tests.
“Honey, this is wonderful,” Julie said. “Well done.”