Other cops' wives stopped by too. Each of them hugged her. At one moment or another, each of them was on the verge of tears. They were sincerely sympathetic, shared the anguish. But Heather knew that every last one of them was glad it had been Jack and not her husband who'd taken the call at Arkadian's service station.
Heather didn't blame them for that. She'd have sold her soul to have Jack change places with any of their husbands-and would have visited them in an equally sincere spirit of sorrow and sympathy.
The Department was a closely knit community, especially in this age of social dissolution, but every community was formed of smaller units, of families with shared experiences, mutual needs, similar values and hopes. Regardless of how tightly woven the fabric of the community, each family first protected and cherished its own. Without the intense and all-excluding love of wife for husband, husband for wife, parents for children, and children for parents, there would be no compassion for people in the larger community beyond the home.
In the I.C.U cubicle with Jack, she relived their life together in memory, from their first date, to the night Toby had been born, to breakfast this morning.
More than twelve years. But it seemed so short a span. Sometimes she put her head against the bed railing and spoke to him, recalling a special moment, reminding him of how much laughter they had shared, how.much joy.
Shortly before five o'clock, she was jolted from her memories by the sudden awareness that something had changed.
Alarmed, she got up and leaned over the bed to see if Jack was still breathing. Then she realized he must be all right, because the cardiac monitor showed no change in the rhythms of his heart.
What had changed was the sound of the rain. It was gone. The storm had ended.
She stared at the opaque window. The city beyond, which she couldn't see, would be glimmering in the aftermath of the day-long downpour.
She had always been enchanted by Los Angeles after a rain-sparkling drops of water dripping off the points of palm fronds as if the trees were exuding jewels, streets washed clean, the air so clear that the distant mountains reappeared from out of the usual haze of smog, everything fresh.
If the window had been clear and the city had been there for her to see, she wondered if it would seem enchanting this time. She didn't think so. This city would never gleam for her again, even if rain scrubbed it for forty days and forty nights.
In that moment she knew their future-Jack's, Toby's, and her own-lay in some far place. This wasn't home any more. When Jack recovered, they would sell the house and go somewhere, anywhere, to new lives, a fresh start. There was a sadness in that decision, but it gave her hope as well.
When she turned away from the window, she discovered that Jack's eyes were open and that he was watching her.
Her heart stuttered.
She remembered Procnow's bleak words. Massive blood loss. Deep shock.
Cerebral consequence. Brain damage.
She was afraid to speak for fear his response would be slurred, tortured, and meaningless.
He licked his gray, chapped lips.
His breathing was wheezy.
Leaning against the side of the bed, bending over him, summoning all her courage, she said, "Honey?"
Confusion and fear played across his face as he turned his head slightly left, then slightly right, surveying the room.
"Jack? Are you with me, baby?".He focused on the cardiac monitor, seemed transfixed by the moving green line, which was spiking higher and far more often than at any time since Heather had first entered the cubicle.
Her own heart was pounding so hard that it shook her. His failure to respond was terrifying.
"Jack, are you okay, can you hear me?"
Slowly he turned his head to face her again. He licked his lips, grimaced. His voice was weak, whispery. "Sorry about this."
Startled, she said, "Sorry?"
"Warned you. Night I proposed. I've always been a little bit of a fuck-up."
The laugh that escaped her was perilously close to a sob. She leaned so hard against the bed railing that it pressed painfully into her midriff, but she managed to kiss his cheek, his pale and feverish cheek, and then the corner of his gray lips. "Yeah, but you're my fuck-up," she said.
"Thirsty," he said.
"Sure, okay, I'll get a nurse, see what you're allowed to have."
Maria Alicante hurried through the door, alerted to Jack's change of condition by telemetry data on the cardiac monitor at the central desk.
"He's awake, alert, he says he's thirsty," Heather reported, running her words together in quiet jubilation.
"A man has a right to be a little thirsty after a hard day, doesn't he?" Maria said to Jack, rounding the bed to the nightstand, on which stood an insulated carafe of ice water.
"Beer," Jack said.
Tapping the IV bag, Maria said, "What do you think we've been dripping into your veins all day?"
"Not Heineken."
"Oh, you like Heineken, huh? Well, we have to control medical costs, you know.
Can't use that imported stuff." She poured a third of a glass of water from the carafe. "From us you get Budweiser intravenously, take it or leave it."
"Take it."
Opening a nightstand drawer and plucking out a flexible plastic straw, Maria said to Heather, "Dr. Procnow's back in the hospital, making his evening rounds, and Dr. Delaney just got here too. As soon as I saw.the change on Jack's E.E.G, I had them paged."
Walter Delaney was their family doctor. Though Procnow was nice and obviously competent, Heather felt better just knowing there was about to be a familiar face on the medical team dealing with Jack.
"Jack," Maria said, "I can't put the bed up because you have to keep lying flat. And I don't want you to try to raise your head by yourself, all right?
Let me lift your head for you."
Maria put one hand behind his neck and raised his head a few inches off the thin pillow. With her other hand, she held the glass. Heather reached across the railing and put the straw to Jack's lips.
"Small sips," Maria warned him. "You don't want to choke."
After six or seven sips, with a pause to breathe between each, he'd had enough.
Heather was delighted out of all proportion to her husband's modest accomplishment. However, his ability to swallow a thin liquid without choking probably meant there was no paralysis of his throat muscles, not even minimal.
She realized how profoundly their lives had changed when such a mundane act as drinking water without choking was a triumph, but that grim awareness did not diminish her delight.
As long as Jack was alive, there was a road back to the life they had known. A long road. One step at a time. Small, small steps. But there was a road, and nothing else mattered right now.
While Emil Procnow and Walter Delaney examined Jack, Heather used the phone at the nurse's station to call home. She talked to Mae Hong first, then Toby, and told them that Jack was going to be all right.
She knew she was putting a rose tint on reality, but a little positive thinking was good for all of them.
"Can I see him?" Toby asked.
"In a few days, honey."
"I'm much better. Got better all day. I'm not sick any more."
"I'll be the judge of that. Anyway, your dad needs a few days to get his strength back." bring peanut-butter-and-chocolate ice cream.
That's his favorite.
They won't have that in a hospital, will they?"
"No, nothing like that."
"Tell Dad I'm gonna bring him some."."All right," she said.
"I want to buy it myself. I have money, from my allowance."
"You're a good boy, Toby. You know that?"
His voice became soft and shy. "When you coming home?"