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English Girl in New York(23)

By:Scarlet Wilson


;Why are you so critical, Dan? You must see a whole host of things in  your line of work. I thought that would make you more sympathetic to  people out there. Not sit as judge and master.'

;I don't judge.' His words were snapped and Abraham flinched at the rise in his voice.

;Well, I think you do. I think that's what you've done since the second I found Abraham and brought him to you.'

He opened his mouth, obviously ready to hit her with a torrent of abuse.  But good sense waylaid him. She could almost see him biting his tongue  and it annoyed her. She didn't want Dan to hide things from her. He  should tell her how he really felt. It didn't matter that they would  disagree.

;Spit it out, Dan.'

;I don't think that's wise.' His words were growled through clenched teeth.

She walked right up to him, her face directly under his chin. He was  angry. She could tell he was angry. But she wasn't intimidated at all.  Dan would never direct his anger at her.

;So, you can kiss me to death, but you can't tell me how you feel?'

Dan walked over to the crib, placed Abraham down and raked his hand  through his short hair, his hand coming around and scraping at the  bristles on his chin. ;Just leave it, Carrie.'

;Why? Isn't it normal to disagree about things? I just can't understand  why the guy who was prepared to risk his life for a bunch of strangers  can't take a minute to show a little compassion to a woman who is  clearly desperate.' She pointed over at the crib. ;No woman in her right  mind would abandon her baby. Not without good reason. I bet she's lying  crying and terrified right now. I bet the past two nights she hasn't  slept a wink with worry over how her son is doing.'

He shook his head. ;You're wrong, Carrie. You're more than wrong. Good  people don't do things like this. Good people don't abandon their babies  or make them suffer. Everyone who has the responsibility for children  should put their needs first-before their own.'

She wrinkled her brow. ;What are you getting at, Dan? What need do you think Abraham's mother was putting first?'

He couldn't meet her eyes. He couldn't look at her. His eyes were fixed  either on the floor or the ceiling. He walked towards the window,  staring out at the snow-covered street, his hands on his hips. ;Drugs,  Carrie. I think his mother was looking for her next fix.'

Carrie's hand flew up to her mouth. It hadn't even occurred to her. It hadn't even crossed her mind.

Maybe she was too innocent. Maybe she'd lived a sheltered life.

;No.' She crossed quickly to the crib and looked down at Abraham. His  eyelids were fluttering, as if he was trying to focus on the changing  shapes around him. He looked so innocent. So peaceful. The thought of  his mother being a drug user horrified Carrie.

She hadn't lived her life in a plastic bubble. There had been women who  clearly had drug problems in the maternity unit next to her's. But they  were in the unit, being monitored for the sake of their babies. Although  they had other issues in their lives, their babies' health was still  important to them.

She reached out and stroked Abraham's skin. It still had the slightest  touch of yellow, but these things wouldn't disappear overnight. Could  his mother really have been taking drugs? It was just unimaginable to  Carrie.         

     



 

She felt a little surge of adrenalin rise inside her. ;No, Dan. No way.  It can't be that. It just can't be. We would know. Abraham would be  showing signs. Drug addicts' babies show signs of withdrawal, don't  they? If Abraham's mother was an addict he would be screaming by now.'

;Hasn't he screamed the past two nights?'

She shook her head firmly. It didn't matter that she was no expert.  She'd heard enough to know a little of the background. ;He would be  sick, Dan. He would be really sick. And Abraham's not. Look at him.' She  walked around to the other side of the crib to give Dan a clear view.  ;He's not sick like that. Sure, he gets hungry and has wind. He pulls  his little knees up to his chest. That's colic. Nothing else. And there  are pages and pages on the internet about that.' She folded her arms  across her chest. ;If we had a baby in withdrawal right now, we'd need  Shana to airlift him to the hospital. There's no two ways about it.'

It was clear from the tight expression on Dan's face that he wasn't ready to concede. He wasn't ready to consider he was wrong.

She could feel her hackles rising. She could feel they were on the  precipice of a major argument and she just didn't want to go there. All  her protective vibes were coming out, standing over Abraham like some  lioness guarding her cub. But why would she have to guard him against  Dan? The man who'd opened his door and welcomed them both in?

She took a deep breath. ;Dan, you're tired and you're cranky. I know  what that feels like. Let's leave this. Go and sleep for a few hours.  I'm going to take Abraham upstairs to see Mrs Van Dyke. She'll be happy  to see him and, who knows, she might even give me some tips.'

She could see he still wanted to argue with her but fatigue was eating  away at every movement he made. His shoulders were slumped, his muscular  frame sagging.

;Fine. I'll go to sleep.' He stalked off towards the bedroom-the bed  she'd recently vacated-before he halted and turned around. ;Mrs Van  Dyke, ask her if she needs anything. Anything at all. I can phone Mr  Meltzer and go back along to the shop in a few hours and get us some  more supplies. We'll need things for Abraham anyhow.'

There it was. Even in his inner turmoil, the real Dan Cooper could still  shine through. He was still thinking about others, still concerned  about his elderly neighbour.

She picked up Abraham from the crib, tapping her finger on his button nose and smiling at him.

Just when she thought Dan had gone he appeared at her elbow, bending over and dropping a gentle kiss on Abraham's forehead.

;I'm not going to let anything happen to this little guy, Carrie.  Nothing at all.' His words were whispered, but firm, and he turned and  walked off to the bedroom, closing the door behind him.





CHAPTER NINE

CARRIE WALKED UP the stairs slowly, Abraham cradled in her arms.

The way that Dan had come over and kissed him had almost undone her. She  was ready to fight with him, to argue with him over his unforgiving  point of view.

But Daniel Cooper was a good guy-his most recent action only proved  that. There was so much more to this than she could see. Maybe she'd  been so wrapped up in her own grief and struggling with her own ability  to cope with the situation that she'd totally missed something with Dan.

It just didn't figure for a warm-hearted Everyman hero to have such  black-and-white views. To be so blinkered. Maybe it was time for her to  crawl out of the sandbox and get back in the playground-to start to  consider those around her.

She reached Mrs Van Dyke's door and gave a little knock. ;Mrs Van Dyke? It's Carrie from across the hall. May I come in?'

She heard the faint shout from the other side of the door, once again  almost drowned out by the theme tune of Diagnosis Murder. She turned the  handle and walked in, crossing the room and kneeling next to Mrs Van  Dyke's brown leather armchair.

She adjusted Abraham from her shoulder, laying him between her hands so  Mrs Van Dyke could have a clear look at him. ;Guess who I brought to  visit,' she said quietly.

Mrs Van Dyke reached out for the remote control and silenced the  television. ;Well, who do we have here?' she asked, one frail finger  reaching out and tracing down the side of Abraham's cheek.

;We call him Abraham. It's been three days now and there's still no sign of his mother.'

;May I?' Mrs Van Dyke held out her thin arms. For a second Carrie  hesitated, instant protective waves flooding through her, wondering  about the steadiness of Mrs Van Dyke's hands. But she pushed the  thoughts from her mind. This woman had held more babies, more little  lives in her hands than Carrie probably would in this lifetime. She had a  wealth of experience to which Carrie really needed even the tiniest  exposure.         

     



 

She placed Abraham in her shaky hands and watched as Mrs Van Dyke  repositioned him on her lap, with her hand gently supporting his head as  she leaned over and spoke to him quietly, all the while stroking one  cheek with her bent finger.

It was magical. Even though Mrs Van Dyke was obviously feeling the  effects of age, from her misshapen joints to her thin frame, a new life  and sparkle seemed to come into her eyes when talking to Abraham. It was  as if he released a little spark of life into her.

Carrie couldn't hear what she was saying. It was as if she were having  an entirely private conversation with him. His little blue eyes had  opened and were watching her intensely. Could he even focus yet? Carrie  wasn't sure. But the conversation brought a smile to her face.

Abraham was wearing one of the beautiful hand-knitted blue cardigans  that Mrs Van Dyke had given her, along with the white crocheted shawl.  The recognition made Mrs Van Dyke smile all the more as she fingered the  delicate wool. They still had hardly any clothes for him and without  Mrs Van Dyke's contribution Abraham would have spent most of the time  wrapped in a towel.