"I'm sorry. Who?" Had Leah made it back that quickly?
"Estella's mother," she says. "She was just here."
I nod and start walking toward the door. I want to know where the hell she was while our daughter almost lost her life. You don't just leave the country without telling anyone when you had a child. She could have made it here before I did if anyone had been able to contact her. Why she didn't bother leaving a number with my parents … I stop walking. Maybe she had. They weren't here to confirm it. Maybe that's why my mother had sounded so strange on the phone. Or maybe my mother had known who Leah left the country with, and that's what made her upset. My mother. Think about that later, I tell myself for the thousandth time today. My feet kick-start and I'm walking again. Around the corner, into the main corridor where the nurses' station is. Beeping … beeping … the smell of antiseptic … I can hear muffled footsteps and hushed voices, a doctor's pager going off. I think about the crying I heard earlier and wonder what happened to the patient. Had it been tears of fear or mourning or regret? I could cry the trifecta of those emotions right now. I look for red hair and see none. Rubbing my hand across the back of my neck, I stand in the middle of the corridor, not sure where to go. I feel detached, as if I'm floating above my body instead of being inside of it. A balloon on a string, I think. Is this what exhaustion looks like, everything muted and blurry? Suddenly, I'm not sure what I came out here to do. I turn around to go back to Estella's room and that's when I see her. No more than a few yards away, we're both still, watching each other, surprised - and yet, not - to have fallen into this same corridor together. I feel the balloon pop and suddenly, I'm being pulled back into my body. My thoughts regain their sharpness. Sounds, smells, colors - they all come into focus. I am living in high definition again.
"Olivia."
She walks slowly toward me and doesn't stop a few feet away like I think she will. She comes right into my arms, molding herself against me. I hold her, pressing my face into her hair. How does such a tiny fleck of a woman have so much power that I can be restored just by looking at her? I breathe her in; feel her under my fingertips. I know, I know, I know that I am the match and she is the gasoline and without each other we are just two objects void of reaction.
"You were in the room earlier?"
She nods.
"The nurse said that Estella's mother was here. I was looking for red hair … "
She nods again. "She assumed and I didn't correct her. Sam called Cammie, Cammie called me," she says. "I came right away." She touches my face, both hands on either cheek. "Let's go back in and sit with her."
I blow air through my nose trying to quell the overwhelming emotions, the relief that she's here, the fear for my daughter, and the anger at myself. I let her lead me back to Estella and we sit on either side of her, saying nothing.
Olivia stays with me for three days. She coaxes me into eating, brings me clothes and sits with Estella while I shower in the little bathroom attached to the room. In the days that she is there, I never ask why she came, or where her husband is. I leave out the questions and allow us to exist together in the worst few days of my life. Besides Leah, another person missing in action is my brother, Seth. Steve had mentioned that he was going on a deep-sea fishing trip the last time I spoke to him. I wonder if Claribel had managed to contact him and if he knew that our mother and stepfather were dead? Then, the strangeness of the situation hits me. Leah and Seth both missing at the same time, and how strangely my mother was behaving days before they were supposed to fly to London with my daughter. Had my mother known that Seth and Leah were together? I try not to think about it. What they do now is their business.
On day two, Olivia quietly reminds me that I have to make funeral arrangements for my parents. I'm on the phone with the funeral director late in the afternoon when Olivia walks in holding two cups of coffee. She refuses to drink hospital coffee and has been making the pilgrimage across the street to get Starbucks twice a day. I take the cup from her and she sits down opposite me. Albert - Trebla - the funeral director is asking questions, but I can't focus on what he's saying. Flowers, religious preferences, email notifications. It's all too much. When she sees me struggling with the decisions, she sets her coffee down and takes the phone from me. I hear her speak in the voice she reserves for the courtroom.
"Where are you located? Yes, I'll be there in forty minutes."
She is gone for three hours. When she gets back, she tells me that everything is taken care of. She is just in time to see Estella wake up. I've been looking at her eyelids for days, so I almost cry when I see the color in my daughter's irises. She whimpers and asks for her mommy. I kiss her nose and tell her that Mommy is on her way. Leah had trouble getting a flight out of Thailand. We've done nothing but fight over the phone. Last I spoke to her was a few hours ago, and she was in New York switching planes. She blames me, of course. I blame me too.
When the doctors and nurses leave the room, Estella falls asleep holding my hand. I am so grateful she didn't ask about her grandparents. Long after her fingers go limp, I'm still gripping her little hand, my heart beating a little easier.
Olivia is standing at the window watching the rain late in the day. She left earlier to go home and shower. I expected her to be gone for the night, but she came back two hours later, wearing jeans and a white tunic shirt, her hair still wet and smelling of flowers. I watch her silhouette and for the tenth time that day, am overtaken with the grief/regret cocktail I've been drunk on.
"This is my fault. I shouldn't have left. I shouldn't have made my parents bring my daughter halfway across the world to see me … " It's the first time I've said any of this out loud.
She looks startled, turning away from the window and glancing my way. She doesn't say anything right away. Just walks over and sits in her usual chair.
"The day I saw you in the music store it was raining too, do you remember?"
I nod. I remember everything about that day - the rain, the drops of water clinging to her hair, the way she smelled like gardenia when she furtively approached me.
"Dobson Scott Orchard was standing outside of the music store. He offered to walk me to my car with his umbrella. I don't know if I was one of the ones he watched, or if he decided on the spot, but I had a choice: high tail it out of there under his umbrella, or go inside and talk to you. It would seem that I made the right choice that day."
"My God, Olivia. Why didn't you tell me?"
"I've never told anyone," she shrugs, "but, that moment - that one, ever-changing moment - has made a profound impact on me. My entire life would have been different had I not walked toward you. The next time you would have seen me would have been on the news." She nods, staring at the floor, her little mouth pulled off to the side. When she continues, her voice is lower than before. "The sum of all the things we shouldn't have done in our lives is enough to kill us with the weight, Caleb Drake. Neither you, nor I, nor anyone else in this life could possibly know the chain reaction our decisions cause. If you're to blame, then so am I."
"How?"
"If I'd done what my heart said and said yes to you, you wouldn't have left for London. Luca and Steve would be alive and your daughter wouldn't be in the hospital in a medical-induced coma."
We are quiet for a few minutes as I think over her words. Everything she has said is frightening.
"So why did you take his case?"
She breathes deeply. I hear the air leave her in a great sigh.
"Brace yourself, this is going to sound really sick."
I mock grab the arms of my chair, and she snickers.
"I felt a connection to him. We were both dealing with our obsessions that day, Dobson and I." She makes her eyes wide when she says the last part. "We were both looking for someone. We were both so goddamn alone that we took a risk not to be. Are you disgusted with me?"
I smile and run my pinkie along Estella's. "No, Duchess. Your ability to see outside the box and mentally align yourself with the scum of the world is why I love you."
The minute the words are out of my mouth, I regret them. I glance at her face to catch her reaction, but there is none. Maybe she's used to me professing my love by now. Maybe, she didn't hear me. Maybe-
"I love you too."
I catch her eyes and hold them, my heart pounding.
"Well, isn't that beautiful. All the fucking inappropriate love."
Our heads spin toward the door as Leah strides into the room. She doesn't look at either of us as she walks past our chairs. She goes right to Estella. At least her priorities are right; I'll give her that. I hear her intake of breath when she sees Estella.
"Shit," she says. Both of her palms are pressed against her forehead, her fingers splayed out above them. If the situation weren't so dire, I would have laughed. She lowers herself to her haunches, says "shit" again, and then stands back up too quickly. She wobbles on her heels then steadies herself on the bed.
She spins toward me. "Has she woken up? Has she asked for me?"