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Wanting What She Can't Have(21)

By:Yvonne Lindsay


Contrition stung at the back of his mind as he saw Alexis accept the news. The frown on her forehead deepened.

"Okay, I'll just work around her, then," she said flatly.

"Can you change your appointment? What is it, anyway?"

She looked at him and for a moment he thought she looked scared. The  urge to protect her from whatever the problem was filled him but was  beaten back by the self-reproach he felt at not being willing to take  Ruby for her.                       
       
           



       

She gave him a shaky smile, one that didn't quite reach her eyes. "No,  don't worry, it's nothing important. I'll work something out. Are you  heading down to the winery office now?"

"I'll be in my study here for a short while, then I'll go down to the winery."

She gave a little sigh. "I'll see you later on today, then."

"Yeah, sure. I should be all done by three."

He left the kitchen and started down the hall but his steps slowed  before he reached the study. Something wasn't right. Alexis hadn't been  herself for days now. Possibly even a couple of weeks. At least since  the day she'd been to see Catherine with Ruby. He cast his mind back.  She'd been worried then about something Catherine had said. Obviously it  was still playing on her. He made a mental note to pursue it with her  this afternoon.

From his study window he saw Alexis leave the house about a half hour  later. She put Ruby in her car seat in the back of the car and buckled  her in, just as she always did. Something wasn't right, though. Alexis  moved more slowly than usual, more carefully. He continued watching as  she went around the back of the car and put the diaper bag in the trunk  before walking around to the driver's door.

Something definitely wasn't right. She leaned against the car, her hand to her stomach, then her legs collapsed beneath her.

He was out of his chair and flying toward the front door before he saw  her hit the driveway. She was already stirring when he reached her side.

"Are you all right? What happened?" he demanded, his eyes roaming her pale features as her eyelids fluttered open.

"I need to see the doctor, Raoul. Can you take me, please?"

"I'll call an ambulance."

He had his cell phone out in his hand, his thumb already poised over  the emergency call button. A wave of sick fear swamped him, making his  hand shake, along with an awful sense of déjà vu. The last time he'd  felt this scared, this totally helpless, was when Bree had gone into  labor with Ruby.

Alexis's hand closed over his. "No, the medical center in town. They're  expecting me-it's the appointment I told you about. Please, just take  me there."

"Are you sure?"

"Please, let's just go."

He helped her up to her feet and shepherded her into the back of the car, with Ruby who was now beginning to fret.

"Not now, Ruby," he said sternly as he helped Alexis with her safety belt. "I need you to be good for me."

To his surprise, the baby stopped and popped her thumb in her mouth.  Her big blue eyes stared straight at him. A tickle of relief that he  wouldn't have to deal with a crying baby on top of his concern for  Alexis flickered on the periphery of his mind.

"That's a good girl," he said absently before giving his sole attention to Alexis again. "Are you comfortable?"

"Enough for now," she answered weakly. "Can we go?"

He closed her door and then got into the driver's seat, adjusting the  rearview mirror so he could keep an eye on her in back. Her face was  still pale and her big brown eyes met his in the mirror. She looked  frightened and identifying that look on her constantly cheerful and  indomitable face terrified him.

The drive to the clinic was short and Alexis was already struggling out  of her seat even as he flew out of his to come and assist her. She  waved him away.

"Let me go, I'll be all right getting in there. Just see to Ruby."

"She can wait, she's safe where she is for now. Let me see you insi-"

"No, Raoul!" Alexis's voice was sharp. "You can't just leave her in the car. I can manage for now."

Without waiting for him to reply she began walking slowly toward the  entrance, disappearing between the front sliding doors as he fiddled  with the baby car-seat buckle-cursing its efficacy until he had it  loose-and lifted Ruby from her restraint. He ran with her to the  building and straight to reception.

"Alexis Fabrini, where is she?" he demanded when he reached the counter.

The receptionist stared at him over the edge of her glasses. "And you are?"                       
       
           



       

"Raoul Benoit," he replied automatically.

"Are you her next of kin?"

Inwardly he groaned. He could see where this was going. They weren't  going to let him see her, or tell him anything. "No, I'm not. I'm her  employer. She has no family locally."

"Then I'll ask you to wait over there," the receptionist said firmly,  gesturing to the bank of chairs lined up in the waiting area.

"I'd like to see her, be with her-"

"She's with the medical staff. I'm sure they'll call you if necessary,"  the woman placated. "There's nothing you can do right now but be  patient."

There was a sympathetic look in her eyes as if she understood his  frustration, but he didn't want her sympathy. He wanted Alexis. He  wanted her well, not pale and trembling. Not sliding unconscious down  the side of her car. That she hadn't hit her head when she'd fallen was  sheer luck, but why had she passed out in the first place? She must have  known something was wrong to have made the appointment in the first  place-had she expected this to happen? And, if she'd had a medical  appointment today, why hadn't she just been upfront and told him about  it? They were lovers. They'd shared more with one another than most  people. Knew each other intimately.

But sitting here, confused and worried, he was struck with how little  he truly knew. He didn't know that she was unwell, or what she thought  was wrong. Didn't know how long she'd been worried about whatever it  was, or why she hadn't told him. And the more he thought about it, the  more he realized how little of her thoughts she really shared with him.  What were her hopes, her dreams for the future? Had he ever bothered to  find out what they were? Had he ever taken the time to learn about her?  What made her happiest, what made her sad? He knew for a fact that he  made her angry with his reluctance to be a part of Ruby's life.

Ruby squirmed in his arms, wanting to be let down to play with a toy in  the waiting area. He eyed it suspiciously. The wooden base looked clean  enough but who was to say the roller coaster of colorful wooden beads  was hygienic? Who knew what she'd catch if she played with it?

"I don't think so," he murmured to the little girl, holding her firmly on his lap.

Ruby squawked a protest.

"It's okay," the receptionist said blandly from behind her desk. "I  disinfected all the toys at the end of clinic last night. She'll be  fine."

Raoul still felt uncomfortable with the idea, but he nodded his  acknowledgment and gingerly set Ruby on her feet. He followed her to the  toy and sat on a chair beside it as the little girl squatted down and  reached for the beads, picking them up and dropping them on the brightly  colored wires that threaded through them.

"Here," Raoul said, getting down to her level. "I think you're supposed to do this."

He demonstrated with one bead, guiding it along a wire as Ruby watched.  But she was having none of it. She quite happily continued to do what  she was doing. With a sigh, Raoul sat back on his chair, his eyes  flicking every now and then to the corridor where he assumed Alexis had  been taken. The waiting was interminable-the minutes stretching out to  ten, twenty, thirty, then forty. The long wait was getting to Ruby also,  it seemed, as she worked her way from interest in the bead roller  coaster to every other toy in the waiting room. Finally, she brought a  book to Raoul, making it clear what she wanted him to do.

"Not now, Ruby. You read the book," he stated, but the baby continued to vocalize her demand.

Mindful of the risk of her cries disturbing the other people that were  now coming into the waiting room, he lifted her onto his lap where, to  his surprise, she settled quite happily and banged her hand on the book.  He opened the cover and started to quietly read. When that book was  done she squirmed back down and got another. And so passed the next  painfully slow ten minutes until Ruby began to fidget and fuss again.  Feeling at a total loss, he stood up with her and started to walk back  and forward, rubbing her gently on her back as he'd seen Alexis do so  many times before. But it seemed he didn't have quite the knack he  needed.