Read Evidence of Mercy Online

Authors: Terri Blackstock

Tags: #ebook, #book

Evidence of Mercy (8 page)

Lynda brought her hands up to cover her face and sank back into her pillow. “Abby said his face was the least of his problems, but I didn't know. . . .”

“All things considered, Lynda, he's lucky to be alive.”

Lynda tried to take in a deep, cleansing breath and slid her hands down her face. “Yeah,” she whispered. “I guess we have to look at it that way. I just don't understand.”

“Understand what?”

“Why
I
wasn't hurt worse. My legs are fine. I only broke a couple of ribs and lost my spleen. He almost died, and it wasn't even his plane!”

“Lynda, stop beating yourself up. If you'd been hurt worse, do you think it would have taken away from his injuries?”

Sally didn't understand, Lynda thought dismally. Nobody could understand.

Sally seemed at a loss for anything else that would comfort her, so she opened Lynda's bag. “Well, anyway, I got you everything you wanted from home. If you need me to go back, I'll be happy to.”

“No,” she said, without even checking the bag's contents, “this should be enough. Thanks, Sally.”

Sally slapped her thighs. “No problem. I'll get in touch with Paige as soon as I can. And you call if you need me. Everything will be back to normal in no time, okay?”

“Yeah,” Lynda whispered, but as she watched Sally leave the room, she wasn't sure that normal would ever be good enough again.

J
ake wished he'd stayed asleep.

And frankly, he didn't know why he hadn't. What was the use in waking up, just so he could listen to the doctor tell him again of the gash that had maimed his face and destroyed one eye? And that was just the beginning.

“Tell me about my back and my legs, Doctor. Tell me why I can't move.”

Dr. Randall—a man in his mid-fifties who had more lines on his face than a street map of Tampa—leaned wearily over Jake's bed rail and seemed to consider his words carefully. This was going to be a tough one, Jake thought. When a doctor grew that thoughtful and hesitant about giving a prognosis, the most obvious question was, “How soon should I buy my burial plot?” But Jake feared the news might even be worse than death.

“You have lower lumbar compression, Jake, due to the impact of the crash, and that's led to a condition called spinal shock,” the doctor said carefully. “It's caused paralysis in your legs. You can count yourself fortunate, though. If the compression had been higher, you wouldn't have use of your arms, either.”

“So I'm supposed to breathe a sigh of relief because I'm a paraplegic and not a quadriplegic?”

The doctor accepted his cynicism with patience. “Let me finish, Jake. The paralysis could be temporary. You have a gash on your back, too, and a lot of swollen tissue. The steroids we're giving you are to keep the swelling down so it won't cause any more nerve damage. And until we get that swelling down, there's no way to tell how much of the damage is permanent.”

Jake fought the furious tears burning his eyes. “Bottom line, Doc. Am I ever gonna walk again or not?”

Dr. Randall rubbed his eyes, leaving them red. “We can't know that for several days. Maybe longer.”

“But what do you
think
?”

The truth seemed to take more out of the doctor than he had to give. “I don't know, Jake. We've been successful with a drug that we think regenerates the nerve cells, and we've started you on it today, in your IV. It all depends on the extent of the nerve damage. We just have to be patient and hope for the best. Meanwhile, you'll start working with the physical therapist and occupational therapist this morning to keep your joints and muscles working.”

“I can't move,” Jake scoffed. “How can I work my muscles or joints?”

“They'll do it for you. But Jake. . . .” He touched Jake's arm, forcing him to look up at him. “As hard as your therapy is going to be, you have to cooperate. Those therapists are going to get you functioning as well as possible, but you have to work really hard. Harder than you've ever worked before.”

“I don't want to work at being a functional invalid,” Jake countered. “I'd rather just give it all up.”

“Well, that's not one of your choices,” Dr. Randall said, still kindly. “You flat-lined in the ambulance, but the paramedics brought you back. And later, when the worst part of this is behind you, you're going to be glad they did.”

“They should have let me die,” he said through dry, cracked lips. “I don't want to be here. I don't want to do this.”

“No one ever does, Jake,” the doctor told him. “But you're going to.”

“What about
her
?” he asked. “The plane's owner. Did she make it?”

“Yes, she survived,” Randall assured him.

“Is she paralyzed, too?”

The doctor seemed to know where this was going. “No. She broke some ribs, damaged her spleen, but she was lucky.”

Jake's face reddened. “Terrific,” he bit out. “And I'm lying flat on my back.” Gritting his teeth, he slammed his fist on the bed. “It wasn't even my plane!”

“There'll be anger, Jake,” the doctor said. “But you'll get through it. You'll need support. Call all of your family and friends to rally around you. Don't underestimate how much they can help.”

Jake didn't respond, for the tears were blurring the one eye he had left, constricting his throat, making him so angry he could have killed someone if he'd just had a weapon.

Family, he scoffed bitterly. Friends.

Didn't the doctor realize that he didn't want anyone to see him like this?

Dr. Randall left him then with the monitors and machines humming in his room, with the IV dripping through a tube in his arm, with the nasogastric tube in his nose draining the bile that kept rising.

Who would have believed it when he'd gotten up yesterday morning, all enthusiasm and hope?

He wished he'd never decided to buy a plane of his own; he wished he'd never picked up the aviation magazine that had advertised the Piper in its classified ads; he wished he'd never met Lynda Barrett.

It seemed like a year ago that he came bouncing down the steps of the Biltmore, introducing himself to the blonde—now he couldn't even remember her room number—and riding off in his Porsche. He wondered whether anyone had contacted the manager of the Biltmore to get his stuff or called the moving company about storing his furniture. Was anyone watching his car?

But who? It wasn't as if he had anyone here he could call. He was new in town and completely alone. Flat on his back or not, he was on his own.

The thought sent rage spiraling up inside him, anger that he didn't know how to direct. Why had this happened to him? Why not her?
She
was the one who'd taken
him
up in a busted plane.

As if in answer to his thoughts, the nurse who'd been hovering over him all morning came to his door. “Jake, is it all right if Lynda Barrett visits you for just a minute? If you're not up to it, I'll send her away.”

Jake looked at the door with his remaining good eye, welcoming the opportunity to feed his anger. “Yeah,” he said bitterly. “Send her in. She might as well get a good look.”

The nurse hesitated a moment, then disappeared. In a few moments, she was back, wheeling Lynda in a wheelchair. He gave her a once-over—she was stitched and bruised, too, but both eyes were intact, and her legs, crossed at the ankles, looked as healthy as his had looked yesterday.

“Hi, Jake,” she whispered almost timidly. “How do you feel?”

He looked at the ceiling. “How do you think I feel?”

She took that gracefully. “Probably pretty bad.” She watched as the nurse stepped out of the room to give them some privacy, then wheeled herself closer to the bed. “Jake, I'm so sorry.”

“Not as sorry as I am.”

She swept her eyes down his body, and they lingered on his legs. “We didn't know if you'd make it. I prayed all night that you would.”

“What for? So I could lie here like a vegetable for the rest of my life?”

“I know how you must feel—”

“Do you?” he asked with exaggerated surprise. “Do you really? Tell me how you know how I feel, Lynda. Have you ever been paralyzed? Have you ever had the sight cut out of your eye? Have you had your face maimed beyond recognition? How do you know how I feel?”

She only gaped at him for a moment, and her fragile expression crumbled. “Okay, I don't know. But you survived, Jake. Just like I did. We both could have died in that crash, but we didn't.”

He turned his head to look at her now. “Are you kidding me? I'm supposed to be happy that I'm useless as a human being instead of dead?” Disgusted, he looked at the ceiling again. “Why did you come in here anyway? What do you want?”

For a moment, she couldn't speak. “Just . . . I just wanted to see if you were all right.”

“Well, I'm not. Satisfied?”

It was clear that she hadn't expected this reaction from him, and he wondered if she'd expected them to bond from the trauma. Were they supposed to be best friends now and compare notes on what they remembered of the crash and eat lunch together and play cards? Didn't she realize that the very sight of her made him lament the day he'd laid eyes on her?

She covered her mouth and started to cry. “I guess I shouldn't have come. I'll go now.”

“Yeah,” he said. “You need to nurse those poor cracked ribs. I'd call the nurse, but I can't move.”

At that, Lynda sprang to her feet. He watched her reach unsteadily for the rail, and with a look of furious determination made softer by the tears on her face, she grabbed the remote control with the nurse's call button from his bed table and thrust it into his hand. “That's one less thing you can feel sorry for yourself about,” she said. Then, grabbing the handles of her chair, she walked carefully out of the room, pushing it in front of her.

Jake watched her go, his bitter anger at her for surviving intact fading as his indignation at her attitude grew.

A
bby, the nurse who had found Lynda in Jake's room the night before, came upon her again, sitting in her wheelchair in the hall of ICU, weeping bitterly into her hands. Stooping in front of her, Abby tried to raise her face.

“Are you all right, child?”

Sucking back her sobs, Lynda looked up at her. “Jake just said some things—”

“He's hurtin', darlin'. Don't put any stock in what he says. When people hurt, they say all sorts of things.”

But her assurance didn't help. This was bigger than words. “You want me to push you back to your room, honey?”

Lynda couldn't answer. “I went there to comfort him, and he just made me so mad—” She broke off and covered her face again. “I told him he felt sorry for himself. How could I
say
that?”

“You're human,” Abby said. “Girl, I've been spit on, slapped, kicked, cursed, screamed at, puked on—and as much as I pride myself on keeping my cool, I have been known to say some nasty things, just because I'm human. You aren't even getting paid for listening to it. You can't expect to grit your teeth and smile through it. That takes something bigger than either one of us.”

Reaching into her pocket, she pulled out a tissue, and Lynda wiped her eyes.

“You know where I go when I can't take much more, and I feel that old dark side of Abby taking over?”

“Where?”

“The chapel. It's on this floor. I'll take you there if you want me to, child. Maybe you'll find some peace there.”

Lynda nodded. “Yes, that's where I need to go.”

“Fine.” Abby got to her feet and pushed her out of the ICU doors. “When I get off tonight, how ‘bout I come by your room and wash your hair? I'll bet you're a pretty brunette when you don't look like you've lost a fight with a grizzly.”

Lynda managed to smile under the tissue. “That would be great. I have trouble lifting my arms.”

They reached the double doors to the small chapel, and Abby pushed her inside. The room was dimly lit with candles at the corners of the altar, and it was only big enough for three small pews on either side of the wide aisle.

Abby rolled her to the front and then in a more reverent voice, said, “There's a phone here at the back, honey. You call me when you're ready—extension 214—and I'll have someone come get you.”

“Thank you,” Lynda whispered.

Abby smiled, then closed the doors on her way out.

Lynda sat still for a moment, staring at the cross behind the small lectern and then behind that, at the stained glass window. A white dove was etched into the glass, flying down to the shoulder of a silhouette kneeling in a pool of water.

This is my son, in whom I am well pleased
. God's words echoed through her mind, their very praise an indictment of her own actions.

Tears stung her eyes, and she sat before the altar, wishing to be judged, ready to be condemned. “I don't know what to say to him,” she confessed aloud. “I don't even know what to say to you.”

It had been too long since she'd had a serious heart-to-heart with God, too long since she'd sat in his presence. Now she felt her inadequacy like a verdict.

Awkwardly, she tried to thank him for her survival, but Jake's injuries limited her gratitude. And then she thought of the plane she had loved so much, destroyed in a matter of minutes, leaving her to face the solitude of her life without it.

As her own thoughts condemned her, she looked up to the window again.

. . .
in whom I am well pleased
. . .

It was from the New Testament, she thought quickly, but she couldn't remember where. It had been too long since she'd read her Bible, and now she wasn't even sure where she'd put it.

But she didn't have to recall the reference to know what it meant to her.

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