Well, quite honestly, I have no plans for a new project at this moment. I have another story that needs finishing and then we will see what kind of muse rears its head. But I HAVE duly noted that many of you are interested in the Richie/Denny story. Others don't seem to care about the female lead as long as Richie is involved. I have also duly noted that you don't want this to be the last of Tony & Lilah. If there's anything else you would like to suggest, you know where the comment box, my inbox and my Twitter account are. :o)
To those of you who said it doesn't matter WHO I write,because you'll still read it: that's greatest compliment you could ever pay me, so thank you from the bottom of my heart.
I'll let you know when something new comes along. Until then, if you aren't already reading it, please feel free to check out After the Rain.
Suckerpoodles to everyone!
♥blush
A little off the beaten path, this Bon Jovi fan fiction features a lesser known Bongiovi - Tony. As always, no disrespect is intended to anyone affiliated with Bon Jovi or any of their family members. All content in this blog is a work of complete fiction.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Saturday, May 25, 2013
Epilogue
Christmas
2012
(Sixteen
Months Later)
“I love you.”
Lilah craned her neck to smile up at him and leaned into
the strong arm encircling her waist.
Those three words thrilled her today just as much as they did the first
time she heard them, well over a year ago.
To her never-ending delight, not a day went by that he didn’t say them,
and not a moment went by that, if she was within arm’s reach, he wasn’t
touching her in some way, shape or form.
When Tony Bongiovi gave his heart, he gave it all and Lilah
considered herself exceptionally blessed to be on the receiving end.
“I love you, too.”
Not that it had been an idyllic journey from that
hospital emergency room to where they stood now, in the home of Tony’s
parents. For every light on the elegantly
decorated Christmas tree in the Bongiovi living room, there had been a problem
to resolve, a decision to make or a compromise to negotiate. Some were easier than others, but they all
shared a common thread of love, respect and honesty.
As any couple developing a relationship, there were some
basic hurdles to jump, starting with family.
In Lilah’s case that really meant Joanna and Andrew, because her parents
weren’t really involved in her daily life, and her extended family tended to go
with the flow.
When her son met Tony for the first time, he stepped up
to shake the older man’s hand with his jaw firmly squared and not a drop of
fear in his eyes. “I don’t care about your bank account or how many celebrities
you know. You hurt my mother and I will
make sure that pain is reciprocated.
Exponentially.”
Lilah had held her breath, almost worried that he would
laugh in the teenager’s face, but Tony nodded respectfully and without a trace of
humor. “That’s exactly what I’d expect, but you don't have to worry about it. On my word."
And just like that, the two most important men in her
life came to a mutual understanding that created a foundation on which they
could bond. They respected one
another. She couldn’t have asked for
anything more.
As for the other side of that family coin, Tony’s parents
were warm and welcoming. So were
Dorothea, her children, and Matt and his family. Jon, however…
“Did you make those cookies I like?” the man in question
asked, turning sideways to slip from the living room to the kitchen before his
wife caught him making his third trip since the end of dinner. Typically stringent about what he ate, he was
using the holiday as an excuse to indulge.
“The cinnamon ones?”
“Snickerdoodles,” Lilah patiently supplied for probably the
dozenth time. It turned out that he had a
vicious sweet tooth for cookies, and it had been love at first bite with her
snickerdoodles. He just couldn't – or had no desire to – remember what
they were called. “And of course I
did. They’re in the bowl with the red
lid.”
She and Jon had come to an understanding very similar to
that of Tony and Andrew. They both loved
Tony enough to find some common ground, and that ground held her promise not to
hurt his brother. Thus, the seed of
their own mutual respect had been planted and continued to grow. More and more, they’d even been known to chat
just because they wanted to, not because the social setting or family mandated
it.
“You’re an angel and the devil all rolled into one,” he
murmured with a playful wink.
Lilah chuckled softly, one side of her mouth creeping
into a fond smile. “Have to keep you on
your toes.”
“You saved me some, didn’t you?” Tony’s breath tickled
her ear with his conspiratorial whisper.
“And some of Joanna’s fudge?”
She poked an easy finger into the slight mound of his
belly, the facets of her antique ring set glittering up at her when she twisted
her wrist to deliver an extra dig. “You
know I did.”
It had taken a while - several weeks, in fact - but he and her best friend had
found their way as well. Once they realized the full extent of each other’s love for Lilah,
they’d forged their own kind of friendship with Jo’s Million Dollar Fudge doing
its fair share of the forging.
Their friendship was significant enough for Tony to
enlist Jo’s expertise in executing a ‘surprise’ wedding last Christmas Eve.
When he off-handedly broached the possibility of marriage
after Labor Day, Lilah had told him that she didn’t see the need. They were back and forth between L.A. and
Lexington, not always together, but it was okay. He loved her, she loved him and she couldn’t
possibly be any more content.
He was content with that for a while, but started ‘casually’
mentioning marriage more and more often. His argument was that theirs was the most significant
relationship he’d ever had and he really wanted them to
validate the significance with rings.
That had been
fine with Lilah. She had no problem with
commitment rings; it was the pain in the neck and practicalities of a wedding
that turned her off. City Hall felt
cheap and tacky, but a traditional ceremony was complicated at their age and with their scattered family. Weddings were a dog and pony show for the
rest of the world and best left to the young and starry-eyed, in her opinion.
So they had chosen a beautiful antique gold and diamond
wedding set for Lilah and a thick gold band for him. Exchanging private vows of love and fidelity
had made it ‘real’ enough for her.
Or so she thought.
Until the first time someone referred to Tony as her husband. Given the rings, it was entirely logical that
the guy changing the oil in her Camaro might ask if the car was hers or her
husband’s. The man was probably wishing
his wife had such good taste in cars, for Pete’s sake, but it started to dig at
Lilah.
Not that she ever told Tony that. She continued to assure him she was perfectly
content with the status quo, because she knew that piece of paper would only
legalize what was in their hearts. That
piece of paper hadn’t done her a damn bit of good before, why should it make
any difference now?
But he knew her.
And he knew that her eyes lingered on the life-sized wedding photos in
the window of the mall’s bridal store, even though her only comment was that she’d
never seen him all dressed up. Seeing as
he wanted the same thing and that her best friend was a bridal consultant, Tony
took all the work out of her hands.
On Christmas Eve last year, Lilah primped and prettied
herself – wearing her hair up in a loose Gibson-girl style at Tony’s request –
for a formal party at Joanna’s house. He,
dressed in a black suit and banded-collar tuxedo shirt, had ushered her into the
black Camaro for their short trip.
Only they didn’t go to Joanna’s house.
They went to Castle Post, Lexington’s very own medieval castle
which acted as a hotel and event locale for the well-to-do. When she asked what they were doing there,
Tony’s response had been, “I want you to be my wife in every sense of the
word. You didn’t want the headache of
planning, so I tried to be the white knight you once called me and rescue you
from that. Joanna orchestrated the whole
thing. Our friends and family are inside
and Jo has a dress waiting for you – the one you’ve been ogling at her
shop. So whaddaya say, Bluegrass? Will you marry me?”
Needless to say, she accepted with tearful eyes and a
joyous heart. After all, she was a girl underneath all that
practicality.
It turned out to be good timing, seeing as…
“Anthony.” His
mother’s voice captured his attention from behind and Tony turned with a smile.
On her hip was a beautiful baby girl crowned with a downy fuzz of dark
hair. She was impatiently tugging at the
hair bow that matched her little plaid pants and red shirt.
“Yeah, Mom?”
“I changed her diaper, but now she wants Daddy.” Laughing, she tightened her grip around the
little girl’s waist when she threw the full weight of her body toward Tony,
pudgy little arms waving in the air.
“Don’t you sweet girl?”
An eerie chill of déjà vu crept down Tony’s spine as he
released Lilah and stepped forward to claim his daughter.
This was the recurring dream from last summer. The baby his subconscious had recognized as
being less than a year old was actually six-month-old Micah Jane Bongiovi, who
had been graced with her mommy’s middle name and a modified version of her
daddy’s middle name.
She was the best part of both of them, in Tony’s
prejudiced opinion.
“Hello, my pretty angel,” he cooed to the infant that had
him wrapped around her chubby little finger.
“Did you wake up from your nap happy?
Are you Daddy’s happy napper?”
“Hey, squirt,” Jon greeted the child with a gentle chuck
under her chin. “You look more like your
mama every day. Thank God.”
“Don’t give her that!”
Tony smacked away the few cookie crumbs that his brother was ready to
pop into Micah’s mouth. “She’s too
little for cookies.”
Much to his annoyance, Jon only snorted with ridicule. “Lighten up, Papa Bear. It ain’t gonna kill her. Wait ‘til you have four of ‘em. As long as they aren’t juggling knives or
killing each other, you won’t care what they do.”
Tony’s eyes immediately connected with his wife’s and
found a vivid question mark painted in their depths. He parked the baby on his left hip,
automatically doing that bouncy thing she liked and her gleeful babble made him smile.
“You want to tell him, or should I?” Lilah questioned softly.
“I got it.
Actually…” He turned so that he
was able to address his entire family at one time. Lilah had told her family yesterday when they
celebrated Christmas Eve with them. It
was only right that he be the one to tell his family – particularly Jon. “If you guys wanna listen up just a second,
Lilah and I have some news to share.”
Adults interrupted their conversations and shushed the
kids until everyone had obediently directed their attention his way. With Micah on one hip and, tucking Lilah into
the other, he nodded his appreciation.
“You know that we’ve been bouncing back and forth between
Lexington and L.A. for a while now.
Lilah isn’t crazy about California and Kentucky isn’t the best base for
me, from a business standpoint, so we’ve had to come up with a compromise.”
Lilah’s arm curled more tightly around his waist in a
display of her unwavering support and he reciprocated without conscious thought. This decision hadn’t been an easy one, but
with their commitment to ‘no bullshit’, respect and a whole lot of love, they’d
come up with what they believed to be the best middle ground for their
family.
“The first of February, we’re moving to Jersey. We bought a nice six bedroom in Edison.”
There was a murmuring of happy surprise, especially from
Romeo, Jake and Rocco, who were thrilled that Uncle Tony would be that much closer
now.
“Isn’t that an awful lot of bedrooms for the three of
you?” his dad asked curiously.
“Well… Yeah, it
probably seems like it.” He couldn’t
keep the smile from twitching at the corners of his lips. “Andrew loves L.A. and his music career is looking promising, but we’re going to keep a bedroom for him just in case, and Lilah wants a couple of guest
rooms. Then our bedroom, one for Micah
and the last one will be the nursery.
For the new baby.”
The smile he’d been trying to contain broke free when Lilah
buried her cheek into his chest. Her own
grin was lighting up her face. She’d
been so damn excited to realize she missed her period a couple of weeks
ago.
Right after they realized she was pregnant with Micah, Lilah confessed something that she’d been hiding from him for some time. Apparently, she’d wanted to get pregnant as far back as Europe, but had been afraid to bring up the subject to him.
In hindsight, it was probably best that she hadn’t, because it would have freaked him right-the-fuck out. Now, though, it was simply one more example of his wife’s sweetness. She wanted him to have a child and wanted to be the one to give it to him.
In hindsight, it was probably best that she hadn’t, because it would have freaked him right-the-fuck out. Now, though, it was simply one more example of his wife’s sweetness. She wanted him to have a child and wanted to be the one to give it to him.
As far as he was concerned, from the instant he realized
they’d lost a baby, Tony had known
there could be no other woman to carry his babies. If she was physically unable to, then he would simply be
the best uncle and step-father he knew how to be.
But he was glad it hadn’t come to that. Not only did they have Micah, now they would
have a second little Jersey-Bluegrass.
“Congratulations, man,” Jon applauded him with a hearty
pat on the back, prompting a startled cry from the baby. “I think that’s great. There’s nothing in the world like having
kids.”
“Yeah, well, you might not be so happy about it when you
hear the last bit of news.”
“Oh?”
Jiggling his daughter’s fussiness away, he apologetically
met Jon’s eyes. “I’m not going on tour
with you this time. I want to stay home
with my wife and kids, so I’m changing jobs.
Bongiovi Brand pasta sauce is going to be my career now.”
“You’re up and leaving me?” Jon’s mouth flattened into a tight line and cool
blue eyes went narrow when he flipped his gaze to Lilah. “I knew you were trouble the minute I saw
you.”
Her shoulders tensed up like concrete along with her jaw,
and her spine went ramrod straight.
Giving his wife a look that said he would take care of this, Tony opened
his mouth to ream his brother a new one at the same time Jon’s mouth melted
into a wide grin.
“It’s a damn good thing you can bake. I’m gonna need a lotta suckerpoodles to make
up for this. I’m talkin’ a LOT.”
Everyone in the room burst into a riot of assorted
laughter and the love of Tony’s life assured Jon, “You’ll have all the
suckerpoodles you can handle and then some.
I promise.”
And they lived…
Happily Ever After
Friday, May 24, 2013
75 - You Want to Know Why?
Tony stood out on the front ‘porch’, smoking a cigarette
and staring up at the half-full moon.
The smell of honeysuckle mixed with the humid night air, reminding him
of someplace far deeper South than Kentucky.
It also was the first time he’d made the connection between the fragrant
flower and the scent that Lilah carried.
Her hair still held a sweet honeysuckle scent, despite her claims that she
stank of antiseptic and old people.
Right now, she should be fast asleep. At her insistence, they’d eaten their impromptu dinner at the
maple dinette on the kitchen end of the open living and dining area,
sporadically chatting as though nothing were out of the norm. He was glad to hear of Richie’s offer to
Andrew and silently hoped the kid was good enough to make his dreams come true.
Lilah ate about half of her food before claiming
exhaustion, prompting Tony to send her toddling off to bed in her bare feet and
wildly polka-dotted pajamas. The woman
loved color and bling. Her living
quarters were a testament to that.
Nothing was tacky.
Far from it, in fact.
The candy-apple red walls in the kitchen complemented her
apple tablecloth and kitchen accessories.
The slightly darker shade of red in the living area was the perfect
accent for the Americana wallpaper border and the handful of knickknacks
scattered amongst the blue denim and maple furniture.
The exception might be that damn bedroom of hers
though. He shook his head with a chuckle
and flicked ashes over the railing.
The walls were bright orange with the bottom half
covered in lime green, hot pink and purple circles of various sizes. The comforter was lime green and the
sheets were purple. There was even a
small chandelier as her shot of sparkle.
It was a twelve-year-old girl’s dream room, but he had no idea how she
slept with all the bright colors.
It was partially reason he gave himself for committing to sleep
on the overstuffed couch. That, and her
need to rest. She wouldn’t get any if he
couldn’t keep his hands to himself, succumbing to the desire to touch the silky
softness of her skin and wrap his arms around her. HE might get the first good night’s sleep in
three weeks, but he wasn’t the one whose body had been traumatized today.
Stubbing out the cigarette butt, he exhaled the last puff
and checked his watch. Almost one in the
morning. Seeing as he’d started his day
at about eight, he wasn’t doing too bad, but it was still time to
get some sleep.
As soon as he checked on Lilah.
✧✧✧
“You’re beautiful,”
Tony said, pressing a sweet kiss to the center of her forehead, and bending to
share a similar kiss with the infant swaddled in her arms. “And so is our baby girl. Thank you for giving me everything I ever
wanted.”
“I love you,
Jersey, and I’d do anything to make you happy.”
Lilah tucked the
little girl into the crook of her left arm, and picked up a glass from the
nearby table. Protruding from the top of
the glass was a pink paper umbrella.
When she tilted it to her lips for a sip, the rum was so strong that it
burned from the back of her tongue to the pit of her stomach.
Draining the potent
drink in one healthy swallow, she replaced the glass on the table just as the
baby started coughing. Lilah’s heart
raced as the sweet bundle went from rosy cheeked to blue lipped as she choked
on some unknown object.
“Jesus Christ,
Lilah, can’t you do any-fucking-thing right?
Babies can’t tolerate all that booze!
You’re going to kill her!”
Her eyes flew wide open and a sucking gasp left her lungs
splintering with pain.
It was her fault.
It was her fault their baby was dead before it ever drew
its first breath. She hadn’t known she
was pregnant and… that last night in
Europe… all those damn umbrella
drinks…. Then just last week she’d been
drinking again.
Tears puddled in her eyes and trekked toward the pillow,
streaking across the bridge of her nose as she pulled herself into a fetal
position.
Pain was something she was familiar with in all of its
varied forms. Oddly enough, physical
pain was the easiest to bear. Physical
pain was just something to get through.
It would go away.
Emotional pain, though was… excruciating in its capacity
to linger, crippling a person in ways that were abysmally cruel. Lies would build on truths, twisting them
into an altered reality that was larger than life.
And hadn’t she had her fair share already? When was enough enough?
Finding out that Walter had been running around on her
was like a sharp ice pick stab to the heart.
Burying Amos and coping with the ensuing humiliation was like having the
blood squeezed from her heart with an old-fashioned wringer. Tony’s look of terror at her profession of
love was more like a brief arrhythmia, but it was still painful.
Men were just hard-wired to mess with a woman’s
heart. That’s what they did, whether
they meant to or not. You got over it
and got on with your life.
But an innocent baby who relied on Mama for its ability
to live…? A baby who was its daddy’s
only child… Lilah and Tony’s baby… dead
before it ever really lived.
That shattered her heart into a billion irreparable
slivers.
Her shoulders heaved on a strangled sob and she turned
her face into the pillow, allowing it to serve as a vacuum for the sorrow that
had finally found its way to the surface.
She’d lost a baby.
A tiny, defenseless baby that might’ve looked just like his handsome
daddy. A precious little being that
could have had her father’s smile. Even
more tragic to her was that this baby was the one thing she wanted to give
Tony, but she’d felt too stupid to tell him that.
That’s why you lost
it, Lilah Jane. You didn’t have the moxy
to step up and put it all on the line.
You didn’t claim it, so Mother Nature stepped in to teach you a lesson.
“Bluegrass? Are
you in pain?”
A warm, heavy hand cupped over her shoulder and Lilah
cursed both her weakness and his presence.
Tony didn’t need this. This was
Lilah’s baggage, and her pain was her own problem.
“I’m… I’m okay,” she mumbled, pushing her face further
into the pillow and using it to inconspicuously wipe away the tears.
“No you’re not.”
The room went from a dark cocoon to blinding brightness with a
flick of the bedside lamp, and he edged his hip onto the mattress beside hers,
peering down at her with concern. “Do you need to go back to the hospital?”
“No.” She shook
her head and straightened out her legs, making room for him to sit. While she was outwardly opening her body by unfurling herself, she deliberately closed her eyes, unable to look him in the face. Not after she’d killed his baby. “I’m fine, really.”
The tender way he brushed errant strands of hair from her forehead
was in direct contrast with the angry growl that filled her ears. “You can’t lie worth a damn on
a good day, and today isn’t a good day.”
Hot teardrops stole out of her sealed lids, scorching
misty paths down her face. There was a
solid lump of agony sitting in her chest and it knocked against angrily against
the confinement of her ribcage.
No, it wasn’t a good day.
“Bluegrass,” Tony sighed, using a hand to nudge her into
the middle of the queen-sized bed. While
she was still ensconced under the covers, he stretched out on top of them,
aligning their bodies from chest to ankle.
One strong arm draped over her torso and held tight as he shared her
pillow, bringing them nose-to-nose.
“Everything’s okay, baby.”
His soft assurance, along with the sweet kiss he touched
to her temple, destroyed the remaining shell of pride that kept her insecurities
and shame hidden from the world. He’d
always known just how to get past her defenses and, this time, she was glad for
it. She craved the forgotten familiarity
of his touch and shamelessly claimed it for a safe haven as she dissolved into
puddle of grief.
“No it’s… not,” Lilah forced through lungs that wouldn’t
hold air after she’d drenched the front of his shirt with her blubbering. “I
killed…” An anguished cry stuck in her already-clogged
throat, and she had to whisper so that she could get out the rest of her
confession. “…a baby. I d-drank too much... I… did t-too much. I di-didn’t do… enough. Tony, I-I’m so… sorry. So… so sorrr-ry…”
“Stop it.” His growl ruffled the top of her hair and he
gave her an angry shake. “You can’t
blame yourself. Sometimes things just
happen, and this was one of those times.
There’s nothing you could have done to change it.”
“But I should have known!”
she bawled piteously, shaking from head to toe as she stretched out his shirt
by balling it into her clutching fists. Her
grieving soul ached until she thought she might die from the distress. “I should have known our baby was living
inside of me! Why didn’t I know?”
“But you didn’t
know! You didn’t know and, even if you
had, there’s nothing you could have done about it. It wasn’t meant to be.”
That was another sharp tap of the hammer to Lilah’s brittle
mental state.
If that wasn’t
meant to be, then you aren’t meant
to be and we aren’t meant to
be. Fate played a fucking cruel joke on
me! I swear I think I would’ve rather
never found my will to live than go through this.
His grip intensified until it bordered on painful, but
the physical discomfort was preferable to the emotional. It was a tangible distraction and, along with his next tersely uttered tirade, it
was enough to haul her from the mire of smothering self-pity.
“Lilah, you can’t do this, dammit! How would you feel if I said it was my fault?” Outright frustrated with her
self-recrimination and dying a little inside at her obvious suffering, he shook
his head with exasperation. “I didn’t
call, I didn’t text, I didn’t even fucking respond when you said you loved
me. Maybe that stressed you out and
killed the baby. Did you ever think of
that?”
Tony had no idea his subconscious had created that
scenario until he was heatedly counter-attacking her in the blame game, but it could
be true. Who the hell knew? Only
now was he able to admit that the lasting scars left by his first marriage had
made him gun-shy of women. Not of their
bodies, obviously, because he could do ‘no-strings-attached’ with the best of
them. He just didn’t want anybody to see
inside him and find his vulnerabilities.
But Lilah… From
the minute she’d looked into his eyes at the bar of that Dublin pub, she had
seen exactly who and what he was – and she fell in love with him anyway. That nervous, edgy woman who had awkwardly
propositioned him within minutes of their first meeting had been trying
to give him something else ever since.
Happiness.
All he had to do was accept it. If he hadn’t been so damned afraid of getting
hurt himself, he would have realized weeks ago that she’d done exactly what she
set out to do and 'saved' his life.
But instead… now they were both hurt.
“It’s not your fault!” she staunchly declared, anger
sparking in the wet blue-green depths of her eyes as she tried to wiggle away
from him. “Don’t say that!”
There’s my
Lilah. Hard as hell on yourself, but
always willing to take care of somebody else.
So sweet, even if you don’t wanna believe it.
With a melancholy smile, he gently thumbed away the tear
that hovered on her lower lid, saying quietly, “And it’s not your fault either. Our baby just wasn’t strong enough to make
it.”
Those two words – ‘our baby' – and claiming ownership of
the lost child viciously knotted his stomach muscles. He could easily find himself beside her in
desolation, but what good was that going to do?
Tony thought again of what his brother had said. This wasn’t something he could make sense of
and he would make himself crazy trying.
All he – they – could do was move forward.
“I’m still sorry.”
He slowly angled his head, kissing the needless apology
away with an airy brush of his lips. “I’m
sorry, too.”
Her tears now dry, Lilah went softly doe-eyed from his
impromptu kiss. She silently put aside her faithful Shield of Apathy and let him see into her heart and soul.
She still loved him.
Maybe more than anybody in his life ever had.
Tony went back for another barely-there caressing of lips.
And another.
Really, he hadn’t planned to kiss her. His only intention had been to comfort and
reassure her that everything was going to be okay. That she
was going to be okay.
That intention was devoured by the soft sigh of his name
on her breath. When she slowly burrowed
against him, lips parted with a soft mewling of pleasure, Tony intuitively
responded. The tip of his tongue slid between
her teeth, skating over the rough velvet of its long-lost mate and he groaned, drowning in the unmistakable flavor of Lilah.
It had been too long since he’d tasted her. Too damn long.
Pure instinct had him taking the kiss to a more intimate
level. His hand came up to bury in the
chocolaty locks at the back of her head, immediately finding the deepest of her
scars hidden there. He stroked it tenderly
with his middle finger as he made love to her mouth, seeking the closeness that
had been absent as long as she had.
He hated that damn scar and what it represented, but at
the same time, he appreciated what it had wrought. Wishing it away would also wish away Lilah and,without it, he wouldn’t be here - finding solace and happiness in the
touch of this very special woman.
“Damn I’ve missed you, Bluegrass.”
Cupping her face, he silently basked in the reverent
touch of her fingertips over his cheeks and lips as she took in each of his
features before connecting her gaze to his.
“Have you? I figured you found
plenty of companionship in Sturgis.”
His thumbs lightly outlined the shape of her mouth, which
was arched into a disdainful frown. It
didn’t take a genius to figure out where her mind was at. He could answer the unspoken question with a single word, but
Tony felt compelled to remind her of who he was... who they were... and who they
would always be.
“You wanna ask me something, you ask,” he ordered with a
gentle nip at the full swell of her bottom lip.
“Tour's over, but I’m still me, and I’m still not putting up with bullshit between us.”
Her jaw went tight under his fingertips, but she was only
quiet for a heartbeat before voicing the question he could hear resonating in
her mind. “How many women have there
been since I left your hotel room?”
Tony could play with her a little if he wanted. He could
ask if she wanted to know how many offers he’d received, or how many he’d
accepted. He could string her along and
toy with her before giving his answer, but he really didn’t have the desire
to. They’d been through enough for one
day, and he was ready to get to the good part.
“None. I haven’t
wanted anybody since you walked out that door, Lilah.”
He might be imagining it, but it seemed an awful lot like
she was holding her breath when she cradled his face and inclined her head,
whispering, “Then tell me why
you’re here.”
Why was he here?
Fate? An uncanny
connection with the woman snuggled into his arms? A psychic knowledge that she needed him? Just a plain old-fashioned desire to see
her? Any of those things may be true,
but, ultimately, he now knew that they all tied back to one simple truth.
He leaned close, resting his forehead against hers as he
felt the sorrow of today morph into the joy of tomorrow.
“Because I love you.”
Thursday, May 23, 2013
74 - The Long Way Home
It was nearly eleven o’clock before the final
discharge papers to release Lilah were signed. By that time, she was groggy, exhausted and starved to death. She would be
hard-pressed to say which was more critical at this juncture – food or
sleep.
Even as hungry as she was, Lilah would probably peg sleep-deprivation as the greater of her two
problems. It had to be. If she weren't a cat’s hair
away from passing out cold, she surely would have put up more of a fight when
Tony calmly stated that he wasn’t going anywhere. Good grief, she didn't even say a word when he went on to declare that he would be taking her home and spending
the night with her.
Sleep-deprivation
my ass, Lilah Jane. The anesthesia
hangover is just an excuse to let your defenses down. You can’t stand to let him go again so soon.
Regardless of the truth in that, he may be the only person who wouldn't drive her
crazy while ‘taking care’ of her. Since he
didn’t like to be coddled any more than she did, Lilah might actually be able
to rest without being a nervous wreck over someone hovering around her
apartment.
The nurse applied the brakes on the wheelchair as Tony
exited the white convertible parked at the ER entrance. Circling the vehicle, he opened the passenger door and reached a hand to help her out of the chair, but Lilah just stared dumbly up at
him.
The anesthesia must be really hanging on strong. With the exception of the paint job, his car
looked just like hers.
“A 2011 Camaro convertible? Seriously? This is what you drive?”
For the first time since his appearance in Kentucky, Tony’s
face transformed into that heart-stopping grin that she adored. “I’ve only had it a couple of days, but what
can I say? We both have excellent taste
in cars.”
“Okay Ms. Bennett,” the nurse addressed her kindly,
cupping Lilah's elbow to help get her on her feet. “Remember…
bed-rest for the next twenty-four hours.
After that you should be able to resume normal activity, with the
exception that the doctor noted.”
Nodding at the 'exception', Lilah shook down the pant legs of the borrowed
hospital scrubs and shuffled to the vehicle’s open passenger door. Abstaining from sex for the next week shouldn't be a problem. She didn't think.
Her butt dropped into the soft leather seat with a quiet groan and she reached for the door handle, smiling wearily at the nurse. “Thank you.”
Her butt dropped into the soft leather seat with a quiet groan and she reached for the door handle, smiling wearily at the nurse. “Thank you.”
“You awake enough to give directions or do I need to use
my GPS?” Tony asked, sliding into the car next to her and dropping the
convertible top as she fastened her seatbelt.
“I wasn’t paying much attention to landmarks on the way here. Mind having the top down?”
“I still don’t really know how you found me, but I’m
mostly awake and I love the night air.” In
the summer, any time after seven o’clock was one of her favorite times. Temperatures cooled, but the air was still warm
enough to comfortably celebrate the survival of another day while wearing a short-sleeved shirt.
The Camaro slid into gear easily
under his masterful hand and he glanced over at her with the ghost of a smile. “Me, too.
As for how I found you, I went knocking on your landlady’s door and she
told me what she knew. Easy enough.”
She snickered sleepily as her stomach growled with neglect. That answered the how, anyway.
"Good Lord, I should've guessed. Verna does tend to keep her finger on the pulse of the neighborhood."
"She seems very well... connected," he admitted with a grin.
Connected, indeed. There was no doubt the old woman would be knocking on her door the next morning to get the 'offiical' scoop.
"Mm. That still doesn't tell me why you're here. Oh, hey. There’s a McDonald’s on the next corner. Could you let me run in and get…” Lilah's eyes fell to her empty hands, and then beyond, to the equally empty floorboard at her feet. Smothering a sigh of disgust, she realized that her bitterly quarreling belly would have to be content with the cheese and crackers in the fridge. “Nevermind. I don’t have my purse with me.”
“Do me a favor and don’t pull the stubborn pride shit,
please. You’re not running in anyplace
and I’ll buy whatever it is you want.”
I love you.
It was weird beyond weird that thoughts of love came from his blunt degradation of the pride and independence that made up the very core of who she was. She should be all kinds of pissed off and offended, but Lilah was clearly still stoned on sedation
drugs. As further proof of her altered state of mind, Lilah didn't even have a desire to argue with him about it.
“Okay. Thank you.”
After relaying their orders through the speaker and
receiving the sack of burgers and fries, he guided the car back onto the nearly deserted road. The quietness of late-night Lexington was broken only by the wind and the faint strains of Bon Jovi's "I'll Be There For You" bleeding out of the speakers.
How appropriate.
Lilah let her head loll on the headrest, slowly swiveling toward him. The passing streetlights intermittently shone across the face that had been haunting her dreams every night and her stomach muscles clenched with more than hunger. This felt like another one of those dreams, laced with confusion and foggy understanding.
Her eyebrows puckered and a mild annoyance pierced through the medicinal muzziness inside her brain. “How many times am I gonna have to ask why you’re here before you give in and actually tell me? Turn left at the next light.”
How appropriate.
Lilah let her head loll on the headrest, slowly swiveling toward him. The passing streetlights intermittently shone across the face that had been haunting her dreams every night and her stomach muscles clenched with more than hunger. This felt like another one of those dreams, laced with confusion and foggy understanding.
Her eyebrows puckered and a mild annoyance pierced through the medicinal muzziness inside her brain. “How many times am I gonna have to ask why you’re here before you give in and actually tell me? Turn left at the next light.”
“I’m shooting for six,” he told her over the clicking of
the Camaro’s turn signal as they waited for the light to change from red to green.
An irrepressible smile quivered at the corners of her mouth when she caught sight of his teasing wink. “You’re such a smartass. I don’t know how I could have possibly forgotten that so soon.”
“Me either, since you’re just as bad as I am.”
Snickering lightly, she refused to validate that accusation with a verbal acknowledgement. She didn't need to. They’d had more than one
out-smartassing event during their time together. “I can’t believe you restrained that part of yourself with
Joanna.”
“What makes you think I did?”
Sneaking her hand into the fast food bag on her lap, she pilfered a fry and
nibbled the end of it as the powerful car prowled around the corner. “Turn right in two blocks. Because, before she left the hospital, she
said she could see why I liked you.”
Actually, she’d said that she could see why Lilah had
fallen in love with him and that, physically, he reminded her a little of
Walter. Undoubtedly that information
hadn't been relayed to Tony, and Lilah sure as
hell wasn’t telling him.
“I didn’t say much to her at all. My head was elsewhere, which was probably a
good thing, seeing as I don’t do the polite game as well as you.”
“Third house on the right,” she directed, choosing not to
go there. This evening had been
unpleasant enough without giving life to that discussion. She preferred to dwell in a polite-game-free world when given a chance. “You can pull in behind my car. Verna doesn’t use the driveway.”
He pushed the gearshift into park and took the McDonald’s
bag from her before hopping out and circling the hood. When she put both flip flops on the drive way
and pushed to her feet, Lilah bit her lip with discomfort. Having had such a centrally located ‘procedure’,
every movement was painfully magnified with the reminder of said procedure.
“Need help?”
As the car door closed behind her, she looked up into his
face, down at his outstretched hand and then back at his face. “I’m okay.”
The brightly shining lights mounted on the side of the garage made it easy to see the eyebrow that was arched in disbelief. “You sure?”
She nodded again, but he still regarded her with a healthy dose of skepticism.
“Let me tell you how this is gonna work, Bluegrass. I’m gonna have enough respect not to smother
you with unnecessary help. In return,
you’re going to tell me when you need help. No martyrdom.
No thinking you’re being an inconvenience. Just ask.”
He dipped his chin to pointedly meet her eyes over the rim of his glasses. “We
on the same page?”
He made everything seem so simple. There were no pretentious games with unknown
rules with Tony. He liked everything
open and aboveboard -- no bullshit.
It was one of her very favorite things about him.
“Same page,” she agreed quietly, ready to weep with
relief. From the very beginning, she
hadn’t had to play a role with him. “Can
I hold onto your arm, please?”
“Sure thing.”
The requested arm was presented without hesitation and
Lilah slipped hers through the crook of the elbow, holding onto his bicep with
her opposite hand. Using him as a human
crutch, she leaned heavily and took a ginger step in the direction of the
thirteen lighted stairs that led to her apartment.
Climbing that simple flight of stairs took much longer
than it normally did, but Tony exhibited untold patience with her one-step-at-a-time
method of scaling them. When they
reached the small landing that held no more than a plastic porch chair and an overflowing pot of impatiens, Lilah was ready to
collapse.
“Key?”
She nodded to the brightly painted “Welcome” sign
hanging to the right of the door and released him to lean on the railing. “There’s a spare in the back of it.”
In a moment’s time he had the lock open, apartment lit
and Lilah ushered inside. Taking a quick
glance around, he zeroed in on the two doors at the back of the studio-style
living room/dining room/kitchen.
“One of those the bedroom?”
“The one on the right.”
Dropping their dinner bag on the coffee table, he
steered her toward the indicated door. “How
about you climb in bed and then I’ll bring your food?”
She glanced down at herself – baggy scrub pants provided
by the hospital, flip flops and a pink t-shirt with fuchsia rhinestone lips on the chest. She looked and felt like a
vagrant.
“I’d rather eat at the table and take a shower before I
get in bed.”
“Twenty-four hours of bed rest,” he reminded her. “Can’t you at least do eight before breaking
the rules? Take your shower in the
morning.”
Being up on her feet was becoming increasingly harder
and, even as he ‘scolded’ her, Lilah felt her shallow pool of energy drain. Her knees began to quiver just a
bit and she curled clutching fingers around the bedroom door facing.
“That might be better,” she agreed weakly, pivoting
carefully on her heel. “But I need to go
to the bathroom. Could you get some
pajamas and panties and toss them in to me?”
Under normal circumstances, she would be mortified to have
anyone picking through her underwear drawer, but Tony had stopped being ‘anyone’
when he pulled her into his arms at the hospital. Or maybe it was when he asked her to spare
him the stubborn pride shit.
Whatever. For tonight, anyway, he
was… her person. And she was going to indulge the flagrant delusion
that he belonged here.
Tomorrow was soon enough to face the truth.
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
73 - Hello to Goodbye
He looked good. Tired, as Dorothea had said, but to her Tony-hungry eyes, even exhaustion looked good on him. Lilah would've told him that, too, if her vocal cords weren't rendered immobile by the unexpected phenomenon of his presence. As it was, her tongue had atrophied and her dumbfounded
lips could only gape in silent query.
This was one of those things that happened in movies. The
timing was so absurdly uncanny that only a Hollywood writer could have scripted
the scene.
With all the times
I half-wished for you to appear out of nowhere and come back into my life, you
had to pick NOW? WHY now?
His whispery kiss over the back of her hand brought her back to life with a jolting shock that was comparable to any defibrillator machine they had in this hospital. Her eyelids slowly blinked him back into focus until she found herself drowning in the tenderness that spilled from his eyes. She didn't want his tenderness. She couldn't handle it on top of everything else.
Ignoring the tightness in her chest, she somehow regained enough control of her faculties and her voice to softly ask, "What are you doin' here?"
Ignoring the tightness in her chest, she somehow regained enough control of her faculties and her voice to softly ask, "What are you doin' here?"
"Lilah, I'm goin' out to the waitin' room and give
you two time to talk," Joanna interjected smoothly, pressing her own kiss
to Lilah’s cheek before vanishing from the bedside.
Oh God. She's
leaving me alone with him? I can't do
this I can't do this. I... CAN’T... DO... THIS!
Her mind spinning like whirling dervish and her heart knocking against the wall of her chest, she still managed to remain expressionless, nodding dumbly as
Joanna slipped from the room. What other
option did she have? Anything else would
paint her as a mentally unstable lunatic.
It ain’t far from
the truth right now.
Tony didn't know what to expect, but the detached indifference that Lilah held up like a shield of armor – as
though she had to protect herself - hadn't even been a distant consideration. That
annoyed him, reminding him of their first few days together. That wasn't who they were anymore and they'd moved too far beyond that damned apathetic aloofness of hers to go back now. He wasn't going to hurt her, for God's sake!
There are lots of
versions of hurt, asshole. You don't think what you did in Lisbon hurt her?
"I came to see you. Now tell me what YOU'RE doing
here," he countered quietly. "What happened, Bluegrass?"
"But how did you know I was here?"
He swirled his thumb over the satiny skin of her hand and
shook his head at the calmly detached question.
She still had that avoidance thing down pat when she didn’t want to talk
about something. If he had to guess, he'd say she was
pretending that she hadn’t been brought here in a damn ambulance.
“I’ve spent the last hour wigged out because your landlady
said you were unconscious and hemorrhaging.
Put me out of my misery and tell me what’s wrong, already.”
Her eyes locked on his for a split second, and he thought
he saw a crack in Shield of Apathy before she quickly plastered over it. “They haven’t actually told me for sure.”
Lilah’s heart beat a mile a minute as she concentrated on
his touch. The heat of his hand over
hers was like a balm to her battered soul.
She shouldn’t derive this much pleasure from the simple scrape of his
thumb over her knuckles, but she’d missed him.
So much.
“Joanna said you were going to be fine, so it can’t be that bad, right? C'mon, Lilah. No bullshit."
'Fine' depended on your point of view, really. It depended on who you were and what you wanted
out of life. Lilah might be physically fine, but her mind... Well, it was going to take a long time before it was 'fine' again.
Lilah Jane, don’t
be a damn drama queen. Just tell him.
But if she told him, then she would have to stare it dead in the eyes. It would become real and… Lilah’s
eyes prickled. She didn’t want it to be
real. Not like this. Not ever.
Too bad. It is real and he’s standing right here in front of you. You may never have told him if he weren’t,
but he is, so tell him already. No fancy cliff-hanger speech, just say the words.
Clearing her throat, she flicked her eyes to the
still-closed door before turning them to meet his, finding Tony's gaze was gentle and curious as he vainly sought access to the thoughts she was keeping hidden. There was no doubt he knew she was hiding something. He always knew.
Then tell him and be done with it!
Then tell him and be done with it!
“I had a miscarriage.”
His thumb went still and, before he could censor them,
the questions racing through his mind paraded over his face as bold as blinking
neon lights. Miscarriage? She had been pregnant? With his baby?
“You’re the only one I’ve been with in over a year, Tony,”
she felt compelled to push past the lump in her throat. The baby had been his, without a sliver of
doubt. She needed him to know that.
“Why didn’t you tell me you were pregnant?”
Lilah withdrew her hand from under his to
mindlessly crumple the edge of the thin hospital blanket. She smoothed it back out again through a blur of tears, her lips quivering with restrained sorrow as the cruel fingers of reality poked painfully at her psyche. The sharp, pointed jabs made her unable to stay emotionally removed from the
situation.
Pregnancy implied rounded bellies, glowing mommies and
squirming pink bundles of cuteness.
Little baby booties, first smiles, and first laughs. Pregnancy was a nine-month celebration of
life and everything that came with it.
Pregnancy had nothing to do with her.
Pregnancy had nothing to do with her.
“I… I didn’t
know. Not until today.”
A grown woman in her early forties who had
always had an irregular cycle, Lilah hadn’t even paid attention when her period
was late. Why should she? They’d used a condom every single time
they’d… had sex.
Not true. Remember the white Harley in the woods? It wasn’t exactly a Boy Scout moment. Nobody was prepared.
“Ah, fuck,” he muttered on a weary sigh as the droplets
of untold grief numbly slithered down her cheeks. “Scoot over.”
He bumped her hip
with his, silently prompting her to wiggle closer to the IV pole on the opposite side of the gurney. As he
scooted in next to her on the bed, his arm crossed over her waist and an
open palm pressed at the base of her spine, rolling her toward him.
After only the briefest hesitation, she looped embarrassingly clingy arms around his back. Lilah hugged him for all she was worth, clutching at his shoulders and just… holding on.
After only the briefest hesitation, she looped embarrassingly clingy arms around his back. Lilah hugged him for all she was worth, clutching at his shoulders and just… holding on.
She’d done this one other time. In Istanbul, she had also selfishly absorbed
the strength he offered from the safe haven of his arms. He didn’t make her admit that she needed it,
or him. He just stepped in and
replenished her own waning pool of strength with his gentle, rocking
embrace.
“You weren’t… supposed to be here,” was her watery
accusation even as she dug desperate fingertips into the tight muscles between
his neck and shoulder. “I haven’t gotten
used to the idea, so I can’t… be
rational about it. I’m sorry.”
“You lost a baby.
Nobody said you had to be rational.”
His arms locked tight down and, for that moment in time, she was able to forget where
she was and why. There was nothing but
Tony making everything better, the way only he could.
Thank you. Whatever sent you here today… thank you.
She had no more settled into the warm cocoon of his arms when a light knock at the door rudely burst her bubble of denial. Lilah jerked in Tony's arms and a somber, forty-ish
man in a white coat entered the room with his hand outstretched. "Ms. Bennett, I’m Dr.
Kaplan. Okay to discuss your condition
in present company?”
Easing up off the bed,
Tony gave her a little space as, nodding, she swiped at her eyes and shook the doctor's hand. Once the formalities had been addressed, he sidled back up to the bed rail and picked that same hand up again, locking her fingers tightly between his.
“The ultrasound results confirmed the diagnosis,” Dr. Kaplan sympathetically commanded her attention from the foot of the narrow bed. Consulting the chart he'd brought into the exam room, he went on to elaborate, “The bleeding you suffered
was the result of a spontaneous miscarriage.
However, your body did not fully expel the tissue, so I’m recommending
that we go in and evacuate the womb to make sure everything is cleaned up
properly. The good news is that, while
the blood loss seemed – I’m sure – significant, I understand it’s under control
now and you shouldn’t require a transfusion.
Once we can get the OB/GYN surgeon in here for the procedure, it should
be fairly quick and painless. We can still
get you out of here tonight as long as you have someone to go home with you.”
Someone to go home
with her? Lilah’s fingers unknowingly buried themselves into Tony’s flesh as she sniffled, thoughts rapid-fire shooting through her limited choices of ‘care-givers’.
She could possibly go to Joanna’s, but she wouldn’t let Jo come to her apartment. The stairs were almost too much for her on a good day, much less after the soap opera afternoon she’d been put through.
Andrew was an 'absolutely not' and so were here parents. She didn't want any of them to know.
That left... no one.
She could possibly go to Joanna’s, but she wouldn’t let Jo come to her apartment. The stairs were almost too much for her on a good day, much less after the soap opera afternoon she’d been put through.
Andrew was an 'absolutely not' and so were here parents. She didn't want any of them to know.
That left... no one.
But she could always lie
and say there was someone to stay with her. Lilah would be fine alone. She
would probably even prefer to be alone until her head got back on straight.
“I’m not going anyplace, Bluegrass,” Tony murmured in the
midst of her chaotic mental ramblings, quietly declaring her problem solved. To the accompaniment of soft, soothing strokes of his thumb, he assured her, “I’ll stay as long as you need me.”
✧✧✧
Tony blew out a puff of smoke and put the lighter back in
his pocket at the same time he withdrew his phone.
He’d stayed with Lilah until they came to get her for
surgery and then spoken briefly to Joanna on his way through the waiting room,
woodenly apologizing that he wasn’t in the frame of mind to make small
talk. Obviously she knew why, because
she didn’t show any inclination to push him.
When he told her he would stay and take Lilah home, she only nodded, saying
that she would stay until her friend came out of surgery.
There was only a short window of time in which to take out his thoughts
and feelings about this whole damn thing, play with them, put them in
acceptable order and get back to a mental place that would enable him to take care of
Lilah. It wasn’t something he could do
in his head, by himself. He was going to
have to call in a sounding board.
Someone who wasn’t a spectacular emotional crutch, but someone who could
help him cut through the crap and see this situation for what it was.
His big brother.
“Hey,” Jon answered the call on the third, nerve-jangling
ring. “I didn’t expect to hear from you
until you got back to L.A. You didn’t
total your new car did you? Because if
you did, you’re calling the wrong fucking guy to bail your – “.
“Jonny,” Tony interrupted. “I’m in Lexington.”
There was a resigned sigh that rattled over the
line. “Lexington? As in Lilah, Lexington?”
“Yeah. Do me a
favor and don’t be a dick. I have, like, ten minutes and I need you, not the shit you want to give me.”
In Tony’s mind, he could see Jon straightening in his
seat and leaning to rest forearms on his knees so that he could listen more
intently. “Alright. What’s up?”
“Short version?
Lilah had a miscarriage.”
He heard a quiet indrawn breath sing over the line. “I guess you think it was yours?”
“Yes, goddammit, it was mine,” Tony ground out without
hesitation, annoyed that this had to even be mentioned as a consideration. The only positive note was that his brother didn’t
beat it like a dead horse, choosing to accept Tony’s word without further argument.
“Shit.” The quiet epithet hung in the ensuing silence
until Jon's next question was voiced. “Did
you even know she was pregnant?”
“No. God, no. She
didn’t even know until today.”
“Damn..... Okay...... So are you
sorry you didn’t know?”
Was he sorry? That
was a tough question. It would have
forced him to face Lilah sooner, that much was certain, but he didn’t know if
that was necessarily a good thing. He… he thought was better off to have come to this place of his own accord. What he felt for Lilah was what he felt for
Lilah and it wasn’t influenced by anything outside of that.
And what is that,
Tony? What do you feel for Lilah?
He could only handle one thing at a time. Coming to terms with Lilah’s… medical
condition took priority if he was going to stay with her. He couldn’t be flipping out when it finally
hit him that they’d lost a baby.
An actual child.
His first and only.
An actual child.
His first and only.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he took another deep drag off of
his cigarette as the feelings he’d bottled upon hearing the news tried to break
free. “I… lost a baby today, Johnny. I can’t wrap my head around it.”
“You won’t be able to,” his brother told him
shortly. Most people would say harshly,
but those people didn’t know Jon. He
just cut through all the extraneous garbage to get to the heart of the matter. Sometimes that meant he was a little
abrupt. “And you’ll make yourself crazy
trying, so don’t.”
“That’s easy for you to say. You have four kids.” Tony had none, and it was bizarre to discover
that a child, of whose existence he had been ignorant, had done a stellar job
of creating an empty hole inside of him. A child who now no longer existed.
No. There was a likelier scenario responsible for that hole. It was probably the side-effect of a rampant case of what could have been, and the revelation of exactly
how badly he might want that.
That.
With her.
As soon as his lungs emptied of their current payload,
another lengthy inhalation filled them again, burning away a good percentage of
his remaining cigarette.
“No,” Jon disagreed calmly, unaware of Tony’s inner
turmoil. “That’s easy for me to say because
I can be objective. You can’t.”
“You’re right. I
can’t. So tell me what the fuck I’m
supposed to do, then.”
“Alright, I will – as soon as you answer two simple
yes-or-no questions.”
He mashed what was left of his smoke in the ashtray with
a frown. Two questions and he would have
magical answers and guidance? Okay. He couldn’t be any more confused than he
already was.
“Alright.”
“What you’ve gotta ask yourself is: one, do you want kids
and two, do you love her?”
His subconscious responded to both with a single answer
almost before Jon stopped speaking. Tony
apparently wasn’t as confused as he believed, because there was no weighing
pros and cons. There was no
rationalization. And why should there
be? Rules and regulations didn’t come
into play with the desires of the heart. Desires weren’t decisions to be made, but
rather acknowledgements of the inevitable.
Kids? He was
smacked in the face by his childlessness every time he visited with his nieces
and nephews, and he had to admit it was sometimes tough to take. Hell, there had even been that goofy
Christmas dream in Europe. He could
still visualize that dark-headed baby girl with her downy fuzz of hair and red
bow.
And Lilah?
He hadn’t put a name to it at the time, but he knew any doubts about his feelings were been removed in the instant he assured her that he wasn’t going
anywhere. Without any thought
whatsoever, he’d known he would put his own life on hold and be there as long
as she needed him. Was that love?
“Yes.”
“Yes, to which?”
“Both,” Tony clarified with a growing confidence, an easy
peace blooming in his heart and spreading slowly outward to envelope his entire
body. “Yes to both.”
Jon chuckled quietly.
“Then there ya go. Now. Do you really need
me to tell ya what to do?”
Nope. His brother
had been more than helpful, but Tony had it from here.
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
72 - Unwavering Uncertainty
Being an ER nurse took a special brand of patience, Amy
Dillon often thought. There was an
eclectic clientele in the emergency room of Central Baptist and you never knew
who was going to walk in with what stuck where.
She’d seen Nerf darts stuck up little boys’ noses, fruits and vegetables
stuck in every orifice imaginable, and one time there’d even been a
gerbil.
Needless to say, people in pain weren’t always the
friendliest of folks and nor were the family members that wanted their loved ones
looked after. Yes, there was a good deal of tact and
understanding required, and occasionally a behemoth of an orderly, to keep
things nice and peaceful in the ER. She
met a wide variety of people in her line of work from all different walks of
life, but never one quite like the man who was barreling toward the exam rooms
at this very moment.
“Excuse me, sir.
You can’t go back there!” she called, her finger on the ‘Bubba Button’,
as she liked to call it. Bubba was the
biggest and most intimidating male employee in the unit, and from the looks of the
stressed-out man whose arms were covered with tattoos, she might be needing his
help.
To her surprise, the man, spun right around, his flip
flops sliding on the shiny tile floor as he made a beeline for her.
“I’m looking for Lilah Bennett,” he informed her
tightly. “She would have been brought in
by ambulance about an hour ago.”
Amy’s head cocked incrementally to one side even as she
put on her most polite and professional smile.
How very
interestin’.
She had gone to school with Lilah Bennett – or Lilah
Hall, as Amy still thought of her – and they had graduated the same year, along
with Lilah’s first husband, Walter.
Lilah had always been the smart one in the class. Not geeky-smart like the class valedictorian
or salutatorian who studied night and day in an effort to come out on top. No, Lilah was one of those people that was
just… Well, smart. She didn’t have to study or spend hours on
homework to be the first one finished with a test – and have the highest score.
Amy, along with about everybody else, knew what had
happened to Lilah last summer and felt so doggone sorry for her that she
couldn’t stand it. The poor girl just
couldn’t pick a good man if her life depended on it. This fella in front of her looked like
another fine example of that.
“Are you family?”
“No.”
“Then I’m afraid you’ll have to wait out here.”
His mouth went flat and hard inside the dark goatee that
covered the lower half of his face and he leaned forward on the desk. Bubba was not out of the equation yet.
“Can you tell me if she’s okay? Is she alone?”
No, she wasn’t alone.
Joanna Johnson Wilson was back there with her. She had graduated from a neighboring high
school the same year as Lilah and Amy.
“I can’t give out information on a patient,” she told the
man whose accent placed his origin firmly above the Mason-Dixon line. In reality, she knew exactly what was going
on and, even if she were at liberty to say, she wouldn’t tell him
anything. Where had Lilah Jane found
this guy? “But she’s not alone.”
“Who’s with
her? Joanna? Andrew?
I wanna talk to whoever it is.”
So Mr. Tattoo knew who the key players in Lilah Jane’s
life were. It made Amy all the more curious,
even as she decided Lilah might want to know this guy was here. Especially if he was who Amy thought he might
be.
“I can’t give you that information either, sir.” When he looked ready to pitch a holy fit, she
felt a little sorry for him and relented a bit.
“But I can go back and tell them you’re out here. What’s your name?”
Belligerence faded to reluctant acceptance with a single
huff. “Tony. Tell her it’s Tony. Thank you.”
Tony. Tony Soprano
fit pretty appropriately, she thought.
She could see this guy in the mob, even though he wasn’t wearing a
sports coat and polo shirt.
Offering him her sweetest Southern smile, she promised that
she would be right back.
✧✧✧
The sick feeling that had taken up residence in the pit of his stomach as he stood on that crazy old lady's porch wasn't going away.
There had been no mistaking the flicker of pity behind the desk nurse’s smile when she unbent enough to announce his presence to whomever was in the back. She knew exactly what was going on with Lilah and it wasn’t good.
There had been no mistaking the flicker of pity behind the desk nurse’s smile when she unbent enough to announce his presence to whomever was in the back. She knew exactly what was going on with Lilah and it wasn’t good.
That thought was reinforced about five minutes later when a petite woman with an obvious limp emerged from behind the double doors
that hid the exam rooms. The auburn hair
clipped on the back of her head was starting to come down around her
bespectacled eyes and her plastic smile didn’t do much disguise the tension and
worry lines in her face.
“Tony,” she greeted him with firmly starched politeness and a nod as he rose from the unforgiving waiting room chair. “I’m Joanna.”
“How is she?” he demanded, jamming impatient fingertips into the pockets of his jeans. He felt no need to engage in pleasantries with Lilah’s best friend. Maybe he could eventually learn to like her, but based
on Lilah's melancholy at the end of every phone call the two had exchanged in his presence... he didn’t have much use for Joanna.
“She’s… They’re
running another test, but she’s going to be fine.”
Fine, huh? That
didn’t explain the watery eyes that she had to blink clear when she couldn't meet his gaze, choosing instead to look at the blue and white linoleum squares at his feet. Fine must have a whole different meaning here than it did in the rest of the world and he had no patience to scope out their weird-ass dictionary.
“I want to see her.”
Joanna seemed to deliberate her answer as she lifted her chin to give his face a thorough once-over. Almost as though she were committing them to memory, she closely inspected his eyes,
the set of his jaw, and the undoubtedly harsh line of his mouth. Each feature was analyzed and digested in turn as the squared outline of her shoulders went rounded, sagging a bit under some kind of invisible pressure.
"I'm only asking to be nice," he informed her quietly. "I WILL see her one way or another."
A spark of something flickered in her eyes and her head dipped in resigned
acquiescence. “I would imagine Lilah’s
going to want to see you, too. She's in Room 6, but I’ll come
back with you to find out the test results. Afterward I'll come out here and give you some time alone.”
Her intentions made clear, she turned her back on him. That sharp pivot on her heel had her headed back back in the direction from which she had come, leaving him to follow behind - or not.
'Not' wasn't an option for him. This was a mission he needed to accomplish. It gave him a sense of purpose, rather than sitting around with his thumb up his butt waiting for someone to feed him an inkling of information. No matter what he found in Room 6, it was better than not knowing.
Sucking in a deep breath, he extended his stride so that he arrived at the secured entry at the same time as Joanna. Tony reached for the handle, nodding his appreciation to the desk nurse who served as the gatekeeper and granted them both access and a sympathetic smile.
Her intentions made clear, she turned her back on him. That sharp pivot on her heel had her headed back back in the direction from which she had come, leaving him to follow behind - or not.
'Not' wasn't an option for him. This was a mission he needed to accomplish. It gave him a sense of purpose, rather than sitting around with his thumb up his butt waiting for someone to feed him an inkling of information. No matter what he found in Room 6, it was better than not knowing.
Sucking in a deep breath, he extended his stride so that he arrived at the secured entry at the same time as Joanna. Tony reached for the handle, nodding his appreciation to the desk nurse who served as the gatekeeper and granted them both access and a sympathetic smile.
As they passed through the double-doors that hid a honey
comb of exam rooms, an unexpected chill rattled his spine. There was something ghoulish about a
hospital, he had always thought. Pain
and agony hung in the air like a curtain of desolation as people lay suffering and dying in beds that were merely feet apart.
Nobody’s dying,
he censured himself as they walked by the five examination rooms leading to Room 6. Even if it sounds like they are.
An old man gave a bone-rattling cough in the first room, while a child sobbed for her mommy in the next. Number three had a big burly guy cussing at the top of his lungs as he held a bloody compress to his head. Four ensconced an eerily-still woman who had to be in her nineties and, lastly, number five was blessedly empty.
It was a welcome relief to step inside the third room on the right. The door that remained standing wide didn't offer any buffer, but the sounds of the damaged and maimed dulled by half, muffled by the thin walls.
His eyes swept over the room, anxious to see her, but Lilah was nowhere to be found. The big, empty spot in the center of the floor indicated that the bed assigned to this room was missing as well, telling him that she wasn't back from whatever mysterious test was taking place.
Joanna settled into one of the two straight-back chairs with a grimace, silently offering him the other one, but Tony chose to stand. Backing into the farthest corner of the room, he leaned his hip into the cabinet housing the small sink and folded his arms restlessly over his chest.
“What happened to her?” Being here hadn't done anything to assuage his anxiety so far. He still didn't know anything. The landlady had been more forthcoming than Joanna or that nurse.
An old man gave a bone-rattling cough in the first room, while a child sobbed for her mommy in the next. Number three had a big burly guy cussing at the top of his lungs as he held a bloody compress to his head. Four ensconced an eerily-still woman who had to be in her nineties and, lastly, number five was blessedly empty.
It was a welcome relief to step inside the third room on the right. The door that remained standing wide didn't offer any buffer, but the sounds of the damaged and maimed dulled by half, muffled by the thin walls.
His eyes swept over the room, anxious to see her, but Lilah was nowhere to be found. The big, empty spot in the center of the floor indicated that the bed assigned to this room was missing as well, telling him that she wasn't back from whatever mysterious test was taking place.
Joanna settled into one of the two straight-back chairs with a grimace, silently offering him the other one, but Tony chose to stand. Backing into the farthest corner of the room, he leaned his hip into the cabinet housing the small sink and folded his arms restlessly over his chest.
“What happened to her?” Being here hadn't done anything to assuage his anxiety so far. He still didn't know anything. The landlady had been more forthcoming than Joanna or that nurse.
“Well… They haven’t said for sure,” Lilah's friend hedged, crossing her legs.
“But you have a pretty damn good idea.”
There was a slow bob of her head as she confirmed his
suspicion. “But it’s not my place to tell
you.”
His mouth was open to inform her in no uncertain terms that he didn’t give a flying
fuck whether she thought it was her place or not when an orderly appeared in the doorway. The slight young man was steering a Lilah-laden gurney, backing it head first the room as he chattered to his passenger.
Tony's breath became painfully lodged in his throat. He had only caught a glimpse of her face as the bed was maneuvered into place, but it was enough to tear him up inside and render him immobile.
Tony's breath became painfully lodged in his throat. He had only caught a glimpse of her face as the bed was maneuvered into place, but it was enough to tear him up inside and render him immobile.
She was pale, her smattering of freckles standing out
like ink splotches against her fair complexion.
The blue and white hospital gown did nothing to help create the illusion of a
healthy glow. Red-rimmed eyes were
closed and her silky chocolate waves were splashed all over the institutional white pillowcase.
That infamous smile he loved so much was nowhere to be found.
That infamous smile he loved so much was nowhere to be found.
“Hey, honey,” Joanna sidled up to the bed, curling her
fingers around Lilah’s delicately veined hand while carefully avoiding the IV
needle implanted there. The liquid coming through the line was clear and he assumed it was some kind of saline drip or something.
“Hey,"she returned hoarsely.
The orderly made his mandatory rotation around the gurney, securing
the wheel brakes before offering an encouraging smile and a light pat to
Lilah’s shin. “There you go, Ms.
Bennett. I hope you’re feelin’ better
real soon.”
“Thank you.”
“How was the test?” Jo prodded quietly as soon as the boy had gone. “Is it…?”
Lilah’s hair scraped against the pillow with a nod. Her voice was hollow and devoid of emotion when she elaborated, “They didn’t actually say, of course, but you could
tell. I could tell.”
“Oh, honey, I’m so sorry.”
While Joanna wrapped her in a tight hug, Tony
marveled at the weirdness of it all.
Here he was, hanging in limbo as to Lilah’s condition, yet her soft
Southern drawl washed over him like a warm summer day and… he felt …
Right was the only word he could come up with. He felt right for the first time in weeks.
I had no idea how much I missed you, Bluegrass.
It was enough to unfreeze him from the statue-like trance he'd fallen into when she was wheeled into the room. He took one step and then another, gradually moving through her blind spot at the back corner of the bed.
“Lilah,” Joanna murmured, hearing his footsteps and
breaking the hug. She brushed the hair
from her friend's forehead with a sad smile.
“Somebody’s here to see you.”
“Dammit, Jo, I told you not to call Andrew!" was the immediate quarrel she got. "I don’t want him worryin' about this.”
The fact that she didn’t want her son made aware of her hospital visit didn't surprise him. That was the
Bluegrass he knew – stubborn and determined not to be a bother. God forbid anybody care enough about her to worry, because wouldn't stand for it.
This time, though, she was out of luck. Tony cared enough... and he would worry all he damn well pleased.
Gliding soundlessly up to the bed rail, he reached forward, curling his fingers around the delicate, ice-cold hand resting at her waist.
“It’s not Andrew, baby.
It’s me.”
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