Beautiful Tragedy (A Standalone Romance Novel) (23 page)

BOOK: Beautiful Tragedy (A Standalone Romance Novel)
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“Early next week,” she said.

“I know there have been a lot of secrets, but can you
not tell her I know? Just please call me if she needs anything, and let me know
when they schedule the surgery for sure.”

Megan nodded; she was still crying as she looked at me
and said, “She thinks she’s going to die, you know? That’s why she’s so afraid
to let you be close. She doesn’t want you to get hurt like that.”

“I know,” I said. “But she’s not going to die, she’s
going to fight, and she’s going to have all of us right there by her side while
she does. And when she’s better, a year or two or three from now, I’m still
going to be there. I want to be there forever.”

Megan smiled and said, “She’s lucky to have you.”

“No, Meg. I’m the lucky one. I didn’t even know what I
was missing until I met her. Thank you, for bringing her into my life.”

 

CHAPTER
TWENTY-FOUR

MOLLY

Megan and I met for lunch after my appointment with
the transplant surgeon. She was acting weird, she had been since yesterday. But
I had dropped a lot in her lap by telling her how sick I was, and making her
promise not to tell Brock. I knew that it was wrong. He was her friend too, and
I was asking her to keep this from him, when I knew he was probably asking her
what’s going one.

Brock had only tried to call me once. I’d been on the
phone with Grandma, and I had rejected his call. He didn’t leave a voicemail.
Maybe this was a good sign. Maybe he was going to take this better than I thought.
Maybe I had given myself too much credit for being unforgettable.

“So what did the doctor say?” she asked while we
waited for our salads.

“He said that I am a good candidate, like Dr. Harris
did. Because I’m healthy otherwise, and I’m young, it will put me up a few
slots. The list is not short, however, and they were realistic about the odds
of it happening any time soon; they’re slim.”

“I’m sorry, Molly. You just have to stay strong, and
be patient. I believe in my heart that we’re going to dance at each other’s
weddings, and throw baby showers together and grow old and wrinkled while still
gossiping about the neighbors.”

I laughed, but I wasn’t so sure she was right. I
wanted her to be, but I had to be realistic. Having false hopes was not going
to help me anymore than it would have Brock.

“So,” she asked, “Any word on when the surgery will
be?”

“Yeah, Dr. Harris called me a little bit ago. It’s
scheduled for early Monday morning at eight. My grandma will be there though,
so you don’t have to take the time off from school…”

Megan was rolling her eyes at me. “Are you crazy? Did
you think wild horses could keep me away?” I didn’t, but I thought I should say
so.

“You’re a good friend Meg,” I said.

“The best,” she said with a grin. There was sadness in
her eyes though. I didn’t know if it was about the surgery, or what I had done
to Brock. Either way it was my fault, and I hated hurting the people that I
loved…all the time.

 

The next few days passed quickly. I tried to go about
my business and not think about the surgery and the aftermath. I couldn’t stop
thinking about Brock, and I couldn’t stop dreaming about him at night. I
thought about taking a sedative, or at the very least a dose of Nyquil, because
every time I closed my eyes I had some kind of dream about him singing to me,
or holding me, or kissing me, or making love to me. I would have to wake up
every morning and remind myself all over again that it was over. It was like my
heart was breaking over and over again. I lived in fear of running into him, of
having to come face to face with the hurt I’ve already caused him. I hoped that
he had given up, or was at least resigned to do so. I hoped that he would move
on, and be happy. He deserved to be happy.

Monday morning my grandmother showed up at five a.m.
to take me to the hospital. Megan was up getting ready. She hugged me tight and
told me she would be there, and she would see me when I woke up. Grandma and I
didn’t talk much on the way there. What was there to say, really? When we got
there, the nurse asked us to wait while she got things ready and as we sat
there shrouded in doubt and anxiety….and Brock walked through the door. I must
have looked shocked because Grandma said, “Oh, you weren’t expecting him?”
Brock heard her and said, “No ma’am. She wasn’t expecting me. I’m sorry to
intrude, but can Molly and I talk for a few minutes?”

Bless her old loyal heart; Grandma looked at me to
make sure it was okay. I guess he already knew, obviously, so what did I have
to lose at this point? When Grandma stepped out I looked at him and said, “I
wish you wouldn’t have come.”

“Why, Molly?” he said. He looked like he truly didn’t
know.

“Brock, you’re not even twenty years old yet. This is
not what you signed up for. Today is only the beginning; I still have a long
and chaotic road ahead of me…if I make it through today.”

He reached for my hand and he said, “I wish that you
didn’t think there’s a chance you won’t make it. I want everything to be on
your side, Molly, even your attitude and your will. I only met you a few months
ago, and I already can’t imagine a world without a Molly.”

That made me smile and I couldn’t pass it up. “You
know, it’s a silly name, but I think if I left the world, there would be a few
more left behind.”

He didn’t smile. I don’t think he liked my joke. “If
you died, part of me would die with you…but I would be a better man for just
having known you. So there goes your argument for “What if I die?” I don’t
believe in my heart, however that you’re going to die. So what that means is waiting
for transplants and enduring dialysis. What that means is a busy schedule. I
want to be there for all of that Molly. I want to be by your side. I want to
read to you while you’re on the dialysis machine and I want to brush your hair
when you’re in the hospital and hold your hand while you wait to hear about the
transplant. I want you, Molly. Not just
the you
who’s
healthy and happy and having a good day. I want the real you. I’m in love with
the real you. I’m so much in love with you, Molly. My heart physically aches
for you.”

Did
he say love? He’s in love with me?
My chest started to hurt
and I could barely take in a breath. Why did he have to say that? I love him
too. I love you too. Say it out loud, Molly. What have you got to lose? He said
it.

“Brock,” I started.

“Don’t tell me to go away again, Molly, because I’m
not going. I’m sorry, but I’m not leaving.” He wouldn’t stop talking, so I
leaned over and pressed my lips to his. That did it. He kissed me back, with a
passion, and my chest really ached from lack of oxygen then.

“I was just going to say, I love you too,” I told him.
The look on his face was enough to die for after that, and I realized that if I
did die today, at least I left knowing that I had experienced life’s greatest
gift, the love of a good man.

After we kissed some more and he held me for a while,
I sent him back out to get Gran who we had forgotten about. Poor old Gran.
Megan and Jake got there, just before they took me back to the OR. Meg hugged
me and told me she loved me, and then to my great surprise, so did Jake. That
one almost put me over the top.

As they wheeled me back in my lovely paper cap, Brock
held my hand. When we got to the door the nurse told him, “I’m sorry, sir.
You’ll have to wait in the waiting room now.”

He bent down and kissed my lips once more. I wanted to
put my arms around him and let him lift me up and carry me away from all of
this. But I didn’t. I decided to suck it up and take it like a woman,
especially when he said, “I love you Molly, with my whole heart. I’ll be right
here when you come out, okay?”

I nodded. He was blurry through the tears, but they
were good tears, happy ones. I was headed to a room where they were going to
take out a vital organ that I literally couldn’t live without for very long, yet
I was happier than I ever remember being. Crazy, I know.

“I love you too, Brock,” I told him.

I watched his face until the doors had completely
closed on him. When they got me into the OR, the anesthesiologist was waiting
for me.

“Hi Molly
,
 
are
you ready to get this done?”

“What’s the hurry, Doc?” I asked him. “You have a tee
time?”

He laughed, “I wish we could keep you awake, you’re a
lot funnier than Dr. Harris. He’s kind of flat as a matter of fact.”

“Yeah, I can’t imagine why. Dealing with cancer is
hilarious.”

 

CHAPTER
TWENTY-FIVE

BROCK

The doctor had told us she would be back there for
about three hours. I didn’t know if I was going to be able to stand it for
three hours. I wondered just how mad they would be if I went back and just
peeked through the window, just to make sure she was okay and they were
treating her right.

Jake was playing a video game on his iPad and Megan
was reading a magazine. Molly’s grandmother was knitting. I stood up and paced
for a bit, but I noticed the looks of the others and, not wanting to tell me
that I was making them nervous and they wished I would stop, I stopped. I
started wishing I had brought my guitar. At least I could go play music for the
other patients and make myself useful for a bit.

I sat again for a while, and then I felt my phone
buzzing in my pocket. I almost ignored it, but I didn’t have anything else to
do so I slipped it out and looked at it. It was my dad. Somehow, some way, he
always knew when I needed him. I went out to the outer lobby and answered it.

“Hi Dad,”

“Hey son. How are you?”

I looked towards the OR doors and almost told him to
call back in another two hours or so and I would let him know. Instead, I said,
“Dad, I met the most amazing girl.”

My dad laughed, “Don’t you meet them pretty regularly
son?”

“Not like this one, Dad. This one is a keeper…like for
forever.” My dad could hear in my voice that I was serious.

“That’s great son!” he said, with real enthusiasm.
“What’s her name?”

“Her name’s Molly and I am head over heels in love with
her,” I told him. I spent the next hour on the phone with him. After I told him
about her, and finally told him where I was and what I was doing here, he
wouldn’t hang up. He couldn’t be here for me in person, so he was here for me
via telephone. I have the greatest dad in the world, the best and prettiest
girlfriend, and two of the best friends anyone could ask for. I’m a lucky guy.
I felt so much better after talking to my dad. He was always so positive, and
it was contagious. Any lingering doubts I had that Molly wasn’t coming out of
there alive and well were purged by the sound of his voice and the wisdom of
his words.

 

After I finished on the phone finally, I went back
into the waiting room. “Does anyone want coffee or anything?” I asked them.
Molly’s grandma said she would love some, Megan wanted a soda, and Jake said, “I’ll
go with you and see what they have to eat. I got up early and breakfast was a
long time ago.”

We weren’t gone long, but when we got back Molly’s
grandmother wasn’t there. “Where’s Grandma?” I asked Megan.


It’s
okay, Brock,” she said.
“Molly’s out of surgery. She’s not awake yet, but they let her grandma go back
and see her.

I felt an overwhelming desire to go barge in there
myself. I knew if I tried it though, I’d be carried out by security and I
wouldn’t be here when she woke up. So I sat and waited some more, and finally
her grandma came back and said, “She’s still sleeping, but you can go back one
at a time if you want.” I looked at Megan and she smiled. “Go ahead. I’m sure
she’d rather wake up to your pretty face than mine,” she said.

As I was headed out the door I heard Jake say, “You
think he’s pretty?”

The nurse let me into the recovery room and I followed
her to a glass room where Molly was. It wasn’t really a glass room, I guess,
but it had huge glass doors facing out to the nurses’ station. She told me to
go on in. None of the equipment was foreign to me; I had seen it all before up
close and personal. But seeing Molly’s tiny body in that bed, hooked up to all
of those tubes and monitors made me feel sick. I went over and bent down to
give her a kiss and then I sat down in the chair next to the bed. She reminded
me of when I was a kid and I watched Snow White. When she ate the apple and
went to sleep, the dwarves put her in a glass coffin and she slept until the
prince came.

I put one hand over hers and said, “I’m not claiming
to be Prince Charming, baby, but I want to be your prince and I’m here, so wake
up.”

That was when she opened her eyes.

 

CHAPTER
TWENTY-SIX

MOLLY

After surgery, it doesn’t matter how well it went, you
always wake up feeling like hell. Your mouth is dry and your vision is blurry.
You’re disoriented and confused and sometimes you’re in pain. I discovered
today though that the cure for most, if not all of that, was to wake up with
Brock at your bedside. His face when I opened my eyes was the most beautiful
sight I had ever seen.

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