Love Always, Kate (2 page)

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Authors: D.nichole King

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After confirming the line’s faultless position, Leslie taped it down. She wheeled me into another small room with a couple of r
eclining chairs, a bed, and a sixty inch TV hanging on the wall. I moved myself to one of the leather recliners and got comfortable. My black diary lay in my lap, ready for my next entry. Leslie attached the chemo drip to my newly placed central line.

“Apple juice or orange juice?”

“Orange.”

“You need to drink it all,
Kate,” Leslie warned. “I know you. No one else is here today for you to give it to, and I hate cleaning out wastebaskets filled with juice.”

I rolled my eyes. “Fine. I’ll drink it.”

“And I’m bringing you some crackers, too.” She walked out the door before I could argue.

Alone, I opened my diary and read the last entry. I needed to write about how I felt, but right now, I just felt numb—and a little hungry. Even though I didn’t want to admit it, I was thankful to Leslie for offering crackers. I hated inconveniencing her.

I toyed with my pen, bumping it on the paper and then sticking the end in my mouth. I didn’t know what to write. My mind was blank. No, I didn’t want to be here. Yes, this really sucked. That’s all I had. Maybe I could blame it on my empty stomach. I felt detached—another reason to side against the dream—like a ghost watching a complete stranger. There was no connection. That was probably what they meant by an “out-of-body” experience.

The click of the door brought me back from numbness-world. Maybe the crackers and orange juice would help stir some real emotion to write down.

“Thanks, Leslie,” I said, looking up.

My heart had never technically stopped before, that I knew of (and I’m pretty sure I’d know
that
), but at the sight of him, I wondered if it just had. It was like one of those movies where the woman dies, and the super-hot guy started performing CPR. Then, her heart suddenly began to beat, her eyes flew open, and the first thing she saw was the man of her dreams giving her mouth to mouth. Unfortunately, the gorgeous dirty-blond with sapphire eyes standing in the doorway wasn’t kissing me. The rest of it was accurate, though.

“Oh, sorry. I didn’t know anyone was in here.”
He smiled. “Hi. I’m Damian.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 2

 

 

November 1

Dear Diary,

Damian, Dr. Lowell’s son, is volunteering at the hospital. Apparently, he got lost and ended up in the chemo room with me. I didn’t mind. At. All. Granted, his sandy-blond hair is spiked with too much gel, but he looked hot. Way hot. Even in his oversized sky blue scrubs.

He stayed in the chemo room long enough to ask my name and where the storage room was. His eyes kept darting to the chemo drip hanging from the IV pole beside me. I don’t know, maybe since he’s the son of an oncologist, I expected more. He seemed uncomfortable, like he didn’t want to be there. I guess I can’t blame him for that.

I wonder how often he’s there. If I’ll get to see him again. Yeah, I know, it’s stupid, but I can’t seem to help myself.

Is it too much to hope that maybe, just maybe, he could look past the cancer and see me?

 

~*
~

 

On Thursday, I almost skipped into the hospital. That was a first. As I walked down the hall to the dreaded chemo room, I kept glancing around, hoping to catch some glimpse of spiked blond hair. I saw nothing. No sign of over-sized sky-blue scrubs, either. I noticed that the spring in my step disappeared, and I entered the chemo room, ready to be hooked up like a hose.

Leslie grinned at me when I walked in. “How are you today,
Kate?”

“Eh,” I answered as I sat down in the blue chair. “Alone again?”

Leslie nodded. “For now.”

“That’s good
, though, right?” I asked as Leslie hooked the tube to the line imbedded in my chest.

“Yeah. It’s good. Lots of kids in remission.”

I debated asking Leslie about Damian. Would she even know? I didn’t want to seem like I was overtly interested, but Leslie had been there for me for years. Holding my hair back as I puked my guts out had to count for something, right?

“Do you know anything about Dr. Lowell’s son, Damian?” I asked, not meeting her eye, and not watching her hook the tubes together either.

“You don’t want to get mixed up with Damian.”

“Why not? What’s wrong with him?”

Leslie sat down in the empty recliner beside me. “Damian is here so his father can keep an eye on him. Dr. Lowell’s wife and oldest son, Liam, died in a car accident two years ago. Damian’s been unraveling ever since.”

The wedding photo of my doctor and his wife that sat on his desk flashed through my mind.
“Oh, I didn’t know...”

A wave of pity washed over me. How horrible it would be to lose your wife in such a tragic, unexpected way. And even worse to have to bury your son at the same time. I had appointments with Dr. Lowell during that time. His pain never showed. Dr. Lowell was a pediatric oncologist, though—his job centered around dying kids and trying to save them.
It was horribly ironic that he could save others’ kids, but not his own. How devastating.

And Damian? He had to be my age. Fifteen back when it happened, and to have suffered so much loss. My heart ached for him. Of course he would be unraveling. Who wouldn’t?

“Um, maybe, if he’s still hurting, then—”

“Katie,” Leslie interrupted, “it’s more than that. He’s…well, he was kicked out of Dowling High School, and now he’s been expelled from Lincoln. It’s only gotten worse. He’s been arrested twice this year.”

Arrested? Damian’s a criminal?

“What did he do?”

“I’m not sure what he did to get booted out of Dowling, but his father had to leave here to bail him out of jail for stealing a car two months ago. Last week, Damian got picked up for public intoxication and destruction of private property—here at the hospital, no less.”

“The window down the hall?” I asked, remembering workers there the day Dr. Lowell had told me my latest numbers.

Leslie sighed. “Courtesy of Damian Lowell.”

I nodded, taking it in
. He didn’t look like a troublemaker. I thought about his smile and the way the deep dimples on his cheeks gave him an innocent look. Imagining him in a jail cell wearing an ugly orange jumpsuit entered my mind. It didn’t fit. My image of a bad boy included black leather jackets, motorcycles, tattoos up and down his arms, more earrings than me, and a cigarette poking out his mouth. But what did I know? I’d spent most of my life in a hospital on drugs. And because of that, I was invisible at school.
I
was the person to avoid.

Leslie interrupted my thoughts. “Orange or apple?”

It took me a second to realize that she spoke. “Uh, apple,” I said without looking up. After the door clicked shut behind her, I sunk into my seat. I tucked my legs underneath me and pulled out my diary, staring at it.

When
Leslie came back in with my plastic cup of juice, I thanked her, still lost in thought. If Damian was hurting, why did that mean I had to stay away from him? Maybe he needed a friend, someone to relate to.

Granted, I didn’t know what it was like to lose a parent or sibling, but I knew about pain—and how in one single moment, your entire life could be flipped upside down. And I understood about being an outcast. How everyone felt so sorry for you
, and the only way they knew how to respond was to ignore you or give you sad looks and sympathetic smiles.

I watched the door, hoping he’d get lost again. But the only person who walked through was Leslie at the end of my two-hour treatment.

I went to bed that night thinking about Damian and feeling guilty for ever being sorry for myself. He had lost so much more than I. At least I still had my whole family for support. Damian only had his dad left, and maybe that wasn’t enough for him.

The sickening effects of chemo punched me in the gut over the weekend. Energy drained from me like water
down a sink. I was tired and weak, barely wanting to get out of bed. My stomach began to turn early Saturday morning and didn’t stop until Sunday night. Mom helped me to the bathroom and kept the small wastebasket next to my bed empty for when I couldn’t make it to the toilet.

She also brought me a stack of books from the library, but they remained untouched on my nightstand. A few times I reached for my diary. I jotted down some notes about not feeling well and t
ried to stay strong, especially in front of my mom.

Damian crossed my mind a few times. When I pictured him in my head, he silently reminded me of how blessed I was. I barely knew him, yet that weekend he gave me strength.
Maybe, somehow, I could return the favor. Even though Leslie said not to get involved with him, that didn’t mean I couldn’t talk to him if I happened to run into him. It’s not like he’d ask me out on a date.

What does
‘involved’
even mean?

On Monday I felt decent enough for half a day of school before my next treatment. I didn’t see Damian that day or on Thursday. Finally I was resolved to speak with him, and now
I hadn’t seen him. I wandered the corridor with my IV pole traveling around with me like an unwanted companion.

I had stopped at the nurses’ station to talk with Leslie. Part of me wanted to come out and ask about Damian, but maybe that wasn’t such a good idea. Like Leslie had
said, the only reason Damian volunteered was so that Dr. Lowell could keep an eye on him.

“How are you feeling,
Kate?” Dr. Lowell asked on his way to make rounds.

“The weekend wasn’t good, but I’m
feeling better today.”

He studied me over the rim of his glasses.
“Well, don’t forget I have you on a more potent dose than two years ago, so it’s very important you take it easy.”

Yeah
, I thought. It didn’t get any easier than lying in bed, throwing up all weekend. I didn’t want to strain myself with over-activity or anything.

A small snicker escaped me
. “Okay, I will.”

Dr. Lowell made a humming noise in his throat. “I mean it,
Kate. Your immune system won’t be able to handle much more than a very basic cold.”

“I know,” I insisted. “I’m taking it easy.”

“All right.” Dr. Lowell sighed, and then asked Leslie about someone’s test results.

Leslie followed me back to the chemo
room where she unhooked me, forced me to drink another glass of juice, and reminded me of what Dr. Lowell had said earlier. I rolled my eyes.

I never found Damian. Maybe he avoided the cancer floor. Or his father.

Disappointed, I walked out to my car. Surely Dr. Lowell hadn’t expelled him from the hospital. That would be counterproductive.

I swept my fingers through my hair, knowing I had a couple more weeks with it at the most.
The cold wind blew, and I caught a whiff of cigarette smoke. My stomach started rolling.
Just make it to the car
, I thought.
Almost there
. Even as I said it to myself, I knew I wasn’t going to make it. And what if I did? I couldn’t puke in the backseat of my yellow Volkswagen Beetle. Instinctively, I twisted my hair back. I ran toward the small patch of grass just a few feet ahead of me. Luckily, I only had apple juice in my stomach. It didn’t take long to empty. When I straightened up, I looked around, hoping no one saw.

That’s when I noticed him.

Walking toward me, stepping on his cigarette, was Damian.

I had two options: pretend I didn’t see him and
beeline to my car, or wait for him to acknowledge he’d witnessed my little episode.

Our eyes locked, and I couldn’t move. Crap. Too late for option one. Since our first meeting, I had worked out a whole conversation in my head about mundane things, none of which centered around vomit. Now, he’d seen me throwing up in the hospital parking lot, and I had caught him smoking on a smoke-free hospital campus. Not great conversation starters.

“Hey,” he said, stopping in front of me. “You okay?”

I nodded, wishing my breath didn’t smell as horrible as I thought
it did. “Yeah. Thanks.”

He cocked his head to the side in recognition
, dark lashes partially concealing the blue behind them. “I know you.”

“I, uh, showed you the store room
a couple weeks ago.” As I said it, I seriously turned around and pointed to the hospital as if he didn’t know it loomed behind us.

Nope, definitely not how I had imagined
this little chat. I felt awkward, but Damian looked completely at ease, standing casually in faded blue jeans and his oversized hospital scrub top.

“Oh, yeah.
Kate, right? You sure you’re all right? I can take you inside or something.”

“No. It’s fine. Thanks.” I smiled. He was concerned. How sweet. And he remembered my name. Even sweeter.

“You sure? It’s kinda my job.” He tugged on his uniform for emphasis.

“No. Really. It’s okay.” I cleared my throat. He wasn’t walking away.
“So, do you volunteer here every day? I haven’t seen you around.”

“Every damn day,” he sighed, not offering more.

“You don’t want to be here, do you?”

He shook his head. “I don’t like hospitals.”

“Me neither,” I said too quickly, biting my lower lip. “It’s boring, smells bad, and there’s lots of needles.”

He
grinned. “I eat supper here every night. Trust me, there are worse things in that building than needles. Hopefully you haven’t had the pleasure.”

I chuckled, and Damian started laughing with me. Just like that, the tension disappeared.

“You’re right. I’ve never been able to keep hospital food down,” I said, still giggling.

“Maybe it would be more bearable if I had some company.” He brushed a wind-blown strand of hair out of my face. My breath caught at his touch. It was surprisingly gentle.

I blushed. “Yeah. Maybe. Distract you from the taste, at least.”

He curved up the corner of his mouth. “You here often?”

“Every Monday and Thursday for the next ten weeks.”

“Ouch. Well, I guess I know where to find you on Monday.”

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