Read Love Finds You in Frost Minnesota Online
Authors: Judy Baer
Tags: #Love Finds You in Frost, #Minnesota
“No hospital,” Jack croaked.
“You could also have strep throat,” the doctor said as if he hadn’t even heard Jack. “Your throat is raw. We’ll run a test for that as well. I’ll send the nurse in to help you get admitted.”
“No . . .” Jack protested, but the doctor was already gone.
“It’s okay,” Merry assured him. “You’ll get better more quickly with IVs and good care. It’s much better than lying around my house until you have no choice but to call for help.”
“You’ll be late for work,” he said, surprising her.
“Thank you for thinking of me, but I called Abby. She’s taking care of things at the store. And there’s no school today. That’s why Greta got to stay up so late last night. Oh dear. Do you think making snow angels with Greta had anything to do with it? It had to be chilly on the ground.”
The nurse entered with several papers and directions to hospital admissions, and there was no more conversation.
Later, Merry re-read the same
Arthritis Today
magazine for the third time as she sat in the hospital family room. She wasn’t even sure that Jack would want to see her once he was settled since she was basically responsible for putting him here.
Finally a nurse entered. “You can go into Mr. Frost’s room now.”
Merry jumped to her feet. “How is he?”
“We’ve made him as comfortable as we can, and his temperature is down a little. He looks exhausted, so if you want to speak with him, you should go now.”
Quickly Merry gathered her purse and jacket.
“Hey,” she said as she stood over Jack’s bed. He was frightfully pale and very still.
His eyes opened slowly. “Hey, yourself.”
His voice was scratchy and his smile wan, but she felt a flicker of relief. He was important to her, she realized, although it was difficult to explain why she felt such attraction to this man who’d managed to criticize much of what she held dear.
“Is there anything I can do?” She felt helpless and surprisingly upset.
“Can you stay?”
“Here?” That was the last thing she’d expected him to ask. “With you?”
“Just for a while. I hate hospitals.”
“Sure. I’d be happy to.” She pulled a chair next to the side of the bed and sat down. Merry was not only taken aback at his request but curious as to what was behind it. Maybe nothing. Maybe he just wasn’t crazy about being alone right how. She didn’t doubt she’d feel the same.
“Jack, when was the last time you were in the hospital?”
Pain flickered in his eyes. “When Jamie died.”
“No wonder you don’t like them. Don’t worry, I’ll stay as long as you want.”
He nodded as his eyes drifted shut. In moments, he was asleep.
When she was sure he wouldn’t wake, Merry slipped into the hall outside his door and called Abby.
“What’s going on?” Abby demanded. Merry hadn’t explained her absence beyond “Jack is sick.”
“I’m in the hospital. They just admitted Jack. He’s very ill. Double pneumonia, they think. I don’t know what else.”
“That’s awful!”
“I’m going to hang around for a while. I want to talk to the doctor. In fact, would you open the store tomorrow too? Things are so up in the air.”
“Don’t worry about it. In fact, I’ll ask Hildy if she’ll come over and help me. She can wrap gifts and keep the coffee and cookies going. That would help me a lot. You take the day off. Rest, if nothing else.”
“You are the best, my friend. Thanks so much.”
“What are friends for but to help in time of need? Take care of yourself, hon. I’ve got to go. There’s a three-hundred-dollar sale heading toward the till right now.”
Merry stepped back into the hospital room where Jack was sleeping and sat down beside him. As she looked at him, she wondered who it was she should call to inform them of his illness. He’d said he had a couple cousins, but what could they do if they had young children at home? She’d have to wait until he woke up to ask him. In a worst-case scenario, she could call his work. A man as handsome as Jack surely had a girlfriend who’d be worrying about him.
And if she were going to stay for a while, she wanted to be comfortable—or at least as comfortable as possible in a hospital room. She arranged the recliner and one other chair as best she could in order to stretch out, then leaned back to try to get some rest.
Perhaps she’d close her eyes for just a moment. . . .
Chapter Thirteen
• • • • • • • • • • • •
“Miss? Miss?”
Someone was shaking her shoulder as Merry swam up from a deep sleep. “Hmmm?”
“Would you like a tray?”
Her eyes popped open. “Is it lunchtime?” She tried to straighten, but it was as if her muscles had molded to the chair.
Jack was still sleeping. His tousled dark hair, unnaturally rosy cheeks, and dry lips, slightly parted, were appealing, like those of a small boy sleeping. His vulnerability did something odd to Merry’s insides.
“Not lunch. Dinner. It’s roast chicken. Would you like some?” The aide held out a tray. Merry’s stomach turned at the sight of milk and juice in paper cartons. The institutional covers over the plastic plates and the tiny packets of salt and pepper didn’t bode well in her mind, but she nodded anyway. She’d slept away the day and her stomach was growling.
Next, the aide shook Jack by the shoulders. He winced and groaned, as if the touch hurt him.
“Why don’t you come back in ten minutes with his tray?” Merry suggested. “If you can keep it warm till then, I’ll wake him up and help him.”
The aide looked relieved. “That would be great. The hospital is very full. There’s a nasty bug going around, and our numbers are up.”
Nasty bug indeed, Merry thought as she ate the pale piece of chicken and a baked potato. Both foods were the same color, and she wondered if boiled chicken wouldn’t have been a better description. The squash was colorful but watery. Still, it tasted wonderful to someone as hungry as she.
How on earth had she slept so long? She’d have to chalk it up to exhaustion. Nights had been short and days long all month. She set aside her tray when the aide returned with Jack’s dinner. Quietly she removed Merry’s empty tray and left again. Merry hated to wake Jack, but he needed nourishment as well.
“Jack? Can you hear me? Can you wake up for dinner?” She put the tips of her fingers on his cheek and felt the unnatural heat there.
“Not hungry,” he muttered.
“I’m not sure that matters. You haven’t eaten. If you don’t, the doctor will put you on a feeding tube, and I’m sure you don’t want that.”
The bedclothes stirred, and he opened his eyes. “I want to go home.” He stared at her with a dark intensity that belied his condition.
“Home?” she echoed. “To California? Do you realize how long a trip that is?”
“Not there. Your place. I can sleep just as well there.” He punched weakly at his pillow before closing his eyes.
So now he considered her place home?
She tinkered with the salt and pepper packets on his tray before she said, “You can talk to the doctor about that when he comes by. If you aren’t eating, I’m sure he won’t consider releasing you.”
Not that he would anyway, Merry thought, but at least it got Jack struggling to sit up in bed.
He wasn’t doing a good job on his own, so Merry pressed the bed’s control button and, with her arm around his back, helped him up. She could feel him trembling and realized what a toll this had taken on him already. Sick or not, Jack was big, strong, and masculine, and it felt right to be holding him. Merry felt herself reluctant to let go.
Surprised at herself, Merry steadied him and left him to sit on his own. She didn’t understand why Jack elicited this feeling within her. Jeff didn’t. Zeke hadn’t. The cute but persistent telephone man, Kip, didn’t. She’d even disliked Jack when she’d met him. What was going on?
With every bite he took, Jack made a face, as if she were feeding him something awful. “This isn’t as good as your food,” he finally said.
“I’m so glad!”
He looked at her questioningly.
“I cook small portions for me and my B-and-B guests. I don’t have to feed a building full of people. Considering the task, I think they do pretty well.”
“Hmm . . .” He looked at her with unfocused eyes that slowly drifted shut.
His head lolled, and she could see him slipping off to sleep again. Merry eased his bedside table away, helped him find a more comfortable position on the pillow, and sat down to keep watch over him. She really should go home and tend to business, but she just couldn’t leave. The man was sick, and there were no family or friends to look after him. And she really didn’t mind. Asleep—and not bashing Christmas—was how she liked Jack Frost best.
* * * * *
Why was everyone trying to wake him up? Jack thought irritably as the voices in the room grew louder. Couldn’t a man sleep when he wanted to? And he felt so rotten . . . every muscle and bone in his body ached. Even his hair and his fingernails hurt.
His head was filled with little men wielding sledgehammers and pounding stakes into the backs of his eyes. He heard a groan and realized he was the one making it. Maybe he’d been hit by a truck. A semi. With a full load. Of iron.
“Here he comes.” This time it was a male voice that spoke. Jack opened his eyes a slit, long enough to see a white coat and the end of a stethoscope. “Good morning, Mr. Frost. Remember me? I’m Dr. Henderson.”
Jack felt someone settle on the edge of his bed. When he opened his eyes he saw the doctor peering down at him and Merry hovering anxiously over his shoulder.
“Wha . . . happened?” he managed.
“Basically, you caught a bad bug and quickly developed pneumonia. You’re dehydrated. You’re getting IV fluids and antibiotics right now, and we’re going to keep a close watch over you. This stuff can turn nasty.”
“
Turn
nasty?” Merry blurted. “It’s already nasty!”
The doctor nodded and checked Jack’s chart. “I’ve ordered respiratory therapy, and we’ll give him oxygen if he needs it. I’m going to start him on potassium, and I’ve also ordered frequent blood draws to watch his white blood count.” He turned to Merry. “Are you his wife?”
“No . . .” She felt a blush spreading across her neck and cheeks. Little did he know!
The doctor turned to Jack, who, although his eyes were closed, seemed to smile a little. “Is there anyone you’d want me to give information to should you be unable to answer for yourself?”
“She’s okay,” Jack said without opening his eyes.
“Very well.” The physician closed the chart, nodded to Merry, and turned to leave.
When he was gone, Merry neared the bed. “Are you sure you want to do that? Is there someone I should call? Family or friends? I’m hardly qualified to . . .”
“No one.” He shifted restlessly as if he couldn’t find a comfortable spot. “Everyone I know is in California.”
She wanted to press him, but he was obviously miserable. She’d try again later.
Unfortunately, later was a long time in coming. As the evening progressed, Jack’s fever elevated and his already fitful sleep grew even more restless.
Merry became alarmed as the parade of nurses, phlebotomists, and x-ray technicians grew.
Her cell phone rang, and she slipped into the hall to answer it.
“Hi, it’s Abby. What’s going on?”
“He’s really sick.
Really
sick. I don’t know what to do.”
“Come home and sleep, that’s what. He’s in the hospital. Besides, he’s not your responsibility.”
Merry hesitated. “That’s not exactly true.”
“What do you mean? He’s a complete stranger!”
Merry turned away so the nurse coming down the hall couldn’t hear her. “The doctor asked for a next of kin or someone to confer with if Jack couldn’t.”
“And Jack chose you?” Abby didn’t try to keep the shock out of her voice.
“There wasn’t exactly a roomful of options. I was there. He didn’t have much choice.”
“I suppose . . .” Abby’s tone was doubtful. “What does it mean, exactly?”
“For the moment, it means I have to decide if I’m going to stay here tonight or not.”
There was a pregnant pause on the far end of the line. “You’re kidding, right?”
“He’s really sick, Abby.” She didn’t admit a part of her
wanted
to stay. While a healthy Jack Frost had annoyed her, this Jack was in need of help.
“Go home! He’s in good hands. You won’t do anyone any good if you don’t get some rest.”
Still, Merry hung around awhile longer, until Jack’s sleep grew less restless. Every few minutes she touched his forehead, her fingers brushing his damp curls. If he was such a complete stranger, why did she feel so protective?
* * * * *
The next day Merry went to the administration office at her school to see if a substitute teacher could step in for her until after the Christmas holidays.
“I don’t like to ask this, but I’m so far behind this year . . .”
Her principal waved away her words. “You are an excellent teacher, Merry. Your classroom is always ahead of the others. Having a sub right now isn’t going to slow them down. Besides, my wife was at your store last week and said it was great. I’ll have to visit myself.”
When Merry told her students that she wouldn’t be back until the new year, the reaction was quite different.
“No!” was the chorus when Merry made her announcement to her students. Even talking about all the parties and festivities in the offing didn’t help.
“Teacher . . .” At the end of the morning Merry felt a tug on her sweater. She turned to see Greta standing behind her.
“Yes?” Merry took in the washed-out sweatshirt and high-water jeans the child was wearing.
“Don’t go.”
“I’m glad you’ll miss me, Greta, but I’m afraid I can’t change my mind now.” She bent her knees so she was eye level with the child. “It won’t be for long.”
“But I’ll miss you!” Greta’s lower lip trembled perilously.
Merry gathered the child in her arms. “Maybe you and your parents can come to Frost for the live Nativity. There’ll be real donkeys, sheep, and goats.” Actually there would also be a cow or two, some horses, dogs, and a ferret. It seemed like everyone who had a beloved pet wanted it showcased in the Nativity scene, and she’d never had the heart to turn them away—even though she very much doubted there were ferrets in the manger.