Shame washed over her. She could have been killed tonight. She could have killed their baby. Her mother was right—she was reckless. No wonder Jon needed her out of his life. She was probably a huge reminder of his past, of thrill-chasing Nora who loved her fast cars more than she loved her life.
But that wasn’t true for Patti. Not anymore. Not now that she had someone who needed her. It was a wake-up call if ever see needed one. It was time for her to stop living in the past. She needed to let it go before it destroyed her, because she wasn’t about to do anything to jeopardize the gift she had been given.
She knew what she had to do now, and she couldn’t wait to get out of there so she could tell Jon. She had so many things she wanted to tell him, that she wasn’t even sure where to start. But she wanted him to be happy, and she thought she knew just the way to make it happen.
Speak of the devil.
Patti looked up at the sound of heavy feet clomping toward her. Then the curtains whipped back and Jon stepped in looking like hell on wheels with his hair disheveled and his eyes wild.
Her blood rushed hot at the sight of him, and Patti smiled. She was so glad to see him. “Hi.”
Jon made no move to come closer, and the way he stared at her, his jaw set hard and the cold look in his eyes, set off her internal warning bells. Patti braced herself.
She had a feeling things were about to get ugly.
21
“Hi,” Jon said, his voice gravelly. “I tried to call you earlier, but a nurse answered your phone. She told me you were in an accident.”
So that answered her first question, which brought up the next. “Why were you calling me?” Her chest tightened as she waited for his answer. With the news of the baby, she was hoping beyond hope that he had tried to get a hold of her because he realized he’d made a mistake.
Her hope was dashed in the next instant. “I just wanted to make sure you were alright. You left angry, and the way you sped out of there…” He trailed off, but Patti didn’t have to think very hard to know what was left unsaid. He was worried that she would get into an accident. He was worried that she’d end up like Nora. Apparently, his worries weren’t totally unfounded.
“I was upset,” she agreed, casting her eyes down to the thin blanket covering her legs.
“Is that how the accident happened?”
Patti took in his pained expression. She wanted to lie and say that it was the other driver’s fault. She didn’t want him internalizing her mistakes, but she just couldn’t do it. She couldn’t lie to Jon. “It was my fault. I wasn’t paying close enough attention.”
“Because of me.” Jon’s expression tightened with self-loathing.
“No, because of me.” Patti sat up straighter. “I was too caught up in my own head. I shouldn’t have even been driving, but I was and I made a mistake. This has nothing to do with you, Jon, so don’t even try to shoulder it.”
They stared each other down, both unwilling to give an inch. Patti wanted him to realize just how much he mattered to her, and she wanted him to stop blaming himself for everything. It just seemed so unlike the confident man she met. This man was a beaten down version of him, and she didn’t like it one bit.
Finally, he broke eye contact. His gaze scraped around the curtained room, to all the wires and tubes hooked up to her. “How are you?”
“I’m okay. The doctor said it’s just a few scrapes and bruises. Nothing major. They’re going to run a few more tests and then I’m out of here.” She watched him, his tall, dark form taking up so much space. His presence made her feel safe and protected. She wanted to offer him the same. Her brows pinched together as something occurred to her. “How did you get them to let you in here, anyway?”
Jon’s eyes narrowed slightly and he looked down at his shoes as though embarrassed to say. “I told them I was your husband.”
Patti blinked. “Really?” A slow smile crept across her face. Jon as her husband? She had to admit, it didn’t have a bad ring to it.
“Don’t laugh,” Jon warned her, a stern look on his face despite the twitch at the corner of his mouth. “They wouldn’t have let me see you if I told them the truth, and I needed to see for myself how you were doing.”
Patti bit her lip. The fact that he was there, standing before her, when she wasn’t even sure she’d ever see him again, was proof positive that he cared for her, and whether he knew it or not, she was about to become a very permanent fixture in his life.
Jon blew out a heavy breath. “So how did this happen exactly? Were you speeding again?”
Patti’s face flamed red. After the time that he’d scolded her, she had been extra careful to obey the speed limits when he was around, but when he wasn’t, she let loose. He wouldn’t be very happy to hear that. She ducked her head and nodded.
Aside from the constant beeping of machinery and the drone of voices and movement all around them, everything had gone deadly quiet within their small sanctuary. Braving his wrath, Patti lifted her head to take a peek at him.
Jon stood at the foot of her bed now, his hands clenching the footboard so hard his knuckles had turned white. His eyes, raw with emotion, filled with an inner turmoil that Patti could only guess at, were glued to hers.
“You’re mad,” she said, stating the obvious just to break the damning silence.
“I am beyond mad,” Jon gritted. “I’m furious, Patricia. I’m furious, and do you know why? Because I love you. I love you so damn much it hurts, and I can’t have you.”
Patti’s eyes widened, and she gathered her legs under her, wanting to reach out to him, needing to fix the relationship that seemed only to be getting further and further out of her reach. “You can have me,” she insisted. “I’m right here. I want you. I love you.”
Jon pushed off the bed, removing his hands before she could touch him. “No, I can’t,” he said fiercely. “Don’t you get it, Patricia? You’re just like her. Everything about you reminds me of her. It just took me a while to realize it. That’s why this won’t work. You’ve already gotten yourself hurt. I refuse to sit around waiting for the day you finally get yourself killed. I won’t do it.”
Patricia’s voice wobbled out of her. “I’m so, so sorry, Jon. I didn’t mean to hurt you.” She wiped away the stream of tears cascading down her face. “I’m not Nora. If you’ll just see—”
“I see fine,” Jon interrupted her. “I see a strong, intelligent, beautiful, fun-loving woman who is hell-bent on destroying herself, even if she doesn’t realize it yet.”
“No, that’s not who I am,” she argued. It felt like a fist had taken hold of her heart and was squeezing it. She could hardly breathe.
“That’s exactly who you are,” Jon said, backing away. “And I can’t stand around and watch it happen. I have to focus on taking care of me. I have to save myself.” Regret flashed in his eyes. “I’m glad you’re okay. Take care of yourself, Patricia.”
“Jon, wait. Wait!” Patti scrambled off the bed, grappling with the bundle of wires attached to her, but she was unable to get free. “Jon!” she shouted, but he didn’t answer. The curtains fluttered in his wake. Patti fell to her knees and cried as quietly as she could manage.
That was the second time Jon had left her in as many days.
He hadn’t even given her the chance to share the good news.
The good doctor hadn’t lied. After getting a brief ultrasound to make sure everything was intact, the nurse provided her with a blurry sonogram she referred to as “Baby’s First Photo.” Patti took her word for it that her baby was in there somewhere and, armed with a stack of paperwork, called Jules.
“I can’t believe you’re pregnant,” Jules screeched in her ear. “I can’t believe you let him ride bareback! Didn’t your parents teach you anything? Does eighth grade Health class ring any bells?”
The moment Jules found out her friend was in the hospital, she was by her side. Patti was grateful for her friend, but she was seriously wondering what she was thinking when she had called her, of all people, when she knew that this would happen.
For the last twenty-seven minutes Patti had been subjected to all manner of questions, most of them humiliating and questioning her level of stupidity, which, according to Jules, ranked somewhere on the level of Neanderthal, but she insisted that even with their small, prehistoric minds, they had more common sense than she did.
“I know about contraceptives,” Patti said glumly. “We just forgot to use them I guess.”
“You forgot?” If at all possible, Jules’ voice had raised another octave. Patti was fairly sure that by the time the car ride was over, she would have lost a good portion of her hearing. “Patricia Jacobs, what would your mother say?”
“She’d tell me to suck it up and get a job because she didn’t raise a quitter.”
“I would slap you, but I make it a point not to hit pregnant women.” Jules glared at her. “I just don’t even know what to say right now.”
Patti turned to look out the window. “Then don’t say anything.”
And she didn’t. They spoke not a word the rest of the way to her house, which were both a blessing and a curse. It meant that Patti had way too much time on her hands to think of how her life had taken so many turns in so little time. It was nauseating. Or maybe that was the pregnancy hormones kicking in?
Once Jules had her inside and in her own bed, tucked under the blankets, fussing over her like a mother hen, Patti felt like she’d aged twenty years.
“I hope you don’t mind if I take off,” Jules told her as she walked back into the room with a glass of water and a couple of aspirin for her aches and pains. “I have so much to do tomorrow to get ready for Piper’s baby shower this Friday, which you are coming to, right?” She directed a pointy fingernail at Patti’s face and arched a thin brow, daring her to find an excuse.
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