A Family To Cherish. Carole Page Gift
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Название: A Family To Cherish

Автор: Carole Page Gift

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

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СКАЧАТЬ and they drove the twenty miles to St. Mary’s Hospital north of Hillsborough. Again, mostly in silence.

      It was nearly six a.m. when they entered the hospital lobby. Daylight was already filtering through the windows, giving the room a smudged, hazy cast, as if the darkness were reluctant to relinquish its hold. Doug went straight to the information desk and asked where he could find his sister. The receptionist checked her charts and directed them upstairs, to the third floor, the Intensive Care Unit. “Dr. Glazier is on call.”

      They took the elevator upstairs to the ICU nurses’ station, and Doug asked to see his sister, his voice tight with anxiety and impatience.

      “I’ll page Dr. Glazier,” said the nurse. “Please have a seat in the waiting room.”

      Doug held his ground. “I just want to know if my sister and her family are okay. Can’t you tell me that much?”

      “I’m sorry. You’ll have to speak with the doctor.”

      Doug’s tone hardened. “Listen, I am a doctor. A surgeon. And I want some answers. Now.”

      “Dr. Glazier is on his way, Doctor. Please have a seat.”

      Doug was about to protest again, but instead he threw up his hands in a gesture of futility and muttered something under his breath. He and Barbara crossed the hall to the waiting room and sat down on a green vinyl couch beside a tall potted palm. Nearby stood a table with a carafe of coffee and foam cups. Barbara got two cups of black coffee and handed one to Doug. “Maybe this will help.”

      “Thanks. Some news would help even more,” he snapped. “All I want is a little information about Nan, and you’d think I was after top government secrets or something.”

      Barbara thought of something. “What about Pam and Benny? I wonder if anyone’s called them.”

      “Let’s wait until we have some news to report.”

      Finally, a lanky man in a white lab coat approached; he had a narrow face, thinning hair, and a small black mustache. He held out his hand to Doug. “Mr. and Mrs. Logan? I’m Dr. Glazier.”

      “It’s Doctor Logan,” said Doug. “How’s my sister?”

      “I won’t sugarcoat it, Dr. Logan. It’s serious. Your sister has sustained multiple injuries, including a lacerated liver and spleen. We operated immediately, but there was too much damage. She’ll need further surgery, but at the moment she’s too weak. If she can gain some strength in the next day or two…”

      “What about her husband, Paul?”

      Dr. Glazier’s brow furrowed. “I’m sorry. Your sister’s husband was killed on impact. A drunk driver crossed into their lane and hit them head-on.”

      “And their daughter?” asked Barbara, choking back a sob. “Did she make it?”

      Dr. Glazier’s voice brightened slightly. “Yes. She was asleep in the back seat. She sustained only minor injuries. She’s in the pediatric wing. Barring any complications, we should be able to release her in a few days.”

      “When can I see my sister?” asked Doug.

      “The two of you can see her now, but just for a few minutes. She’s in module 2A.”

      Barbara and Doug instinctively clasped hands as they entered the small, unadorned room. In the large hospital bed lay a pale figure connected to a maze of blinking, whirring machines. Barbara clasped her hand over her mouth and whispered, “Oh, Doug, she looks so bad.”

      Doug approached the bed and put his hand on Nancy’s arm. His voice rumbled with emotion. “Hey, sis, it’s me, your big brother.”

      Nancy’s eyes fluttered open, but her gaze remained unfocused. “Doug?” she murmured through pale, swollen lips.

      “Yeah, it’s me, baby. Barbara’s here, too.”

      Nancy struggled to speak, her lips forming a faint smile. “Didn’t think…you’d see me again…so soon…did you?”

      “Can’t say that I did,” said Doug, his voice catching.

      “You know me,” whispered Nancy, closing her eyes. “Always doing…the unexpected.”

      Barbara slipped over to the other side of the bed and gently smoothed back Nancy’s mussed hair. “Now we need you to get well, Nan. Show us how quickly you can come back to us, okay?”

      Nancy moistened her dry lips and gazed up urgently at Barbara. “Janee? Is she…okay?”

      Barbara nodded. “She’s going to be fine, Nan. The doctor says she’ll be out of the hospital in a few days, good as new.”

      “Thank God.” Nancy lifted her hand weakly to Barbara. “If Paul and I…don’t make it…take care of Janee.”

      “Don’t be silly, Nan,” said Barbara, forcing a smile. “You’re going to be just fine.”

      “Promise me, Barb. Just in case. Take care of my little girl.”

      Barbara blinked away sudden tears. “Of course we will.”

      Nancy swallowed hard and groped for words, her voice growing faint. “Teach her about art…and music…and poetry. Take her to church. Show her God’s love…like you showed us.”

      Barbara fished for a tissue in her purse and blew her nose. “We will, Nan. I promise.”

      “Give her all the love…Paul and I gave her. She needs…a lot…of love.”

      Doug bent over the bed and kissed his sister’s pale forehead. “We’ll take good care of her, Nan, until you’re well again and can take care of her yourself. You just concentrate on getting better, okay?”

      Nancy turned her eyes to Doug, her sallow skin taut against her high cheekbones. “Say a prayer. Please.”

      Doug hesitated for a long moment, giving Barbara a look that said, Get me out of this. She stared back unflinchingly and waited. Finally Doug bent over the bed, his face close to Nancy’s, and whispered a simple, heartfelt petition for her healing. Halfway through he stopped and drew in a deep, shuddering breath. In the silence Barbara could hear the whoosh and click of the machines monitoring Nancy’s vital signs. After a minute, Doug spoke again, his voice broken, the anguished words rising on a sob as he begged God to spare his sister’s life.

      It was the first prayer Barbara had heard Doug utter in over four years.

      Chapter Three

      “We’ve got to look in on Janee,” Doug told Barbara as they left Nancy’s room.

      Barbara felt a tight, choking sensation in her chest. “I don’t know if I can. Oh, Doug, it brings everything back.”

      “We’ve got to go in, Barb. We’re responsible for Janee until—until Nancy’s well again.”

      They were already walking toward the pediatric wing. Barbara took Doug’s arm, fearing СКАЧАТЬ