Название: Karma Kameleon
Автор: Stephanie Haefner
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Karma Kollection
isbn: 9781616503413
isbn:
“How are you, Lexi?”
I was sick of answering that question. Between my mother, and Jeanette, and Amanda, and Rachel, and every other person who had called me over the past two days, my answer of “Okay” had been perfected, regardless of how I actually felt. I wanted to scream, “My baby died. I’m fucking devastated. Why are you asking me such a stupid fucking question?” But no one wanted to hear that.
“I have your blood test results and your HCG levels are lower than the hospital’s test, so that’s good. May take a few more days to go down to zero.” She sat on her rolling stool. “I’m sure the hospital gave you some literature. Is there anything you need clarification on?”
“No, I don’t think so.”
“Okay, have you–”
“I have a question,” Rich interrupted.
“Of course.”
He hesitated before asking, his eyes blinking back tears. “Can sex cause a miscarriage?”
The doctor’s eyes softened as she looked from Rich to me and back again. “No, it can’t. Sex during any stage of pregnancy is more than fine.”
“But, um…what if it was different positions? We did it the night before the miscarriage started.”
“Having sex did not cause this. Please don’t blame yourselves. There is no explanation for why miscarriage happens. And honestly, the baby most liked passed away a week or two ago.”
My heart sank to the floor. My baby had been inside me, already dead, and I hadn’t noticed? How could I not know there was something wrong?
“Have you passed any clots–large ones?”
I shook my head. “Just a couple small ones.”
“I’d like to do another ultrasound, to see what’s going on.”
We gathered my things and the doctor escorted us to one of the ultrasound rooms. The technician joined us and I already knew the drill. I lay back and she inserted the wand. The gray image of my womb came on the screen, empty.
“Everything is expelling as it should be. But I do see a small sac still attached to the lining of your uterus.”
My baby.
“It should come loose in the next few days. It will look like the other clots, only a bit larger. Give me a call when it happens and we’ll do another HCG check and ultrasound to make sure everything is as it should be.”
This wasn’t how it should be. My baby should be alive and growing, not waiting to be “expelled.”
I nodded, having no other reaction. The doctor said her goodbye and I redressed. Rich took my hand as we walked home instead of taking a cab. It was a long walk, but the late spring day begged to be taken advantage of. Plus, the walk would do us good.
The sidewalks were filled with businessmen and tourists, all in a hurry to get somewhere. Rich and I walked as if we had nowhere to be and were in no rush to get there. He held my hand in his and we walked on, almost in a daze.
When we reached our building, we both stopped. I had no desire to go home. Jeanette had Preston for the rest of the afternoon–she’d told us to take our time. We had no real need to go home.
Rich looked at me. “Wanna keep walking?”
I nodded.
We walked past a flower shop, the sidewalk out front covered with buckets and pails filled with blooms of all shapes, sizes, and colors. Rich stopped for a minute, caressing the petals of a bright yellow rose.
“Wait here a minute.”
He dashed inside the flower shop. What was he doing? Through the front window, I watched him walk up to the counter. A minute later, the woman had brought him a small white box. He handed her some cash and after receiving change, he was back outside.
“What was that all about?”
“I have an idea. Come with me.”
He hailed a cab and asked the driver to take us to the Central Park pond. I didn’t ask what was in the box or why we were going to the park. Rich had something in his mind and I was along for the ride.
When the cab stopped, Rich paid and I followed him toward the Gapstow Bridge, which curved over the neck of the pond. He stopped at the highest spot of the bridge, facing the water, and placed the small white box on the ledge. Images of tall green trees reflected on the water as ducks swam and dunked their heads for food.
He opened the box and inside sat two perfect gardenias. Lifting them out, he handed one to me, then brought the other to his nose, inhaling its sweet aroma. Our free hands intertwined and I squeezed tight, meeting his gaze, eyes wet with fresh tears.
The warmth of his lips touched mine and then he turned back to his gardenia. “Goodbye,” he whispered and tossed his bloom into the water. It landed perfectly, ripples surrounding it.
I did the same, mine landing a few feet from Rich’s. He drew in a deep breath and exhaled, taking me into his arms. We stood there for a while before continuing home.
Chapter 5
Back to work. I needed to finish my first draft of Which Way to Broadway. But more than that, I needed the distraction. By nine AM, Rich had gone, Kevin and Marcus too, and the babysitter had taken Preston to spend the morning at the children’s museum.
Usually I worked at the desk in our bedroom, but with the entire place to myself, I chose the living room love seat instead. We’d hit a cold spell and I couldn’t imagine anything more relaxing than my cashmere blanket and a cup of French roast with hazelnut, my legs sprawled in front of me. My laptop sat with its cursor blinking at me. Waiting for me to do something amazing. But my mind kept wandering elsewhere.
It had been a few weeks since I’d added anything new to this story and I’d left it right before the climax, at the part where the main character was practically raped.
I’d already told Amanda about the story. I thought she might have some issues with it, but she didn’t. She was flattered, and confessed she’d loosely based her current project on me and my love story with Rich. We’d agreed to change the names, obviously, and decided it a good idea to work on stories near and dear to us.
I sat there, ready to relive one of the worst nights in Amanda’s life, just a few days after one of the worst of mine. And once I put my fingers to the keyboard, the story emerged. It felt damn good to have something different to focus on–something that, though sad, was not my personal misery.
A few hours later, my stomach growled and I took a break. Rising from the love seat, I stretched and realized the fullness of my bladder. I sat on the toilet, debating what to make for lunch, and felt something weird. In the toilet water I found a walnut-sized clump–bright red and exactly how my doctor had described.
I’d СКАЧАТЬ