Part 9 (2/2)

Justin exhaled. ”Shoot, I don't know. I tried to tune out everything the midwife-in-law said after the part about the water breaking.”

”Some doctor you turned out to be,” Chaz griped. ”Anybody here know anything about childbirth, you know, just in case?”

”I see good episode of House last month. Very informative,” Isuzu said.

”I saw that!” Chaz said. ”But I don't think the mother lived on that one, did she?”

”When my nephew was born, I was at a Knicks game,” Justin said.

”When I was a kid, our dog had puppies . . .” Abigail offered. ”Not the same, though, huh?”

”No.” They all agreed, it wasn't the same.

”Five minutes between contractions is generally the time a woman should head to the hospital,” Bernard offered. ”It's usually best to deliver within 24 hours of the water breaking. To avoid infection.”

Mouths agog, everyone turned to stare at Bernard.

12.

Bernie,” Abigail said and peered through the diffused light into the strange old man's face, ”why do I get the feeling there is more to you than meets the eye?” They'd aimed the flashlight straight up and topped it with the sus.h.i.+ container to create a makes.h.i.+ft lamp.

He chuckled. ”I reckon you could say that about most folks, huh?”

”But how do you know so much about labor?” Justin asked aloud what the rest were thinking.

”Long story.” He shrugged. ”I don't like to talk about it all that much. It's your garden-variety sob story.”

”Ah.” Abigail picked a stick up and began poking around in the rubble. She pulled out a child's T-s.h.i.+rt, shook it off, and smoothed it over her knee. It had a fuzzy giraffe on the front. It was so small. And soft. She wondered who it had belonged to. And if they were all right. Justin reached up to trace the giraffe's soft neck.

”Anyway,” Bernie continued, seeming unable to resist his captive audience, ”I used to be a doctor. OBG in fact.”

Justin gave Abigail's hand an imperceptible nudge with his finger. It was a message. He wasn't sure if he should believe Bernie. Abigail nudged him back. She wasn't either.

Bernie propped his forearms on his thighs and squinted at the flashlight. ”Used to be a respectable kind of guy. The kind of guy you'd call a workaholic. Got married. Had a couple of kids. Nice house, nice cars. The whole ball of wax. But I was so busy working to get all that stuff, I didn't have any time to maintain it. So, the wife ran off with the guy who taught her self-defense cla.s.s; the kids hated me because they didn't know me; the house and most everything else went to them in the divorce settlement; and because I couldn't stop working long enough to deal with the pain, I hit the bottle.”

Chaz made an empathetic sound in his throat, and Isuzu reached over and patted his shoe. The fact that he was wearing two different shoes had Abigail wincing.

Bernie's wheezy laughter was mirthless. ”Got so dependent on booze I couldn't function at work.” There was a definite catch in his gravelly voice when he could finally continue. ”Lost a young mother during what should have been a routine C-section. It . . . it was . . .” He dragged a sleeve over his face and struggled to compose himself. ”Vowed to never deliver another baby as long as I lived.”

Abigail glanced at Jen for her reaction, but as usual, Jen didn't appear disgusted or appalled. Just sympathetic. And sad for Bernie.

”Malpractice accusations, lawsuits, criminal trial, a little prison time, and here I am. Ruined, shameful, lost, unable to cope, you name it. Just . . . taking each day as it comes until I can check out. Thought maybe today was my ticket to h.e.l.l, but I didn't have the guts to stay outside.” Again, he fell silent, and no one had anything to add.

Selma had amazing night vision. Ever since her second cataract surgery, it was like a miracle. She could read without gla.s.ses and see fine print better than she could when she was half her age. So, when it came to navigating a debris strewn wheat field at warp speeds, she was a regular Dale Earnhardt, Jr.

Luckily, the tornado's swath did not include long stretches of Route 66, and Selma made good time over to Exit 5 and onto Fisher's Mill Highway. Eventually, they had to stop shy of Sycamore Drive and the high school, but they were light years closer than they had been before Selma decided to 4-wheel-it in a rear-wheel drive. Jerking the Olds to a stop behind a smashed up school bus, she and Guadalupe threw open their doors and hit the ground running. Ahead, the gymnasium area was brightly lit, and it was obvious that the paramedics had been hard at work for a while.

”No,” Guadalupe whimpered, bracing herself for the worst. ”No, no, no.” She pressed her knuckles to her lips.

”It's okay, honey. Try not to panic,” Selma said, panting, trotting, and trying to keep up. It was easy enough to say, but she'd been in Guadalupe's shoes before-in fact the circ.u.mstances were eerily similar-and knew that staying calm was next to impossible.

”Elsa!” Guadalupe began shouting from a block away as she rushed toward the school. ”Elsa! Elsa, donde esta?” She was crying now and making no effort to hide her growing hysteria.

”Mama!” Elsa screamed from the parking lot, and charged toward her mother and flung herself into Guadalupe's waiting arms. Her eyes were puffy and her nose was red and she was jerking from the kind of body-wracking hiccups that come with hard crying. ”It was s . . . so horrible! So terrifying! I c . . . can't believe . . . I'm alive.”

”Elsa, Elsa, oh, thank G.o.d you are all right!”

Elsa's beautiful prom dress was dirty and torn, but she was-except for an odd bruise here and there, and some serious emotional trauma-injury-free.

”What is it, hija?” Guadalupe peered into Elsa's eyes as the child was crying so hard her guttural babblings were now impossible to understand.

Elsa tried to speak, but had to stop twice to pull herself together. ”Two . . . of the kids are dead, mama,” she cried, her voice guttural with horror. ”And, others are missing and so many are hurt.”

”Muerto?” Guadalupe gasped. ”No!”

”Yes, mama. But they are not telling us who, until their parents arrive. But I think I know, Mama . . . I think . . . I know.”

Selma hung her head and began to pray. Because if anyone would know exactly how they felt, it was Selma Louise Tully.

Everyone was on edge. And not just because they'd just barely escaped with their lives from a history-making tornado. And, not just because of the terrible stench of manure that had blown in from a local dairy or the occasional startling collapses of now rickety buildings. No, at the moment, everyone was feeling the stress because Jen had begun labor in earnest. She was a true champion, clearly in terrible pain, but handling it with a strength and grace that was amazing, given the situation. Luckily, the battery in the flashlight was still going strong, and the emergency crews were gaining ground in their direction. Everyone had hope that it wouldn't be long now. But that didn't relieve the torment that plagued Jen every sixty seconds.

”Bernard,” Abigail asked, agitated, ”Isn't there something we can do to help her with the pain?”

”No,” he said with a grunt. ”Not without an anesthesiologist on hand. Just keep breathing like you're doing,” he said to Jen. ”Pick something to focus on.”

”Here,” Abigail said and spread the tiny s.h.i.+rt with the little giraffe on Jen's knees. ”Look at this and-”

”Hee, hee, hoo,” Jen breathed.

”Atta girl,” Bernard praised. ”You're doing fine.”

”It hurts so bad, Bernie,” Jen gasped between contractions.

”You do seem to be progressing pretty fast. How many weeks along are you?”

”Almost thirty-eight.”

”Hmm. Could be worse.” Bernie bent down and dug through his grocery bag.

”Found this in the same place I found the sus.h.i.+. Can't believe it didn't break.” He held up a bottle of sake.

Bernard handed the bottle to Chaz. ”I was gonna tip it later, but I think we oughta bust it open now.”

”I'm not sure now is the time to party, my man,” Chaz said, staring at the bottle he suddenly found in his hands.

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