Making progress.
Two hours later, I’m in a recovery ward sporting an incision near my left armpit and starting to feel the discomfort as the anesthetic wears off. Vincent is at my side, holding my hand and smiling softly every time I make eye-contact with him. Every ten or so minutes, a nurse comes in to check on me, pulse and blood pressure and then taking my temperature before updating my chart and breezing out as quickly as she arrived. I begin wondering how this will proceed from here. Doctor Cartwright said, once the biopsy was done and the surgeons were happy I had recovered sufficiently, I was to be allowed to go home. They also mentioned planning a treatment program and does this program mean I will have to come here on a regular basis? How often is regular? I start to wonder. The strain and the stress must have tired me out because when I am next aware, I have been moved to a regular ward. Looking around as much as I can, the first thing I see is Vincent asleep in a chair beside my bed, chin resting on his chest, arms folded and looking quite at peace in his slumber. It’s not until he opens his eyes sometime later, I see they are blood-shot and puffy. Has he been crying? Why would he cry? I know why and my tears start as soon as I realise he is the bearer of bad news.
“Hello gorgeous,” he greets me but I can sense the strain in his voice. “How are you feeling?”
“I feel terrible,” I reply but it takes me a minute to force myself to ask my question. “It’s bad, isn’t it?”
“We have to stay positive, Dayna.” The smile is forced and the courage in his tone shaky.
That’s the answer I didn’t want to hear. “I’m trying, darling.” He takes my hand and offers a reassuring squeeze and his silence gives me time to compose my thoughts. “I don’t want to ask because I don’t think I have the fortitude to face the answer.” He can’t help what happens next and he starts crying. I can see his struggle and his pain and that answers my unspoken question. “Oh Vincent,” I begin but then I’m crying too, a sorrow so deep and soul-destroying that it crushes every hope and dream I have ever held. How long this lasts, I have no idea but it does eventually stop and clarity of thought begins to return. “You’ll have to tell my parents, Vincent. They have to know.”
“I will, Dayna. I promise, I’ll go see them after I leave here.”
Long into the night, he just sits there, un-moving, not speaking, just holding my hand and squeezing a little every time I look at him. He’s feeling like me. There are no words yet. I hate being the reason for his pain. I love him and never want to hurt him but I am hurting him and there is nothing I can do to take away his anguish. Empty inside is the best way I can describe what I feel. Thinking has always been a pleasure but that ended when I realised thinking just makes me want to cry even more. Sleep offers some relief and I drift in and out of sleep until I realise, it’s now dawn. Wards-people come and go, cleaners emptying bins and collecting linen and gowns to be washed and reused, another pushing a trolley bearing trays to serve patients their breakfast but apparently, I am not included and the woman breezes past without so much as glance at me. Not that I can stand the thought of eating but it would have been nice to be offered. People eat to live and it is mostly likely that don’t wish to waste the food on someone who won’t. I know I am being morbid but until anyone has lain on a hospital bed, knowing it will in all likelihood be the last bed they ever sleep in, they cannot understand.
Being as objective as I am able to under these circumstances, I realise I am coming to terms with this. It does not mean I am accepting it or even that I have stopped fearing the outcome, far from it. I’m terrified because it’s a normal human reaction to fear the unknown and of what lies at the end of life’s journey, no one knows. There is no answer for life’s eternal mystery. Glancing to my left, the IV stand has two bags, I can read the label on the nearer one, it’s a saline solution but it obscures the descriptor on the bag behind it. Following the tubes with my eyes, the saline leads to a catheter in my left arm and the other one feeds into a junction in the tubes a few inches from my arm. Behind that, a machine is maintaining a vigil on my vital signs and next to that is one that looks like an IV stand but with a green box on the top but the display shows it’s not in operation at present. Behind that, a large display screen occupies a space on the wall surrounded by electrical sockets, various taps for oxygen and the other gasses used, data-sockets, USB ports and switches for the room lights as well as the examination lights. For people with hope, this would be very reassuring but in my case, it’s depressing. Vincent’s eyes slowly open and he looks straight at me.
“Good morning, gorgeous.” The dark circles under his eyes almost making him look sinister.
“My handsome man, how wonderful you are.” I reply, playing along with the false bon-homme.
“They are kicking me out soon, Dayna. You are off to get a guided tour of the hospital and get a few tests done along the way.” He takes my hand reassuringly and kisses it. “I will be back though. You will have to get used to me being here I’m afraid.”
“I love you, Vincent Thorn” I begin then after a few moments of trying to think what I want to say, I try to get the words out. “I want - I want you to know that. I’ve always loved you - I always will.”
It happens simultaneously, his eyes water-up and he speaks. “You beat me to saying exactly the same thing, Dayna Milton. I better get out and let these people do what these people have to do.” He stands up, leans over and kisses me and the kiss is a replica of our first kiss, so, so long ago but I remember. A girl never forgets things like that.
End:
On silent feet it comes, reaching to take, grasping, relentless and the sole thought possessed, I am coming for you.
The old imagination is getting a work-out today. This is damn hard to write.
Ls x