As Hannah pulls up to the same ER where she was with Emily just over a year ago, she tries to not let the painful memories of that day overwhelm her. Entering through the familiar sliding doors, she takes a deep breath and then gives the nurse at the reception desk Oliviaâs and Maddieâs names.
After a moment, another nurse guides her back to a curtained area where Maddie lies in a bed. Hannah can barely stand the anger she feels at the sight of Maddieâs swollen and bruised faceâboth of her eyes are blackened and her bottom lip is split open. The nurse told Hannah that Maddieâs injuries look worse than they areâshe escaped her fatherâs beating with no broken bones, just a mild concussion. What about the injury to her heart? Hannah thinks. Thereâs nothing mild about that.
âHannah,â Maddie says when she sees her. Her voice is raspy and she sounds exhausted. Next to the bed stands a tall, slightly gangly boy in a black robe and a man who looks enough like the boy that Hannah assumes he is his father. The boy turns to look at Hannah, too.
âIâm Noah,â he says, âand this is my dad. We didnât want to leave Maddie alone.â
âNice to meet you both,â Hannah says, quickly shaking hands with Noahâs father. âI wish it was under better circumstances.â
Noah speaks again. âThe police should be here any minute to talk with her about what happened. I gave them my statement back at the house.â
âYou were there?â Hannah asks. A brief, traumatized look flashes across Noahâs face and he bobs his head, lips pressed together firmly. His father reaches over and squeezes his sonâs shoulder, then moves his gaze to Hannah. âI think I should get him home now,â he says. âIf youâre planning to stay.â
âI am,â Hannah assures him.
âI want to stay, too,â Noah says emphatically, glancing at his father. âPlease, Dad?â
âMaddie needs to rest, Son,â his father says kindly. âAnd so do you. We can come back in the morning . . . okay?â
Noah turns his attention to Maddie, who nods. He leans down and gives her a quick kiss on the cheek. âIâll text you, okay?â he says.
âOkay,â Maddie says, tears filling her already red-rimmed eyes. He straightens and turns to leave, but Maddieâs voice stops him. âNoah?â
âYeah?â
âI know I already said this like twenty times, but . . . thank you.â
âEh. No biggie. Totally standard Saturday night.â Noah gives her a shaky grin, and then a moment later, he and his father are gone.
Hannah steps over next to the bed, reaching for Maddieâs hand. âHowâs your mom?â Hannah asks. âDo you know?â
âSheâs in surgery,â Maddie says, clearly trying not to cry. âThe nurse told me she has broken ribs and internal bleeding. And a broken arm, so theyâre going to put screws in it so she hopefully can still use it.â
âOh, sweetie,â Hannah says, not wanting to ask for specifics of the nightâs events yet, knowing the police will do that soon enough. âIâm so sorry. Iâm sure the doctors will take good care of her.â She waits a beat. âWhat about you? Are you okay?â
Maddie shrugs, then takes a shuddering breath. âI donât know what I would have done if Noah and I hadnât come home . . . my mom would be dead, Hannah. Dad was trying to kill her.â Maddie dissolves into tears, and Hannah leans down to hold her, careful not to press against her bruised face.
âYouâre all right,â she murmurs. âEverything will be all right.â She keeps repeating this, smoothing Maddieâs hair and letting her cry, until a few moments later, when a uniformed police officer pushes back the curtain and steps in to stand on the other side of Maddieâs bed.
âHi, Maddie,â she says gently. She is a stocky woman with short blond hair and round, pink cheeks. âIâm Officer White, but you can call me Katie, okay?â Maddie pulls back from Hannah and nods, so Katie continues. âI need to ask you a few questions.â
âDoes she have to do this now?â Hannah asks.
âIâm sorry,â Katie says. âI know this is a terrible time, but sheâll remember the details better closer to the event. Iâll go slow, I promise.â
âItâs okay,â Maddie says with a sniffle. âI want to.â
Hannah hands her a tissue from a table at the side of the bed, listening with growing horror as Maddie describes the scene she and Noah walked in on, and then what happened after that. Maddie couldnât say what led her father to attack Oliviaâthat would have to come later, from Olivia herself. Hannah canât believe the bravery Maddie and Noah showed, taking on James like that. No wonder Maddie thanked Noah; it sounds as though he might have saved her life.
âHas your dad ever hit your mother before?â Katie asks, keeping her voice low. Maddie nods, and the officer continues. âHow long has it been happening?â
âAs long as I can remember,â Maddie says, and half an hour later, after Maddie has recounted everything she can think of about her fatherâs abuse over the years, Katie says she has enough information for now, and itâs time for her to go.
âIâll walk you out,â Hannah says, wanting to talk with the officer alone. She looks at Maddie. âIâll be right back, okay?â Maddie nods, and Hannah walks with the officer to the waiting room.
âWhat happens now?â she asks Katie as they stand off to the side of the sliding doors. âTo James Bell, I mean?â
âHeâs in custody,â she responds. âAnd either an attempted murder charge or first-degree assault charges will be filed by the prosecutorâs office. After that, thereâll be a hearing, where his lawyer will probably ask for him to be released on his own recognizance. What happens after that all depends on which judge gets assigned the case.â
âDo you think theyâll release him?â Hannah asks, disgusted at the thought.
The officer shrugs. âThat remains to be seen. Itâs more likely heâll have a high bail set, and Mrs. Bell will have to file a restraining order once he pays it and gets out. But considering the violence of his acts tonight, no judge is going to just let him walk. If he doesnât make a deal and it gets to trial, hopefully heâll do some serious time.â She pauses. âStill, Mrs. Bell should find a good lawyer. Sheâs going to need one to make sure she and her daughter are protected.â
Hannah thanks her and returns to Maddieâs side just as a doctor in a blue surgical scrub cap approaches the bed. âIâm Dr. Peyton,â she says, pulling off her cap to reveal a headful of short, tightly woven black braids. She looks at Maddie with kind brown eyes. âI just finished working on your mom.â
Maddieâs chin trembles. âIs she okay?â
Hannah canât help it; she starts to cry, unable to think of anything other than the moment when the doctor first told her there was no hope for Emily . . . that her daughter would most assuredly die. She waits for the same words to tumble from this doctorâs mouth about Olivia.
âShe sustained some pretty serious injuries,â Dr. Peyton says with a brief frown. âBut luckily, we were able to stop the bleeding.â She reaches over and runs a gentle palm down Maddieâs forearm. âDonât you worry. After some time and healing, sheâll be just fine.â
Maddie lets loose a shuddering sigh. âThank you,â she manages to choke out. âWhen can I see her?â
âSheâs in recovery now,â Dr. Peyton says. âThe nurse will take you to her once sheâs settled into a room, most likely in an hour or so.â She looks at Hannah. âAnd just so youâre aware, Olivia will need to stay here at least a week, for observation. Weâre keeping Maddie overnight.â
âThank you,â Hannah says, and then the doctor gives Maddieâs leg a quick pat before walking away. Hannah pulls up a chair to sit next to Maddieâs bed.
âThanks for coming,â Maddie says, rolling her head on the pillow so she can look at Hannah.
âOf course, honey,â Hannah says. âIâm so glad you called me. Itâs hard to go through this kind of stuff alone.â
âNoahâs dad is freaking out that my dad did this to us,â Maddie says. âTheyâve worked together for like, a hundred years or something.â She tears up again. âHe thought my dad was kind of a jerk, but he never suspected . . . this. No one did.â
Hannah puts her hand over the top of Maddieâs. âA lot of the time, people see what they want to see. And no one wants to think someone they spend time with can do something like this.â She waits a beat. âYour dad is a good actor, too, isnât he?â
Maddie nods, then releases a long sigh, her eyelids fluttering. âIâm so tired. I donât think Iâve ever been this tired, even when I was sick.â
Hannah reaches for Maddieâs blankets and tucks them up around her shoulders. âWhy donât you try and sleep for a bit? Iâll wake you when the nurse says you can see your mom.â
âPromise?â
âCross my heart.â
âOkay,â Maddie says with a weak smile, then closes her eyes. Only a moment later her breaths deepen, and Hannah watches her while she sleeps, remembering how many times she did this same thing with Emily. Especially in the months preceding the accident, when her daughter seemed to be pulling further and further away. Hannah would tiptoe into her room after she was certain Emily was asleep, staring at her daughterâs relaxed, beautiful face, charmed by the odd way she pushed out bits of air between her lips like she was trying to blow up a balloon. Those stolen moments, when sleep robbed Emily of the ability to throw up walls between them and she was still just a little girl, are among the things Hannah misses most.
It strikes Hannah now that her brother was right when he said that at one point or another, everyone pretends to be something theyâre not. This tendency starts so youngâjust as it did with Emily, when she first began to push Hannah away. We try on personalities like second skins, learning to present only the best version of ourselves to the world, fearful of what might happen if we reveal just how imperfect and vulnerable we really are. But itâs those imperfections, Hannah realizes, those struggles, that truly connect us. Itâs what linked her and Olivia so quickly when they first met. Itâs the reason sheâs sitting here next to Maddieâs bed, worried for this child as much as she once worried for her own.
After a while, Hannah begins to nod off, too, only to be awakened by the same nurse who had brought Hannah back to Maddieâs bed. âOliviaâs in her room now,â she says. âSheâs conscious, and asking for Maddie.â
Together, Hannah and the nurse gently shake Maddie awake, then help Maddie ease herself into a wheelchair. Hannah pushes the chair, following the nurse down a long corridor lighted by cool blue, fluorescent bulbs. They take the elevator to the fourth floor, and the nurse leads them to a private room at the end of the hall. She opens the door, but Hannah hesitates before entering.
âMaybe you should go in alone, first,â Hannah says, her hands suddenly sweaty as they grip the handles of the wheelchair. She isnât sure if Olivia will want to see her.
âI want you to come with me,â Maddie insists, so Hannah steadies herself and does as Maddie asks. Olivia lies in a bed against the far wall, tubes stringing out from her body just as they had from Emilyâs last year. Hannah swallows hard, trying not to cry at the memory, trying to be strong for Maddie. And Olivia, too.
âMama,â Maddie says, and Olivia opens her eyes, turning her head toward her daughterâs voice.
âBaby girl,â she whispers. Her voice is raw, and it looks to Hannah as though it hurts her to speak; her throat must be raw from the intubation tube they used in surgery. And, Hannah realizes, from Jamesâs hands around her neck. âCome here,â Olivia says, and Hannah pushes Maddie over to her mother.
Oliviaâs eyes are swollen, black and blue like her daughterâs, but itâs clear she sees Hannah standing behind the wheelchair. âYouâre here?â she says quietly. Not angry, not accusing. Just a question.
âI called her,â Maddie says, her words made fragile by tears. âI asked her to come.â
Hannah holds Oliviaâs gaze with hers for a long moment. She understands why Olivia asked her to stay away from themâto protect them all from James should he find out who Hannah is to their family. But Olivia was also hurt that Hannah kept the truth from herâdishonesty, even if it is for a justifiable reason, is far from an ideal foundation for a friendship. But Hannah hopes that after the events of this night, Olivia might be willing to start over.
But instead of saying anything to Hannah, Olivia looks at her daughter again. She visibly flinches as she takes in Maddieâs bruises and swollen flesh. âOh, honey, your face,â she whispers, trying to lift her arm to reach out to her daughter, but realizes the cast sheâs wearing prevents the movement. âYour father . . . ?â Maddie nods, and Olivia clenches her eyes shut. âWhat happened?â she asks, looking back at Maddie. âThe last thing I remember is being in the living room . . . James hitting me . . .â Her voice breaks, and Maddie puts her hand through the railing on the bed to touch her motherâs leg. Slowly, she explains to Olivia what she told Hannah and the police officer earlierâhow she and Noah managed to fight James off and called the police to take him away.
âHeâs in jail, now, Mama,â Maddie says. âHe canât hurt us anymore.â
Olivia swallows carefully, clearly still struggling to speak through the pain in her throat. âI should have left him before . . . you were right.â She looks at Hannah. âBoth of you were right.â
âThat doesnât matter now,â Hannah says gently, not wanting Olivia to feel any worse than Hannah suspects she already does. âWhat matters is that youâre both alive and that he pays for what he did.â
âIâll tell the police everything,â Olivia says. âDo you think it will be enough? My word? That heâll go to prison and I can divorce him?â
âYou can divorce him either way,â Hannah says, wanting to touch Olivia but not knowing where to put her hand that wonât hurt her.
âNoah and I will testify, too, Mom,â Maddie adds. âIt wonât be just your word anymore.â
Olivia presses her split, swollen lips together and nods her head once. Hannah decides to place just the tips of her fingers on Oliviaâs white blankets before she speaks again. âI think the best plan for right now is to take things one step at a time. First, you need to focus on getting better.â She pauses, unsure what Olivia will say to what sheâs going to offer next, but knowing itâs what she wants to do. âAnd if you want . . . if youâre okay with it, Maddie can stay with me until youâre back on your feet. Anything else you need, anything at all, Iâm here.â
Maddie looks at Hannah and then back to her mother again. âItâs okay with me, Mom,â she says, reaching out to take Hannahâs free hand.
Olivia is quiet a moment, still gazing at Hannah. There is a hesitance in her eyes and a slight stitch between her brows, making it clear that sheâs trying to sort out how she feels. âThank you,â she finally whispers, and Hannah knows she means this for so much more than just tonight.
And then Hannah smiles, realizing that no matter how quickly sorrow can demolish a life, a moment of kindness, a pure and simple act of forgiveness, can just as quickly save it.