I hear Phillipâs voice. My eyelids are heavy, but I push them open, squinting against the light.
âPhillip?â I mutter, my throat feeling as raw as it sounds.
âPrincess, youâre awake,â he says, his voice like music to my ears. He has tears in his eyes but a smile on his face.
I raise my hand and see the IV in it, and then I see a room filled with flowers. âIâm in the hospital?â
âYou got in a car accident.â
It all flashes back. The car running a red light, coming toward me. The impact.
âYou scared meâno, you devastated me when I thought you had â¦â
I donât let him finish. I start crying, knowing how badly Iâve let him down. How Iâll never forgive myself for losing our baby. He might have me, but what did I do to our life? There were no pictures of the two of us with a bunch of kids on heaven TV.
While Iâm so happy to see Phillip, I know Iâm not supposed to be here. I know that I messed up both our lives when I left our house. Itâs funny; had I run the light, I would be home nowâstill pregnant and feeling Baby Mac kicking me.
Instead, I feel an emptiness I canât contain, like Iâm a shell of what I once was.
Emotionless.
Unfeeling.
Empty.
What kind of wife could I be to Phillip after this?
And, now, I know why they showed me that scene of Phillip in the backyard with his dark-haired children. So, Iâd know I have to let the picture play out.
And, as much as itâs going to hurt, I know I have to let him go. Let him find the happiness he deserves. The happiness he doesnât know heâs fated to have without me.
âDo you remember the accident?â he asks gently.
âYes. I turned on the arrow. A car ran the light. I saw it coming toward me and tried to speed up.â
âAnd am I ever lucky I bought you the new Mercedes. The driver who hit you died at the scene.â
Visions flash through my mind as Phillip speaks.
I touch my stomach and cry hysterically. âIâm so sorry, Phillip. I donât know why Iâm here. Itâs all my fault; thatâs why, isnât it? Iâm being punished for being mean to your mom. I wasnât really mad at her; I was upset with Lori. I shouldnât have been at that intersection. I shouldâve never left the house. And my dadââ
âYour dad?â
I nod, but Iâm still hysterical.
I need to get out of here.
Right now.
I grab my IV, ready to pull it out so that I can bolt from this bed.
This place.
The walls of the hospital are quickly closing in around me.
âJadyn,â Phillip says sternly, âcalm down. If you donât calm down, theyâll sedate you.â
âHow am I supposed to calm down, Phillip? I killed our baby! I wish I were dead, too!â
Phillipâs eyes widen in shock. âPrincess, I sat by your side and told you over and over that the baby was okay. That we needed you to get better. They said youâd hear me.â
I freeze. Stop crying. Shake my head.
Try to find my voice.
âWhat? No! The baby is okay? Really? Itâs not dead?â
âNo, he isnât,â Phillip says, running his hand across my face. âHe had a low Apgar score at first, but heâs fine now. Do you wanna meet him?â
I put my hand over my mouth, my whole body shaking, unable to control the emotions flooding me.
I canât get the words out. â
Itâs ⦠a ⦠boy?â
âYes.
.â
âPhillip, is he okay? Normal? Healthy? He was blue. He didnât cry.â
âHe looked blue to me, too. Really blue. I thought he was dead. They took him away so fast, and I just assumed ⦠then everything happened with you.â He squeezes my hand and gives me a reassuring smile. âThey said, as soon as he took his first breath, he turned the normal pink color. Heâs perfect. I promise.â
âWhere is he?â
âIn the nursery.â
âYouâre supposed to lay the baby on the motherâs chest right away. What if he doesnât recognize me? What if we donât bond? How long have I been out?â
âYou were in the ICU for thirty-six hours. Itâs Sunday morning. I couldnât bring the baby into the ICU, but he and I have been talking about you the whole time.â
âTalking about me?â
âYes, I explained that giving birth was difficult for you, and you needed a little time to get better but that you couldnât wait to meet him. He understands.â Phillip looks so tired but so incredibly sweet. âIâve been reading him stories, too. The ones you bought.â
â
?â
âThatâs his absolute favorite,â Phillip says. âHe coos when I read it to him. Iâll have Danny come sit with you while I go get him.â
âDannyâs here?â
âDanny hasnât left your side. I donât think I wouldâve gotten through this without him. It was a relief to have him stay with you when I needed to be with our baby.â
He rushes to the door but stops and comes back.
He kisses my hand. Kisses my forehead. Kisses my dry lips.
âI love you, Princess.â
âI love you, too, Phillip.â
I watch the man of my dreams, my heaven on Earth, walk out of the room.
Part of me wonders if Iâm dreaming.
Or if Iâm finally in the real heaven.
But then Danny wanders into the room, looking lost. Itâs obvious he hasnât slept much. The dark circles under his eyes have always shown a lack of sleep on his light skin.
âYou look like crap,â I say and smile, realizing this is real. That Iâm alive.
He shakes his head at me and runs his hand through his hair. âI should look like crap. Do you know how badly you scared us? You , Jay.â
âPhillip said youâve been here the whole time.â
He sits next to me and grabs my hand, his eyes filling with tears. âI wasnât there for you when your parents died. No way was I going to leave when Phillip needed me.â
I laugh. âOh, so it was just for his sake, huh?â
âThat, and I love you. You look like youâve been crying.â
âI love you, too. I thought the baby had died, Danny. It sounds weirdâdonât tell anyoneâbut I saw my dad, and he and I watched them take the baby out of me. There was blood everywhere. The baby didnât cry. I thought we were waiting for the baby to come to heaven with us.â
âThen, what happened?â
âI heard Phillip yell, âPrincess, donât you dare leave me.ââ
âBut you did.â
I saw kids playing on a swing set Phillip built. You and Lori were there, but he was with someone else. It broke my heart.â
âHeâd never get over losing you. You know that. Neither would I.â He hands me a water bottle and says, âDrink this. Your voice sounds hoarse.â
I sip from a straw, savoring the coolness on my throat.
âSpeaking of , Phillip said itâs Sunday morning. Arenât you supposed to be playing football today?â
âHey,â he says. âIâm not a loser, and thatâs not a very nice thing to say to someone who has been worried about you.â
âHow am I supposed to watch you play if youâre here?â
He smacks my hand. âWhat part of donât you understand?â
âWas I really dead?â
âPhillip was with you in surgery when your heart stopped. They rushed him out of the room. Called code red or blue or whatever they do. When I got here, Phillip told me you were gone. But I guess they worked on you. Zapped you or whatever they do to make your heart start beating again. They didnât tell us theyâd revived you for almost an hour. It was the longest hour of my life. Phillip was inconsolable. And, even once they told us they had revived you, they couldnât assure us youâd be fine, and we didnât know what to expect when you woke up.â
âYou always said my mom must have dropped me on my head when I was a kid.â I laugh.
He rolls his eyes at me. âWell, obviously, your memory is still intact.â
âYou should also know that I drafted you as my fantasy football quarterback, and if you donât play tonight, Iâll start the season in last place.â
âOut of all the quarterbacks you could have drafted, you chose me? You must have gotten a shitty pick.â
âI had first pick, Danny.â
âBut you should have taken Brady or Manning. Rogers.â
âDanny, this is your first full season. Itâs your team. Youâre not the replacement or the backup. Youâre the starting quarterback for a professional football team. Exactly where we all knew youâd be. Itâs your time to shine. Thereâs no other quarterback Iâd want on my team. I donât care how many rings they have. And, if I win, Iâll get, like, seventy-two dollars.â
He pips my finger and looks at his watch. âOh, sure. Thatâs why youâre trying to get rid of me.â
I look at him seriously. âI really appreciate you being here with Phillip. A lot, Danny.â
âNowhere else Iâd be. His parents are here, too. I understand you were upset with Phillipâs mom before you left.â
âI blew up.â
âShe chewed his ass, just so you know.â
âWhy?â
âBecause he shouldâve talked to her about it.â
âI should have talked to her about it, too, but I didnât want to hurt her feelings. Honestly, it was Loriââ
âIâm sorry I made you go over there. She told me what she said. She feels really bad about everything thatâs happened lately. When she apologizes, do you think you can forgive her? For me?â
I nod. âOf course I will.â
Danny smiles at me. âIâm glad youâre not dead.â
âI am, too.â
Phillip walks into the room, carrying a little bundle wrapped in the blue-and-white cloud blanket I bought just the other day. I donât think Iâve ever seen him look more handsome. When he was in here a few minutes ago, he looked exhausted. Now, heâs practically glowing.
The beaming look of pride he has trumps every single moment I saw on Heaven TV.
I canât believe heâs carrying baby.
He lays the bundle in my arms.
The most perfect baby stares up at me with wide blue eyes. His eyes are framed with dark eyelashes even though he has a tuft of blonde hair. He has adorably chubby cheeks and perfect lips. His mouth forms a little O-shape, and he coos at me.
âHeâs so beautiful,â I whisper, still in awe of how perfectly perfect he is. I rub my lips across his feather-soft hair. âAnd he smells so good.â
I try to open up the blanket, but my IV gets caught.
Phillip helps me, revealing ten toes.
âOh my gosh, he has your feet, Phillip!â I laugh, looking at his long, bony toes. âLook, Danny! He has Skeletor toes already!â
Danny laughs.
âBut he looks just like you,â Phillip says dreamily.
âDo you really think so?â
âLooks like a little old man to me,â Danny teases.
Phillip ignores him. âMy mom has a picture of us as babies, and he looks just like you did.â
âBut he has your mouth,â I say.
âDid Phillip tell you he named the baby?â Danny asks with a naughty smirk.
âOh, Phillip, you didnât. If you named him Otto, I swearââ
He puts his pinkie next to the babyâs hand, and I watch in marvelous wonder as the baby grasps ahold of it.
âWhat? I thought you loved that name.â
I nod my head toward the door and motion to Danny with my eyes. âDonât you have somewhere you need to be?â
âIâm not sure if I should play.â
âDanny, you need to.â
He kisses my head. âYeah, I suppose youâre right.â
When he gets to the doorway, he stops, turns around, and lets out a deep sigh.
âWhat?â I ask.
He grabs the duffel bag that we had packed for the hospital. âAfter what you went through with your heart and all, I probably shouldnât scare you.â He pulls the Nebraska gnome out of the bag and sets it on the bedside table.
âI wondered when that thing was going to turn up.â Phillip laughs.
âItâs been in your bag since you packed it. I thought youâd get a kick out of having it during the labor process, but Jay ruined my brilliant plan with all of her drama.â
I laugh with them but purposefully roll my eyes toward the door.
He holds up his hands. âFine! Iâm going!â
âI need lots of passing yards, please.â
Danny plugs his ears as he walks out. âI didnât hear you.â
Phillip sits on the bed and grins at me. Then, he runs his hand across the babyâs forehead, just like he does mine when Iâm stressed.
âChase Michael Mackenzie, meet your mommy.â
âYou gave him my dadâs middle name? We didnât talk about that.â
âI know, but it just felt right. Did Danny tell you any of what happened?â
âYeah, kind of.â
âDid he tell you that we thought you were dead for what felt like an eternity?â
âHe did. Iâm sorry you had to go through that, Phillip.â
Phillip nods, tears welling up in his eyes. He wraps his arm around me. âI love you.â
âI heard you, Phillip.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI didnât hear you when you talked to me after the surgery, but when you said, âDonât leave me, Princess,â I heard you. I never want to leave you.â
Emotions rip through me. Joy. Happiness. Relief.
And love.
Most of all, an overwhelming, deep-in-my-soul, all-consuming love.
âWe have a present for you,â he says with a grin.
â
?â
âYes, me and Chase.â He pulls my charm bracelet out of his pocket and puts it on my wrist.
I immediately spot the new charm. A star thatâs sparkling with diamonds.
âItâs beautiful,â I say.
âDo you know why we got a star?â
âHeaven?â I guess.
âAt the swings, before I proposed again, you told me that youâd always loved me but that our love felt too big and you felt small in comparison. I didnât completely understand what you meant. But I do now. The love I feel for you and this little guy,â he says, squeezing my hand, âis almost overwhelming. Like the stars we used to stare at. My love for you both is the size of the universe.â
I kiss the babyâs head. âI love you, Chase Michael Mackenzie. Thank you for the charm.â
And then I kiss Phillip.
Danny is playing on the TV, the baby is sleeping in my arms, and Phillip is asleep in the recliner next to the bed. I stare at both of them in a happy daze. I notice the baby journal tucked into the chair next to Phillip, so I carefully reach over and grab it, deciding I need to write something.
Iâm shocked to find out that Phillip already has.
Dear Baby Mac, You were born three weeks early on September 7th, weighed in at six pounds five ounces, and were nineteen and a half inches long. You were early because you and Mommy got into a car accident, and it caused her to have something called a placental abruption. Thatâs a bad thing because it meant she was bleeding, and you were not getting all the oxygen you needed.
When you were born, you were a little blue, and your Apgar score was low, but the nurses took care of you, and the next time they did the score, you were almost perfect. Your mom had a rougher time, and for a while, I thought we had lost her.
It was the worst pain Iâve ever experienced. Way worse than any of the bones Iâve broken. Even the time I fell out of a tree and they had to screw my arm back together.
But, when you love someone the way I love your mom, youâd happily take physical pain over the emotional kind.
Sheâs in the ICU now. Stable but critical. They say the next twenty-four hours are crucial.
And Iâll admit, Iâm scared.
My parents are hereâyour grandparents.
And Danny. Danny is my best friend, and heâs never left my side through all of this. I hope, someday, you will have a friend like him.
Everyone has been asking me what your name is. To be honest, I thought you were going to be a girl. We had agreed on a girlâs name but not a boyâs.
But your momâs favorite was Chase, so I decided on Chase Michael Mackenzie. You have a grandpa and grandma in heaven.
And it might sound crazy, but when I was crying in the waiting room, out of the corner of my eye, I thought I saw him rocking you. When I turned to see if I was just hallucinating, he was gone. But Iâm pretty sure he was there. Helping us get through it.
So, I gave you his middle nameâMichael.
I have to admit, I always thought most babies were kinda ugly.
But not you.
Youâre perfect.
Iâve been holding you and feeding you until your mom is able to. And staring in wonder at your ten perfect fingers, ten perfect toes, and the cute little way you ball your fists up before you start crying.
Itâs been killing your grandparents, but I wonât let anyone else hold you until she has.
She went through a lot to bring you into this world, and she deserves that honor.
And Iâve been telling you all about her. About how sheâs been writing in this journal. About how she couldnât wait to meet you.
About how much she loves you.
When your mom and I were young, weâd lie in a hammock and stare up at the stars. Weâd talk about how infinitely big the universe was and how small we were in comparison. Your mom once told me that she felt small compared to how big our love felt.
I didnât completely understand what she meant that day, but I certainly do now.
The love I feel for the two of you is almost overwhelming, like the size of the universe.
Your mom has a special charm bracelet, and I sent my dad out to buy her a diamond star, so sheâll always know we feel the same way about her.
When she wakes up, weâll give it to her together.
I love you, Chase Michael Mackenzie, and I know your mommy canât wait to meet you.
And, as soon as she finds out youâre a boy, sheâll probably tell me she told me so. Sleep well, my precious baby boy.
All my love, Daddy Tears stream down my face. Phillip gave me this journal, so I could write to the baby, but that isnât really what I did. The journal was written more for me than for him.
I wrote some things that probably werenât appropriate.
I wrote some things that were probably stupid.
I wrote some things that were probably silly.
But this journal represents my real journey. Itâs not a sugarcoated fluff piece.
And, someday, Iâll tell him that nothing in this journal prepared me for the way I feel right now.
Nothing.
No childbirth class.
No books read.
Nothing could have prepared me because there is nothing in the world that compares to the feeling of holding your baby for the first time.
I smile, realizing I know now exactly when Iâll let him read it.
When heâs expecting his own baby someday.
Because Iâll want him to know that, sometimes, life doesnât always go the way you planned it.
And, sometimes, tragedy can strike when you least expect it.
But, sometimes, it can be even more incredible than you ever imagined.
I grab a pen and start writing.
Dear Chase Michael Mackenzie, My perfect, sweet baby boy.
Weâre still in the hospital. Your dad is taking a nap, and Iâve got your uncle Dannyâs football game on, but mostly, Iâm watching you sleep in my arms. Youâre making the cutest little faces as you dream, and I canât wait until the day you smile at me for real.
I wish my parents were here to see you, but I know for sure that they are watching over us.
Thereâs something I want you to always remember.
You and I could have had a very different outcome. Weâre both lucky to be alive. Iâll be thankful for every single day I get to spend with you.
And something else I know â¦
You are destined for greatness.
I donât know what youâll do or be, but I know it as surely as I feel my own heartbeat.
And Iâm going to do everything I can to prepare you for it.
All my love, Mommy