The Doctor’s Truth: Part 4: Chapter 57
The Doctor’s Truth: A MMF Ménage Secret Baby Romance (The Truth or Dare Series Book 2)
Otto, Pearl, and I are waiting with bated breath when the exam room door finally opens up.
A doctor I havenât seen before steps in with a big smile and far too much energy. âHey! Iâm Surgeon Elliot Caulder.â He glances at me and Pearl. âIâll guess you two are twins. And this must be Otto, right?â
Otto nods shyly. âYep.â
âGreat. Iâm the pediatric surgeon, and Iâll be assisting in the surgery today. Before we go any further, Iâm going to need help from my handy assistantâ¦â I only notice now that he has a hand behind his back, and when he pulls it forward, I can see that heâs holding a plush teddy bear with a bandage over its head. âThis is Rex, our recovery bear. If youâd like, you can hold him while I go over the procedure with the adults.â
âIâm twelve,â Otto says, deadpan and unimpressed. âNot a baby.â
âAlrighty!â Dr. Caulder pulls up a chair in front of me and Pearl, the bear sitting in his lap. âLetâs talk.â
âHowâs Donovan?â I ask.
âAs far as Iâve been told, the surgery is going smoothly. Theyâre about halfway through, which is when we want to get started prepping Otto. That way, the kidney has less time floating around before itâs transplanted. Now, a couple things you should knowââ
He walks us through it. Complications that can arise during the surgery. Complications that can arise after the surgery. And then, once heâs prepped us on everything from kidney rejection to shark attack, he clasps his hands together and says, âIâm going to give the three of you a couple minutes, and then weâll come in and start prepping Superman here.â
He gives Otto a fist bump on his way out, which Otto half-heartedly returns.
Pearl hugs Otto tightly and tells him how brave he is.
Itâs strange. I spent so much time wanting this moment, waiting for this moment. But now that itâs hereâ¦the thought of putting my sonâs life in the hands of a surgeon is terrifying. Even if that surgeon is Jason King.
I pet Ottoâs long hair back from his forehead. âI really shouldâve trimmed this.â
He blows at his bangs. âI like it.â
I press my lips together. âHow are you feeling?â
He shrugs. Then he admits, âA little scared.â
âI know.â I hold him. I donât want to let him go. âI love you, little man.â
âYouâre my bacon, Mum,â he says, and I donât even want those words to leave my ears.
The surgery takes over ten hours.
Jason opens Donovan, removes the kidney, and then carts the organ over to Ottoâs room, where he stitches it inside my baby.
I only know this because doctors come by periodically to keep me in the loop with small, hopeful updates.
As the clock ticks on, I start to feel like my soul has completely left my body. The only thing keeping me grounded is Pearl, who slips her hand in mine and holds it.
We sit in a private waiting room and watch the minute hand click on the clock on the wall.
I canât eat. I canât sleep. I take Jasonâs advice and replay a recording I made in voice notes over and over again. Itâs a simple sound, just my own voice telling me, âItâs okay. Itâs going to be okay.â
Itâs two in the morning, and just when I think Iâm going to completely lose it, a familiar face rounds the corner.
Jason is sweat-soaked and pale, and for a second, my heart lurches in my chest and nearly climbs out my mouth.
But then he smiles, that crooked, boyish grin of his. âSurgery was a success,â he says. âOtto is coming out of sedation now. Heâll be out in a few minutesââ
I donât let him finish what heâs saying. I launch myself at Jason and wrap my arms around him. I hold him as tightly as I can, curling up into him, and he hugs me back, holding me.
âThank you,â I whisper, and my voice comes out as a sob. âThank you, thank youâ¦â
Otto is drowsy. Otto complains that he can taste the saline. But Otto is alive. My boy is alive, and his body is no longer poisoning him from the inside out, and everything is going to be okay.
I canât stop looking at him. I canât get close enough to him. I canât stop touching his hair, to the point where he swats my hand away with a whined âMum.â
For him, he just woke up from a long nap, and now heâs got a strange scar up his abdomen. For me, I feel like Iâve been stuck in the foxhole in the middle of a war zone for the past ten hours.
Eventually, Otto and I fall asleep curled up in his hospital bed.
I donât know how long we sleep for. When I wake up, I notice itâs dark outside the window, and the curtains are drawn. Theyâve turned off the overhead light, too, but thereâs still a light from the adjoining bathroom, and the light that filters in through the box window in the doorway.
Pearl sleeps in a cot beside the hospital bed.
Ottoâs arms are splayed about in all directions which is, somehow, his most comfortable position to sleep in. By some miracle, he hasnât pulled out any of the IVs or wires attached to him, and Iâm soothed by the consistent beep of his heart monitor.
I hear muffled voices in the hallway. Through the door window, I can see Jason talking to another doctor. Jason rubs his hand over his mouth, his forehead creased with concern.
Carefully, I peel myself out of the hospital bed. My clothes are wrinkled, and they feel stiff and uncomfortable. I hang my legs off the side of the bed, slide into my shoes, and quietly exit the room, closing the door behind me.
In the bright light of the hallway, I feel a little strange and out of placeâlike a little girl who crawled out of bed in her pjâs to interrupt the adultsâ raucous nighttime party.
âHey,â I say, and both turn to look at me. I hug my arms around my chest. âEverything okay?â
Jason glances at the other doctor and then pats him on the shoulder, which seems to be his cue to leave. He turns to me then and says calmly, âItâs Donovan. The surgery went smoothly, but his blood pressure dropped during recovery, andââ
My ears block the rest of his noise, turning it into a fuzzy tangle of sounds. I canât hear any more doctor-speak. I know the sympathetic turn of the eyebrows. The pinched corner of his mouth. The way he clasps his hands to keep himself from nervously rubbing them together.
I know what heâs saying, what heâs really saying.
Something went wrong. Donovan is in trouble.
âWhen can I see him?â I ask, breaking through the fog.
âNow,â he says. âIf youâd like. We havenât been able to get him to wake up yet, but youâre welcome to see him.â
âPlease.â
Jason slips a hand to my back.
He guides me through the hospital. This building never sleepsâmany rooms are dark, turned out for the night, but there are still plenty of nurses and doctors at their stations, checking in on patients, working at the computers.
He leads me to a room and opens up the door but lingers by the doorway instead of coming in.
Just when I thought I couldnât possibly have any more room for anxiety, it swoops in again, birds low-diving in my stomach. Donovan is lying in the hospital bed, strapped up to monitors and tucked under a white blanket. Heâs Donovan alright, but the nothingness in his face terrifies me. If it wasnât for the slight rise and fall of his chest, I wouldnât be certain he was alive at all, and that thought chills me.
âDo you want me to stick around?â Jason asks gently.
âNoâ¦itâs okay. I need a second.â
He nods and then gives my arm a small squeeze. âIâll be right out here if you need me.â
Then he closes the door, giving Donovan and me some privacy.
There are a couple of chairs in the room, and I pull one up to sit beside Donovanâs bed. His skin looks so pale, like wax. I find myself transfixed on his chestâthe hospital gown opens low, and I can see his necklace bunched up. His mother and fatherâs wedding rings close to his heart.
I reach over and trace one of the rings with my fingertip. âHeyâ¦itâs me,â I say, the words sounding strange out loud. I feel like Iâm leaving a voicemail instead of talking to a living, breathing human. But in case he can hear me, I push forward. âYouâve got to wake upâ¦Otto is recovering well. He wants to thank you for his new kidney. We couldnât have done any of this without you.â
I press my lips together and then get to the truth of it. âI couldnât have done any of this without you. My whole life Iâve been afraid to fall in loveâ¦terrified of trusting other people. Then I found you and Jason. You loved me. Without any strings. And thatâ¦scared the hell out of me.â I take a breath. âBut more than thatâ¦it scares me to think that I could lose you and youâd never know how I felt. Youâre the other half of me. You get me. In a way no other human ever has. Youâre my best friendâ¦my soul mateâ¦and I love you.â
The words donât sound strange, or forced, or wrong. They sound right, so I lean forward on Donovanâs bed and reach over to draw my fingers through his hair.
âI love you, Donovanâ¦â
Suddenly, he moves. His eyebrows knit, and his mouth curves downward. âOwâ¦â
âDonovan?â My heart jumps in my chest. I leap forward and catch the side of his face in his face. The backs of my eyes burn with unfallen tears. âItâs okay, Iâm hereâ¦whatâs wrong? Do you need me to get Jason?â
âNo.â He shakes his head. âYouâreâ¦leaning on my catheter lineâ¦â
Immediately, I sit up, removing my arms from the bed. âOhâ¦my God. Iâm so sorry.â
He lets out a wheezed laugh. âItâs okay. It was less painful than your heartfelt declaration.â
A laugh escapes me now, too, even though my eyes are glassy. âJerk.â
âSlut.â
He looks up at me. Those deep, dark eyes look at me like they see straight into my soul.
âYou scared me,â I whisper. âI thought I lost you.â
âIâm not going anywhere. Ever.â
Then he hooks his fingers through mine. He squeezes. I squeeze back.
âHowâs Otto?â he asks, a hint of alarm trickling into his voice.
âGreat, thanks to you. They say heâs recovering well.â
âIâm glad to hear that.â
He looks back at me, those eyes flickering over me. âHow are you?â
âBetter, now.â
He pauses for a moment. âI want to kiss you,â he says, âbut sitting up hurts, so if youâre into that sort of thing, youâre going to have to meet me halfwayâ¦â
Immediately, I lean over and catch his lips gently in mine. He lets out a soft sigh into my mouth. I feel complete. Like, finally, the last piece of the puzzle has slid into place.
Our strange little family is whole again.