His wife doesn't even flinch when he heads out the door after a few hours of
sleep. She's in the bathroom brushing her teeth and gives him a wave and a sad
smile.
"Can you pick up the dry cleaning, Jack?" Her voice catches him
off guard, his hand is already on the doorknob. "I have a meeting in an hour and
I've got to take Hannah to her dance class straight after."
He nods, his
turn to react silently - he doesn't trust that his voice won't give away his
real feelings. Dry cleaning, pick up the dry cleaning, he tries to etch
the thought in his brain. Pick up the goddamned dry cleaning, and oh - you
have a good day too.
Three blocks later, he descends into the subway
station, dry cleaning and wife already in the back of his thoughts. He
mechanically punches his ticket, filing past students and swerving around
tourists on autopilot.
Someone is yapping about a term paper and a coat
on sale at Bloomingdale's into a cell phone. He wants to grab her by the
shoulders and ask her if she heard about the FBI agent who was shot; if she's
ever seen someone she loved with a bullet hole in their thigh and blood
everywhere but where it should stay. The blood, the fucking bloodstains on the
carpet and her hands covered in red.
He doesn't take another look at her,
standing to let a man on crutches sit. How the hell is she going to get to
work if she can't drive and can't walk? His mind is racing once again and he
disembarks a stop early, preferring the motion of the streets to the stagnant
noise of the train. How the fuck is she going to come back to work after this
at all?
His car, parked haphazardly along the curb, brings the
events of the previous night rushing back full force (not that they'd ever
really left). Files and takeout wrappers and Samantha's sweatshirt are tangled
in the backseat.
He waits until he's merging onto the freeway to pull the
sweatshirt onto his lap, wrapping one of the sleeves around his free hand. He
doesn't think she'll want it back anytime soon, and he thinks he might keep it
until she does. A souvenir of his failure to save her, hidden in the back of a
closet away from the eyes of his wife, witness to a marriage he failed to
save.
There's a post-it note on the dashboard, a hospital name scrawled
in Sharpie and a room number added later in pencil. He stares at it at every
chance, willing it to disappear, willing this to have all been a nightmare.
At the next stoplight he crumples the paper and stuffs it into the glove
compartment. The traffic surges forward again and he turns toward the hospital.
He's torn between wishing it was farther away and wanting to have been there
since the night before.
Suddenly, there it is, he concentrates on
finding a parking space to drown out the constantly repeating tape in his head
of how he failed her. Turn of the engine, close the window, lock the doors; he
does it all automatically.
The hospital corridors are white - everything is
blindingly white, uncomfortably sterile. Subdued sounds and a growing urge to
whisper each word.
The nurse barely acknowledges his presence, continuing
to fill out a form while she types his request into the computer. Her fingers,
he notices, find the keys without thinking.
"I don't have any record of a
Sam Spade, sir." His heart drops and he struggles for what he's supposed to do
next. She's gone, she can't be, she cannot be gone. She has to be here.
"Are you certain he's been –"
"Samantha, I mean Samantha. Spade. Sorry,
I'm used to calling her..."
"If you'll please follow me,
Sir."
**************
"Hey, sweetie." His own words surprise him
even as he's stroking her arm with one hand, pushing her hair back with the
other. She's alone in the room, no jackets from friends who just left to get
coffee, no flowers from a concerned mother. "I hope I didn't wake you up. How're
you doing?"
Her eyes struggle to focus on the face in front of her,
blinking away the sleep and dried tear drops of a long day and night.
The
steady hum of the private room reassures her that he's the only one in earshot
and then come her words:
"I was so scared, Jack."
The breath he
hadn't realized he was holding comes out painfully.
"It's okay now,
sweetheart, you're going to be fine." He runs his palms down her upper arms,
fighting his urge to press his ear against her chest. I need to know your
heart is still beating.
"Have you been home yet?" Her voice crackles
over the short sentence, she closes her eyes again.
"Yeah." He shifts his
weight uncomfortably. "I did. Martin told me you were here and I figured I
should wait to come by."
"And you're okay?" Eyes still closed, her voice
sounds calmer than a minute ago.
"I'm fine."
'Good..." A long
pause, slow breathing, her eyes flutter and she tries to move her hand to grab
him. Her fatigue makes the distance too much, and she looks at him with pleading
eyes.
"Shhh, Sam, don't move around. You've been through a lot, you
should be sleeping."
He watches her during the lull in conversation.
Blood is still staining her fingernails, streaked along her chin; it looks so
dark against her washed out flesh.
"I'm going to stay awhile, Sam." He
doesn't think to ask if she even wants him here. Some part of him recoils at the
idea of her lying in this empty room with no one to hold her hand, no one to
tell her everything's okay when she wakes up confused and in pain.
She
tilts her chin in what he takes to be agreement. He slides out of his jacket and
places it on the back of the chair.
"Please get some sleep. I'll be here
when you get up."
"Maria...? The girls?"
"Let me worry about
things. I'll take care of everything." Whatever that turns out to
be.
"You're an idiot, you know?" She softens the blow with a half
smile.
"I nearly put out my back picking you up and this is the thanks I
get?" He laughs out loud at the welcome glimpse of her personality.
"You
could've died." Her eyes are glistening with more tears ready to fall. "You
could've been shot, and it would've been my..."
He presses his lips
against her cheek; gratefully breathing her in and exhaling against her skin.
"I could never leave you behind."