Read A Heart for Robbie Online
Authors: J.P. Barnaby
Tags: #Romance - Gay, #Romance - Contemporary, #Fiction - Medical, #dreamspinner press
list, and then a thought struck him.
“Excuse me,” he asked the woman at the counter, who sat affixing
“Signed by the Author” stickers to the fronts of a stack of books.
She looked up with a smile, as if thrilled to be interrupted. Her
flaxen hair fell in sheets around her pale face, and her eyes, magnified by large lenses, were a brilliant blue.
“Can I help you find something?” she asked, her voice as bright as
her smile.
“Would you happen to have heard of an author named Julian
Holmes?” he asked, digging the name out of the back of his mind as he
remembered the conversation with Dane about the author whose son lay at
St. Mary’s. Her visage, already animated, brightened still further.
“Oh, of course. Julian comes in all the time. He had a signing here a
few weeks ago, in fact. His last while he’s getting ready for the birth of his son. He’s so excited.” She held up a small stack of books with the name
Julian Holmes across the front and a “Signed by the Author” sticker.
Simon took the first one off the stack and read the back.
In the far reaches of a small Arkansas town, an
unspoken evil has taken hold. Monsters conjured by mere
thought, demons summoned from Hell through the
subconscious, and the dead rising from their graves. Liam
Black’s parents had moved them to Tempest, Arkansas, to
get away from the carnage of New York City streets. Now he
faces the greatest danger ever, the beautiful Eve. While she
may look sweet and innocent in their junior bio class, Liam
suspects there’s far more to her than anyone sees. Is she the
one responsible for their classmates’ newfound ability to
transform thought into matter? Liam, armed with the ancient
knowledge hidden in the attic of his new home, is the only
one who can stop it.
22
JP Barnaby
Interesting. The mix of dystopian YA with a twinge of horror, minus
a full apocalypse caught his attention. He decided to give it a shot, even though he wasn’t normally a fan of YA. It wasn’t every day that a gay
author wandered into the hospital where he worked. Maybe they’d get a
chance to meet, and he’d be able to at least say he’d read one of the
guy’s books.
“That’s the first in the Black Heart series. I think you’ll like that.
The characters are amazing,” she said with a swoon that didn’t quite mesh with selling a book.
Simon picked up the other books on the stack and set them aside to
grab the hardback book from the bottom. He turned it over and saw the
bookseller’s crush written in those handsome cheekbones and soft
grayscale eyes. Checking the front of the book, he noticed it was the third and most recent book in the series.
“I’ll take the first,” he said, because it would fit into an interior
pocket of his coat while at the club. The hardback, while beautiful and in excellent condition, would not. Plus, his bookshelves were already
overflowing. He should just take a picture of the cover and buy it on
Amazon for his Kindle, but bookstores were a dying breed. It felt nobler to support the store, like he made a difference, and being a paper pusher, he didn’t feel that way often. Sometimes, when he got a kid to nail a perfect spike on the court, he felt it, but that skill wouldn’t get them out of the life they’d been born into. He felt, deep down, nothing he did in life made
much of an impact on anyone.
She rung him up, and he declined the bag even as he slid the book
into his coat pocket. He still had two hours left before he could respectably show up in one of the clubs alone. Sitting at the bar by himself at seven in the evening reeked of desperation. He was, in fact, desperate, but he didn’t want it to show. So he walked to the end of the block and across the street to a Caribou Coffee. The coffeehouse had far more people than the bookstore.
Apparently, in the age of digital everything, patrons held caffeine in higher esteem than their own education or literary entertainment. A few people
sat reading, while the rest were laughing and sharing a future memory
with their friends. A twink took a selfie with his sour-faced boyfriend and Simon looked away.
He missed his friends on nights such as these: guys from college that
he hung out with in sports bars on the other side of the city, or a couple of girls from human resources that he’d do an after work-drink with
A Heart for Robbie
23
occasionally. None of them suspected the double life he led. Like a secret agent, hiding the most incriminating parts of himself behind smoke and
mirrors, Simon only let them see the parts of him that he felt were safe.
He ordered a hot chocolate, still rather full from dinner, and settled
into a halfway comfortable chair away from the noise of guys who were
far too energetic far too early in the evening. Simon smirked, imagining the willowy twink with the wild hands falling asleep midfuck while
riding some daddy, all because he’d started the evening earlier than he
should. Instead of worrying about them, he opened up the paperback and
started to read.
“SIR?” A young voice asked, interrupting the fight scene where Liam
battled a demon who held Eve captive in one of the circles of Hell, which happened to be conveniently located in a barn on the outskirts of town.
Simon looked up to see a gangly teenager with unfortunate glasses and a
slight case of acne around the side of his mouth. “We’re closing up in
about ten minutes.”
“Oh, thank you,” Simon said, surprised, as he pulled out his phone to
check the time. He had four missed texts and two calls he didn’t notice
because he was so engrossed in the novel. The hot chocolate, stone cold
after sitting untouched for nearly three hours, sat in the same place on the table. Time had stopped for Simon and put everything on hold, except life.
The empty coffeehouse loomed around him like an unfamiliar song.
Simon closed his eyes to get a hold of himself, disoriented from being in rural Arkansas for so long. It had been a long time since he’d been sucked into a book so completely he’d forgotten everything else.
In fact, he seriously considered skipping the club and going home to
continue reading until the tender hours of dawn. Sex wasn’t that important, was it?
He decided he would walk past Hydrate on his way to the L and see
if it still held any allure for him. Simon folded the corner of the page to mark his place and slid the book back into his pocket as he stood up. His legs and back ached from being in the same position against the seat for too long. One joint popped and then another. Finally, he took one step
toward the garbage and, not feeling any lingering pain, dropped his cup
into the hole and headed for the door.
24
JP Barnaby
The weather had turned cold, and the March night slapped him in the
face when he stepped into it. A light Chicago wind whipped around him,
yanking his scarf over his shoulder. Simon knew he should have brought a hat. He always forgot it, probably a subconscious thing because it fucked up his already wild hair. Instead, he jammed his gloved hands into his
pockets and hunched his shoulders as he walked. The torrent of demons
and zombies danced through his head, bringing questions only future
reading would answer. Deep down, he knew vampires would come into it
somewhere. All of the clues were there, but he couldn’t figure out how
Holmes would introduce them without disrupting the rules of the universe he’d already established.
Hydrate came up faster than he’d expected. No line of people
waited, as sometimes happened during the summer. Apparently, no one
wanted to brave the blustery night even in the hopes of booze, dancing,
and sex. The door opened, and Simon looked around. A few guys sat at
the bar, laughing and talking while the bartender handed them drinks. It looked pretty dead, actually, but he couldn’t see the second bar or the
dance floor from the door. Maybe he’d find more action farther back. But the question remained, did he want to go in?
“Excuse me,” a quiet male voice said from behind him. Deep, but
with a slight Latino accent, the sound sent a shiver down Simon’s back.
He turned and looked into beautiful black eyes surrounded by the longest lashes he’d ever seen on a guy. He stepped out of the way, but his new
friend didn’t move. He simply stood there, looking at Simon. Simon
glanced around to see they were alone.
“Are you going in to get a drink?” Simon asked with a desperate
kind of hope.
“Yes, and I’m buying one for you too.”
A Heart for Robbie
25
Chapter 3
THE CONFERENCE room into which the assembled team of doctors
escorted Julian had a false friendliness he couldn’t quite put his finger on.
With an odd number of fake floral arrangements placed strategically
around the table, several haphazardly placed chairs, and everything
painted in perfectly coordinated, soothing colors, the room made Julian
feel that St. Mary’s Children’s Hospital in Chicago’s River North area
tried too hard to keep their patients’ families calm. Their doctors had
probably delivered some of the worst news imaginable within these walls, and Julian had a feeling from their grim expressions that this meeting
would be just as devastating.
“I think this is where Mr. Rogers came to die,” Liam whispered.
Julian glanced over his shoulder to see Liam standing behind him, a
horrified look on his young face. He’d brought Clay again. Apparently, he thought Julian needed gay boy love too. Right then, Julian would take all the love he could get. He’d return the love in spades when he wrote the
next chapter of their lives. They deserved it.
“Mr. Holmes,” Dr. Martinez started, her short black bob pulled
behind her ears and her brown eyes grave.
Julian pulled himself away from Liam’s sympathetic gaze.
“Call me Julian, please,” Julian requested for possibly the hundredth
time since arriving at the hospital nearly two hours before. They’d
introduced him to the entire neonatal team, the cardiac team, and now he was on display for a different team.
“Julian,” she amended. “These are Doctors Averitt and Dane, and we
have been working together on your son’s care since he was admitted. The cardiac cath revealed a serious deformity, known as a pulmonary atresia, 26
JP Barnaby
in your son’s heart. His right ventricle is underdeveloped, and several of the major arteries are also underdeveloped and misplaced. We would like
to do an initial surgery to install a BT shunt to bypass the ventricle until we can find a suitable donor. Julian, there is no easy way to say this. The shunt is a short-term solution. The only way to save Robbie’s life is with a cardiac transplant.”
Julian’s own heart constricted painfully in his chest.
“I… I’m sorry. Can we back up just a little?” he started, trying to get
a handle on his emotions. Even though he couldn’t feel it, he saw Liam
drop a hand on his shoulder. “His heart is deformed?”
Dr. Averitt nodded and pulled a piece of paper from his briefcase.
Very serious but disappointingly detached, he pushed his glasses higher on his pale nose and showed Julian a diagram. It appeared photocopied from
some kind of medical textbook. His graying blond hair fell forward just a little across his forehead as he spoke.
Julian’s mind refused to focus on just one thing, jumping erratically
from Dr. Averitt’s hair to Dr. Martinez’s name tag and then back to the
paper in front of him. He understood, intellectually, that his distraction came from shock and lack of sleep, and he tried harder to concentrate on the diagram of a heart Dr. Averitt held, even as he counted the stripes on his shirt.
“This drawing is of a normal heart,” he said, taking a black marker
and drawing a thick line near the bottom right of the heart, sectioning off a part. “In your son’s heart, this chamber, the right ventricle, is too small to be very effective. In order to help the heart pump blood the way it should, we want to put in a shunt here.” He drew a small tube from the chamber
above into the smaller ventricle. “That will buy him some time until we
can get him on the transplant list and find a suitable donor.”
“And a… a transplant will save his life?” Julian asked, balling his
hands into fists on the tabletop to try to contain the suffocating pain. He’d sat in the Pediatric ICU all afternoon and held Robbie. He refused to
consider the possibility that his son could die.
“If you elect not to put him through the trauma of a transplant, he
may last a year. The stress on his heart will continue to increase as he grows, and at some point, his heart will fail. With a transplant, there is a 60 to 70 percent chance that he will live to see five. With each successive A Heart for Robbie