Read A Reason to Believe Online
Authors: Diana Copland
“She’ll always miss you, Abby.”
“Just like I’ll miss her. But we’ll be together
again someday. You believe that, don’t you Matt?”
Her eyes were wide and guileless.
“Yeah, I do. Now.”
She hopped off the chair, and he expected her to
go, but she didn’t. She looked at him, an odd smile
on her piquant face.
“What?”
“I’m going,” she said with quiet emphasis. “But
Kiernan isn’t.”
Matt’s breath caught in his throat.
“Do you understand? He’s staying. It isn’t his
turn yet.”
Matt inhaled sharply, his eyes beginning to fill.
“Yes, I understand. Thank you, Abby.”
She grinned. “Don’t thank me. And don’t waste
any more time.” She angled her head, and suddenly
she looked much older than six. “Life is a
wonderful thing, but it can be shorter than you
think. Don’t waste a second of it.” She started for
the door, but then stopped and placed the toy
carefully on a chair in the corner. “Here, Skittles
can keep you company. I don’t think he’d like it
much where I’m going.”
She came back to press a kiss to Matt’s cheek,
and he could actually feel her soft lips, smell the
soft scents of talcum powder and peppermint. She
turned and walked away, pausing to wave from the
doorway before she simply faded into nothing.
* * *
felt a hand close over his.
“Matt. What is it?”
He looked over into Sheila’s eyes and blinked
quickly. “Dream.” He rubbed his hands roughly
over his face. “How long was I out?”
“Maybe twenty minutes.” She offered her cup.
Matt shook his head. “No, thanks. I don’t think
my stomach could take it.” He exhaled, his breath
shuddering. “I’m guessing there was no news.”
“Not yet, but there should be soon.”
Almost as if their conversation had drawn him,
the doors to surgery swung open with a soft
whoosh, and a doctor in green scrubs and a paper
hairnet appeared, his mask hanging loose around
his neck. “Mr. Bennett?”
Matt surged to his feet. “Yes.”
The doctor crossed to him and offered his hand.
“I’m Dr. Sterling. I did the surgery on your friend.”
“Is he all right?”
The doctor’s face softened in a weary smile.
“He’s a tough one. We had a couple of scary
moments there, but he made it and his vitals are
much better than any of us could have expected.
We were able to repair the aorta and close the
hole in his lung. He’ll be sore for a while, but
other than that, there shouldn’t be any long-term
effects. He was very lucky.”
Matt exhaled fully for the first time since he
realized Kiernan had been hit, his knees suddenly
weak. He was grateful when Sheila was there, her
arm going around his waist.
“Oh, thank God,” she said, holding out her hand.
“Thank you so much, doctor.”
He shook her hand. “He should be out of
recovery in a bit. I’ll have a nurse come for you
when he regains consciousness.”
He left. Matt turned into Sheila’s arms, pulling
her to his chest and holding her tight.
“I’m so glad,” she said. “For both of you.”
Matt stepped back and nodded, and he didn’t
even mind that Sheila could see his relieved tears.
He brushed at them with his fingers, laughing
weakly, and turned.
And stopped.
Sitting on a chair in the corner was a stuffed
white unicorn with a fuzzy pink mane and tail and a
candy-colored striped horn. His head was cocked
at a quizzical angle, as if he had asked a question
and was waiting for an answer.
Matt stared at it, his heart swelling. “Sheila,” he
said, his voice hoarse. “Where did that come
from?”
She looked at the toy and shrugged. “No idea. I
noticed it when I got back with my coffee. I figured
maybe a child left it there accidentally.”
Matt crossed the room and picked it up. The fur
was soft and the black button eyes shone. “A child
left it,” he murmured. “But it wasn’t an accident.”
* * *
morning. Kiernan had been moved overnight, and
Matt stopped at the nurses’ station, asking for
directions to Room 535. The nurse smiled at him
and pointed, and Matt returned her smile.
He’d seen Kiernan for a brief moment in
recovery, but he’d been so groggy and out of it
Matt hadn’t lingered. If Sheila hadn’t been with
him, reassuring him that the sheer amount of
medical paraphernalia he was hooked up to was
just regular post-op, Matt would have been
terrified. There were dozens of tubes going in and
out under the light blankets, and his face was
mostly covered with an oxygen mask. Matt stayed
just long enough to touch his hand and find it
warm, and to reassure himself he really was
breathing. After, he followed Sheila’s advice and
went home for a shower, dodging the media still
camped outside his house. They were friendly and
anxious to hear his side of the dramatic events of
the night before, but Matt couldn’t have been less
interested in talking to them.
He went back to the hospital that night. Kiernan
was still mostly unresponsive, drifting in and out,
but the weak squeeze he gave Matt’s hand and his
soft smile were reassuring.
Sheila picked Aidan up at the airport and
brought her directly to the hospital. Matt was
concerned before she arrived. After all, she’d told
him if anything happened to Kiernan she’d hold
him responsible, and in his heart he couldn’t help
feeling that he was. But she looked at her brother,
tears streaming down her pale cheeks, then turned
to Matt and opened her arms.
“You didn’t do this,” she whispered against his
ear. “Kiernan has always made his own choices.
You mustn’t blame yourself.”
Matt hadn’t realized how much he needed to
hear the words until her absolution rushed over
him like a cleansing wave, leaving him weak with
relief. She sent him home, vowing to spend the
night at Kiernan’s bedside. Matt had been able to
go back home and collapse, sleeping twelve hours
straight.
He’d been eating a piece of toast in front of the
television when he saw coverage of Marc
Reynolds’ release from jail into his wife’s waiting
arms. “There ya go, Abby,” he’d murmured, and
his smile had lasted all the way back to the
hospital.
He paused briefly outside Room 535, then
pushed the door open and walked cautiously
inside.
The room was awash with winter sunlight from
a large window falling across the narrow bed in a
bright square. Kiernan’s head was turned toward
it, his eyes closed. Aidan wasn’t there, and Matt
wondered fleetingly where she was, then
remembered Sheila promising to come and take
her to breakfast.
He was profoundly relieved to find the amount
of medical equipment around Kiernan vastly
reduced. He was still connected to an IV and there
was a blood pressure cuff around his left arm. An
oxygen tube looped around his ears and was
inserted in his nose, but his heartbeat showed with
reassuring steadiness on a monitor above his head
on the wall. Matt crossed to the foot of the bed and
studied him.
His black hair was tousled, and his jaw and
upper lip were shadowed. There were dark
smudges beneath his closed eyes, and his long
black lashes lay on cheeks that were very pale.
Still, Matt didn’t think he’d ever seen anything in
his life as welcome as the steady rise and fall of
his chest beneath the bedding. He stood there for
several minutes, simply enjoying watching Kiernan
breathe, when the black lashes twitched and then
slowly lifted. He blinked several times, inhaled
deeply and then grimaced, his hand moving to the
thick bandages over his chest.
“Are you in pain?”
Kiernan turned his head quickly. “Hey,” he said,
his voice rough.
“Hey, yourself.” Matt crossed around to his
bedside, and saw a cup of ice water with a straw
sitting on a table near his head. “Are you thirsty?”
Kiernan nodded, and Matt lifted the cup, turning
the straw to his lips. Kiernan took small sips, then
pulled back with a sigh.
“Better?”
“Much.” Kiernan looked up at him, and the
small smile that spread across his features made
Matt feel like the most important person in the
world.
“Hi,” Kiernan murmured.
“Hi.” Matt gestured toward Kiernan’s chest.
“Sore?”
“Yeah, a bit.” Kiernan lifted his hand and Matt
took it. “But it’s not too bad.”
“Good.” Matt leaned over and pressed his
forehead against Kiernan’s, closing his eyes. “You
scared ten years off of my life.”
“I’m sorry,” he whispered. “But I couldn’t just
let him shoot you. I had to…”
“It’s all right.” Matt pulled back slightly and
looked into his eyes. “I know. I’d have done
exactly the same thing if our situations had been
reversed.”
A smile tugged at the corner of Kiernan’s lips.
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
Matt kissed him. He’d meant it to be a simple
peck, but it turned into a slow, lingering kiss, full
of everything he felt and didn’t know how to say.
Kiernan stroked his head, then his neck. When their
lips parted, Matt pulled a chair close to the bed
and sat. He withdrew something from inside his
coat, and when he set it on Kiernan’s chest, the
dark-haired man looked at it with a quizzical
smile.
“Where did that come from?”
“It was a gift.”
“It looks just like Skittles.” Kiernan touched the
pink mane, a nostalgic smile flirting with his lips.
“I’m pretty sure it
is
Skittles.”
Kiernan’s eyes darted to his. Matt told him
about his dream and about finding the stuffed
animal on the chair when he’d wakened.
Kiernan smiled mistily, touching the striped
horn with the tip of his finger. “‘There are more
things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are
dreamt of in your philosophy.’”
“
Hamlet.
I will admit that particular quote has
more meaning to me recently. Particularly since
Christmas Eve.”
“I thought you were going to say since you met
me.” Kiernan looked at him fondly.
“Abby turned up before you did, remember.”
“That’s right, she did.”
“She said something to me, in my dream. She
said, ‘Life is a wonderful thing, but it can be
shorter than you think. Don’t waste a second of
it.’”
“Pretty smart for a six-year-old.”
“I certainly thought so.”
“And have you?”
Matt looked at him quizzically.
“Been wasting time?”
Matt nodded slowly, staring at the blanket
covering Kiernan’s solid chest. “I think I have. “I
think…when Brad was killed, I shut down. I’ve
never believed there was anything after death. I
don’t think I believed in anything anymore. Nothing
made sense to me.”
Kiernan turned his hand and caught Matt’s. He
linked their fingers.
“I kept everyone at a distance, thinking it would
keep me from feeling anything. Because if I didn’t
feel anything, then I couldn’t feel pain, either.”
Matt lifted his head to find Kiernan watching him
solemnly, large blue eyes steady. “But—I don’t
want to do that anymore.”
“You don’t,” Kiernan said carefully.
Matt shook his head slowly. “No. I want to feel
everything. The joy, the sorrow, all of it. Because
it’s a gift, and I don’t want to waste a moment.”
His heart began to pound. Now came the part that
terrified him. “And, I want to feel all of it—with
you. I’m…I know we haven’t known each other
very long, and I know our acquaintance has been
one round of weirdness after another—” Kiernan’s
lips quirked, “—but I’m pretty sure I’m in love
with you.” He spoke the last in a rush and held his
breath.
Kiernan’s smile faded. Matt felt his heart sink as
he studied him solemnly.
“Well, that’s a good thing,” Kiernan said finally.