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Authors: Sarah Lynn Scheerger

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60

CHASE

Time is funny. Sometimes a single minute drags out for a lifetime, and sometimes a month goes so fast it feels like it never even happened. Too bad Chase can't fast forward, rewind, delete, and pause what's happening in real life, just like a movie. If he could, Chase would have wanted to fast forward through much of his childhood. But right now, at this moment, the time spent making this decision is so important that he wishes he could press Pause and make it all stand still until he can sort things out. Because he knows once the decision is made and papers signed, there's no rewind.

But in the end, the decision seems clear. Sad, but clear. Like oil in salad dressing left out overnight, the answer just rises to the top. Chase and Rose talk about it long into the evening, long after their room empties and the hospital ward quiets down. With the lights dimmed, they take turns holding the baby, rocking her, and patting her back. Mostly she sleeps, her eyes gently closed, and her chest rising and falling with little breaths.

“This might be the only good thing I've ever done,” Rose says softly, squeezed over on one half of the bed. Chase sits on the other side, his feet bare. The baby lies across their two laps, swaddled in a thin blanket with her arms pulled in toward her body. “Unless you count sharing my lunch in elementary school. Or letting someone bum a cigarette.”

“Well, this is definitely the best thing I've ever done,” Chase agrees. “We made her and she's perfect. Nameless, but perfect. Only she can't go without a name for too much longer.” The heat of Rose's body against his and the baby across his lap warm him, despite the cool hospital air.

“I wonder how my mother picked mine. Did she figure out the symbolism of a rose? Did she give me my thorns for protection?”

“Man, you and symbolism. Just promise me you won't name her something from a Disney movie.”

“Oh, come on. Don't you like Jasmine? Or Ariel? Cinderella?” Rose swats the back of his head. “I almost
want
to name her something out there just to be a rebel.”

“Imagine, you a rebel.”

Rose ignores this. “And she was born on Christmas. That gives us something to work with.”

“How about Jingle?”

“Bells?” The baby stirs as if to protest. “Or Belle like from
Beauty and the Beast
?”

“Disney, that's Disney! I reserve the right to veto all Disney-related names.”

“How about Nicholas for a girl?” Rose shifts to face him more, although it makes their butts press against the hospital-bed railing.

“Uh … no.” Chase checks out Rose's face to see if she's serious. “Remember, she has to survive elementary school.”

“What are your ideas, oh wise one?”

“I have one. But don't laugh.” Chase clears his throat. “How about Serenity?”

“Serenity?”

“That's what I said.” Chase leans over to touch the baby's hair. It looks and feels like duck fluff. “Because that's what I want for her. To hold on to all that is peaceful and serene about herself.”

“Serenity, huh? Maybe.” Rose puts her finger in the baby's palm. Tiny fingers wrap around her own. “Isn't there a famous tennis player named Serena?”

“Yeah, but I like Serenity better. I know it's unusual. I just think it fits her.”

Rose brings the baby's hand to her mouth, pressing her lips into the delicate skin. “I can't imagine being without her. She was inside of me for so long. She was all mine. My little secret. I could feel her move, feel her turning around in there, feel her kicking.”

Rose's eyes fill up with tears. She turns her head away, so that strands of hair fall down and cover her face. Her braids had come undone hours ago. “Being without her will feel like I'm missing a part of myself, like I'm walking around without my right arm. How do you manage without your right arm?”

“Are we sure we want to do this? We don't have to.” Chase cuts in a little too quickly, saying what he's said twenty times before.

“You're not making this any easier by waffling so damn much.”

“Okay, okay. It just sucks because what I
want
and what I know to be
right
are two separate things. I guess I don't feel that different from you. I'll feel like something is missing. Or I'll feel homesick … or guilty.” Chase feels nauseous just thinking about it. “But at least we can still be involved in her life without sacrificing our own. And at least we'll know she's loved. And safe.” The baby turns her head to the right and works her mouth like she's sucking on something, only she's not.

Rose wipes her eyes with the back of her hand. “Serenity.” She rolls the name around in her mouth. “I could get used to that.”

“For short, we could call her ‘T.'”

Rose brushes the tip of her finger against the baby's nose. “Hey, little T, get ready. Because the world is coming at you. Fast.” The baby's lips turn upward for a moment while she sleeps.

“Hey! Did you see that? She smiled! I didn't think babies smiled this young.”

“They don't. It must have been gas.”

“Or maybe she likes her name.”

Chase listens to the baby's puffs of breath in and out, and tries to match his breaths to hers. He tries not to think of all the tomorrows and to just be there with her breathing. If Chase could take this moment in isolation, it might've been perfect.

“I think Serenity
is
the name for you,” he tells her, kissing her soft cheek, his lips sinking in deeper than he'd have thought, like into a down pillow.

“Me too. I want one,” Rose whispers. “Pucker up, little T.” She leans forward to kiss the baby's mouth, loose hair spilling around her.

Chase gathers Rose's hair in his hands, holding it away from Serenity. “No. You pucker up,” he says to Rose, kissing her for the first time in eight months, sending goose bumps racing down his arms.

“Well, aren't we a sappy bunch. We ought to be on a freaking Hallmark commercial.”

“I missed you,” Chase says, tucking her hair behind her shoulder. “Welcome back, Rose.”

Chase knows that this moment is the closest to serenity he's ever been. He looks at the baby's little hands, dimples indenting the skin in front of each finger. You can tell a lot about a person by her hands. Soft. Delicate. Sweet. Serene. But strong. Her hand grips his finger in her palm like a clamp, like she doesn't want him to escape. Like she wants to hold on to him, to hold him there for that moment in time. That perfect, peaceful moment.

And then, for just the briefest slice of a second, Serenity opens her eyes and looks right at him. Kind of like she wants to say something. Kind of like she wants to tell him it's okay.

Behind every good story is a good support team.

Thank you to Team Home Front: my husband, Rob, and my children, Ben, Noah, Jacob, and the little one on the way—my synonyms for
love
. Thank you for believing in me and for being the amazing people you are.

Thank you to my sweet son Alex, who was with us for such a short time, but still managed to teach me so much about life and about who I am. Alex, we miss you and will love you forever.

Thank you to Team Family Support: to Mom and Dad, Peggy and Bob, thank you for all the
love
and encouragement. To Jessie and Dale, Adam and J.A., Daniel and Jamie, Lois and Brian, Marjie and Jeff, and Michael, thank you for being the coolest siblings and siblings-in-law on earth. To Holly—my honorary sister—thank you for always being on my team.

Thank you to Team Moral Support: to Holly, Dorothy, Jill, Janet, Tina, Dream, Kristi, Jodie, Stephanie, Omario, Sanjay, Valerie, Darlene, Jennifer, Ophra, Steve, Pete, Jodi, Tara, Yvette, Michelle, Maria, Tom, Kelly, and Tim.

Thank you to Team Tech Support: Sherry, Hillary, Stacy, Marilyn, Stephanie, Lisa, Ian, Chad, Platte, Mindy, Hannah, Julie, Alexis, and Terry. Thank you for your keen eyes, pruning tendencies, and patient support.

Thank you to the Fabulous Team at Whitman: Wendy for your brilliant guidance, your balance of fleshing out and tightening up, and your supportive nature; Kelly for your wise oversight; Diane and Kristin for your careful eyes; and Jenna for your vision.

Thank you to Team Cheerleader: Deborah for being my tireless advocate, an amazing party thrower, and networker extraordinaire.

Thank you to Team Literature: Connie at Mrs. Fig's Bookworm and Mary at the Camarillo Library. Thank you for bringing amazing books to our community.

Thank you to Team Inspiration: This is a completely fictional work. But I am inspired on a daily basis by the teens in tough situations who not only survive, but thrive. To all the teens I've ever worked with … teenage-hood is temporary. Don't forget that
it gets better
.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Behind every good story is a good support team.

Thank you to Team Home Front: my husband, Rob, and my children, Ben, Noah, Jacob, and the little one on the way—my synonyms for love. Thank you for believing in me and for being the amazing people you are.

Thank you to my sweet son Alex, who was with us for such a short time, but still managed to teach me so much about life and about who I am. Alex, we miss you and will love you forever.

Thank you to Team Family Support: to Mom and Dad, Peggy and Bob, thank you for all the
love
and encouragement. To Jessie and Dale, Adam and J.A., Daniel and Jamie, Lois and Brian, Marjie and Jeff, and Michael, thank you for being the coolest siblings and siblings-in-law on earth. To Holly—my honorary sister—thank you for always being on my team.

Thank you to Team Moral Support: to Holly, Dorothy, Jill, Janet, Tina, Dream, Kristi, Jodie, Stephanie, Omario, Sanjay, Valerie, Darlene, Jennifer, Ophra, Steve, Pete, Jodi, Tara, Yvette, Michelle, Maria, Tom, Kelly, and Tim.

Thank you to Team Tech Support: Sherry, Hillary, Stacy, Marilyn, Stephanie, Lisa, Ian, Chad, Platte, Mindy, Hannah, Julie, Alexis, and Terry. Thank you for your keen eyes, pruning tendencies, and patient support.

Thank you to the Fabulous Team at Whitman: Wendy for your brilliant guidance, your balance of fleshing out and tightening up, and your supportive nature; Kelly for your wise oversight; Diane and Kristin for your careful eyes; and Jenna for your vision.

Thank you to Team Cheerleader: Deborah for being my tireless advocate, an amazing party thrower, and networker extraordinaire.

Thank you to Team Literature: Connie at Mrs. Fig's Bookworm and Mary at the Camarillo Library. Thank you for bringing amazing books to our community.

Thank you to Team Inspiration: This is a completely fictional work. But I am inspired on a daily basis by the teens in tough situations who not only survive, but thrive. To all the teens I've ever worked with … teenage-hood is temporary. Don't forget that
it gets better
.

All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this book or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2014 by Sarah Lynn Scheerger

Cover design by Jenna Stempel

Cover image © Eternity in an Instant/Digital Vision/Getty Images

978-1-4976-9884-0

Albert Whitman & Company

250 South Northwest Highway, Suite 320

Park Ridge, Illinois 60068

www.albertwhitman.com

Distributed by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

345 Hudson Street

New York, NY 10014

www.openroadmedia.com

BOOK: The Opposite of Love
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ads

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