Montana Dreaming. Karen Rose Smith
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She brushed a hand along the contour of her tummy, caressed the knot that sprung up on the left side. A little foot? A knee? A fist?
As she stood, the muscles of her back gripped hard, causing her to bend and grab the table for support.
“What’s the matter?” Mark jumped to his feet.
“I’m not sure.”
For a woman with bad feet, Mrs. Tasker was by her side in an instant. “Are you in labor?”
Juliet froze as the possibility momentarily hovered over her like the calm before the storm. “No, I don’t think so.” At least, she hoped not. It was still too early.
As the ache in her back continued, she closed her eyes. Dios, por favor. Don’t let it happen now. It’s too soon.
“Are you having a contraction?” Mrs. Tasker asked, glancing at her wristwatch, as though she meant to start timing the pains.
“It’s just a backache,” Juliet said, willing it to be true.
The older woman crossed her arms in an all-knowing fashion. “That’s how my labor started with Jimmy. All in my back.”
Juliet lifted her gaze, looked at Mark, expecting him to blurt out a gripe, a complaint, an I-told-you-so. But the only sign of his response was a tense jaw, a pale face.
“No need for us to take any chances,” Mrs. Tasker said. “I’ll call an ambulance.”
“Don’t bother.” Mark reached into his back pocket, took out his wallet, withdrew a twenty-dollar bill and dropped it on the table. “I’ll take her to the hospital.”
Juliet began to object, to tell him to finish his dessert. But he slipped an arm around her and led her to the front door.
Mark followed White Water Drive to Thunder Canyon General, then veered toward the separate emergency entrance. He stopped under the covered portico, close to the automatic glass doors, and threw the car into park. “Wait here.”
Leaving Juliet in the idling car, he dashed inside past a security guard, his heart pounding as though he had a personal stake in this—and he sure as hell didn’t.
But Mark knew firsthand how things could go wrong during labor. And he wasn’t going to leave Juliet, who didn’t have anyone to depend on, to fend for herself. Neither was he going to let her ignore any symptoms that might be serious.
He spotted a nurse behind the reception desk. “I need help. Now. I’ve got a woman in my car who may be in premature labor.”
The nurse grabbed a wheelchair and followed him outside. But rather than take Juliet right to a room, she stopped at the reception desk.
“Can’t this wait?” Mark asked, growing more agitated by the second. He wanted to hand over Juliet to a qualified professional, then get the heck out of here.
“I’m sorry,” the nurse responded. “This will only take a minute.”
She was wrong. But while the customary paperwork was filled out, Mark managed to not pitch a fit about the amount of time it took.
Finally, Juliet was given a temporary bed in the E.R. Her only privacy was a blue-and-white striped curtain that didn’t reach the floor.
Before long, she’d had her temperature and blood pressure taken—all within normal range.
Mark really ought to loosen up. Normal was a good thing, right?
“Did you notify your physician that you were coming in?” the nurse asked Juliet.
“I didn’t have time to think about it.” Juliet glanced at Mark and blew out a sigh. “Can you tell Dr. Emerson that I’m here?”
The nurse, a matronly blonde, placed a hand on Juliet’s shoulder. “Dr. Emerson had a heart attack last night and is in ICU.”
Juliet gasped.
“But don’t you worry,” the nurse said. “We have a top-notch resident obstetrician who will take good care of you.”
“Dr. Hart?” Juliet asked.
The nurse smiled. “That’s right.”
“I saw her on Sunday afternoon. I’d had a fainting spell. And you’re right. I felt very comfortable with her.”
“Good,” the nurse said. “I’ll give Dr. Hart a call and see whether she’d like us to examine you down here or send you to maternity on the second floor.”
Juliet uttered an okay. She might be comfortable with the resident obstetrician, but Mark could see the worry in her eyes. The anxiety in her face.
“In the meantime,” the nurse said, pointing to a chair beside the bed. “Why don’t you have a seat, Dad?”
Dad? She had that all wrong. But before Mark could explain, Juliet did it for him. “This is my friend, Mark Anderson. He’s not the baby’s father.”
The nurse smiled. “It’s nice for a woman to have someone she trusts be her birth coach.”
Birth coach? Whoa. Not Mark. He’d just brought Juliet here to make sure she saw a doctor, that she was someplace safe. Maybe he could stick around and hold her hand for a while. But if things got hairy, if she was really in labor, he’d wait in the cafeteria until she gave birth. Heck, he might even hang around long enough to look at the baby behind a glass window and tell her the kid was cute—even though he’d seen a couple of newborns and thought they looked more like aliens than humans.
Then, after that, he’d be on his way.
When the nurse stepped out, Mark took a seat, but he couldn’t seem to relax. What was taking so long? He glanced at his watch. The minute hands seemed to be moving slower than usual.
A while later—he didn’t know how long—another nurse arrived. A friendly, thirty-something woman with short, dark-hair and wearing a pink smock dotted with teddy bears. “Ms. Rivera? I’m Beth Ann. Dr. Hart has asked me to take you to maternity.”
The nurse fiddled with the bed, making it mobile, then began to push Juliet out of the E.R. and into the hall. She slowed her steps just long enough to glance at Mark. “You can follow us.”
He opened his mouth to object, to say he’d be having coffee in the cafeteria, but for some reason, he fell into step behind the rolling bed.
They took an elevator to the second floor, then the nurse wheeled Juliet toward the maternity ward, where she paused before the ominous double doors.
Mark’s steps slowed, too. But not because he was tagging along behind them.
What the hell was he doing? Juliet was in good hands. Competent hands. He didn’t need to go in there. They didn’t need him. Besides, he’d done his duty. His good deed for the day.
But when Juliet