My first thought as we enter the injury rehabilitation clinic is about my mother.
Years ago, sheâd hop in and out of other kinds of rehabilitation clinics.
I was sixteen when I finally confronted my brother about our motherâs troubled history with alcohol. Not that I hadnât overheard him and Grace talk about her issues before, but I didnât find out the real extent of her past until we had the âMomâs intense headachesâ conversation.
Needless to say, she didnât exactly have migraines.
I donât blame Sammy or Grace for disguising the truth when I was younger. What was the alternative? Telling me that my mother used to forget to pick me up from school and ballet lessons because she got too drunk to remember she had a daughter to take care of?
Yeah, right.
Now, as I take in the pristine white walls, clean floors, and smell of antiseptic in the air, I wonder if she ever felt as trapped in one of those clinics as I do now. And Iâve only been here two minutes.
We reach the reception desk, where I tell a smiley lady my name and what Iâm here for.
It still feels surreal to say it out loud. Posterior ankle impingement. Sounds painful, doesnât it? I can confirm it hurts like a bitch.
âPlease, take a seat.â She gestures to the waiting room with a manicured red nail. âDr. Simmons will see you shortly.â
My head goes back to my mom as I follow my brother to the waiting room.
Learning the truth so many years later wasnât easy, but I understand why they didnât talk to me about it sooner. I was nowhere ready to hear about my less-than-ideal family life.
Sammy told me that, when our motherâs brother passed away unexpectedly many years ago, she became a ghost of the woman she used to be. She drowned the voices in her head with alcohol, and little by little she drowned herself. Then she met Pete, and I was born not even a year later.
Pete, a father who never played with me, never took me anywhere, never even hugged me. Stupid Pete.
I try not to think about him too often because the mere mental image of my father turns me into a person I refuse to be. Bitter, angry, hateful. Thatâs not me. Thatâs not who I was raised to be.
Despite growing up neglected by my mother, Iâve never hated her. Sammy was afraid I would, but I couldnât find the energy. Three years after I started living with my brother and Grace, my mother got out of rehab for good and, apparently, has been clean ever since.
I cried when I heard the news, afraid I would be taken away from my brother and his girlfriend.
I know, right? What kind of child has a meltdown when learning her mother is coming back for her?
Luckily, both Sammy and my mother decided I was better off living with him. I was happier and had a better chance at a bright future if my family life didnât change.
I still saw my mother a few times a month when she would take me out for pancakes or to play in the park, but those visits didnât help to bring us closer. Iâm sure she was devastated about it, but I⦠I barely knew the woman. I wasnât attached to her. Even when I lived with her and Pete, my brother came by every day and always took me to the park and for ice cream, so Iâve always gravitated toward him the most.
I canât long for a mother Iâve never had. A mother I havenât seen in a year.
âAre you nervous?â Sammyâs knee bumps against mine when we sit.
âJittery,â I deadpan.
He sends me a look, a silent way of telling me to behave. I think he should give me a free pass today.
I was supposed to be working my ass off to nail an exclusive audition for my dream ballet company today or, at the very least, crying about not having been accepted. I was still supposed to be able to dance, to move my leg. Not⦠Not this.
Now my body is an empty shell of grief and unfulfilled dreams Iâm not sure Iâll ever bring back to life.
âDonât sulk,â Sammy mutters under his breath. âDr. Simmons will have you back on the stage in no time. At least you donât need surgery.â
Fine. That wouldâve been way, way worseâIâll admit as much. I try to tell myself that, as far as careless accidents go, I didnât get the short end of the stick, even if it feels like it.
But all attempts at convincing myself that Iâm fine, that this is nothing I canât climb my way out of, arenât enough. Iâm not in the mood to count my scarce blessings right now. Not whenâ
Itâs the âMaddison Stevensâ that snaps me out of my thoughts, but itâs the deep voice saying it that has my stomach plummeting.
I turn my head in the direction of the man standing only a few feet away, and I crane my neck up, up, up, because heâs so tall he surely must experience a different kind of weather up there.
When I donât respond, too busy staring at this mountain of a man who has just walked into the waiting room, my brother elbows me softly in the ribs.
âHere! Iâm here,â I call out awkwardly, my voice only slightly higher than usual.
I feel my brotherâs eyes burning a hole into the side of my face as I stand, probably wondering why I look so worked up all of a sudden. But Iâm too stunned to speak, my throat going dry for reasons I donât even want to entertain.
Iâm used to being around tall men. Sammy is six-foot-three, and Kyle towers over me too. But this guy is on a whole other level.
At what I would guess is around six-foot-five, he narrows his impossibly blue eyes at me and frowns. He frowns.
I ignore the uneasy feeling settling in the pit of my stomach and grab the crutches Sammy is holding out for me.
âAre you Maddison Stevens?â There goes that low voice again, asking me the simplest of questions I canât seem to answer like a normal person.
My mouth feels too dry. âYes.â
Itâs not that I find him attractive or anything. Itâs not that. And sure, I might have taken in his short dark hair, his bigâway too bigâhands holding a folder between his thick fingers, and how the navy blue scrubs he wears contrast with the dark brown of his short beard, for a little longer than it would be appropriate. But itâs not every day that I get to see a real giant out in the wild.
Heâs imposing. Itâs just that. Heâs intimidating. Handsome, too, all right, butâ¦objectively.
And okay, letâs say I found him attractive. Hypothetically. If I had to guess, I would say heâs around thirty. Iâm not saying that makes him decrepit, but heâs definitely old for me. Not like that matters anyway.
âIâm James Simmons,â he introduces himself, stoic andâyepâstill intimidating. âIâll be overseeing your recovery.â
So this is one of the best physical therapists in the East Coast. He doesnât smile, and for some reason I find it odd. Arenât doctors supposed to be friendly and all that? Maybe this guy didnât get the memo.
His icy blue eyes donât linger on me as he turns to Sammy, now standing by my side. âAre you her father?â
âBrother.â Sammy shakes his hand, and indeed, this James person is a couple of inches taller than him. Which is impressive because my brother is the tallest man I know by far. âNice to meet you.â
âLikewise,â he answers, still in that same deep but almost bored voice. âIâve got it from here. We can go now if youâre ready, Miss Stevens.â
Miss Stevens. Why have those two words just sent a thrill down my spine?
Actually, I donât think I want to answer that.
I manage to get out of this giant-man-induced lapse in judgment and turn to my brother. âWill you be here when I finish?â
His smile is soft. âIâm not moving an inch, princess.â
A tiny sense of guilt takes over again before I can stop it.
He wants to be here. Youâre not making him stay.
But is that really the case? Didnât he just upend his family life in Warlington because I was careless and injured myself?
âMiss Stevens?â That authoritative voice manages to add a nonverbal layer of stop wasting my time at the end of his question somehow.
Or maybe Iâm reading too much into this manâs every little action.
âReady. Yes,â I blurt out, because apparently, I am unable to form a single coherent sentence in front of him.
With one last look at my brother, I turn to face Dr. Giant and give him as much of a sincere smile as I can manage. âWe can go now.â There it is, one full sentence. I got this.
Without another word, he gives my brother a nod and turns around. To his credit, he doesnât speed down the empty hallway, but he doesnât walk beside me either.
We reach a miniature hospital type of room, which I assume is his office. Two huge windows with blinds occupy one of the walls, and different graphics, anatomy posters, and diplomas hang all around the remaining three.
âTake a seat, please.â He gestures to a treatment table placed against the opposite wall from a small desk and a couple of chairs. He doesnât spare me another glance, focusing instead on typing something into his computer.
Okay, then. It would do me well to remember Iâm not here to make friends. Iâm here to get back on track as soon as this stupid injury will let me.
Holding on to my crutches a little tighter, I make my way to the table as slow as a turtle. Iâm not particularly clumsy, but Iâm paranoid the slightest contact with any surface will set back my recovery process. What if I make it worse? What if I end up having to need surgery because I keep on being careless? No, thank you.
Because, if I canât dance, what can I do? What do I even have to offer?
Nothing makes me breathe as easily or feel as complete.
I could never live a fulfilling life if my days didnât consist of stretching on the barre and learning routines.
How would I live?
The dark spiral of my thoughts only becomes more violent when I reach the treatment table.
He wants me to take a seat. It should be simple enough, but⦠I⦠I canât.
I set my crutches aside and feel the soft fabric of the cushioned table under my fingers. Breathe in, breathe out.
Tears prick the back of my eyes, and I remind myself Iâm not alone in this room. Ever since Sammy came to look after me, Iâve restricted my crying sessions to my showers. I donât like bawling my eyes out in front of anyone, let alone a complete stranger who doesnât seem to like me all that much in the first place.
Youâre fine.
Iâm here, on the right path to healing my ankle, and Iâll be fine. My brother is right outside if I need him.
Thatâs the problem.
âMiss Stevens?â His voice comes from somewhere behind me, but I donât want to turn around. âCan you get on the table by yourself?â
I could. A few days ago, I could. When I had a working ankle and a purpose. What do I have now, besides self-pity and regret?
I donât want to tell him that no, I canât get on the damn table. This isnât about him. This is about how my own body feels like a prison. How my limbs feel foreign and heavy when, just a few weeks ago, they helped me fly on the dance floor. How I was on my way to make my dream happen, and nowâ¦
Now I canât even push my body weight up.
âLet me help you.â Looking over my shoulder, I spot him walking toward me, only stopping when thereâs a small gap between us. He smells goodâlike wood and spice and some fresh-scented shampoo. Stop it. His smell is none of your concern. âHere.â
Huh?
My eyes drop to his hand, that massive hand that is now holding some kind of step stool.
For me.
Oh.
As he leans in to place it on the floor, embarrassment clouds my thoughts. Why does the fact that I need a step stool to get on the table make me feel so weak?
âGrab my arm for support.â
Dr. Giant offers me his forearm, and for a second, I donât know what to do with myself. I mean, itâs not like heâs asking if I want to hold on to him or if Iâd rather climb the two steps alone. Heâs commanding me to do it. Itâs as if he knows Iâm useless, which wouldnât be too far from the truth.
Thereâs a slight tremble to my fingers as I wrap them around the firmness of his naked forearm. The hairs on his arms tickle my skin as I slowly make my way up, praying he doesnât feel how clammy my hands are getting.
As soon as my butt touches the table safely, he extracts himself from my koala-like grip with ease, sets aside the step stool, and slides into the rolling chair in front of the computer.
I lace my fingers together and stick them between my thighs, begging this tingling sensation to go away. And then Dr. Giant, this man who is already way too attractive for his own good, reaches into the pocket of his scrubs and takes out a pair of glasses.
And he puts them on.
Goddamn it.
My gaze darts toward the ceiling, suddenly finding it fascinating. Itâs lost its original white color, and I suspect that lightbulb will need to be replaced soon because it doesnât blind me in the same way the lightbulbs in the waiting room did. His officeâ
âAll right. I would like to ask you a few questions before we begin,â he says, breaking the tension in my shoulders.
I drop my gaze toward him and those evil glasses. Heâs turned sideways toward me, but his attention remains on the screen.
My throat is dry. âSure.â
He goes straight to the point. âHow did you get your injury?â
âI hurt my ankle while dancing ballet.â Itâs funny how the reminder feels more painful than the actual injury. âI think I pushed myself too hard, and it justâ¦gave in.â
He doesnât react, doesnât comment on my careless behavior. He doesnât chastise me for not taking good care of myself either.
I get nothing, and I canât tell if I feel more relief or unease.
He types something in and asks me another question. âDoes the pain travel or stay in the same area?â
âIt never travels above the knee, and my toes donât hurt.â
âDoes the pain get better or worse if you move your ankle? And in what positions?â
âIt stays the same.â
âWhat was your functional mobility status prior to your injury?â
At his question, my stomach turns with nausea. All the optimism my brother tried to make me feel this past week at the fact that I donât need surgery melts away as the reality of my situation settles in.
I canât dance.
I lost my chance to join The Norcastle Ballet.
An uncertain and cold future unfolds before me, a future I want nothing to do with.
âMiss Stevens?â Those blue eyes watch me carefully, and Iâm quick to snap out of it.
âYeah, yes. Sorry. I, um, recently got my BA in Ballet Performance and was supposed to audition for The Norcastle Ballet.â Donât cry, donât cry, donât cry.
âYou were a professional ballet dancer, then?â
Itâs the were that almost makes me sick. I swallow back the lump in my throat and say, âYes.â It only comes out half-raspy and with no tears. Thatâs a win in my book.
His eyes linger on mine for a beat too long, and his jaw clenches in a weird way. I donât know why I think itâs weird. Maybe because itâs paired with that look in his eyes. Kind of soft, kind of not.
The moment breaks as he types something in on his computer again. âWhat is your goal?â he asks then, catching me off guard.
I blink. âGoal?â
âWith physical therapy,â he clarifies. To be honest, I havenât thought much about what I want to get out of PT besides going back to who I used to be. So, I tell him just that. âWeâll see what we can do.â
Weâll see what we can do.
I get that doctors arenât supposed to give you false hope and all that, but he could watch his words a little more carefully. Make them sting a little less.
After making me feel like shitânot like heâs even noticedâhe takes off those glasses that make him look too good and stands, moving closer to where Iâm sitting. âIn this first session, weâll focus on measuring what impairments could be affecting your injury, and Iâll trace a treatment plan from there.â
I only nod and take off my shoe and sock.
Iâm not expecting his touch to be so gentle as he palpates my ankle, looking for who-knows-what, but I try to pay it no mind. So what if this is the most physical contact Iâve had in months besides hugs from my brother and dance partners? Pfft. Big deal.
Hating myself a little more, I glance at his profile for the tenth time since I walked in and try not to think too hard about why I canât seem to take my eyes off this man. This older man.
His short but thick beard doesnât stop me from noticing the sharp edge of his jaw, or its tightness for that matter. Why is he so on edge? Iâm the one suffering from a life-altering injury and his grumpiness.
I let out a deep sigh, feeling more frustrated with myself than anything else, and he notices. âDoes it hurt?â
âA little, but Iâm fine.â
A grunt is the only answer I get.
We move on to some range of movement measurements and some tests of strength. I like that he takes his time explaining every exercise, even though I barely understand a thing. He says nothing that isnât strictly necessary and doesnât try to make small talk, which is fine by me.
Closing my eyes, I lose myself in the familiar darkness. I find comfort in knowing all I have to do is exist right now, in this room, as Iâm lying on this table while he massages my ankle with such unexpected gentleness.
In the distance, the clock ticks, and voices drift from under the door as other physical therapists and patients walk by. The smell of antiseptic isnât so strong now, unlike whatever shampoo Dr. Giant used this morning. That minty scent could wake up the dead if he got close enough.
âThatâll be all for today.â His gruff voice pulls me out of my almost sleepy state. I canât believe I was about to call it a night right here, at ten in the morning. âI can confirm your ankle wonât need surgery, and weâre looking at around a six-week recovery plan. Youâll come to the clinic four times a week, then perhaps two. Weâll see how you progress.â
Still somewhat groggy, I sit up as he moves back behind the desk. âOkay.â
I put my sock and shoe back on and grab my crutches, only to set them aside when I realize I canât use them to get back on the ground. I count to five in my head to avoid thinking how pathetic this is. How pathetic I am.
âCould youâ¦?â I start, dying a little inside. He slides me a confused look, and I point to the stupid stool with my chin. âSo I can climb down.â
He gets the stool and lends me his arm again. Donât focus on his muscles. Donât you dare.
I do. I do dare, and I only regret it a little bit.
Once I can stand on my own and hold my crutches again, he moves back to his desk. âYou should rest as much as possible, so avoid going out for now unless itâs strictly necessary, or it might take your ankle longer to recover.â
My breath hitches at the mere possibility of messing up rehabilitation too. What would happen if I did? Would I⦠God, would I not be able to dance ever again?
âI will send you an email later this morning with a list of proper care instructions and our treatment plan for the upcoming weeks so you know what to expect.â
I swallow. âAll right. Thank you.â
For the first time since we entered this room, he looks at me. And I mean, really looks at me. It may be all in my head, but his jaw seems to lose all that tension from before and his voice sounds a little softer when he says, âTake care, Miss Stevens. Iâll see you tomorrow at nine.â