Dr. Brandt: Chapter 40
Dr. Brandt: Billionaires’ Club Book 5 (Billionaires’ Club Series)
I hadnât seen Cameron much since my parents and Warren arrived, but it wasnât because he was upset they were here. Cameron had been in Dr. Brandt mode since I woke up in his on-call room four days ago after I fainted.
Heâd been relentlessly going over lab work, ordering more and more scans of Jacksonâs brain activity, and while he was in that mode, I would talk to my sleeping son, doing everything I could to bring him back to me.
I pulled my fingers through the top of Jacksâs silky-soft onyx hair. There was a terrible hole in my heart and soul that I could never describe, and now and then, the pain caused a spasm to rip through me when I took a breath. I was exhausted and wanted my son back, but all I could do was keep pushing through each moment, hoping for a miracle.
Today, a pediatric neurosurgeon from Stanford joined Cameronâs team at Camâs request. The physician was a friend of Camâs from college, and Cam said he wanted the manâs second opinion as things were leaning toward a better outlook if the surgery was performed.
I trusted Cam and his team explicitly after living in this hospital twenty-four hours a day, all week. Still, I wanted Cameron to feel one hundred percent sure about everything, so whatever that man needed, I was behind it. I wasnât arguing with anyone at this point.
âJacks, youâve officially missed the playoffs. You and I know that Cam and his buddies wouldâve made sure you saw it in person if you wouldâve just woken up,â I said.
Then a thought hit me, and I walked out of the room to find a nurse.
âMs. Stein,â the older woman greeted me. âIs everything okay?â
âI have a silly question,â I said. At this time of night, the only thing that could be heard in this hospital wing was the beeping of monitors and the shuffling of nurses when they got up from their desks to check on patients every so often. It mightâve even been considered peaceful under any other circumstances.
âNothing is silly,â she smirked. âIâm Polly, by the way. I see that Laticia is assigned to your son, Jackson. Would you rather ask her? Sheâs just with another patient.â
âNo, Iâm good,â I answered her smile with a tired one of my own. âI just had a question about patients in a coma.â
âYou want to know if they can hear you while they sleep?â she said inquisitively, and after I nodded in response, she continued. âThere are many schools of thought on the topic, but I believe they can. Call me eternally optimistic, but I think there is too much evidence to suggest they donât. Weâve had a handful of reports from patients who had certain recollections from their time in a coma, so who am I to dispute that?â
âReally?â I might not have been an eternal optimist, but I needed to hear that. âI read about it online, but there are so many conflicting stories.â
âI think it depends on what state their brain may be in, but I believe the subconscious mind picks up everything.â
âI think so, too. I hope so, anyway.â
âJust keep talking to him, Mama,â she said. âIf anything, he will find comfort in your voice.â
âThank you, Polly.â
I walked back into Jacksonâs room, seeing my handsome son resting peacefully, and I took his hand in mine. âThis better work,â I muttered, feeling my anxiety climb. âThe nurse says that you might be able to hear me, Jacks, and I hope you can. Maybe if I keep talking, youâll want to wake up just to shut me up.â I laughed nervously as I rubbed his limp hand. Here goes. âSo, Iâm going to tell you something about Dr. Brandt. Remember when you told me that you two had so much in common and that it was freaky?â Jacks and Cam had taken on Jake and Collin in a game of tag football on the beach that day, and Jacks noticed how Cam threw the ball exactly the way he did. âI almost told you then, but Cameron and I decided to wait until after your surgery, so you werenât stressed or anything, butââ I inhaled, paused, and then continued with a big sigh. âCameronâs your dad, honey.â I sniffed and wiped a tear from my cheek, wishing I could look into his beautiful eyes as I revealed this. âImagine that. Your best buddyâand doctorâis actually your father. We were very young when it happened, but it happened nonetheless, and we really need you to come back to us now, Jackson.â
I exhaled. The last of my nerves thatâd spiked had dissipated along with all my hope and excitement, believing that revelation would snap my son awake. I wouldâve dealt with any kind of fallout later, and when nothing happened after my life-changing reveal, I would have begged for any type of fallout to happen just to get him to wake up. I was desperate.
âCome back to me, Jackson. Please wake up and talk to me, yell at me, or tell me you want me to leave you alone!â I was pleading, begging, and crying with the desolation I felt. âTell me anything, baby. Just please wake up. Please, please, wake up, Jacks.â
I let the tears erupt from deep inside and laid my head on his chest, holding him and wishing he was awake to shove me off him. I felt like I would go mad if Cameron didnât have a solution by tomorrow. I needed something. Right now, all I could do was sob and be as close to my sleeping, handsome man as I could be.
âCome here, Jess,â Cam said, rousing me awake after falling asleep on Jacks.
He positioned me to turn and face where he knelt in front of me. I reached for his face and studied his eyes. âI need him back, Cam,â I said, running my thumb underneath Camâs brilliant eyes. âPlease do something.â
I started crying again and leaned into his embrace. I felt Cam soften and hold me for the first time since meeting the solemn surgeon whoâd taken over. His arms ran up my back, bringing a warm and soothing comfort to my aching soul.
âIâm going to, Jessa,â he said. âIâm going through with the surgery.â
I snapped my head up to look at him. âYouâre confident?â
As he nodded, I could see he was sure. âIf I werenât confident, I wouldnât consider it as Iâve told you. But, yes, this is going to take care of a lot of issues. After surgery, he may wake up within hours, or it might take days, at the most. I need you to understand there can and may be complications, though, as with any surgery.â
âI understand. I think I do, anyway.â I sniffed and ran my hands over my eyes. âPlease tell me youâre saying this because of protocol or something?â
âYes, protocol, but I also want you to be prepared for anything,â he continued. âI know this has been quite a journey for you and our son, and this will be the steepest mountain to climb. However, this past month has shown me that you and Jacks have what it takes to get to the top.â
I hugged him tightly, and for the first time since this happened, my inward resentment of Cam subsided. Maybe it wasnât fair of me to loop him into my self-loathing, but I did. He was my accomplice in selfishly neglecting our child, and even though I couldnât forgive either one of us for our actions, it felt good to know he was able to help turn this situation around. At least one of us had the power to redeem ourselves; it sure wasnât me, though, and I wouldnât let myself off the hook that quickly anyway.
I pulled away as the ICU nurse admitted Warren. âDr. Brandt, thereâs a call for you.â
âThanks, Laticia.â Cam stood and faced me as Warren stood next to me. âItâs good that youâre here,â he acknowledged Warren. âThe phone call is from the lab. Theyâve got the results Iâve been expecting to show that Jackson is a candidate for surgery, and so, I plan on surgery at four in the morning.â
âDonât you think that is a bit fast?â Warren questioned Cameron.
Cam eyed me, then Warren. âActually, I believe the surgery could have taken place yesterday; however, I wanted Dr. Astorâs opinion. You are aware of that, are you not?â
Cameron was that hard-faced and stiff-talking surgeon again, and Warren was face-to-face with a man who would bury him with words if he wasnât careful.
âI understand that, Cameronââ
âThank you, Dr. Brandt,â I acknowledged Cameron professionally since his current demeanor demanded it, and Warren knew that.
Warren was being a prick, and I knew it. I wasnât in the mood for games, though. I wanted my son to be well and for Cameron to be confident in this surgery. I didnât have time for cockfights between two grown men who hated each other.
âI am very confident performing this, like I was telling you, Jessa,â Cam said. âIt will be roughly a six-hour surgery, and I expect a full recovery after that. We will have our neuropsychology team ready to aid you with any further questions, but that will come after surgery. This can take a toll on you, but youâve already been through hell, so this is just one more thing to push through.â
âI understand,â I said.
âOnce Jackson is awake,â he looked between Warren and me, âwhich I expect to happen within hours after surgery, our rehab center will begin working with him immediately. I want him to be challenged, and I will not back down.â
âDo you think that is necessary so quickly after surgery?â Warren asked, speaking before I could.
âIf I didnât, I wouldnât demand it,â he answered, then looked at me. âAfter spending a fair enough time with Jacks, Iâm confident that challenging him immediatelyâstarting small, of courseâis what heâll need and where heâll thrive. The teams will go over all of this in further detail.â
âThanks, Cam,â I said, forgetting about Warren and hugging Cameron with the sincerity and relief I felt.
âHeâs going to surprise all of us,â Cameron said with a smirk, his deep blue eyes sparkling as they stared into mine. âI promise you that, Mom.â
With only a fraction of a second to feel that spark that made me come alive from the inside out, he half-smiled, then pulled away. âBoth of you should get your rest. Starting tomorrow, youâll face many mental and physical demands. And when Jacks is awake, he will need you to be rested and ready to go to work with him.â
âIâll get her to the hotel,â Warren slid his arm around me and looked at me. âYour parents need to know whatâs going on as well.â
âI can speak with them. Where are they?â Cameron asked.
âI donât think thatâs a very good idea,â Warren said, and I pulled away from him the minute I sensed his enjoyment at relaying that information.
I wouldâve been shocked if anyone despised Cameron more than my parents. They were also the most passive-aggressive people I knew. I loved my parents, but they stopped talking to me for a time because I didnât nail Cameron to the wall for knocking me up and taking off. They didnât appreciate when I didnât take their advice, and, as certain people love to do, they got their feelings hurt and made it about them.
I put up with it because I wanted Jackson to know his grandparents, and I hated the thought that my parents were upset with me. It killed me to have that contention, so we worked through it eventually. Once Warren came along, my mother and father adored him for taking on another manâs burden by caring for his child and the woman heâd selfishly left behind.
I avoided the Cameron Brandt discussion with my parents like the plague. And now, here Cameron was, wanting to speak with them. And why shouldnât he? He was their grandsonâs doctor. I just didnât know how it would play out.
âYou may not think thatâs a good idea, Warren,â Cameron said, after studying him for a moment, âbut they are the maternal grandparents. If they have any questions, I would like to answer them.â
Warren looked at me. âYour parents donât need to be put in an awkward situation. Theyâre as stressed as we are, and, as you know, their opinions arenât very high of Cameron.â
âIâm standing right here, Warren,â Cameron seethed. âAnd I understand if Rod and Patty donât want to have the stress of their grandsonâsââ
âIs it absolutely necessary?â I cut Cameron off, not wanting the added stress of this. âI can relay the info to them. And honestly, if youâre doing the surgery at four in the morning, maybe itâs best if you get some rest. Focus on Jackson, and Iâll deal with my parents.â
Cameron eyed me, and I didnât want to know what the man was thinking from his expression. I hadnât meant to insult him, but I did not need the added bullshit of my parents hating him right now. I couldnât do it. It would hurt Cam, and it would hurt them. It was just too fucking much.
âIf you feel more comfortable giving your mom and dad the information, then fine. Iâll head out since Iâll be back here first thing tomorrow.â He spun around and then was gone.
âShit,â I said, feeling horrible that Iâd inadvertently chosen my parents over Cameron. âI feel awful.â
âDonât,â Warren answered. âCameron should know this isnât the time to be the hotshot doctor and make amends with your parents that way. Itâs absolute nonsense, and I, for one, would like to respect your parentsâ wishes of never being in his presence again.â
âJesus Christ, Warren,â I looked at him. âThatâs a bit harsh. What they donât like about Cameron happened sixteen years ago. My parents should be over it by now.â
Warren took my hand and gently guided us out of the room. âJessa,â he said once we were walking through the hallways and werenât in earshot of anyone, âyour parents love you very much.â
âI know that,â I said, rolling my eyes.
âSo, you know their current disdain was renewed after learning that he was apparently flying you everywhere in private jets and playing on the beach when he should have been focused on healing your son,â Warren said, repeating everything I was ashamed of myself for.
âThis is bullshit,â I said. My world seemed to be spinning out of control, and I didnât feel like it was a good idea for me to leave my son. âI canât leave the hospital. I wonât.â
âYou need to get some proper rest, and staying here isnât going to give you that,â he answered.
âI can make my own decisions, Warren. Thank you.â
âDonât take this the wrong way, but the last time I left you to make your own decisions, Jacks ended up in a coma while you were in Mexico.â
I glared at him. âFuck you,â I growled. âYou donât think I already blame myself for this?â
âI just donât understand where your mind is anymore, Jessica. None of this has made sense since you flew out here and hunted that man down for help.â
âAfter the surgery, and when Jacks is recovered, youâll understand,â I said, suddenly feeling weak from arguing with Warren.
Weak and stupid.
âThen why wasnât the surgery decided on in the beginning, Jessica? Why is he suddenly the heroic doctor? I donât want to insult you, but you should understand that this whole thing makes people question you and your relationship with Cameron. Itâs not a good look for a mother who says she wanted help for her son and ends up in bed with his doctor.â
âIâm not doing this,â I said, walking briskly away from him.
âDoing what?â he questioned, stepping up to keep up with me. âListening to the truth? People talk, you know?â
I was stopped when he tugged my arm and placed his arms around me.
âI just want him better,â I said.
That was the end of my fight for my own happiness.
Somehow, Iâd given Warren and my parents power over me, and I was too weak to fight for it back. I didnât even know if I wanted it back. I clearly wasnât responsible enough to keep my son from nearly dying. I deserved this shame for what Iâd done to Jackson. It was painfully obvious that my decision-making couldnât be trusted.
I hated that I felt so weak. I hated that everything Warren was saying was right. And I hated that I agreed with him.