Chapter 87
Learning Curve
Thursday May 1st
Scottie
Sweat drips from my brow and my neck and my armpits and my boobs as I use all my strength to lift myself up from my wheelchair and into my bed. My arms shake and my hands cramp, and when my ass is halfway toward my mattress, my elbows start to buckle, but I force a deep inhale of oxygen into my lungs and muster every ounce of power I have to complete the distance. Once my butt hits the bed, I almost slip off the edge, but my physical therapist is there to help ease me back a few inches so I donât hit the floor.
âGreat job, Scottie!â Pam exclaims. âI canât believe how strong youâre getting.â
âI donât feel strong.â I blow out a breath of air from my pursed lips, and it forces a few pieces of sweat-drenched hair away from my face. âIf you werenât here, I wouldâve ended up on the floor.â
âScottie, itâs been two weeks, and the progress youâve made is unreal,â she reassures with a soft smile as she hands me a glass of water with a straw. I take a sip. âNormally, you wouldnât be able to do any part of a transfer until the four-week mark at most. Usually, for most patients, it can take six to eight weeks, depending on their upper body strength. Youâre doing amazing. Donât get discouraged.â
I try to take her words in and believe them as truth, but itâs hard. Then again, everything feels hard these days.
My entire medical team has been excited about my progress. Dr. Hurst was over the moon this morning when he found out I had managed to successfully ask a nurse to help me to the bathroom without having an accident. Prior to that, I was either pissing myself without knowing or the staff had to catheterize me.
Now, I wouldnât say Iâve all of a sudden gotten feeling in my bladder, but I did feel the teeniest inkling of something, and when you combine that with the fact that Iâve paid enough attention to understand how often I usually go, it helped achieve that milestone. The me from three weeks ago never thought peeing in the toilet would be this exciting, but the me of today actually smiled over it.
Itâs at least a tiny shred of normalcy.
âDo you need anything before I go?â Pam asks, and I shake my head.
âIâm good. Thanks.â
âIâll see you tomorrow, Scottie.â
âSee you tomorrow.â
âAnd while Iâm gone, do me a favor and give yourself a pat on the back, okay? Youâve made leaps and bounds that I honestly didnât think would be possible this early.â
I make a show of reaching up with my right hand to pat myself on the back. âWay to go, me,â I say sarcastically.
Pam just laughs and rolls her eyes. âOne of these days, Scottie, Iâm going to get you to say that, and youâre actually going to believe it.â
âYeah, yeah,â I retort. Pam grins before walking out of my door.
My rehab hospital room is different from the hospital room I was in at Daytona. And different from the first room I was in when I arrived at St. Lukeâs. About ten days into my rehab process here, Dr. Hurst felt I was ready to be transferred to a floor that requires less care from the nursing staff.
So now, instead of getting checked on every two to four hours by the nurses, I only see them around mealtimes. Itâs been a welcome change.
Though, if I had my way, all the flowers and balloons and cards and bears and everything else that people have sent me wouldnât have followed me here. Itâs not that Iâm not thankful that everyone is trying to support me, but Iâm trying to find a way to move on from feeling like a victim all day every day. When I look at it all, I get sad.
âHey, hey, hey!â Wren greets as she walks into my room with her arms full of a duffel bag and a box, and I tilt my head to the side in confusion.
âI thought you werenât coming until tomorrow?â
âI switched shifts with Jessica,â she updates and sets the bag and box down on the small dinette table near the window. âIâll be here tonight, tomorrow, and until, like, three oâclock on Saturday because I have to work early on Sunday morning.â
She starts to pull items from the bagâa brush, a hair straightener, hair products, makeup, nail polish.
âWhat is all that?â
âI thought weâd enjoy a little girl time,â she says and flashes a smile over her shoulder. âA spa day, if you will.â
âYou trying to tell me I look like a troll?â I tease. She shrugs, and I scoff. âWow, donât spare my feelings or anything.â
She laughs. âNo offense, but youâve been slacking on the self-care.â
âWell, I donât know if you know this, but I recently became paralyzed.â
âOh shit, really?â She snorts. âI had no idea.â
âYeah.â I smile, and this time, I actually feel like I mean it. The humor feels good. âMy legs donât work. Like, at all. Itâs nuts.â
âButâ¦do your arms work?â she questions with pursed lips. âBecause Iâm pretty sure you donât brush your hair with your feetâ¦â
âYou really went there, huh?â I retort with wide eyes, but I also laugh.
Wren grins and carries the box over toward me. âBy the way, Dad sent a care package of all of your favorite snacks. I hope you donât mind, but I ate half of the gummy bears on my drive here.â
âStealing the paralyzed girlâs candy? Thatâs a new low.â
âPfft. I guess now isnât the time to mention that I also ate your Oreos, huh?â
I know itâs crazy, but this entire conversation is my favorite conversation Iâve had in I donât know how long. Itâs as if, finally, someone is treating me like Iâm a normal person. Finally, someone isnât trying to bend over backward for me.
âDad says he misses you and loves you and plans to come visit Saturday after his morning shift.â
My happy balloon is instantly popped.
Ever since I was transferred to New York, my father has been spending all his time either working or visiting me. I hate it because I want some form of normal for him, too.
Heâs always been a hard worker, but this is another level, and thatâs all thanks to me and the financial debt my medical care has added to his life. I tried to tell him not to worry about it. I tried to remind him that Iâm legally an adult and all the bills should be in my name, but heâs the best kind of guy and refused to hear anything I was trying to say.
Wren grabs a chair and moves it toward my bed, and she gives me no option as she grabs my foot and starts to paint my toes a pastel shade of pink. Normally, Iâd give her shit, but now, my mind is doing its typical spiral of all the things that weigh heavily on my shoulders.
Medical bills. My dad working himself to the bone.
My scholarship.
My classes that Iâm missing every single day.
My squad and the fact that my injury caused us to lose Nationals. And all the teammates who have reached out, trying to come visit, but I just make up excuses to keep them away.
My friendsâJulia and Kaylaâwho are the sweetest, kindest, most amazing girls Iâve ever had the pleasure of knowing, and for the past week, all Iâve done is avoid them.
Even Blake and Ace have tried to stop by.
And Finn, wellâ¦he texts me every day, all day long. Random shit. Links to songs on Spotify. Funny memes that made him laugh. I love yous.
He also hasnât gone a single day without having a nurse come in and ask if Iâm accepting visitors, but I always say no.
âDid you happen to see anyone out in the waiting room?â I ask Wren, my curiosity too damn piqued to deny.
âBy anyone, Iâm assuming you mean Finn,â she says and just barely glances up at me as she applies polish to the pinkie toe on my right foot. âAnd yes, heâs in the waiting room. Like heâs always in the waiting room. All he needs is a bed and a family portrait, and I think theyâd officially declare it his new home now.â
âGet real. Thereâs no way heâs here all the time.â
Wren eyes me seriously. âScottie, heâs here all the time. He never leaves.â
âBut what about his classes?â I question, and she shrugs.
âAll I know is that heâs here all the time. Sometimes, he is working on school shit, so I assume heâs found some way to stay on top of things.â
âI wish he wouldnât do that,â I say, but my voice is so quiet that I donât even know if Wren heard me.
âYou might be trying to push him away, but itâs not working. I mean, heâs always here. Always. Not to mention, I just found out today about that GoFundMe he started for you. If all those things combined donât scream love and devotion, I donât know what does.â
âGoFundMe? What?â
âYou didnât know?â
She pauses painting my nails to pull her phone out of her jeans pocket. A few taps to the screen and she hands me her phone. And right there on the screen is an actual GoFundMe page for Scottie Bardeaux.
And when I see how much money heâs managed to raise for me, I drop Wrenâs phone into my lap. âIs that real?â
âGirl, itâs real,â Wren says. âWhen I showed Dad this morning, he burst into tears. I canât even begin to tell you how stressed heâs been about keeping your medical care going, even though he doesnât have the funds to pay for it all. Last week, he spent hours on the phone trying to get payment plans in order. And now, because of Finn, all of thatâs been solved.â
Big, fat, salty tears stream over my lips, and I pick Wrenâs phone back up to look at the list of people who have donated money and left kind words of support.
The Kelly FamilyâThatch, Cassie, Ace, and Gunnar.
The Brooks FamilyâKline, Georgia, Julia, and Evie.
All of Finnâs newest brothers and sisterâRemy, Flynn, Ty, Jude, and Winnie and their families.
Wendy Winslow and Howard.
Finnâs mom and his siblings.
Coach Jordan.
Literally every single one of my teammates.
A bunch of my professors.
Dean Kandinsky.
Even Officer Walters from the Dickson Campus Police.
So many people and so much money and I donât even know how to feel about it.
When Wren sees that Iâm crying, she stops painting my nails and climbs into bed beside me.
âI love you, Scottie,â she whispers as she gently runs her fingers through my hair. âAnd I know this is all really hard for you. Youâre used to being independent. Youâre used to being the one who is helping other people, not the other way around.â
âIâm such a fucking burden now. On everyone.â
âBut donât you see?â she retorts and leans back to meet my eyes. âYouâre not a burden, Scottie. Youâre important. Youâre special. Youâre loved. And everyone who is trying to help you is doing it because they love you. Because they care about you.â
I shake my head. âButââ
âThere are no buts.â She cuts me off. âThese are facts. This is truth. This is love. And the sooner you learn to accept that, the sooner youâre going to be able to find closure with what youâve lost and be able to move on to a future that, while it may not be what you pictured, can still be a future that is just as bright, just as beautiful, just as fulfilling. There are a ton of people here, right on this floor, you could help, you know? Other people struggling. Maybe helping them like you used to at the hospital at home will help you too. You have lots of gifts left to give. I promise.â
Her words slice through my chest and open up a dam of emotion I didnât even realize was there. My entire being feels like itâs at warâmy heart and my headâtrying to understand how I should feel and what I should feel.
I cry into Wrenâs arms until Iâm numb from emotion.
I cry until I canât cry anymore.
I cry until I fall asleep.
But for the first time since I got hurt, theyâre not just tears of anguishâtheyâre tears of possibility.