Yours Truly: Chapter 5
Yours Truly (Part of Your World #2)
Iâd had a total breakdown last night when I got home.
Iâd started to realize I would never really be happy again. Not the way I had been. I wasnât ever getting my life back, and it wasnât just the thing with Nick. Bennyâs condition had broken me. It was the final straw.
Benny was like my child. I was eight years older and had practically raised him while Mom worked and went to nursing school.
I could be the strong-ass woman Mom taught me to be. I could put myself through med school and support myself and live through my horrendous divorce. But I could not watch Benny deteriorate like this and hold the line. I just couldnât.
When Iâd gone to his apartment yesterday after work to get his cat, there had been a three-day notice to vacate on his door. He wasnât paying his rent. Then I got inside, and it went from bad to worse.
His place had been trashed. He hadnât cleaned the litter box in weeks, the dishes in the sink had mold on them, the treadmill that he used to use religiously was covered in unwashed laundry. The cat practically dove into my arms when he saw me, like I was part of a long-awaited rescue mission and he was relieved I was finally there to save him.
Benny was clinically depressed. Heâd been depressed since all this started last year, but it had gone from a functional depression, where he could still shower and take meds, to this. He just gave up when his kidneys did.
I think I needed to move him in with me. Either that or call Mom. He needed an adult-ier adult to take care of him right now. He was going to have to decide which overbearing woman he wanted in his life, because one was about to be assigned to him whether he liked it or not.
Iâd gotten home last night and collapsed into bed and machine-gun sobbed into my pillow until I fell asleepâwhich didnât last long because Bennyâs cat woke me up. It took me a solid ten seconds of pure terror before I realized I had a cat in my bedroom and not a murderer. I couldnât go back to sleep after that.
I needed to not be at work today. I needed to sit around my house without a bra, my hair in a weird bun, watching reruns of Schittâs Creek. My eyes were still puffy, and I was a soft breeze away from losing it againâand I got my period. I get to bleed for a week without the sweet release of death.
I guess for the moment it was sort of good that I wasnât training for a new jobânot that I was thrilled with how that whole thing went down and why. But at least I didnât have to be at the hospital eighty hours a week when I could barely handle the forty-eight I was currently scheduled.
It was six-thirty a.m. I was having coffee with Jessica before work today.
I didnât used to like her very much. She was good friends with Alexis at one point. They were neighbors before Alexis moved. I always found Jessica a little too bitter, but now that I was bitter too, I appreciated her burn-the-patriarchy energy.
I got to the hospital cafeteria and grabbed a triple cappuccino. I wished there was vodka in it.
I spotted Jessica at the table sheâd picked in the corner and headed over, dressed in the baggy black zip-up hoodie I wore over my scrubs. The hood was on. That coupled with the sunglasses I was wearing over my puffy, bloodshot eyes made me look like I was about to drop the hottest hip-hop album of the year.
Jessica, on the other hand, looked great. Perfect hair and bright red lipstick at six-thirty in the damn morning. She was an OB-GYN. She was forty-six, perfectly put together at all times, and Iâd never seen her smile. Like, ever. She was married to some big lawyer or something, but she hated him, which didnât surprise me because she hated everyone. It was currently my favorite thing about her.
When I dropped into the chair across from her like a human beanbag, she was looking at her phone. âAnd what happened to you?â she said without looking up, her tone bored.
âWhy would you think something happened to me.â
She set her phone down and looked at me like a parent talking to a petulant teenager. âYouâre wearing sunglasses indoors.â
âMaybe I have pinkeye.â
She waited.
I tossed my bag on the floor next to me with a thunk. âBennyâs not doing great. And my divorce is final in two weeks.â
âGood,â she said dryly. âFree at last.â
I rolled my eyes. âFree to do what? Date? Have loads of sex with hot singles? Have you seen it out there?â I leaned forward. âAnd believe me when I tell you that my standards are low. The bar has come waaaaay down. At this point Iâd settle for a guy simply because he has a penis, more than one towel, and no flags hanging on his walls. I mean, do they actually expect us to have sex with them on a futon in their momâs basement? Like, actually?â
âYes,â she said flatly. âThat is exactly what they expect.â
I sat back heavily in my seat. âIâm beginning to think men are not sending us their best people.â
She scoffed, which was Jessicaâs version of laughing. âAll they do is lie and throw off your PH balance. They are a constant reminder that we donât choose our sexuality, because who in their right mind would choose to be attracted to men. They are completely worthless as partners. Did you know that when a wife becomes seriously ill, she is six times more likely to be abandoned by her spouse than a husband is?â
I stared at her. âAre you serious?â
She took out a compact and checked her teeth. âAnd the older the woman, the higher the rate of abandonment. I hear thereâs a saying up in oncology. When the wife gets sick, the husband gets a new wife.â She clicked the mirror closed and gave me a pursed-lip can-you-believe-this-shit look.
I blinked at her in horror. âThat is disgusting.â
âYes, it is.â She agreed. âBut remember, you canât spell disappointment without men,â she sang.
I laughed a little too manically before putting my forehead into my hand. âThatâs it,â I mumbled. âIâm giving up. I should just accept that Iâm never having sex again. Iâm canceling my bikini-wax appointments. Just gonna let the forest reclaim the land, succumb to my inner swamp witch.â
I squeezed my eyes shut from behind my glasses. âI feel like if I died, it would take me a solid twenty-four hours to realize Iâm in hell.â
Then I groaned, remembering. âAnd then thereâs this asshole Iâm working with, this new guy I canât standââ
âOh? Who?â she asked, looking back at her phone, only sounding mildly interested.
âDr. Maddox.â I made a face.
She paused and looked up at me over her screen. âJacob Maddox?â
I rubbed my forehead tiredly. âYeah. You know him?â
âWonderful man,â she said matter-of-factly.
I froze and blinked at her. âIâm sorryâwhat?â
Her beeper started going off. âI know his mother,â she said, looking at her pager. âIâve known the whole family for years. I have an emergency C-section, I need to run.â She got up.
âWait. Are you sure weâre talking about the same Jacob?â I said, watching her grab her bag. âBrown reddish hair? Sort of yea highââ
âHe was head of emergency medicine at Memorial West. Heâs an excellent human being.â
I stared at her. An excellentââNobody likes him!â
She flung her bag over her shoulder. âWell, theyâre wrong. Drinks later?â
âI canât. Butââ
âText me when youâre free.â
She grabbed her coffee and I watched her walk off, high heels clicking. She dropped the cup into a trash can, turned a corner, and disappeared.
I sat there blinking after her from behind my glasses.
What the hell was that about?
She didnât say anything nice about anyone, let alone men. An excellent human being? Gross.
Whatever.
I was too exhausted to even think on this. I had to broach the Mom/move-in subject with Benny today. Then if he said yes, I had to actually move him in, which I doubted heâd be able to help with in his state. I didnât have time to ponder the benevolence of whatâs-his-face.
I finished my coffee alone and then went to the locker room to get rid of the hoodie and glasses and change my tampon. I felt surly and extra grouchy, so when I got to the ER and saw Gloria standing by a patient room with Hector, peeking through a crack in the curtain, I came up behind them like a cranky old woman getting ready to chase people off her lawn. âWhat are you doing?â I grumbled.
âShhhhhh,â Gloria whispered. âWeâre watching.â
âWatching what?â I said, straining to look around them through the sliding glass door.
âDr. Maddox,â she whispered.
I groaned. âOh God, what has he done now?â
I hadnât seen him for a few days since the supply closet Go Fuck Yourself. I think he was avoiding me.
Good.
Hector didnât look away from the window. âThis little girl came in with a dog bite and heâs sewing up her doll.â
I wrinkled my forehead. âHeâs what?â
âYeah. I was just in there. I guess the dog tore her doll and she was all freaking out and crying, and Dr. Maddox goes in there and starts talking all soft to her like, âMija, letâs take care of your baby, okay?â And then he gets his suture kit and starts working on the doll, while his resident started the kidâs stitches, so she wouldnât notice it. Dios mÃo, I have never seen anything so sweet.â He turned to Gloria. âDo you think heâs single?â
âYeah,â she said. âI also think heâs straight.â
Hector shook his head. âNo. No way. I seen him at the Cockpit.â
âWhere?â she asked.
He leaned to look around her into the room. âA gay bar in uptown. It was definitely him. I never forget a jawline like that.â
âJust because he was at a gay bar doesnât mean heâs gay,â she said. âI heard he used to date some doctor at Memorial West. A woman,â she added. She nodded at me. âCome look.â She stepped aside so I could peer into the crack in the curtain.
I could see Dr. Maddox, the patientâs mom, a second-year resident, and Jocelyn in the room. Dr. Maddox had his back to us, sitting next to the gurney. His scrubs were hiked up and he was wearing colorful socks again, though I couldnât make out the design from here.
He had the doll on a table, and he was stitching her up. The little girl couldnât have been more than four or five. She wasnât crying, she was distracted. He seemed to be telling her a story as he worked because she giggled. Even Jocelyn smiled, and she was one of his earliest and most dedicated haters.
âWell, Iâll be damned,â I muttered. âHeâs not Satan after all.â
âWhat are you guys doing?â
We jumped at the voice. Zander was coming toward us from the double doors.
âHey. Nothing,â I said, putting my back to the glass. âJust watching a procedure.â
Gloria and Hector took this as their moment to exit and left.
âWhatâs up?â I asked.
âI came down to tell you, Iâm releasing Benny today. He looks good. Ready to go.â
I immediately perked up. âGreat!â
âSo who are you watching?â He peered around me into the room. âOh, Jacob.â He grinned when he saw what he was doing. âThat son of a bitch, look at him in there. I always did like his bedside manner.â
I cocked my head. âYou know him?â
He nodded. âYeah. We were roommates for years. One of my best friends. Great guy.â
I made a face.
He eyed me. âWhat?â
âNo, itâs just I keep hearing that today, but nobody here likes him much.â
He drew his brows down. âJacob?â
âYeah. Heâs kind of a dick.â
Zander barked out a laugh so loud it surprised me. âJacob is not a dick. That guyâs the nicest dude youâll ever meet, trust me. Heâd give you the shirt off his back.â
âJacob,â I deadpanned, crossing my arms. âHeâs totally rude.â
âIf heâs coming off that way, heâs probably just nervous. Heâs an introvert, kind of shy.â He looked at his watch. âLook, I gotta run.â He started jogging backward. âHey, be nice to him, yeah? Heâs one of the good ones.â He turned and jogged the rest of the way to the double doors.
I gawked after him. One of the good ones?
Iâd known Zander for years. I not only respected him as a doctor, but I also trusted his judgment in general. I didnât think heâd say that about anyone unless he believed it was true. I mean it wasnât true, Jacob was definitely an ass. And he was in cahoots with Gibson for the chief position, which I was still pissed about. But I did believe that Zander believed Jacob was a nice guy.
And Jessica also believed Jacob was a nice guyâ¦
Gibson must like him too.
Huh.
I looked back through the glass. Jacob was finishing the doll. He wiggled it in front of the little girl and then bopped her gently on the nose with it before handing it to her. She clutched it and beamed.
I felt my face soften.
I mean, he had brought me that warm washcloth that day in the supply closet. He could have just taken off, especially after I snapped at him in Bennyâs room. And I never really apologized for running into him that day either. Now he was over here saving dolls from certain deathâ¦I guess he wasnât all bad.
I chewed on my lip.
If Jacob was shy, losing all his patients on his first day and then pissing off the entire nursing staff wouldnât help matters. No one really gave him a shot after that. If he really was âone of the good ones,â like Zander said, that kind of made me feel bad, like it was his first week at a new school and I was one of the mean girls.
Maybe I was one of the mean girls.
I was so crabby lately I was probably shorter with him than I would have been if my life wasnât a dumpster fire.
Benny was an introvert too. He had a really hard time in schoolâ¦
Through the sliver in the curtain, I saw Jacob get up and I started for the nursesâ station, but I only got a few feet before I let out a groan and turned back around.
A moment later, when the door to Jacobâs room slid open, I was waiting outside. I stepped in front of him with my arms crossed. âHey,â I said flatly.
He froze with his hand on the door. âHello,â he said, looking like a deer in headlights.
âBring them desserts.â
He blinked at me. âWhat?â
âYou should have brought the nurses donuts on your first day. You showed up empty-handed, that was your first mistake. Cupcakes might save you, but not the cheap stuff. Nadia Cakes, two dozen, get a keto one for Gloria, at least four gluten-free ones, and one vegan. Hector doesnât do animal by-products. Bonus points if you get a doggie cupcake for Angelicaâs new puppy.â
He stared at me, and I turned and walked away.
There. I was nice to him like Zander had asked. I gave him the tools to dig himself out of his nosedive with his team. Whether he chose to take my advice was on him. My conscience was clear. I was no longer a mean girl.
âHey,â he called after me.
I let out a long breath and turned back around. âWhat?â
He stood there with this earnest, hat-in-hand, puppy-dog look that made it hard to keep my flat expression. I registered again, almost to my own annoyance, that he was cute.
He had this super-sexy, strong-quiet-type thing about him. Deep, gentle brown eyes, a square jaw with just enough scruff to look a little rugged but still put together. He was maybe five-nine, five-ten, to my five-four. Mid-thirties, in shape. His hands were plunged into the pockets of his black scrubs and he had veins running down his toned arms. I loved well-hydrated veins.
I shook it off. Was he hot? Yes. Fine. Doesnât matter. Super annoying, though.
âYeah?â I said impatiently.
âWhat about you?â he asked. âWhat kind of cupcake do you like?â
âRed velvet, and I donât want one,â I said, turning back around.
I didnât want anything from him.