MATT FOUND THE ELEVATORS, punched the up button, and planted his feet in a wide stance as he waited for one to arrive. Two young female physical therapists were chatting and waiting for an elevator going down. One of them, a pretty, athletic-looking blonde, smiled and said, “Hi,” to Matt.
He responded with a polite “Hi,” then took a couple of long strides to the nearby window and pretended to look out.
Damn. He should have asked Dr. Goodlove about the twins’ condition while he’d had the chance. She probably thought he was completely cold, not to have even mentioned them.
But the woman was so beautiful he couldn’t seem to think straight around her. It had been a long time since he’d been this interested in a woman, and it scared the hell out of him. A doctor. Was he crazy?
Well, at least he’d given her his card and put the ball in her court. This time he was going to be sure. No more messing up his life. He was getting too old for that.
The elevator bell dinged and, as soon as the doors closed and he was alone, hurtling skyward to the pediatric burn unit, his thoughts focused on the twins.
Over the past ten days, while he’d been home on medical leave, he’d thought of little else. Had he saved their lives, he worried, only to leave them to a future of endless pain, surgeries, rehabilitation, scarring, misery? When he’d gone in to see the babies last week, the scene had been haunting.
After he’d changed into scrubs, a tall, wiry nurse had given him a brisk rundown on how to do a surgical scrub. When he’d finished that, she’d helped him don the sterile garb—gown, mask, hat, gloves, paper shoes—and he’d followed her into the pediatric intensive care unit. All this trouble. Matt thought as he hurried to keep up with the nurse whose paper gown billowed out at her sides like wings, because the mother had given her permission for him to be in the room. And what would he say to her? What good could he do?
The room seemed bathed in bright light and a torrent of perpetual whispering white noise—monitors and pumps beeping and clicking, the rhythmic whoosh of two respirators. A nurse was there—busy, busy. He focused on the mother first; he couldn’t look directly at the loosely gauzed little mummies in the two crib-size beds. The mother’s bums looked better than the last time he’d seen her—they had been mostly second degree—but otherwise she looked considerably worse. Exhausted. She got out of her rocking chair and hugged him, their sterile gowns rustling between them. Who was taking care of her other baby now, Matt wondered, the one born a few days ago?
Matt released her and, silently, she took his hand and led him to the beds. It seemed important to her that he look. He’d seen burn victims before—other firefighters, mostly. Victims who had healed eventually. Nothing like this.
The twins were swaddled from head to toe in the gauze—even their eyes were covered—and under that, Matt knew, were the pigskin grafts. They were flat on their backs with their small feet supported on footrests and their tiny arms strapped out to their sides, the pose of the crucified. The kneecap of one baby was exposed. Perfect skin with no damage. That was all Matt could see. Matt focused on that little kneecap, concentrated on it.
Finally he whispered, “How are they doing?” Because, what else could he say?
Instantly, one twin’s heartbeat shot up—the out-of-control beeping was terrifying—and Matt understood why the mother hadn’t spoken. The nurse busied herself adjusting an IV drip.
Suddenly the beds started humming, and Matt startled again, wondering if he’d set something else off, until one side of each mattress tilted up. Then he remembered—automatic pressure beds.
Another nurse came in. She’d obviously been on a cigarette break, and in this sterile room, to Matt the smell seemed as odious as a skunk. He didn’t want anything contaminating the twins environment. She signaled for them to leave. Report time, he supposed.
Out in the waiting room, he had told the mother, before he’d left, to take things one day at a time. He needed to take his own advice, didn’t he?
The elevator doors opened, facing the large chest-high counter that wrapped around the nurses’ station. A man and woman, both wearing blue scrubs and all the other telltale paraphernalia of busy nurses, stood behind it, concentrating on a chart they had opened on the counter.
“I think we should call Dr. Miller and see what he thinks about staggering the dose,” the man was saying.
The woman looked up at Matt and asked, “May we help you?”
“I’m here to check on the Taylor twins,” Matt said quietly. “I wondered if I could look in on them.”
The two nurses exchanged a sad, secretive glance that gave Matt a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach.
“Who are you?” the male nurse asked kindly.
“I’m Matthew Creed, the firefighter who rescued them. I’ve been up here before. Their mother gave her permission for me to see them.”
The female nurse was flipping through something below Matt’s line of vision. “Yes, Mr. Creed—” she looked up “—your name is on the Kardex, but I’m afraid...” The nurses exchanged that look again and just then an older couple who looked like grandparents came out of a nearby room and started walking down the hall toward them.
“Let’s step in here, okay?” the male nurse said, indicating a small cubicle off the nurses’ station.
Matt followed the nurse inside. There was a large window in the wall, apparently soundproof, because when the nurse closed the door Matt could no longer hear the phone beeping or the voices of the grandparents as they stood earnestly talking to the female nurse.
“Have a seat, Mr. Creed,” the nurse said as he lowered himself into an institutional plastic chair.
Matt took the other plastic chair, facing the window, and awkwardly arranged himself—arms folded across his chest, feet planted wide—for what he guessed was going to be a blow.
“Mr. Creed, the Taylor twins died an hour ago, within minutes of each other.”
Matt leaned forward, propped his elbows on his knees, and hung his head. He honestly didn’t even know what he felt most at that moment: relief for the babies or sadness for their mother.
God, sometimes he hated his job.
“The hospital media coordinator has asked us not to speak to anyone about it yet,” the nurse continued. “She wants to control media access to the mother if she can. This case has generated a lot of local publicity, as you know. But I figured you, of all people, deserved to be told. I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay,” Matt said, when it was anything but.
Burn-unit nurses and firefighters, sharing a common enemy, knew how to talk to each other. “The twins couldn’t sustain any kind of fluid or electrolyte levels,” the nurse explained. “They’d been in kidney failure for a week.” Then he clamped his beefy hand on Matt’s broad shoulder. “We all do our best, but sometimes we lose.”
“I know.” Matt had started to think about the babies, how little they’d felt when he’d lifted them out of their smoldering crib, how limp, and tears stung his eyes.
“Listen.” He cleared his throat and stood. “I really appreciate your telling me.” He extended his hand to the nurse and they shook hands. “I won’t tell the other firefighters until your media person has had time to deal with it.”
“I appreciate that,” the nurse said, opening the door.
A ward clerk and a couple of nurses gave Matt sympathetic smiles. Matt knew he looked stricken, knew his nose was as red as a cherry. It always turned red like that when he tried to suppress tears.
As