Chapter Two
A misting
rain began to fall as Angela headed toward the highway and the fifteen-mile
ride that would bring her home, the largest town in the rural area. Ahead, one
of the electronic signs that warned of traffic problems flashed, and she slowed
to read it: “Accident on entrance ramp to Highway 33. Use alternate route.”
That
brought her to a full stop, right in the middle of the road. Alternate route?
She didn’t know an alternate route. After a year in this area, she’d had time
only to find one way to and from the area where she worked. This was it.
The
blare of a horn behind her jerked her to attention, and she hit the gas to move
to the shoulder. A car sped past, its engine roaring, and she quickly followed
in the hopes it might lead her home.
It
was too fast. In seconds the roadway ahead disappeared in a veil of fog, and with
it the car’s taillights, leaving only white stripes in an endless backdrop of smudgy
black.
She
slowed to a crawl and squinted through the slapping windshield wipers to focus
on the lines, her teeth clenched with such force her jaw began to ache, her
fingers gripping with such strength her arms began to shake.
She’d
taken a deep breath to clear her head when a noise ahead caught her attention—screeching
tires trying to grip pavement. Angela took her foot off the gas, and while her
car idled, a high-pitched whining filled the space ahead of her, followed by an
explosion of metal, ripping and grinding and crashing for what seemed like forever.
“Oh
God.” The words escaped her mouth, sounding like a prayer, before she knew they
were in her head. She shook the thought away and moved the car forward, accelerating
bit by bit until her headlights caught it—the crash.
A
car, small and brown and looking like a relic from the mid-‘80s, had stopped in
a broadside position ten feet off the roadway, its crumpled hood molded around
a drunken-looking light stanchion. The overhead light spotlighted the car and
its predicament in a yellowish funnel shape, as exhaust pumped from the car’s tailpipe
in flumes so thick, even the now-sheeting rain couldn’t smother it.
She
was up and out of her car before she’d pulled her phone from her pocket, and as
she ran, she flipped the switch on her headset and dialed 9-1-1, then dropped
the phone back in her pocket.
The
dispatcher answered just as she reached the car, but her attention was caught
by the web-like splintering of the windshield. Inside, the man in the driver’s
seat was slumped over the steering wheel. Blood seeped from a gash in his head.
Angela
grabbed the door handle, and as she yanked, the door hinge screeched its reluctance
to yield. When it gave way to the pressure, she landed on her butt on the
slick, grimy shoulder, and shards of gravel and glass dug into the fleshy part
of her palms.
Wincing
against the sting, she scrambled to her knees and crawled forward.
The
interior of the car smelled like sweat, blood and other body fluids, and her
nose wrinkled involuntarily. The man hadn’t moved, and she reached past him to
turn off the ignition, then pressed her fingers to his carotid artery. When she
felt the answering pulse, weak and thready but there, she drew in a quick
breath and let it out in an explosive sigh.
“9-1-1
operator. Again I repeat, what is the emergency?” The man’s voice blasted from
her earpiece, making her heart leap, and she realized the dispatcher had been
speaking the whole time.
“I’m
sorry. I’m sorry. I fell, forgot I had you on the phone. There’s been an
accident, somewhere near the detour for Highway 33.”
“What
detour, ma’am?”
“The
one at the entrance ramp. The sign said it was closed due to an accident.” Her
annoyance caused the words to whip from her mouth, short and brittle.
The
dispatcher hesitated. “You said this was Highway 33?”
“Yes,
33.”
“There
is no Highway 33.”
“The
point is, I couldn’t get on the highway, so I kept traveling on that road. I
got, I don’t know, a couple miles down and there’s a terrible accident.” Her
voice trembled, and she swallowed the spit forming in her mouth while observing
the car’s occupant. “There’s a man. He’s alive but bleeding from a head wound.
Looks like he impacted the windshield. I don’t want to move him. He could have
spinal or other internal injuries.”
“Are
you a doctor?”
“Surgeon,
yes.”
A
rustling noise came from the back of the car, then a moan, and Angela moved to
the back door, then peered through the window.
A
woman lay braced against the opposite door, her feet planted on the seat so her
knees were lifted and spread. Her hands were wrapped around her belly. It was huge
and swollen. She convulsed, her back arching, and wailed for a full five
seconds before simmering into a moan.
“Look,
can’t you track me by GPS or something?” Angela asked the dispatcher. “There’s
a pregnant woman in the back. Looks like she’s in labor. I have to go.”
She
didn’t wait for a reply, but tuned the dispatcher out while she opened the door.
At the intrusion, the woman jerked. Her hair was dark—whether black or brown
was too difficult to determine in the murky light shining through the
windows—and it was matted with perspiration that drenched her scalp and ran
down the sides of her face. Her eyes, wild and glistening with tears, latched
on Angela’s face.
“Help
me.”
“I
am. I am. What’s your name?”
“Peggy.”
“Hi,
Peggy. I’m a doctor. I’m here to help. How far along are you?”
“Full
term. I’ve been in labor since this morning. My water broke and we were rushing
for the hospital. My husband was driving like a crazy man. We slid and
crashed.”
“Contractions,
how far apart?”
“I
don’t know. I don’t know. Seems like they never stop.”
Right
on cue, she gasped then began to pant. “Here comes another one.”
“Hold
on. I need to take a look.”
Angela
crawled onto the seat and slid the woman’s dress up over her knees. There was
blood, a lot, and she tried to recall from her one obstetrics rotation if this
much was normal. Or maybe it was from the accident. But then the contraction
built, and the baby’s head began to crown and push past the bulging tissue.
“Peggy,
you’re almost there, almost there. Doing great.”
Peggy
moaned while she bore down, seeming to instinctively know when to back off.
When
the contraction eased, she sagged against the door, panting once more. Angela
dragged her coat off, then slipped it beneath Peggy’s hips.
“What
are you doing out tonight?”
“Excuse
me?” She hadn’t expected the third degree from the woman in the midst of
childbirth.
“What
are you doing out on such a nasty night? Shouldn’t you be home, next to a
husband or lover, maybe your own baby?” There was a teasing quality to her
voice, despite its weak breathiness.
Angela
fought rolling her eyes as she swiftly tugged her sweater off her arms. It was
brand new, a cozy fabric that would be gentle against the baby’s skin.
“Actually, I was at a church service, with my boyfriend.”
The
woman’s eyes flared before half closing. “How could I forget. Christmas. I’m
having a Christmas baby.” Her eyes had closed, and her lips lifted in a weak
smile.
“Yes,
you are.” But that was the extent of the conversation because another
contraction grabbed the woman and bowed her back in its grip. “This is it,” she
said, hoping she was right.
Quickly,
Angela draped the sweater over her hands, placed them next to the woman’s body and
prepared to deliver the baby. Like
catching a football, that’s what they’d said during training. She’d even caught
a few babies herself, and remembered the thrill of new life. Ron had spoken
often of it, how the female body was designed so uniquely for this task. How
the baby and mother, in perfect design, knew how to work together.
The
memory of his words kept her calm, her hands steady. Still, she half listened
for the arrival of the ambulance while rain pounded the hood of the car like a spray
of bullets.
“You’re
doing great, Peggy. The baby’s almost here.” Blood gushed from the woman’s womb
and spilled from the coat onto the floor of the car. Angela ignored it, ignored
what it might mean, and focused on the baby’s head as it slowly emerged.
“His head is clear. He’s beautiful. Two eyes,
a nose, a mouth. He’s perfect.” Her voice caught in her throat, and she had to swallow
a rush of emotion.
Peggy
sagged against the door and her legs went lax. “I’m tired, so tired.”
“Of
course you are. Creating life is no easy work.” The baby’s head rested in her
hands, and as she spoke she dabbed at his eyes and mouth to clear the mucus.
And where the hell was that ambulance?
“Do
you have children?” The woman spoke, once again giving her an X-ray look that
seemed to seep into her soul.
“No.
But hopefully, some day.”
“Get
married first. Don’t bring a baby into the world without a father.” Her eyes lit
for a second before fatigue dimmed them once more. In that moment, Angela saw
their velvety brown shade, like pansies. They reminded her of someone, a face
flitting in the back of her mind. It vanished.
She
shook away the confusion and said, “Look at you, already talking like a mom.”
“I
am, aren’t I?”
Before
Angela could respond, Peggy tensed, and her eyes rolled back. Another contraction.
She heaved herself into an upright position, grabbed her knees to draw them to
her chest, and strained, letting out a series of strangled squeals.
“Couple
more seconds and that beautiful baby will be yours,” Angela crooned, half to
comfort the mom, half herself. But nothing happened. No movement from the baby.
Peggy
began to whimper, and Angela’s shoulders tensed from holding position for what
felt like an eternity. When Peggy collapsed again, sounding like a bellows,
Angela flipped the switch on her earpiece.
“Hello,
9-1-1, you still there?” Silence. The call had died. Next she tried Ron, but it
went to voicemail.
Scrubbing
her face, as if the manipulation of tissue would wake her brain, she thought
back to her conversations with Ron. He’d told her about a seminar he’d attended
on midwifery and at-home birthing.
Babies
and mothers are instinctively adept at getting out of problems, she remembered him
saying. You just had to help them.
Her
thoughts clear, she moved closer to Peggy, her hamstrings spasming as she moved
from the scrunched position.
“Peggy,
I think the baby’s shoulder is stuck. I need you to get on your hands and
knees.”
“What?
Here?” Her eyes floated open, but they were flat, and dull. As if she’d given
up.
“Yes.
Now. You have to now, Peggy. Your baby needs you.”
Those
were the magic words, and they compelled the exhausted woman to action. Together
they maneuvered her until she’d balanced on her hands and knees, her right
shoulder and hip resting against the back of the car seat.
But
the effort had taken its toll, and Peggy’s words slurred. Still she kept her
humor. “I like you. I wouldn’t stick my butt in just anyone’s face you know.”
“Somehow
I knew that about you, Peggy. Good job. Let’s get this baby born.”
The
words were barely out of her mouth when Peggy tensed with yet another
contraction, only this time, the baby began to move.
“He’s
coming, Peggy. He’s coming. Hang in there.” Her voice had thickened with
emotion, a combination of relief and tension, fear and gratitude all mixed up.
As
the shoulders began to emerge, she slipped her hands under the baby and eased
him out.
Or
her.
“A
girl. You have a beautiful baby girl. Congratulations, Mama Peggy.” With tears
filling her eyes, then overflowing, Angela wrapped the baby in the sweater,
made sure she was breathing, and waited while Peggy flopped around. When she
placed the baby in her arms, a look of wonder and awe washed away the fatigue,
and Angela felt her shoulders relax.
While
Peggy cooed to her baby, Angela used the hem of her skirt to wipe the blood
from her hands, then dashed to the front of the car to check on the dad. He hadn’t
regained consciousness, but his pulse was steadier, which gave her hope that
internal injuries were minimal.
In
the backseat, the baby made little grunting noises as it nursed for the first
time, and it wasn’t until she began to cry, tiny mewl-like noises, that Angela
suspected anything.
She
glanced back. Peggy’s face had turned gray, her breathing rapid and shallow,
and bruise-like shadows hollowed the space beneath her eyes. Moving once more
to the back seat, Angela placed her palm on Peggy’s neck. Skin clammy, pulse
racing. Shock.
“Is
the baby okay?” Peggy’s voice sounded slippery, like she couldn’t control it.
“The
baby is fine. You’ll be fine too. The ambulance will be here soon.”
“You
saved my baby. Thank you.”
“No,
you saved your baby.”
The
corners of Peggy’s mouth tipped up in an expression of pure satisfaction. “She’s
beautiful.”
“Absolutely.
Look at all that curly black hair.”
“Like
yours, isn’t it?” Peggy took her eyes off the baby to peer at Angela for an
uncomfortably long time. Before Angela could answer, she said, “She’s going to
do wonderful things. Maybe she’ll be a doctor, like you. God has great plans
for this one.”
Avoiding
the “G” word, Angela said, “I’m sure you’ll be right there with her, enjoying
every moment.”
Peggy
shook her head, cuddled the baby’s head into her neck, and rocked back and
forth. “I wrote her a letter.”
Unsure
how to respond, Angela kept quiet, and after a moment, Peggy adjusted the baby so
she could look into her face. “Happy birthday, my sweet angel.” Her eyes
brightened. “That’s her name. Angela.”
“That’s
my name,” Angela blurted it before thinking, as if this woman would give a
damn.
But
Peggy looked up and held Angela’s gaze while giving her a bittersweet, knowing
kind of smile. “I know.”
Please check back tomorrow for the final chapter of Christmas Delivery.
If you missed the first chapter, you can find it here.
14 comments:
Ah...the plot thickens, and I'm loving it. Well done. Love your descriptions, Leah.
Thanks, Vonnie! And thanks for checking in so early!
Absolutely fabulous. That's all I can think to say. Thanks, Leah.
Thank you, Margo. That's so nice! It makes going into the day job (in a few minutes) so much easier. :-)
This is cosmic! I totally love it. Great job.
I don't think I've ever been called "cosmic," Christine. I totally love IT! :-)
Great second chapter. Looking forward to knowing what happens next.
Oh my, what an interesting twist. Very well done, Leah!
Thanks, Barbara and Jannine. :)
Oh, my. What a beautiful, vivid piece of writing! I can't wait for tomorrow.
Thank you, Alison, for those kind words. Hope you enjoy the last part!
OMG...I have chills. I can't believe I just now read this!!! Yesterday was a crazy time that included being stranded with a car that wouldn't start, buying a battery, and having company in the evening. So, I totally missed out. But that means I can jump right to Chapter Three. After that hook, how can I not? Excellent job. Love the vivid descriptions, the characters, the situation, everything.
I hope your car situation is fixed, Ally!
Didn't expect that. Now I'm really glad I don't have to wait to read the next chapter.
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