Not Quite Enough(51)


Another man was lowered into the cave and pushed Trent away from Monica’s side. The only thing he could do was stand by and watch as they worked on her. They started an IV and cut off the bandage on her leg. From the box, they removed gauze, tape… and proceeded to place a quick bandage over her wound. They wrapped something else around her leg, immobilizing it.
“Trent?”
Trent shoved around the medic to see Monica’s eyes open and search for him.
“I’m here.” He kissed her forehead. “I’m here.”
She smiled and looked between the men. The guys working on her tried to talk to her, but she didn’t say anything else before closing her eyes.
Between the three of them, they managed to get her in the basket and secured. Trent looked around the room, and then remembered the request for water. He filled a water bottle and secured it inside Monica’s backpack, which he placed beside her.
He stroked her head again, and then she was being lifted into the air.
Trent held his breath until he knew she was safely aboveground.
“You’re next.”
It took another fifteen minutes for the rope to lower back down to ground level. And by the time Trent made it out, Monica had already been whisked away.



Chapter Eighteen



There came a point where life merged with death in a tug-of-war and the body in between could do nothing but grab a bowl of popcorn and watch. On one hand, death held a peaceful blanket of nothing left but an aching feeling that something was left out of place, something extremely important that needed to be done. On the other hand, there were the clawing nails of pain and anguish that instinctively you knew needed to be felt, to be triumphed over, in order to experience one more day.
That one day would be worth the struggle.
Images floated above Monica’s thin layer of consciousness. Trent smiled above her, his face lit up by the glow of his cell phone. He kissed her, told her they were going to be OK. Then she was floating, and the ceiling of the cave floated toward her and panic set deep inside of her. I’m not done, she yelled at whoever listened.
Faces floated around her, of those who she worked with and beside, her sister, her brother-in-law… strangers.
Where’s Trent?
The image of him inside the cave, alone, welled up inside her. “He’s in there. Help him.”
Then the water from the giant wave overtook everything and she couldn’t catch her breath.
She fought to find the surface.


Jessie held her sister’s hand throughout the flight. Not once did Monica wake long enough to utter one word that she was OK.
Walt flew with them to Florida where a team was waiting.
Jack kept telling her Monica would be all right. That she wouldn’t allow anything as simple as a broken leg to get the best of her.
“Monica’s tough,” Jack told her.
From Monica’s bedside, Walt chimed in, “We don’t call her the Ice Queen for nothing.”
“Ice Queen doesn’t sound flattering.”
“She’s tough, Jessie,” Walt told her. “She’s going to be all right.”
Yet there was a hint of doubt behind Walt’s eyes.
The private jet didn’t hold the necessary equipment to hold a gurney in place, so they improvised with what they had. The basket that had brought Monica to the surface was strapped into the couch of the plane. They secured an oxygen tank that helped deliver what Monica needed. Dr. Klein had met Walt at the airport with necessary medicine. Even to Jessie, Monica appeared as if she were sleeping and not struggling.
Yet when the constant beep of the monitor that displayed her sister’s heart rate to the doctor slowed, Walt adjusted something… appeared frazzled. When Monica started to lose the contents of her stomach, the good doctor turned white.
Walt tried to hide his unease and mumbled under his breath, cursing the fact that he didn’t have enough of what he needed to make everything perfect for his patient. His friend.
They landed in Miami. A medevac team met them and helicoptered Monica and Walt to the hospital.
When Jessie and Jack arrived at the hospital much later, they were ushered into a private waiting room for the longest hour of Jessie’s life.


As much as Trent wanted to assure his brothers that he was alive, the desire to follow Monica and make sure she was being cared for was stronger.
“Where did they take her?”
Someone threw a blanket over his shoulders, which surprisingly he accepted. The cold night and rain should have been a comfort. They weren’t.
Jason hooked an arm around his shoulders. “The airport. Someone said Miami, but I’m not sure.”
Trent turned one-eighty and met with the bulk of a man he’d never seen. “Where did they take Monica?” he demanded.
“Miami General,” the man said with a slight southern accent.
Trent twisted around. The world lost balance and someone was holding him up.
“Hold on, brother.” It was Glen talking this time. “Let’s have someone check you out.”
“I’m fine,” he insisted. He patted his pockets for the keys of his Jeep. He remembered them on the floor of the cave next to their food supplies. “Damn.”
“Trent?”
Why were there two of Jason?
“What?”
Three… there were three of him.
The world tilted again and someone called his name.
Everything came into a fuzzy focus and then everything inside Trent’s stomach emptied.
Maybe I’m not fine.


Trent recognized the inside of the family jet. It had been years since he’d been there, and wasn’t exactly happy with being there now. Within one breath, he went from rescued survivor to patient. It was as if the mere mention of gastrointestinal issues made everything inside him twist on itself.

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