"A heart transplant? My baby's only two years old." Hannah
Quinn stared at Dr. Scott McIntyre, the cardio-thoracic
surgeon who sat across the conference room table from her.
His familiar, Mediterranean Sea eyes were sympathetic, but
his face remained somber.
The shock of seeing Scott again was only surpassed by
the pain of his words. Her son was dying.
When had she slipped down the rabbit hole to this
horror at Children's General Hospital? As if that weren't
torment enough she now faced a mother's worst nightmare,
and the news was being delivered by Atlanta, Georgia's
supposedly best cardio-thoracic surgeon, a man who hurt
her badly years before.
In the movies this would be called a twist of fate,
horrible irony. But this wasn't some screenplay, this was
her life. Her child who always had a smile. Her little boy
who giggled when she kissed him behind his ear was in
serious danger.
"He was doing fine. I was taking him for a scheduled
checkup. Next thing I know his pediatrician has ordered an
ambulance to bring us here." Hannah covered her mouth,
damming the primal screams that threatened to escape.
Moisture pooled in her eyes, blurring her vision of Scott…
now Jake's doctor. "You have to be wrong."
He glanced at Andrea, the heart transplant coordinator
sitting beside him, before he reached across the table as
if to take Hannah's hand.
"Don't." She straightened. He withdrew.
That night eight years ago had started with a simple
brush of his hand. She couldn't go there, wouldn't go
there again or she'd fall apart. She had to hold it
together until her world righted. And it would, it had
to. "I knew that a valve replacement might be in his
future sooner than I had hoped, but a heart transplant?
Your diagnosis can't be correct."
Scott ran a hand through his wavy hair. The soft silky
locks had gone from light to golden blond with age. His
fingers threaded through his hair again, a mannerism
Hannah remembered from when they'd been friends, good
friends. They'd shared a warm banter when he'd come to
work on the step-down floor. The banter between them
developed into a friendship she valued, and thought he had
too.
Leaning forward, he brought her attention back to why
they were sitting in this tiny, barren room acting as if
they'd never known each other intimately.