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Chapter no 11 – Maggie

Maybe Now (Maybe Someday Book 3)

โ€ŒI am craving a Twix so bad right now.ย Dammit, Jake.โ€Œ

I couldnโ€™t hear the majority of his conversation with his son when he was out in the hallway earlier. I heard words here and there and could tell he was talking to a child, so when I heard the word โ€œdad,โ€ it all made sense.

I suddenly understood why he seemed so alpha-male on the surface, but also somehow had an extremely adorable, romantic side to him. I knew he loved fast cars and extreme sports, but on our date, I couldnโ€™t help but wonder what must have forced him to settle down and take his career seriously like he did.

That something turned out to be Justice.

I still donโ€™t know why Jake made that Twix comment, but now the only things on my mind are the speed at which Jake rushed out of this hospital roomโ€ฆand Twix.

I reach over to my nightstand and grab my phone. I donโ€™t know which one of them is driving, so I open up a group text between the three of us.

Maggie: I really need a Twix. Warren: A Twix? Like the candy bar?

Maggie: Yes. And a Dr. Pepper, please. Ridge: Warren, stop texting and driving. Warren: Itโ€™s cool, Iโ€™m invincible.

Ridge: But Iโ€™m not.

Maggie: Are you guys almost here?

Ridge: Five minutes away. Weโ€™ll stop at the store before we get there but weโ€™re only getting you a Diet Dr. Pepper. You need to watch your blood sugar. Need anything else?

Maggie: I think weโ€™re way overdue for an AMA. Ridge: Nope. I donโ€™t think so.

Warren: Did someone say AMA? (And Iโ€™ll get you a Twix, Maggie.) Ridge: No.

Warren: LETโ€™S DO IT!!! Be out front in five minutes, Maggie! Ridge: Donโ€™t, Maggie. Weโ€™ll be up there in five minutes.

Warren: No, weโ€™ll be out front in five minutes.

I ignore Ridgeโ€™s concern and choose to side with Warren. I throw the covers off me, feeling the first flicker of happiness since Jake walked into this room. God, Iโ€™ve missed them so much. I look around the room to make sure I wonโ€™t be leaving anything behind. My doctor left about half an hour before Jake showed up, so Iโ€™m not due for another visit from her until morning. This is the perfect time to make my escape. I reach down to remove my IV, knowing exactly what Ridge is thinking right now.

AMA is the acronym for when a patient leaves a hospital Against Medical Advice. Iโ€™ve only been able to successfully sneak out of a hospital twice in all my years, but Warren and Ridge were there for both escapes. And itโ€™s not as irresponsible as Ridge is making it seem. Iโ€™m an expert when it comes to IVs and needles. And I know theyโ€™re only keeping me overnight to be monitored. Not because Iโ€™m in any immediate danger. I have been more congested today than normal, but my blood sugars are stable now, and thatโ€™s the only reason Iโ€™m here right now. Stable enough to eat at least aย biteย of a Twix bar. And the last thing I want to do is lie in a hospital bed all night while getting absolutely no sleep.

Iโ€™ll contact the hospital in the morning and apologize, letting them know it was a family emergency. My doctor will be pissed, but I piss her off a lot. Sheโ€™s used to being irritated with me.

When she was here earlier, she started to get invasive about my โ€œsupport systemโ€ since my health has been on somewhat of a decline this year. Sheโ€™s been my primary doctor for ten years now, so she knows everything about my situation. I was raised by my grandparents, who are no longer taking care of me. My grandmother passed away, and my grandfather recently went to a nursing home. My doctor knows about Ridge and our recent break-up because heโ€™s almost always with me at my appointments and anytime Iโ€™m in the hospital. But sheโ€™s noticed his sudden absence in my life because she asked about it during my last visit with her. And then today, she asked again because no one was with me in the hospital this time.

After hearing her concern today, for a split second it made me regret pushing Ridge away in the end. Iโ€™m not still in love with him, but I do love him. And part of me, when I start to worry about being alone, thinks maybe I made a mistake. Maybe I should have held on to his love and loyalty. Butย most of meย knows that ending our relationship was the right thing to do. He would have conveniently remained in a mediocre relationship with me for the rest of my life if I hadnโ€™t forced him to look at our relationship through a magnifying glass instead of his rose-colored glasses.

Our relationship wasnโ€™t a healthy one. He was stifling me, wanting me to be someone I didnโ€™t want to be. I was growing resentful under the weight of

his protection. And I always felt guilty. Every time he dropped everything he was doing for me, I felt guilty for pulling him away from his life.

Yetโ€ฆhere we are, in the same predicament.

I donโ€™t think I realized how alone I was outside of him while I was dating him. It was when we finally separated that I truly realized he and Warren are all I had. Itโ€™s part of the reason I agreed they could come tonight. I think the three of us need to really sit down and have a heart-to-heart about this entire situation. I donโ€™t want Ridge to feel like heโ€™s all I have when I do have an emergency. But in realityโ€ฆheย isย all I have. And I donโ€™t want that to hinder his relationship with Sydney in any way. I mean, I know I have Warren, too. But I think Warren needs more care than even I do.

My life is starting to feel like a merry-go-round, and Iโ€™m the only one on the ride. Sometimes itโ€™s fun and exciting, but sometimes I feel like puking and I want it all to just stop. I realize I focus on all the negative way more than I should, but part of me wonders if itโ€™s because my situation is so unusual. Most people have huge support systems, so they can live normal lives with this illness. My support system was my family, and thatโ€™s now non-existent. Then my support system became Ridge. Now? Itโ€™s still Ridge, but with different rules. The last few months of dissecting my situation has been eye- opening. And it puts me in weird funks. I used to feel stifled, but never alone.

I wish I could find a good mental balance. I want to do things, see things, live a normal life. And sometimes there are stretches where I do that and itโ€™s all fine. But then I have days or weeks where the illness reminds me that Iโ€™m not in full control.

Sometimes I feel like Iโ€™m two different people. Iโ€™m Maggie, the girl who chases down items on her bucket list at one hundred miles per hour, the girl who turns down hot doctors because she wants to be single, the girl who sneaks out of hospitals because she enjoys the thrill, the girl who broke up with her boyfriend of six years because she wants to live her life and not be held down.

The girl who feels full of life, despite her illness.

And then thereโ€™s this quieter version of Maggie, whoโ€™s been looking back at me in the mirror these last few days. The Maggie who lets her worries consume her. The Maggie who thinks sheโ€™s too much of a burden to date a man sheโ€™s completely into. The Maggie who has moments of regret for ending a six-year relationship, even though it absolutely needed to end. The Maggie who allows her illness to make her feel like sheโ€™s dying, despite being very much alive. The Maggie whose doctor was so concerned about her today, she called in a prescription for anti-depressants.

I donโ€™t like this version of myself. Itโ€™s a much sadder, lonelier me, and luckily only appears once in a blue moon. The original version of myself is what I strive to be at all times. Most of the time thatโ€™s who I am. But this

weekโ€ฆnot so much. Especially after the visit with my doctor today. Sheโ€™s never seemed as concerned for me as she was today. Which makes me more concerned than Iโ€™ve ever been. Which is why I just pulled out my IV, am changing out of this gown, and am about to sneak out of this hospital.

I need to feel like the original Maggie for a few hours. The other version is exhausting.

The walk out of my room and down the hallway is surprisingly uneventful. I even pass one of the shift nurses in the hospital, and she just smiles at me like she has no idea she refilled my IV solution an hour ago.

When I step off the elevator and into the lobby, I can see Warrenโ€™s car idling outside. Iโ€™m instantly filled with adrenaline as I rush across the lobby and out the doors. Ridge steps out of the passenger seat and opens the door for me. He forces a smile, but I can see it all over his face. Heโ€™s angry that Iโ€™m leaving before being discharged. Heโ€™s angry that Warren is encouraging it. But unlike pre-breakup Ridge, he says nothing. He holds his tongue and holds the door as I climb quickly inside. He closes my door, and Iโ€™m putting on my seatbelt when Warren leans across the seat and kisses me on the cheek.

โ€œMissed you.โ€

I smile, relieved to be in this car. Relieved to see both him and Ridge. Relieved to be getting the hell out of this hospital. Warren reaches between us and holds up a Twix and a Diet Dr. Pepper. โ€œWe brought you dinner. King Size.โ€

I immediately open the package and pull out one of the bars. I say, โ€œThank you,โ€ with a mouthful of chocolate. I hand Warren one of the four bars just as he hits the gas and drives away from the hospital. I turn around, and Ridge is sitting in the middle of the backseat, looking out the window.

His gaze meets mine, and I hand him one of the Twix bars. He takes it and smiles at me. โ€œThank you,โ€ he says.

My mouth falls open so far, chocolate almost falls out of it. I laugh and cover my mouth with my hand. โ€œYouโ€โ€”I look at Warrenโ€”โ€œHe spoke.โ€ I look back at Ridge. โ€œYouโ€™re speaking?โ€

โ€œPretty cool, huh?โ€ Warren says.

Iโ€™m dumbfounded. I have never heard him speak a single word. โ€œHow long have you been verbalizing?โ€ I sign.

Ridge shrugs like it isnโ€™t a big deal. โ€œA few months.โ€

I shake my head, completely in shock. His words are exactly how I imagined they would sound. Our relationship with the deaf culture is what ultimately brought all of us together. Warrenโ€™s parents. Mine and Ridgeโ€™s hearing loss. But Ridgeโ€™s hearing loss is much more profound. Mine is so mild, it doesnโ€™t even hinder my life in any way. Which is why, for years when we were together, I did all of his speaking for him. Even though we could both communicate using ASL, I still wanted so badly for him to learn to speak

out loud. I just never really pushed him because I donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like to have profound hearing loss, so I didnโ€™t know what it was that was holding him back.

I guess he figured it out, though. And I want to know every detail. Iโ€™m excited for him. This is huge! โ€œHow? Why? When? What was the first thing you said out loud?โ€

Something immediately changes in his expression. He becomes guarded, like itโ€™s not something he wants to talk to me about. I glance at Warren, who is staring straight at the road like he just purposefully checked out of this conversation. I look back at Ridge, but heโ€™s looking out the window again.

And then I get it. Sydney.

Sheโ€™s why heโ€™s talking now.

I suddenly feel envious of them. Of her. It makes me wonder what it was about her that made him overcome whatever obstacle it was that held him back. Why wasnโ€™t I enough of a motivator to ever make him want to say things to me out loud?

And here she is again: the insecure, depressing version of myself.

I grab the Dr. Pepper and take a drink, trying to drown this sudden onslaught of jealousy. Iโ€™m happy for him. And Iโ€™m proud of him. It shouldnโ€™t matter what spurred him to want to learn how to communicate in more ways. All that matters is that he is. And even though my chest still burns a little, Iโ€™m smiling. I turn back around and make sure he can see the pride in my expression.

โ€œHave you cussed out loud yet?โ€ I sign.

He laughs, wiping the corner of his mouth with his finger. โ€œShit was my first cuss word.โ€

I laugh. Of course it was. He liked watching me say that word when I was angry. I realize speaking words out loud without being able to hear them probably isnโ€™t as satisfying as being able to hear your own voice, but it has to feel a little good, finally being able to cuss out loud.

โ€œCall Warren an asshole,โ€ I say.

Ridge looks at the back of Warrenโ€™s head. โ€œYouโ€™re an asshole.โ€

I cover my mouth with my hand, completely in shock that Ridge Lawson is verbalizing. Itโ€™s like heโ€™s this whole new person.

Warren looks over at me, taking the steering wheel with his knee so that he can sign what heโ€™s saying for Ridge. โ€œHe isnโ€™t a toddler. Or a parrot.โ€

I punch Warren in the shoulder. โ€œShut up. Let me enjoy this.โ€ I look back at Ridge and rest my chin on the head rest. โ€œSay fuck.โ€

โ€œFuck,โ€ he says, laughing at my immaturity. โ€œAnything else? Damn.

Goddamn. Mother-fucker. Hell. Son of a bitch. Bridgette.โ€

I die with laughter as soon as he includes her name in his string of

profanity. Warren flips him off. I turn around and face the road again, still laughing. I take a sip of my drink and then relax against the seat with a sigh.

โ€œIโ€™ve missed you guys,โ€ I say. Only Warren knows Iโ€™ve said it. โ€œWeโ€™ve missed you, too, Maggot.โ€

I roll my eyes, hearing that nickname again. I look over at him but make sure my headrest is a barrier between me and Ridge so that he canโ€™t read my lips. โ€œIs Sydney mad that he came?โ€

Warren glances over at me briefly and then stares back at the road. โ€œMad isnโ€™t the right word. She did react, but not like most people would have reacted.โ€ He pauses for a moment and then says, โ€œSheโ€™s good for him, Maggie. Sheโ€™s justโ€ฆgood. Period. And if this whole situation werenโ€™t so damn weird, I feel like you would really like her.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™tย dislike her.โ€

Warren looks at me out of the corner of his eye. He smirks. โ€œYeah, but you wonโ€™t be getting manicures together and going on road trips with her anytime soon.โ€

I laugh in agreement. โ€œThatโ€™s for damn sure.โ€

Ridge leans forward between the seats and grips both the front headrests. He looks at me and then he looks at Warren. โ€œRearview mirrors,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s like a sound system for deaf people.โ€ He leans back in his seat. โ€œStop talking about us like Iโ€™m not right here.โ€

Warren laughs a little. I just sink into my seat, ruminating over that last sentence.

โ€œStop talking about us like Iโ€™m not right here.โ€ โ€œStop talking about usโ€ฆโ€

โ€œUs.โ€

He refers to himself and Sydney as anย usย now. And he speaks out loud. Andโ€ฆI take another sip of my drink because this isnโ€™t quite as easy to swallow as I assumed it would be.

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