Alicia was putting Hope to bed when Jon got out of the shower. Alison had insisted on closing the diner most nights. While Jon appreciated the extra time it gave him with his family, he felt guilty; like he was forcing the woman from the only home she had known for years.
Jon sat at the end of the bed they shared. He wore only the towel wrapped about his waist as he rehearsed what he would say for the hundredth time that day. He wanted to get this right. A man only proposed once. That other one did not count. Somehow he had known even then his marriage would not last. This one would. It had to.
He sighed, but he had left this one too late. He had done everything all wrong. You fell in love, then proposed, got married, and had children. He still had not figured out what order he had done it all in. But there was no denying that the proposal and marriage were coming last. And he was running out of time there, too. The doctors were pushing for the surgery as quickly as possible.
"Okay, so what's bothering you?"
Jon had been so caught up in his thoughts that he had not even noticed her standing in the doorway. She frowned as she closed that door behind her and came to sit next to him on the bed. Her hand reached out, taking his mangled one.
The doctors were right. The damage to the nerves and circulation in that hand and arm meant that the sensation in it was never quite right. But now, if he were not watching her clutch it, he probably would not have known he touched him at all.
"The doctors want to amputate it." That was not how he had planned to begin this conversation.
"Yes, we've talked about that before."
He shook his head, "No, I mean now. Well, not now. Not right this minute. But soon."
She inhaled deeply, "How soon?"
"They haven't given me a date exactly. But as soon as they can arrange it. In the next couple of weeks, for sure."
"I thought it took months for those sorts of things with the VA?" He watched the light dawn in her expressive dark eyes, "Oh, it's that bad?"
He sighed as he turned to wrap his good arm about her, "It is not life-threatening," at least not yet, he left unsaid. "But I have lost all sensation in it, and they say the circulation is just as bad. There's no hope now of it improving." That was harder to admit than he had thought.
She nodded as she studied the old brown shag carpet that he had come to love as a symbol of home. His home - with them. "Okay, so we knew this might happen, right? We just need to prepare Hope for it. How long will you be in the hospital? Will she be able to visit you there? Will you need to stay at the rehab center for long the way that Chris did?"
Her question came at him so fast that his head hurt. He had been so focused on the proposal and arranging a quickie wedding that he had not considered how they would handle their daughter. He did not even have answers to half her questions.
"If things go well, I shouldn't need to be in the hospital for more than a week or so. Not since I live locally now and can go back easily in an emergency. I think it is the same with the rehab, though I'll need to check. But it seems it would be cheaper for them if it could be handled outpatient. And you know how the VA is about anything that saves money?"