WHEELS OF LOVE
DB#15
Edited by Kenjisato
Could anyone see past the wheelchair?
***
CHAPTER 1
"Look, Jenny, there is no easy way to say this... I think we should take some time..."
The girl in the wheelchair with a sad expression on her face just nodded, as if she expected the bad news. Her sister, Kara, wasn't so understanding.
"Are you breaking up with my sister because she's in a wheelchair, Gordon? You're a scum of the worst kind!" she spat on the boy's face.
Jenny fought the tears and raised her hand to stop her sister, "Kara, you're not helping."
"I want this piece of shit to feel a bit of the pain you are feeling," Kara said, swinging the pink baseball bat in her hand.
"Your sister is right about me, Jenny. I wish I was a better man, but I'm not," Gordon said. "I wish I was a braver one."
Jenny squeezed her eyes shut, hoping that would help keep the tears in, but it was a losing battle.
"You'll get no arguments from me! You're not worthy of Jenny's heart!" Kara spat on Gordon's face, getting in his face. "Go! My sister needs a real man in her life, not a shallow-has-been-wannabe!"
"Nothing you can say could be worse than what I told myself when I made this decision, Kara," Gordon shook his head. "I'm sorry, but I can't deal with you being in a wheelchair and what comes with it, Jenny. I see no future for us."
"You're such a low life! One day, bad karma is going to hit you and you'll regret this decision!" Kara kept screaming.
"Kara, please stop it! Could you give us some privacy?" Jenny pleaded. She just wanted everything to be over.
"Fine! I'll be in my room smashing balls with my bat," she pointed at Gordon's crotch with her bat and stormed out of the living room.
"I'm sorry about my sister. She is very protective of me after what happened."
"It's okay, Jenny. I understand."
Jenny was silent, collecting her thoughts for a while, and then she said, "I can't lie and say it doesn't hurt, but truth is, Gordon, I don't blame you. I'm not sure if roles would be reversed if I wouldn't make the same decision you did."
Gordon nodded, somehow relieved.
"I should have never climbed into that car. I knew James was in no condition to drive, but I did it anyway," Jenny went on, almost talking to herself. "We had no designated driver either."
"It was prom night. We were celebrating. We were all as drunk as James," Gordon said. "We made a bunch of bad decisions that night. Sadly, James paid with his life, and you..." his words trailed off.
Jenny moved her head up and down slowly.
"James hit that curve too fast, the car went one way, and the road went another. I woke up in a hospital bed unable to feel my legs," Jenny's voice trailed off.
Jenny couldn't remember many specific details of the accident, but the fear she felt that day was still crystal clear in her memory. She still had nightmares that made her scream and wake up, covered in sweat.
First, came the beeping. Then, a low humming sound and some clicking noises like an old dot-matrix printer might make. Jenny opened her eyes to the fluorescent-lit hospital room and remembered. The crash, the pain, the confusion.
She closed his eyes again and breathed, slow and deep.
"Calm down. You're alive," a familiar voice soothed her. Her mother was sitting in the chair at his side.
Jenny moved her fingers, and flexed her arms. Everything worked, but her whole body hurt like hell. She tried to move her foot, just a little to the left to ease the pressure from what felt like a tight bandage, and she couldn't. The foot would not respond. Neither would the other foot, or her knees.
Panic rose, and she forced herself to open her eyes again, to look down and make sure her legs were still there. She pulled off the thin white sheet covering her, and tried again, watching her big toe where it protruded from the edge of a compression boot.
"Move," she commanded.
It didn't.
"Mom. What happened to me?" Just a whisper.
"Jenny." She was at her side in an instant, cool palm on her cheek, red-rimmed eyes glistening down at her. "How do you feel?"
"Like hell. What happened...?"
"You were in a car accident. The boy who was driving died." There was an obvious lack of sympathy in that last statement. Her mother swallowed hard before she continued. "You'll be okay. But... the doctors aren't sure you'll ever walk again."
Blood rushed in his ears, loud-- like a bike engine, like a car crash.
"Never walk again?" Jenny repeated.
She stared at her mother, numb.
"That's what they say," her mother repeated. There were dark lines in her face, gloom in her deep irises.
Jenny nodded, but not because she understood or accepted the information she'd been given, only to acknowledge she'd heard. Tears streamed down her cheeks, and her lip trembled.
"Shh, I know." Her mother leaned over her, wiping her tears.
After a minute, when Jenny didn't respond, her mother continued. "Kara is here, too, down in the cafeteria with Dad. I'm so glad you're finally awake. We've been worried sick."
The weeks that followed were painful in every possible way. Jenny was moved to a rehab center. All the tiny scratches on her face and legs healed, and the bruises faded away.
For a short time, Jenny clung to the hope that her paralysis might one day go away, and her life as it was, would return.
Physical therapists and nurses visited, and forced her to sit up and do things she didn't want to do. Doctors and psychiatrists visited, asked her questions she didn't want to answer, and told her things she didn't want to know. Her family visited every day, their perfectly whole bodies and reassuring smiles reminding her that she, alone, was broken.
Gordon stood with her for a few months, but Jenny knew their relationship was over. She could feel her boyfriend drifting away from her, like a boat at the end of a long rope. He finally went to college leaving her behind.
Jenny fought the release, as long as she could. Going home meant starting the rest of her life. It meant accepting her broken body as unfixable, that what had happened to her-- was permanent.
After some months, against her wishes, Jenny was wheeled out to her home.
Her family gave her a motorized chair and a manual one, and a lot of recommendations she barely listened to.
"Look, Jenny," Gordon said with a sad expression on his face, bringing Jenny back to reality. "We are not the same people we were before we climbed into that car. Nothing is going to be the same. I'll walk with a limp for the rest of my days."
Jenny opened her mouth to interrupt him--or perhaps more likely to contradict him, but he carried on. "I know it's not the same... But the fact still remains, that everything we planned together is never going to happen. I'm already in college. If I stay with you, it would be only out of pity..."
"Don't you dare pity me! Don't you ever dare! I pity you, Gordon Timms!" Jenny spat on his face. "Go!"
Gordon looked at the floor, embarrassed.
"I am aware I am being shallow and just thoroughly unworthy of you. I am not good enough for you, Jenny. I pray and hope you can find a better man."
"JUST GO!"
Gordon turned around and dragged his feet to the front door.
Jenny held her tears back, 'til her ex-boyfriend closed the door behind him.
As soon as he left, her body was wracked with gasps, as she cried her heart out.
Kara ran down the stairs and hugged her sister tight, cursing Gordon to the top of her lungs.
Jenny cried for hours, until she ran out of tears.
CHAPTER 2
Once Jenny was done with rehab, she went through all the stages of grief. She had suffered a profound loss and life-changing injuries.
All her dreams had been crushed along with her legs.
She'd be the girl in the wheelchair for the rest of her life.
Jenny had been part of the gymnastics team, when she was in high school. She even had accepted a scholarship to study at Seattle Pacific University. Her future looked bright - until the car accident changed everything.
She had to relearn how to do many things from a wheelchair. She never anticipated the paralyzing fear she felt, when she forced her body to perform relatively simple tasks, like taking a shower or going to the toilet.
She got a lot of support and love from her family, especially from Kara, but nobody told her how frustrating it would be to be reliant on others. She was pampered by her overprotective parents. Truth was, she depended on them for many things as to help move her from her chair to the backseat of a car so she could attend doctor appointments or rehab.
Harry Potter had a cloak that rendered him invisible. Now, Jenny rolled around in the Chair of Invisibility. It appeared that once she sat in her wheelchair, she was no longer visible to other human beings.