After talking to Marie, Dawn and I quickly packed and then managed a fitful night's sleep before an early start.
We headed east at six in the morning. You don't want to cross the passes tired in winter, and we were into mid-November. Snow at Snoqualmie Pass was measured in tens of feet and snowfall in tens of inches. We hit the pass at eight, Yakima a little after ten.
I'm glad there are signs pointing toward the hospital, they make finding it easier. We found the hospital, parked, and quickly went to reception; asking for Marie's room.
On the fifth floor, we found her in a private room being attended by a nurse, while a strained looking middle-aged woman sat in a corner. It was only as Dawn stepped next to the nurse that Marie knew we were there. "Dawn?"
She had a cast visible on her left arm, fading bruises on her face and neck, and a suspicious looking lump under the sheet.
Her eyes darted from Dawn to me and back again. "How? You came for me?" Tears welled in her eyes.
Dawn stepped to her, taking a hand in hers. "Shh, it's ok. We're here. When you're ready we'll take you home."
"Mom...this is Dawn, and that's Ron. They're friends, good friends."
"I know dear, you've been calling for them."
She turned to us; "I'm Agnes, obviously her mother. She's been calling your names all the time she was unconscious, and even when she slept. You must be pretty good friends?"
Dawn and I exchanged glances and nodded together. "Yes," I said, "we love her."
"Ahh." Was all she said. "I'll leave you alone for now; Jonathan is down stairs, he's going through therapy for his stroke. Right now his goal is to come up here to see his girl."
"How bad was the stroke?"
"He's lost a lot of motion on his right side, but we're already seeing some of it coming back. The doctor said we were lucky to get him here as fast as we did, but we had been shopping just a mile away, and I happened to be driving when it hit. I'm going down stairs now; it's nice to meet you. I take it you're staying a while?"
"As long as we need to."
"Then we can talk later."
I watched her walking into the hall and had to think she had to be a very strong woman.
We visited until Marie began nodding, then kissed her goodbye.
We took a room at a hotel within ten minutes of the hospital. While checking in I had a thought and asked if they had a two bedroom suite. Fortunately they did, so while Dawn moved us in, I returned to the hospital looking for Agnes.
She had returned to Marie's room, and seemed to be sleeping when I walked in. At rest, you could see she was feeling the strains of the last few weeks, but she woke quickly when I whispered her name.
"What is it?"
"I don't know how far from here you live, but we've taken a suite at the Ledgestone. It has two bedrooms, and you're welcome to one of them any time."
"Home is almost an hour away. You're sure I won't be a problem?"
"Agnes...here's a key. Get some rest. It even has a small kitchen so you can make something at any hour."
"Thank you. I could use a full night's sleep. And a bath. I'll come over in an hour or so."
***
We settled into a routine over the next week; up early, breakfast for everyone, then to the hospital in separate cars. We visited with Marie while Agnes joined her husband, and then one of us would adjourn to a lounge to take care of business on line or by phone. After an hour, we'd trade off. This gave us a lot of time to be with Marie, and being in a non-sexual situation, we talked about many things; she liked hiking and would like to do sections of the Pacific Crest Trail, but most of her experience was on the Eastern slopes of the Cascades. She'd never been on a sail boat and when I told her about The Dancer, looked apprehensive. "I don't know...what do you do when they tip over?"
"They only heel over so far, then they're stable, but that's not a problem with my boat -- she's a trimaran and they heel no more than five degrees."
"Trimaran?"
"Three hulls; the central, main hull where all the accommodations are, and the amas, floats, they provide stability. She's easy to sail and pleasant to sail on. Next summer we'll get a lot of time on her."
"We?"
"Sure. You don't think Dawn and I have given up on you, do you?"
That's when Agnes came in, watching over an older man struggling with a walker. Realizing it was Marie's father, I stood, leaving so they could be alone. He held up his hand; "Are you the man my wife has been telling me about?" he said with some difficulty.
"Most likely, I don't know what she's been telling you though."
"Where's the other one? The woman?"
"Dawn? She's in the lounge, probably on her computer."