Chapter 10 #2
“I don’t know what’s wrong,” Joe said, clearly despondent by his body’s failure to understand his pressing need to make love to his wife.
“Nothing is wrong,” Janey said. She laid her hand flat against his stomach, thrilled to be close to him even if things weren’t going according to plan.
“I don’t get it. This has never happened. Ever.”
“It’s no big deal, babe. Just relax. We can try again tomorrow.”
“I don’t want to try again tomorrow, and don’t tell me to relax. If your equipment wasn’t working right, would you be able to relax?”
It took everything she had, along with a reserve pool of strength she didn’t know she possessed, to refrain from laughing at the expression on his face.
“If you laugh, I’ll divorce you.”
“I wouldn’t dream of laughing. It’s not funny.”
“No, it isn’t. Something is wrong with me. How can I be naked in a bed with you and not be hard as a freaking rock?”
Janey knew she needed to be very, very careful about what she said. “Um, I don’t know? Would it help if I, you know, gave him some special attention?”
“It might.”
“You aren’t doing this on purpose to get me to do that, are you?”
“Have I ever needed to resort to tricks to get what I want from you?”
“No, but we’ve never had postpartum sex before either. You—and he—might be afraid I’m going to turn into one of those wives who forgets all about her poor husband after she gives birth.”
The look he gave her was positively hilarious, but again, she didn’t dare laugh. “Are you?”
“Am I what?”
“One of those wives who forgets all about her husband after she gives birth?”
“How could I ever forget about you?” She coaxed him onto his back and began with a light massage of his chest and the six-pack of muscles that rippled under her touch. “You’re supposed to be relaxing.”
“I am.”
“Close your eyes. Don’t think. Just feel.” Janey continued the massage, adding a string of kisses across his lower abdomen. When that didn’t work to arouse him, she lowered herself until she was on top of him, with his penis cradled in the valley between her breasts.
He pulled in a deep breath and held it.
“Relax.”
“I can’t relax when you’re doing that.”
“Yes, you can.” She continued to kiss him, adding some tongue action that usually made him crazy, but not tonight. Nothing was working.
“It’s broken. That’s got to be it.”
“You’re thinking, and you’re not relaxing. How can I be expected to work under these conditions?”
“Come up here, will you?”
“I’m not finished here. I haven’t even gotten to the good stuff yet.”
“Please?” He held out his arms to her.
The pleading tone of his voice had her giving in to what he wanted.
She crawled toward him and loved the feel of his strong arms encircling her.
She always felt so safe—and so desired—in his arms. That there could be something actually wrong between them was so unimaginable, she couldn’t bear to even think about it.
“I’m sorry,” he said grimly.
“Please don’t be. We’ve had so much going on, it’s a wonder we aren’t both drooling by now.”
“I hope you know it’s not because I don’t want you. I’ve been dying for you.”
“I do know that, it’s just… Never mind. It doesn’t matter.”
“Don’t do that. Whatever you’re thinking, just say it.”
Janey propped her chin on her hands and studied his face, which was tight with the kind of tension she hadn’t seen since the day their son was born under dramatic and frightening circumstances.
“The way everything happened with P.J. It’s got to be on your mind that it all began right here with you and me in a bed together, making love.
And I’m just wondering, if it’s possible, that you’re so afraid of getting me pregnant again that it might be messing with the equipment. ”
Joe began to protest but stopped himself, sighing and closing his eyes. “Yeah, it’s possible.”
“Do you know that in all the weeks since P.J. was born, you’ve never told me what that day was like for you?”
“Because that doesn’t matter now. You’re both safe, it’s in the past, and there’s no need to relive it. Once was more than enough.”
Janey wished he could see how tormented he looked at the reminder of what had to be one of the worst and best days of his life all rolled into one unforgettable twenty-four-hour period.
“I think you relive it every day and suffer in silence over it because all the focus has been on me and the baby—”
“Which is exactly where it should be. You’re the one who went through the trauma of emergency surgery.”
“I had it easy, Joe. I was unconscious and had no idea what was happening until it was all over and everything was fine. That’s not how it was for you, is it?”
His jaw pulsed and clenched as he struggled to retain his composure. “I don’t want to talk about this. Why are we rehashing the past when it doesn’t matter now?”
“It does matter if it’s still weighing on you so heavily.” She moved farther up to kiss his unresponsive lips. “Joe, honey, talk to me. Tell me what you went through so we can get past it and move on. Don’t keep it all bottled up inside.”
He turned them so she was on her back and got out of bed, pulling on a pair of shorts with hasty, jerky movements. “I don’t want to talk about it. I don’t want to relive it, and if you’d been awake, you wouldn’t want to either.”
Janey held out a hand to him. “Come back.”
“I don’t want to talk about it.”
“I heard you.”
He took her hand and reluctantly allowed her to guide him back to bed. “I’m sorry. I don’t mean to bite your head off.”
“It’s okay. I get it. But I have all these blanks, you know? One minute I was napping in Mac’s guest room, and the next I’m in Providence with a new baby and a traumatized family all around me.”
“It’s better that you don’t remember it. Trust me on that.”
“I do trust you. I wish you would trust me enough to talk to me about how it was for you.”
“Don’t make this about trust, Janey. That’s not fair. I trust you more than I trust anyone.”
“I know you do, so trust me to help you get past this by talking to me about it.”
He raised both his hands to his head, running his fingers through his hair repeatedly until the short strands stood straight up. “You’re really going to make me do this?”
“Afraid so.”
“Fine. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.”
“I won’t.”
He was quiet for a long time, so long she wondered if he’d changed his mind, and then he began to speak in a dull, flat tone that was nothing like his usual animated speech.
“The one image I’ll never get out of my head was how much blood there was.
I went up to wake you because Blaine and Tiffany were on their way over after their wedding at the lighthouse, and I thought you’d want to be there when they arrived.
I couldn’t get you to wake up. I thought you were just really asleep, but then I touched you…
You were really cold, and for a minute, I thought…
” His voice caught and his eyes filled. He covered them with his hands as if to hide his anguish from her.
With her heart breaking for him, Janey wanted so badly to hold him, but she didn’t dare touch him.
“I pulled back the covers, and there was just so much blood. I almost passed out at the sight of it, but I forced myself to move, to scream, to call for David. Thank God he was there. I’d spent so much time—years—hating him for what he’d put you through and then to have him right there when this happened...
There’s nothing I wouldn’t do for him after what he did for you, for me, for P.J.
He was… He was incredible.” Speaking in a whisper, he added, “I’ve never been so scared in my entire life, Janey.
” Tears rolled down his face, but he made no move to deal with them as he stared up at the ceiling. “Not even when my father died.”
She went to him then, putting her arm around him and laying her face on his chest.