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Cutler 02 - Secrets of the Morning

Titel: Cutler 02 - Secrets of the Morning Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
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gleefully at my helpless descent. Then Philip emerged, his eyes full of lust.
    Finally, there was Michael, smiling at first, and then his smile evaporated and he became smaller and smaller and smaller as he fell below me, disappearing.
    "Michael!" I cried. "Michael, don't leave me! Michael!"
    I heard voices around me.
    "Look at the monitor. Something's happening."
    "She's coming out of it."
    "Call Doctor Stevens."
    "Dawn," I heard someone say. "Dawn, open your eyes. Come on, Dawn. Open your eyes."
    My eyelids fluttered.
    "Dawn."
    Slowly, the whiteness around me began to take shape. I saw a milk-white wall and a large window, the tan curtain drawn closed. My eyes moved to what was nearer to me and I saw a metal pole holding an I.V. bottle. I followed the tube from it to my arm. When I turned my head, I saw a nurse looking down at me. She smiled. She had soft blue eyes and light brown hair and she looked like she was no older than twenty-five.
    "Hi," she said. "How are you feeling?"
    "Where am I?" I asked. "How did I get here?"
    "You're in a hospital, Dawn. You were in an accident," she said calmly.
    "An accident? I don't remember any accident," I said. I tried to move and did feel very stiff.
    "Take it easy at first," she said. "The doctor will be here in a moment to tell you more." She brushed back my hair with the palm of her hand and fixed my pillow so I would be more comfortable.
    "But what kind of an accident was I in?" I asked.
    "You were hit by a car. Luckily, the car wasn't going too fast at the time, and you were just grazed really, but you were thrown back and knocked unconscious by the fall. You've been in a coma."
    "A coma?" I looked around again. I could hear other nurses and doctors talking in the hallway just outside my door. "How long have I been here?"
    "Today is the fourth day," she said.
    "Four days!" I tried to sit up, but I got dizzy quickly and left my head on the pillow..
    "Well, well, well," the doctor said, entering with another nurse, one who looked older and not as friendly. "Welcome back to the world," he said, coming to my side. "I'm Doctor Stevens."
    "Hello," I said in a small voice.
    "Hello, yourself," he replied. He looked like a man in his late fifties. He had dark brown hair, his temples a distinguished-looking gray. But his light brown eyes twinkled like the eye of a much younger man. He had a round face, even a bit pudgy. There was a dimple in his chin. He was stout with a neck like a wrestler and probably only about five feet eight or nine, but he touched me gently and smiled at me kindly.
    "What happened to me?" I asked.
    "I told her about the accident," the younger nurse said.
    "That's what happened to you," the doctor said. "You were caught in a snow storm and were hit by a car just hard enough to spin you around and send you flying backwards. You must have struck your head on some hard-packed snow. The blow was sufficient to render you unconscious and you haven't been eager to regain consciousness since," he said, his eyes more inquisitive and curious now as he peered down at me. "All your vital signs are good and you have no fractures.
    "However," he continued, his voice lower and even softer now as he brought his face closer to mine and took my hand into his, "I'm sure you are aware that you're pregnant."
    The words brought tears to my eyes, for it reminded me quickly of Michael and his desertion of me. I swallowed back my tears and nodded.
    "You were trying to hide it?" he asked. "That's why your family wasn't aware?"
    "Yes," I said, barely audible. I expected a frown and a reprimand, but he simply closed and opened his eyes gently and smiled.
    "The baby is a resilient one, for sure," he said. "Ordinarily, a mother would be in danger of losing her child as a result of such an accident, but everything is fine in that department."
    A lump came to choke my throat and my eyes filled with tears.
    "We'll start giving you some real food and get you off the I.V. In a day or so, you should be up and around. After that, our observation of you will be complete and you can go. I don't foresee any other complications," he added, smiling. "Any questions?"
    "Does anyone know I'm here?" I asked quickly.
    "Oh, yes. In fact," he said, "there's a young lady out in the lobby. She's been waiting hours and hours, coming back each day to see how you are. She's a very good friend and she's been very worried. Ready for a little company?" he asked.
    "Oh yes, please. It must be Trisha," I

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