“Jonathan,” I said. “I—“
“You sit,” the Gregory interrupted, pointing in front of Jonathan, to an antique, early modern chair I recognized from Jonathan’s bedroom. I’d described that chair and its place under a sconce one night, back when I thought I’d have him back.
I glanced from Gregory to Irene, and then to Jonathan, who waited patiently.
I sat.
“What’s this about?”
No one answered. Gregory and Irene got on either side of Jonathan, facing me.
“You ready, Mister Drazen?” Irene asked.
“For a long time, now.”
They did something that made me draw my breath in and clutch the arms of the chair. The two put their hands under Jonathan’s arms and slid him off the bed and lowered him to the floor.
“What—?“
When they let him go, I was too stunned to finish the sentence. He kneeled before me. I heard his labored breathing, the rattle of the IV pole, and glanced up at Irene and Gregory.
“What are you doing? This is crazy.”
I was ignored. Gregory said something to Jonathan in Russian and he answered in kind, with a wave of his hand that indicated, “I got it.”
Jonathan, with great effort, pulled a knee up, until he was on just one, then glanced up at me. “I’m going to lean on you a little,” he said.
“Sure?”
He put a forearm on my knee, and reached into his jacket pocket, pulling out a small black box.
“Oh, Jonathan...”
He opened the box and handed it to me. It had a ridiculously huge square cut diamond.
“Thank Theresa if you see her. I’ll get you one that suits you when we’re up to it,” he said.
“You don’t have to do this.”
“Shh. Behave, would you? For once?”
I pressed my lips together to keep from laughing. One side of his mouth curled in a smile, and then he laughed gingerly. I wanted to kiss him deeply, and for a long time, breathing him into me, but I knew he didn’t have the breath to spare. I settled for a fraction of the kiss I wanted, leaning down and brushing my lips against his, the softest parts of our faces melting together for a brief second, half a gasp, a tease of desire.
“Goddess,” he said, his breath on my mouth. “Have me, please. I was wrong. You’re not the sea under my sky. You are the sun I revolve around, the stars that mark me, the moon rising through me. I’m lost without you. And if you won’t have me, I’ll break, I swear to God. I know it’s selfish, and I’m sorry. Let me serve you. Have me as yours. Let me live under you.”
I held his face, running my fingers over the stubble on them, jaw in the heel of my hand. I could feel him leaning into me, weak, as if this had taken everything out of him.
What could I say to this? What could I say to being loved enough for this monumental an effort? Did I ever, in my wildest imaginings, think I deserved this level of devotion after I’d rejected him the first time?
After I’d left him, cursed him, denied him? After lying to him, drugging him, disobeying him, using him, could I justify letting him make this mistake, even if it was the last mistake he made? I was ambitious, venal, antagonistic, impoverished, and arrogant. I was unworthy, by a mile, and overcome at the circumstance that would lead such a man to beg to be bound to such a woman.
So, I said the only thing I could.
“Yes.”
CHAPTER 25.
JONATHAN
Her hair fell across our fists, which were balled up together around a found box holding my sister’s ring. My hands shook as I removed it. My rib cage ached like it was stretched by an ever-expanding balloon inside it. With the tube out my chest, it was filling with blood, drop by drop. I was sure the feeling of expansion was air, or my imagination, but the fear of it made it hard to get the garish thing on her finger. The size was right, but the stone was wrong. All wrong. I wanted something else for her, something more original, a ring that could only belong to a goddess.
“I won’t disappoint you,” I said.
“I’m not worried about you being the disappointment.”
Irene’s voice cut in. “I declare you engaged. Time to go.” She put her hand on my shoulder.
“I want to tell you what you do to me the night I agree to marry you,” Monica whispered.
“They have to put me back in. I don’t want you to see it.”
“Jonathan, please—“
“Time to go,” Irene said more firmly.
“Go,” I said to my fiancée. “Please. Come back in an hour. Then you can tell me about our wedding night.”
Her head tilted a little and her eyes widened. Yes, it was quick, but wasn’t that the point? She kissed me a second too long because we ended with me grimacing. She must have known it wasn’t about her, because she got up and walked out with out looking back. Good woman.
I submitted myself completely to Irene and Gregory, who had broken a hundred rules or more to give me five minutes to ask properly for Monica’s hand. The rules were good. They were there for a reason, which was, I couldn’t handle five minutes kneeling. I felt like I’d just run a marathon that ended in a dark alley, where I’d been beaten with baseball bats and cut into small pieces with a serrated knife. Or something that made me too weak, too pained, too outside myself to manage my own body.
They got me out of my clothes, reinserting, realigning, and recalibrating the devices attached to me. They accepted my gratitude for as long as I had the wherewithal to express it, which was an eternity, but probably about five minutes in the rest of the world. Then I fell off the cliff of consciousness for awhile. Might have been the drugs, or my body giving out like it did a few times a day. Even then, I didn’t have the energy to fully feel angry, though there was a cord of that in my spine. Mostly, I felt fear. I was responsible for her now, and though the unknown was bad enough to face alone, in the dark, unprepared, I felt as though I had something to live for tomorrow.
CHAPTER 26.
MONICA
I crouched on the stairwell. It was late. Jonathan couldn’t see me that next hour after he’d given me the ring, or the one after that. Sheila had come and gone, her lips pressed together in a line of rage. Eileen called to see if I was there, and if I was, was he lucid enough to see anyone. This was f**ked, but I figured, if Jonathan had wanted his family involved they would have been involved.
I called Darren.
“Do you have something blue?”
“Technically, yes.” He stepped out of the studio to finish the sentence, and I could hear the rain and traffic in the street behind him.