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Rebekah (Seven Sisters Book 4)
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Rebekah
The Seven Sisters Series Book Four
by Amelia C. Adams
With thanks to my beta readers—Amy, Cheryl, Dorothy, George, Joseph, Laurie, Mary, Meisje, and Shelby.
Don’t miss the previous books in this series:
Heather
Jessica
Gaylynn
Cover design by Erin Dameron-Hill
Table of Contents:
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Epilogue
Chapter One
Bagley, Texas
May 1985
“We have a fourteen-year-old girl complaining of severe abdominal pain, fever, and vomiting,” the paramedic called out as a gurney was pushed through the emergency room doors.
Rebekah McClain tossed the patient file she was looking at onto the counter at the nurses’ station and ran to join the team guiding the stretcher into one of the bays in the emergency room. They lifted the girl off the stretcher and onto the bed. “Her name?”
“Amber,” the paramedic replied.
“Amber, my name is Rebekah, and I’m a nurse. Is it all right if I examine you?”
The girl nodded. Tears rolled down her cheeks, whether from pain or fear, Rebekah wasn’t sure. “Where are her parents?”
“They followed us in their car.”
Rebekah placed her hands on the girl’s abdomen. All the symptoms seemed to indicate the appendix, but she didn’t sense anything there. Odd. She moved her hands to the side, and there—so much heat rising from that area, and a slight vibration. She closed her eyes and focused, opening them again when she heard Dr. Hunsaker’s voice.
“What do we have here?”
“This is Amber. Fourteen years old, presenting with symptoms of an ovarian cyst,” Rebekah replied.
“Ovarian cyst? That’s not typical for such a young woman.” Dr. Hunsaker frowned. “Just what are the symptoms?”
“Severe abdominal pain, fever, and vomiting,” Rebekah replied. She glanced over at the paramedic. They usually left after delivering their patients, but he was hovering around for some reason, and she’d have to ask him why later.
“That sounds like the appendix to me,” Dr. Hunsaker said. “We need to get her into the OR now.”
“Yes, we do, but please, Dr. Hunsaker, do an ultrasound first,” Rebekah said. “If this is a cyst and she’s been opened up for an appendectomy—”
Dr. Hunsaker exhaled. “Are we going to have another one of those conversations again?”
It had been over a year since the weird event when the seven McClain sisters had all been zapped by a power outage at their parents’ house. Since that time, they’d each manifested different strange powers, and Rebekah’s was the ability to diagnose. As a nurse, she’d had the ability to use her gift over and over again, but when her opinion contradicted the decisions of the doctors she worked with, things got more than a little awkward.
“Sir, please just take a few minutes to do an ultrasound. I won’t say another word, I promise.”
Dr. Hunsaker scowled. “You? Not say another word? I’ll believe that when I see it. Ultrasound!”
A tech wheeled the machine over, and within moments, Dr. Hunsaker was scowling. “There’s nothing wrong with her appendix. Fine—let’s look at the ovaries.”
The screen revealed some definite abnormalities on the right ovary. “Get her up to the OR,” Dr. Hunsaker called out. He turned to Rebekah. “My office after the procedure.”
“Yes, sir.”
A man and a woman rushed into the ER, looking around frantically until they spotted Amber. “Is she all right?” the woman asked.
“We would have been here sooner, but traffic was horrible,” the man added.
“Your daughter is suffering a ruptured ovarian cyst,” Dr. Hunsaker explained. “In most cases, these resolve themselves, but I don’t feel confident that this one will. We’ll take her into surgery and see what’s going on in there, all right?”
“Yes, please. Do whatever you need to do,” the man said, and the woman nodded.
As Amber was being wheeled away, Rebekah said to the parents, “You can go with her up to the doors of the operating room. They’ll show you where to wait.”
“Thank you,” the woman said, and they followed behind their daughter.
Rebekah sucked in a deep breath. They’d be able to manage the situation once they were in the OR, but if they’d waited, things would have become much worse. The time wasted in looking in the wrong place, not to mention having to change surgery sites . . .
“I’d take your lunch break now, if I were you,” Harriet, the charge nurse, said as she walked up to Rebekah. “You know Dr. Hunsaker’s going to rake you up one side and down the other—you’ll need your strength for that.”
Rebekah chuckled and shook her head. “I definitely know it. Thanks—I’ll just be in the cafeteria.”
As she walked down the hall, she saw the paramedic still standing there, and she motioned at him with her head. “Come on.”
He looked confused for a moment, but then fell into step beside her. She didn’t slow down to wait for him—she had half an hour, and she didn’t intend to waste any of it.
“So, what’s your story?” she asked him.
“My story?”
“Yeah. Why are you still here? I thought you were supposed to dump and run.”
“We usually do, but it’s the end of my shift, and I wanted to see how this one turned out.” He paused. “Actually, that’s not true.”
She turned to look at him. “We’ve only just met, and you’re already lying to me? You don’t mess around, do you?”
“I . . .”
“Never mind. You can explain while I eat.”
She moved through the cafeteria line quickly, grabbing some pre-made items rather than waiting to be served. Then she sat down and arranged her sandwich, chips, and fruit in front of her. “You didn’t want anything?” she asked.
He shook his head. “Dinner at my parents’ house tonight. My mother would kill me if she knew I ate anything first.”
Rebekah unwrapped her sandwich. “You talk while I eat. Not trying to be rude—I’m just in a hurry.”
“Right. Sorry. Um, okay, I stuck around because I wanted to see how the case turned out—at least, to start. But then I overheard your diagnosis. How did you do that?”
“How did I do what?” She didn’t meet his gaze as she opened her chips.
“How did you know it wasn’t her appendix? I’ve brought in dozens of ruptures—I could have sworn that’s what it was.”
Rebekah chewed on a chip while she thought up a reply. She hated lying—she hated it so much. “My sister had a ruptured cyst last year, and they thought it was her appendix,” she said at last, cringing a little bit. “So that was the first thing I thought of. It was more of an educated guess than anything.”
“That was more than a guess.”
“Well, I did say it was educated.” She flashed him a grin, hoping that some humor would lighten the tension. She wasn’t about to tell this total stranger how she’d managed to diagnose Amber’s cyst. It was none of his business, anyway. “I’m Rebekah McClain.”
“I’m Jeremy Burton. It’s nice to meet you.”
“Nice to meet you too. You’re new—I know all the emergency personnel in this town, and I haven’t seen you before.”
“Just moved here last week. I used to
live in San Antonio, but I was ready for something quieter.”
“Well, Bagley is definitely quieter. Are your parents in San Antonio?”
“Yeah. I’d actually better be on my way soon if I don’t want to be late—I’ve clocked the drive at an hour if traffic’s good.” He said that, but he still didn’t make a move to stand up.
“Have you been a paramedic long?”
“A couple of years. I got into it after my brother was almost killed in a car accident. Some quick-thinking first responders saved his life, and I realized that’s what I wanted to do—I wanted to make that kind of difference.”
Rebekah studied him while she chewed. He had a kind face and gentle eyes, and she could see him inspiring trust in the people he worked to save. “That’s a great reason to get into this profession. If you don’t have the passion, you won’t survive.”
“And what about you? How long have you been a nurse?”
“I went to nursing school pretty much right after high school, but lately, I’ve been thinking about going to medical school.” She kept her voice a little noncommittal, not telling him that her application had actually just been sent off. She wouldn’t know until September if she’d been accepted, and there wasn’t any point in making it public—especially since, yet again, it wasn’t any of his business.
He nodded. “After seeing you in there just now, I think you’d be a great doctor.”
And they’d looped right back around to the topic she’d been trying to avoid. “Thank you. I appreciate it.”
She took a few more hurried bites, gathered up her trash, and dumped her tray, then started walking back toward the ER. Jeremy walked alongside her, almost as if he didn’t know where else to go. She kind of wanted to ask him to go away—she really needed a few minutes to work through what she was going to say to Dr. Hunsaker—but that would be rude. Plus, just then, another ambulance came pulling into the bay.
“A forty-year-old male, GSW to the chest,” the paramedic called out, this one a middle-aged woman. “Blood pressure is falling fast.”
Rebekah glanced around. Harriet was the only other nurse around at the moment—they didn’t get a lot of emergencies in this little hospital, so they were never fully staffed. She was supposed to have another eight minutes on her break, but that didn’t matter. “Over here,” she said, grabbing the end of the stretcher and guiding it toward a bed. They lifted the man into position, and she could see that blood had completely saturated the gauze padding that had been put on him in the field. She touched his chest briefly just to verify—no doubt about it. This man was going to bleed out.
“Harriet, we’ve got to get him into surgery! He’s going to bleed out—the bullet went through his left main coronary artery.”
“I’ll run up to the OR and see where Dr. Hunsaker is on that cyst,” Harriet said over her shoulder, already in motion. “And I’ll page Dr. Smith—maybe he can get here faster than Dr. Hunsaker can close.”
Rebekah pressed on the wound, but it didn’t matter how much pressure she applied—he was going to keep bleeding until he was stitched. “Help me,” she said to Jeremy, who was still, for some reason, hanging out.
He seemed to know what she needed and grabbed the end of the bed. Together, they maneuvered it toward the operating room, where Rebekah scrubbed up and began preparing the patient for surgery. She wasn’t an OR nurse and she had very little experience on this side of the swinging doors, but she’d do whatever she could to help speed things up for the surgical team. Jeremy seemed uncertain, but after a moment, he scrubbed up too and asked how he could help.
Just a few minutes later, Dr. Hunsaker burst in, looking furious. “What in the blue blazes is going on in here?”
“This man’s about to die,” Rebekah said. “We don’t have any time to lose.”
He looked at her, then at the man on the table. Without replying, he headed over to the sinks, stripped off his gloves and gown, and scrubbed, then dressed in new sterile clothing. Ethan, the OR nurse who had been following him like a shadow, also changed, and they were back in record time.
“You, out,” Dr. Hunsaker said to Rebekah, and she gave a nod before stepping away.
She went out into the hall, Jeremy following her. “You’d better start that drive if you want to be on time for dinner,” she said absently.
“Dinner? Oh, that’s right.” He hesitated. “Listen, can I see you later this week? I just . . . I need . . .”
She shook her head. “I’m sorry, Jeremy. I’m really busy, and I just don’t . . . I mean . . .”
He held up a hand. “No, it’s all right. I get it. I really do.” He gave her a smile. “I’ll see you around.”
“Thanks for your help in there. Getting the patient ready.”
“Yeah. I hope you don’t get in too much trouble for that.”
“I’ve been in trouble for over an hour. A little extra isn’t going to hurt me.”
He smiled again. “Okay. See ya.”
She watched him go, then slumped on the counter at the nurses’ station. Oh, she was in so much more trouble than she’d let on.
Chapter Two
Jeremy stopped by his apartment for a quick shower and change of clothes, then was on his way to San Antonio. It looked like he’d be about fifteen minutes late, but maybe when he explained to his mother that there had been a girl involved, she’d forgive him. She was always asking when he was going to find a nice girl. Not that he’d actually found one, but he’d met one, and that had to count for something.
Rebekah McClain . . . He had no idea what had just happened. Who was she, and how . . .? He shook his head. It was like she somehow knew what was going on inside her patient even though she couldn’t see it. Maybe he could have accepted her explanation about the cyst, but the main coronary artery? The left one? That was too specific to be a guess, even an educated one. He also knew from talking to the other paramedics that they didn’t get many gunshot wounds in this small town, so it’s not like she would have a lot of experience with them.
Part of him felt like he should just let the whole thing drop and pretend like he didn’t notice anything. But a much larger part of him wanted to know more, to figure out just what he’d witnessed. He knew he hadn’t imagined it—it was a real, solid thing, and his imagination wasn’t that good anyway. The real question was, would she tell him?
By the time he pulled up to his parents’ house, he’d decided that he would go down to the hospital the next day and see if she’d agree to have dinner with him—for longer than thirty minutes. Maybe he was intruding and maybe he should leave her alone, but his curiosity was eating him up inside, and he wanted answers.
His brother, Greg, answered the door, reaching the knob easily from his motorized wheelchair. “Hey, Jeremy,” he said as he maneuvered backward to let Jeremy in. “You’re a little late.”
“Yeah, I know—I’m sorry. Is Mom freaking out?”
“Well, she hasn’t called the Highway Patrol yet to see if there’s been an accident, so you’re probably good.” Greg grinned and led the way into the kitchen. “Look who’s here, Mom!”
Hannah Burton turned from the stove. “Well, if it isn’t Jeremy. You could have called to tell us you’d be late—you know how I worry!”
“I do know, Mom.” She hadn’t been so uptight before Greg’s accident, but ever since then, if she didn’t know where everyone was at all times, she’d fret. Jeremy could understand it, and he also knew that it was hard on her when he decided to become a paramedic. They were each dealing with their feelings about Greg’s accident in their own ways. “I’ll call next time.”
“See that you do.” She set down her mixing spoon and took the pot from the heat. “Greg, call your father for dinner, please.”
Greg steered his wheelchair over to the top of the stairs that led down to the basement. “Dinner, Dad!”
“How’s he been?” Jeremy asked quietly, nodding toward his brother.
“He’s had some pain this we
ek,” Hannah replied. “His doctor put him on a different medication, but we can’t see that it’s doing any good. There are some things Greg’s just going to have to live with.”
That might be true, but what a horrible truth. Jeremy hated the thought of his brother enduring that kind of pain every day for the rest of his life. Of course, he was grateful that Greg still had a life, but if there was a way to reduce the pain, he’d do whatever it took to find it.
Hannah carried the last serving dish over to the table, and Jeremy grabbed the pitcher of water that was on the counter. A moment later, Thomas Burton came up the stairs and joined his family.
“How was your drive?” he asked Jeremy just as he always did, and Jeremy replied that it had been fine, just as he always did. Things between Jeremy and his father had always been strained, but even more so after the accident—Jeremy believed his father blamed him for it, and Thomas had never done anything to prove him wrong.
“Time to say grace,” Hannah said, and they all bowed their heads.
Jeremy said “amen” as was expected, but he didn’t register a single word his father had said during the short prayer. He’d been trying to figure out how to change some of these family dynamics that had been in place for so long, they seemed implacable.
His mother—always devoted, always concerned, always plugging away at whatever challenge she was presented with. His father—hard-working, difficult to please, uncommunicative. Greg—optimistic, long-suffering, the peacemaker. And then there was Jeremy, who was the fixer, the one who wanted to mend all the fences and knit together all the bones and patch up all the seams. None of these roles were wrong, necessarily, but the family wasn’t working together—it was fraying at all the edges, each person going through the motions separately instead of coming together to share their pains and their triumphs.
“Jeremy, have some potatoes.”
He took the dish from his mother and put some steaming mashed potatoes on his plate, then passed the bowl to his right. Everything went around the table in a well-choreographed dance until everyone had some of everything, and then the expected interrogation began.