Even when they were in different med schools or different 					countries, he had never been more than a phone call or email away. It had taken 					losing that, losing him, to make her understand just how much of a role he’d 					played in her life, whether she’d understood it or not.
   				Tuesday morning bloomed clear and bright, with the birds 					tweeting and the sun shining and the flowers blooming all around her. If she 					hadn’t rolled out of bed and thrown up first thing, the day’s beauty would have 					driven her to it.
   				She got dressed slowly, pressing her hand against her stomach 					more than once as she imagined what her baby was doing inside of her. Today was 					the day she would find out what kind of genetic abnormalities the virus might 					have engendered in her child. The
   day she might find out whether or not 					she would ever be able to hold him or her in her arms, or if her body was going 					to destroy that dream once and for all.
   				She’d never been very religious, had always been something of 					an agnostic when it came to considering a higher power. She’d seen way too much 					suffering in her day, way too much violence and pain, not to wonder sometimes 					whether a benign God really existed. But today, for the first time in her adult 					life, she felt the urge to pray. Not for herself, but so that—whatever 					happened—her baby wouldn’t suffer.
   				Kara closed her eyes and made a silent appeal. She didn’t get 					an answer, but then she hadn’t really expected one.
   				She made the short trip to Dr. Beaumont’s office without the 					radio on. She couldn’t handle the cheerful lilt of the D.J.’s voice, not when 					her whole world was falling in around her.
   				She’d timed things just right so that she wouldn’t get to the 					office until exactly nine-thirty. She didn’t think she could handle sitting 					around the waiting room for very long while Lucas ignored her. With any luck, 					he’d have gotten stuck at the clinic and be running late.
   				But Lucas wasn’t the most responsible person she’d ever met for 					no reason. When she opened the door to the doctor’s office, he was sitting right 					there in the middle of the waiting room, a magazine about parenting on his lap 					and a totally blank look on his face. The only emotion he showed at all, in 					fact, was in the way his right index finger tapped against his leg. It was the 					one poker tell he’d never been able to break.
   				The door closed behind her with a thump and he glanced up at 					the sound. Their eyes met and for long seconds she forgot how to breathe. His 					were ablaze with so much emotion that she almost got lost in them. And then, 					very deliberately, he turned away.
   				She checked in with the receptionist and then went to choose a 					seat. Which brought on a whole new agony of indecision. All the other women in 					the room whose husbands had accompanied them were sitting right up next to them. 					But she was afraid if she got that close to Lucas he’d make a point of getting 					up and moving away from her. Besides, with as churlish as he was being, she 					wasn’t sure she wanted to be anywhere near him, anyway.
   				Finally, she decided on the chair that was kitty-corner to him. 					Close enough that it was obvious they were sitting together, but not so close 					she actually had to look at him or feel his thigh rub against hers.
   				All her worry ended up being for naught, anyway, because as she 					sat, the nurse called her to the back. Lucas waited for her to pass before he 					got up and followed her. It was strange having him there, would have been weird 					even if they had been getting along. He stood to the side while they weighed her 					and the nurse made a disapproving sound because she’d actually lost two pounds 					since her visit the week before.
   				“Still nauseous, even with the medicine?” she asked as she 					wrote Kara’s name on a cup and handed it to her.
   				“Pretty much all the time.”
   				She shook her head. “These babies sure do take a lot out of 					their mamas, don’t they?” She addressed the question to Lucas because Kara was 					already heading into the bathroom to pee in the cup. But she couldn’t help 					herself. She held her breath, lingering by door as she waited for his 					answer.
   				“I don’t know how she does it,” he finally told the nurse, who 					nodded.
   				She let her breath out slowly, took care of what she had to, 					and then hurried out. Lucas was in exam room two and Dr. Beaumont was inside, 					already chatting with him.
   				“I didn’t realize Lucas was your baby’s father,” she said as 					soon as Kara came in the room. Which, judging by the way Lucas stiffened, was 					pretty much the worst thing she could have said.
   				Not that Kara particularly cared at that moment. Her eyes were 					fixated on the folder the obstetrician held in her hands. The results of the 					amnio were in there.
   				“So, what did the tests say?” she asked abruptly, absolutely 					unable to make small talk until she knew if her child was going to survive.
   				Mary Beaumont smiled in understanding. “Actually, they came 					back much better than I anticipated. I was going to start by examining you, but 					let’s get this part out of the way before we get to the fun stuff.”
   				She opened the folder, handed a copy of the amnio results to 					both Kara and Lucas. “I don’t normally do this, but will since you’re both 					doctors. As you can see, the main area of concern is the thrombocytopenia, 					which, I have to admit, I’ve been expecting. Low platelet counts in the fetus of 					a mother who has had dengue hemorrhagic fever are not uncommon. There are a 					couple of different treatments for it and I’ll talk you both about them, as well 					as which course I think we should follow. But the other test results are 					excellent, really.”
   				“Thrombocytopenia can be treated by giving Kara a platelet 					transfusion once a week,” Lucas commented.
   				“Yes. And that’s what I’d like to try first. There are no 					guarantees this early in the game, but on the plus side, we’ve caught it in 					plenty of time to do something about it. This will, of course, necessitate a 					C-section, as we don’t want to risk brain damage as the baby goes through the 					birth canal with low platelets. But this is cause for definite optimism.” She 					smiled at Kara. “You were right all along.”
   				Kara’s relief was so acute that the room began to spin around 					her. She listed to the side, probably would have passed out if Lucas hadn’t 					grabbed her and shoved her head between her legs.
   				Mary gave her a few seconds to stop seeing gray and then said, 					“Okay, you. Up on the table. At the moment, I’m a lot more concerned about your 					health than I am the baby’s. She’s doing fine—”
   				“She?” Lucas interrupted.
   				“Didn’t see that on the amnio result sheet, hmm? Yes, Kara is 					very definitely carrying a little girl.”
   				* * *
   				THE NEXT FEW MINUTES PASSED in a blur for 					Lucas as he tried to assimilate the fact that he was 					going to be a father—of a little girl—while also trying to catch everything Mary 					had to say about Kara’s health which, as he’d feared all along, was quite 					precarious.
   				“We’ve got to get you eating,” Mary said severely as she 					scribbled on her prescription pad. “You are now fifteen pounds under minimum 					weight for your height.”
   				“I am eating. Like six times a day.”
   				“Yes, but you’re throwing up five times a day and that is not 					conducive to fetal or maternal health.” She handed her the sheet of paper. 					“Here’s a prescription for metoclopramide. Let’s try this since the other 					medicine isn’t working. It’s a little stronger but still safe for the 					baby—certainly safer than having a mother who can’t nourish her. And before you 					start in on me, yes, there’s only been one definitive study done on 					metoclopramide, but it was a huge one and the results were very positive. 					Besides, the baby is at a lot more risk if you starve to death than if y 
					     					 			ou take 					this medication.”
   				She kept writing. “I want you to double your iron intake, which 					I know, is a lot with what you’re on already, but there’s some research that 					claims it will help with the fetal platelets. I’ll set up the first transfusion 					and call you with all the information. It will be in the dialysis center 					upstairs and it will take about five and a half hours each time, so be prepared 					for that when you come.
   				“I’d like to see you back in one week and if you have no other 					questions, then you are free to go.” She looked at them both, eyebrows raised in 					silent inquiry.
   				“If we can get Kara eating, she’s going to be okay?”
   				Mary nodded. “The baby—”
   				“Not the baby,” he interrupted. “Kara. Kara is going to be all 					right?”
   				The other doctor smiled then, reached over and squeezed his 					hand. “She’s strong and she was healthy when all this started. The ultrasounds 					of her organs look good. If we can get her on track with the nausea, she should 					be just fine.”
   				Relief overwhelmed him, so acute that he suddenly understood 					why Kara had nearly passed out when she’d heard about the baby. His legs felt 					like they had turned to rubber.
   				As Kara went to check out and make her next appointment, he 					muttered, “I’ll meet you in front.” And then he dashed for the door, not 					stopping until he was outside in the late-summer sunlight.
   				Bracing his hands on his thighs, he bent over, drew in a series 					of long, shallow breaths as he tried to come to terms with everything that Mary 					Beaumont had said. The baby—his daughter—was probably going to be okay and Kara, 					thank God, Kara was fine. She was fine.
   				A sob welled up, deep in his chest and he tried to cough it 					out. Bad enough that he felt like a total louse for how he’d treated Kara 					Thursday night. The last thing he needed was to feel like a wimp, as well. But 					the second the first sob dissolved another rose up and took its place. He leaned 					back against the building and gave himself a minute, just a minute, to sob out 					his relief.
   				“Lucas?”
   				He stiffened when Kara called his name, turned his head and 					wiped away the tears he hadn’t been strong enough to stop.
   				“Are you all right?” She crept closer, put a tentative hand on 					his shoulder, as if she was afraid of being rejected.
   				He was an even bigger ass than he thought, spouting all that 					shit at her because he couldn’t deal with the fact that he’d failed her. That 					all these years she hadn’t felt comfortable enough with him to come to him when 					she needed someone. That wasn’t her fault. It was his, and he’d been too big of 					a moron to realize it until it was too late.
   				“Yeah, I’m fine.” He straightened up and she let her hand drop 					back down to her side. He felt the loss keenly.
   				“It’s wonderful, isn’t it, that the baby’s going to be 					okay?”
   				“Yeah, really wonderful.” And it was. But it wasn’t worry for 					the baby that had kept him up the past few weeks. It was worry for the baby’s 					mother.
   				“Well, I should get going,” she said. “You probably have to get 					back to the clinic and—”
   				“Don’t go.” The words tumbled out at the exact same second he 					grabbed on to her hand in a near bone-crushing grip, and he didn’t even bother 					trying to stop them.
   				“I’m sorry. I’m so sorry I said all that crap the other night. 					It was mean and ugly and wrong—”
   				“No.” She pulled his hand up—the one that was still entwined 					with hers, and pressed it to her heart. “You were right. I didn’t trust you to 					choose me because no one ever had before. Not my mom, not my dad. But that’s my 					baggage. It has nothing to do with you and I should have known—”
   				“I should have asked more, if you needed anything. If I could 					help with something. You just always seemed so self-sufficient—”
   				“I am self-sufficient.”
   				“I know. You’re the strongest woman I’ve ever met and I love 					you, so much more than I know how to show you.”
   				“I love you, too, Lucas. I think I always have, from that first 					moment you grinned at me after bonking me on the head with that stupid 					volleyball.”
   				He grinned. “It got your attention, didn’t it?”
   				“Yeah, right. You don’t actually expect me to believe you threw 					that serve, game point, just to get my attention.”
   				“Damn straight I did. Up until then, you’d been eyeing my 					roommate. I didn’t like it.”
   				“You had a girlfriend.”
   				“I still didn’t like it.”
   				“How very dog in the manger of you.”
   				“Yeah, well, it might have taken me seventeen years, but I 					finally figured out what I should have known all along. I love you.”
   				“I love you, too.”
   				He grinned. He couldn’t hear those three words enough. “The 					question is, what are you going to do about it?”
   				“Me? Why is it up to me?”
   				He grinned. “Because it’s always been up to you. But, because 					I’m feeling magnanimous, I’ll give you a hint.”
   				“Oh, yeah?” She pursed her lips in that way she had that used 					to make him wonder what it would be like to kiss her. Now he knew. And he still 					wanted to feel it again. And again.
   				“Yeah.” He bent down, kissed her soundly, reveling in the 					response she no longer bothered trying to hide. “If you ask nicely enough, I’ll 					even let you make an honest man of me.”
   				Her eyes grew wide. “That’s my 					hint?”
   				“That’s your hint?”
   				“You want me to ask you…”
   				“I do.” He grinned, kissed her again. “See, there’s another 					hint.”
   				“I think you should ask me.”
   				“Why? You’re a self-sufficient woman. You can handle it.”
   				She cupped his face in her hands, looked deep into his eyes. 					“You mean I can handle you.”
   				“That’s exactly what I mean.”
   				“All right, then. But you’re buying the ring.”
   				He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, blue box. “I 					already did.”
   				* * * * *
   Keep reading for an excerpt from The Road to Bayou Bridge by Liz Talley!
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   		 			 				CHAPTER ONE
   				August 2012
   Naval Station, Rota, 					Spain
   				THE PAPER ACTUALLY SHOOK in Darby Dufrene’s hand—that’s 					how shocked he was by the document he’d discovered in a box of old papers. He’d 					been looking for the grief book he’d made as a small child and instead had found 					something that made his gut lurch against his ribs.
   				“Dude, come on. The driver needs to go.” Hal Severson’s voice 					echoed in the half-full moving truck parked below the flat Darby had shared with 					the rotund navy chaplain for the past several years. His roommate had waited 					semi-good-naturedly while Darby climbed inside to grab the book before it was 					shipped to Seattle, but good humor had limits.
   
					     					 			; 				“Just a sec,” Darby called, his eyes refusing to leave the 					elaborate font of the certificate he’d pulled from a clasped envelope trapped in 					the back of his Bayou Bridge Reveille yearbook. How in the hell had this escaped 					his attention? Albeit it had been buried in with some old school papers he’d 					tossed aside over ten years ago and vowed never to look at again, surely the 					state of Louisiana seal would have permeated his brain and screamed, Open me!
   				Yet, back then he’d been in a funk—a childish, rebellious huff 					of craptastic proportions. He probably hadn’t thought about much else except the 					pity party he’d been throwing himself.
   				The moving truck’s engine fired and a loud roar rumbled through 					the trailer, vibrating the wood floor. The driver was eager to pick up the rest 					of his load, presumably a navy family heading back to the States, and his 					patience with Darby climbing up and digging through boxes already packed was 					also at an end. Darby slid the certificate back into its manila envelope, tucked 					it into his jacket and emerged from the back end of the truck.
   				Hal’s red hair glinted in the sunlight spilling over the tiled 					roof, and his expression had evoled to exasperation. The man was hungry. Had 					been hungry for hours while the movers slowly packed up Darby’s personal effects 					and scant pieces of furniture, and no one stood between Hal and his last chance 					to dine in El Puerto de Santa Maria, the city near the Rota Naval Base, with his 					best comrade. “Let’s go already. Saucy Terese and her crustacean friends await 					us.”
   				“Not Il Caffe di Roma, Hal. I don’t want to look into that 					woman’s eyes and wonder if she might greet me with a filet knife.”
   				“You ain’t that good, brother,” Hal said in a slow Oklahoma 					drawl. “She’ll find someone else on which to ply her wiles when the new guy 					arrives.”
   				“You mean the new guy whose name is Angela Dillard?”