Conversations with Jack & Diane Broken Image “Oh Diane,” Jack groaned, the pain in his head nearly taking his thoughts. He squeezed her hand as he lay immobilized on the hard hospital bed. “Tell me,” he struggled. “Tell me...” “Tell you what Jack?” she begged, her blue eyes red with crying. “Tell you what my love?” “Tell me that the doctor lied. Tell me...Oh please Di, tell me he lied.” “About what Jack? Lied about what?” “About the little boy...” he answered weakly, his voice stung with grave emotion. “What little boy Jack?” she asked, her face frowning with concern. “The little boy that dashed out into the street.” His breathing was heavy, very labored. “The little boy! Oh Diane...!” he cringed. His hands clawed at his eyes, his face contorted by a pain other than physical. “Oh my god Jack, did you run into a child?” He nodded his head, unable to hold back the seering grief that plagued his heart and soul. “Oh Jack,” she tried to comfort, leaning forward, her face against his clenching hands. “Oh Jack, I’ve warned you over and over about driving drunk.” She held him, trying in vain to stop his trembling. “Diane,” he whispered. She leaned in toward him, her chest tight with remorse as she beheld his sunken face. “I heard it,” he gasped. “Heard what?” she asked softly. “I heard his bones snap as the car crushed into him. I saw the terror in his eyes...” He clawed at his face again, as if he wanted to tear his eyes from their vantage point. “Stop it Jack,” she whispered. “Please stop it.” “I can’t Di. Everytime I close these damned eyes I see his precious face. He couldn’t have been more than eight. Oh god! Oh God!” “I’ll get the doctor,” she exclaimed. “Maybe he can give you something to help you rest.” “No!” he shouted, his body wrecked with the pain of it’s broken spirit. “Don’t leave me Diane. I’m so cold sweetie. Hold me,” he begged. “Please...” His eyes beseeched her, his voice but a raspy sigh. Diane held him as he wept for the little boy. She wept with him. “Is Becky here?” he asked, as if a sudden inspiration guided his words. “No Jack she’s not,” Diane answered. His body went limp in her arms. “It’s almost dawn Jack. She’s at home, asleep.” “Good...good,” he managed. “I just thought that...” His voice trailed off. “Thought what Jack? Tell me love.” He raised his grief swollen face. “I just thought that perhaps if I could just see her sweet young face, that perhaps the pain would go away.” He sagged back against his sweat stained pillow, barely able to breath. Diane wiped the tears from her eyes as she slowly stood. She looked down at her dear friend, a feeling of remorse gripping at her like an iron vice. Her best friend in the world. A man she could not imagine life without, had killed an innocent child while driving drunk. How could she ever look upon him in the same glorious light again? She knew her thoughts were selfish. But she couldn’t help it. His thoughtless act had stripped her of her most prized possession. Her respect for him. So caught up in her own sense of loss was Diane that she didn’t notice the doctor as he walked up next to Jack’s bed. It wasn’t until he spoke that she was rocked back to reality. “How you doing Jack?” he asked as he flipped the chart. Jack didn’t answer. Diane walked over next to the doctor. “How are the boy’s parents doing?” she asked, her expression pained and pale. “What boy?” the doctor frowned. “The boy that died?” “What boy that died?” the doctor inquiered. “The boy that died when Jack crashed,” she persisted. “The only thing that died when Jack crashed was a telephone pole,” he assured Diane. “What!?” she whispered loudly, too stunned to raise her voice to a full shout. She recovered quickly. “But Jack just told me that he ran into a little boy, and that he died.” “Hmmm,” the doctor responded, still engrossed in Jack’s chart. He finished his writing and closed the little file, hanging it back on it’s hook around the bed rail. “He’s experiencing DDRS,” he told Diane. “I don’t understand,” she squinted, barely able to stand. “Drunk drivers remorse syndrome,” the doctor elaborated. “It’s very common in a case like this. The guilt associated with the event manifests itself into a delusional state. And the patient believes that the odds, as they say, have finally caught up to him.” “But he really thinks he killed someone. Aren’t you going to tell him that he didn’t.” She stood with indignant firmness. “Wouldn’t matter what I told him right now,” the doctor tried to explain to her. “Presently Jack probably believes that he killed that little boy which his mind has created for his delirium.” He smiled at Diane. A doctor’s smile, cool and absent of mirth. “Don’t worry, in a day or so he’ll realize the truth.” Diane sat down heavily, in a chair next to the bed. “And what happens until than?” she asked. “Until than he could use all the support he can get,” answered the white robed physician. He looked at Diane for the first time. “Are you his wife?” he asked as he finished giving Jack a sedative. “No, I’m just a friend,” she answered. “His wife is out of the country right at the moment.” “Well right now he could sure use your friendship.” “Yes, I suppose he could,” she whispered. “It’s probably going to be a pretty rough night for him. It might help if someone he cared for were close by. For when the nightmares come.” “Nightmares...” she mumbled, staring down at Jack, still too stunned and relieved too think straight. “What nightmares?” “Nightmares reliving the event he's created for himself. They will almost certainly grip him through the night. Flashbacks are a common response to this type of trauma. Having someone here to hold him would be the best medicine he could get.” The doctor smiled again. This time it was genuine and compassionate. “Oh yes doctor,” Diane assured him. “I will stay here with him..” “Good.” He patted her shoulder knowingly. “Hopefully the turmoil he’s experiencing right now will help him concur the drinking problem.” “Do you think it might?” she asked. The doctor shrugged. “Only time will tell. If you need anything just press that button over there.” He pointed at the buttoned cord hanging down the front of Jack’s propped-up mattress. “I will doctor. And thank you.” “Don’t worry, he’ll be fine in a few days. Physically anyway. He’s going to need help psychologically though." “I’ll be here to help,” Diane offered without hesitation. The doctor nodded and smiled. “Good,” he whispered as he left the room. Diane moved the chair up next to the bed, slowly resting her face against Jack’s arm, fighting against the grateful slumber that she so desperately longed for. She would sleep now, tomorrow the work would begin. The End... Unpublished Works © 1997 GJB