She stared at me. “Penny, you’re 26 years old.”
I laughed. “Mom, I’m 19.”
She dropped my hand and covered her mouth before her sob escaped.
“I’m 19,” I said again. Right?
Chapter 2
Tuesday
A different doctor than the first one came into the room. He looked much more professional with a white coat, hair graying at the temples, and a stethoscope dangling from his neck. I instantly trusted him more than the other man. And he didn’t hover unnecessarily close or make me feel uncomfortable in any way. Except for his onslaught of questions.
“And what’s your name?” he asked. The way he was staring at me made me think this was some sort of trick question. But I had only ever had one name.
“Penny Taylor.” Maybe I didn’t like him that much after all. He was treating me like a child. I knew my own name. “Do you want me to spell that for you?”
He chuckled. “No, that won’t be necessary.” He looked down at his notebook. “And the very last thing you remember is studying?” he asked.
I nodded, my mind stuck on what my mom had said. Penny, you’re 26 years o
ld. I shook my head. I’d think I’d remember if seven years of my life had flown by. “So can I get out of here? I really do feel fine and I have exams to study for.”
The doctor jotted something down in his notebook. He looked up from his pages and smiled. “We’ll get you out of here as soon as we can, Penny. You have my word.”
“You can’t release her like this,” my mom said. “What’s wrong with her?”
Her words stung. There was nothing wrong with me. She was the one that had lost her mind. I glanced at my dad for reassurance, but he was staring at me with just as much worry etched on his face.
Penny, you’re 26 years old. The words swirled around in my head, refusing to settle. I’m 19.
“I’m going to go talk to your family in the hall,” the doctor said. “We’ll be back in a minute. Sit tight, alright?” He tapped my blanket covered foot and walked out the door with my parents.
This was just some sort of bad dream. I hadn’t been sleeping that well. Austin had blown me off the past few nights, claiming he was studying for finals. But he never studied, his GPA was proof of that. I knew what he was doing behind my back. Who he was doing. And he was slowly driving me insane.
I was fed up with his shit. I was so sick of being his second choice. We needed to have a serious conversation about what we were. Again. How many times had we talked about the same issues over and over again? But I refused to go home for the summer without knowing where we stood. That would definitely drive me mad.
Wake up. I patted the sides of my face but the hospital room didn’t magically transform into my dorm room. Melissa would know what to do. She could tell everyone what was going on. I looked at the nightstand for my cell phone but it was nowhere in sight. The chairs by the bed were empty too. Damn it.
I looked down at the IV stuck in my arm. I was just contemplating how much it would hurt to pull it out when the door flew open.
The first doctor came barging in, his eyes blazing with anger.
“Penny, we’re leaving. I’m taking you home.”
I shrunk away from him. Why would he take me home? My parents could do that. I didn’t like this doctor.
“Everything’s okay. Let’s just get you unhooked from these.” He looked at the machine I was attached to, like he was trying to figure out what to do. How inexperienced was he?
“Mr. Hunter,” my new doctor said as he came into the room. He was so flustered that his cheeks were red.
“Penny, you know I’m sorry. You know that. You know I’d never hurt you.”
I opened my mouth and then closed it again. Who was this guy? “I don’t know you.”
He ran his hands down his face. “Baby.” He sounded tormented.
But I was more focused on what he had said rather than how he had said it. Was he talking to me? I looked at my parents. I didn’t think he was talking to them. When I turned back to him, he was on his knees by the side of my bed.