
Between Breaths
Author
A. Duncan
Reads
1.7M
Chapters
34
Arabella is not exactly thriving. Life feels heavy, stress is her sidekick, and now her health is acting up too. But then along comes a certain personal trainerâannoyingly charming, maddeningly good-looking, and somehow making her laugh again. With her best friend cheering her on and a few unexpected sparks flying, Arabella starts to remember what it feels like to live. But when her health takes a sharp turn, sheâs forced to face choices no one wants to make. Between fear and fire, joy and heartbreak, Arabella must figure out what really mattersâand if sheâs ready to fight for it. Sometimes love doesnât fix everything⊠but it might just make it worth it.
Chapter 1
ARABELLA
I stare at the test results, reading them for the third timeâlike squinting might make the numbers less terrifying.
âStill not enough oxygen in my bloodstream,â I mutter.
Danika leans over my couch, reading over my shoulder. âElevated RBCs again. Thatâs not good.â
She should knowâICU nurse by trade, professional meddler by nature.
âNo kidding,â I say, rubbing my temples. âAnd the rest of it? Thyroidâs stable, blood pressureâs normal, chest X-ray is clear, but I still canât breathe right half the time. I feel like an eighty-year-old woman climbing stairs.â
Danika sits beside me. âSo, whatâs the plan? Are you going back to see the doc?â
âYeah. I have an appointment this morning to discuss the results. Not that itâll change anything. Heâll probably say I need to lose weight again.â
Danika rolls her eyes. âYou should tell him he could lose a few to fifty pounds himself.â
I chuckle. The last time Danika went with me to the doctor, he asked if Iâd been exercising. She asked him where he went to the gym.
âDonât tempt me. I might actually do it this time.â
âYou need another opinion.â
Flaring my arms, I say, âYou mean another one? âCause this is the fourth doctor Iâve been to. All my bloodwork is off, but they canât seem to find out why. I give up.â
âDid you tell him you eat relatively healthy?â
âWhatâs the sense? They wouldnât believe me. Besides, pasta is my vice. Not that healthy, Danika.â
âWell, we all have vices. Mine is chocolate cake.â
I shrug. âBut youâre still thin. Iâm curvy. Always have been, but this breathing thing is new. Iâve never had a problem walking or exercising. I feel like an old lady who needs an oxygen machine rolling behind her.â
âIf your RBCs are high⊠Dehydrated?â
âProbably. I havenât been able to take much lately, either food or liquid. Makes me nauseous sometimes. Plus, I donât have much of an appetite anymore. Hell, if the doctors wait a while, Iâll starve to death. Canât complain about being fat at least.â
She straightens and walks into my kitchen. âWant a drink?â
âSeriously?â
âYou need more liquids if nothing else, Ara.â
I groan but take the bottle when she brings it over. âYou may be a nurse, but youâre not my boss, Danika.â
âDrink up.â
âDamn you.â
âLook, Ara, instead of walking around the track every day, why not try my gym? Theyâve got great personal trainers there. They work with your needs, not their agenda, and everything moves at your pace.
âTheyâll sit down with you, make a plan, and go from there.
âOhhh no. And have everybody stare at the curvy girl whoâs trying to lose weight and canât breathe? No, thanks. Plus, doesnât that Jace Remington guy own the place?â
âYep.â
âYeah, no thanks.â
âWhat? The man is sinfully hot.â
âI wouldnât know. But I do know the man came from a buttload of family money, and instead of using his college degree, he opens a gym. Iâll never understand it.â
âCome on. Youâll rarely see him around. He only comes in every so often. Plus, Iâve never heard of him hitting on or dating anyone who went to his gym. Bad for business, ya know?â
âIf heâs that hot, I bet it still doesnât stop all the girls from coming and eye-fucking him.â
She laughs. âTrue. However, he has mostly male employees; the women are his cousins. Heâs very polite when heâs there. All those women can do is eye-fuck him, because it isnât going to happen.â
I shake my head.
âCome on, Ara, please. Just give it a try. Iâll go with you.â
âFine. If it gets you to shut up.â
âYou know, I wonder who the woman is that he will settle down with one day. I mean, come onâŠhe is getting a little older. I heard one of the guys the other day say he was forty-two.â
I look at my best friend like sheâs grown another head.
Pointing between the two of us, I say, âDanika! We are a little older! Have you forgotten that?â
âMy mind still thinks Iâm in my twenties, thank you.â
âTrust me, youâre forty.â
âLook, if this doctor starts the weight speech again, drag him,â she says, smirking. âVerbally. Not physically. Probably.â
I snort. âNo promises.â
***
The elevator ride to the third floor of the clinic is mercifully short, but my patience is already thin by the time the nurse calls my name.
âMs. Dawson. Room three.â
I follow her back, sit on the crinkly, paper-covered exam table, and try not to scream while I wait.
Sometimes it feels like Iâm wasting time walking into the doctorâs office. Itâs always the same: Well, losing weight would help quite a bit.
Useless.
Ten minutes later, Dr. Calloway walks in, tablet in hand, with an expression that already makes my blood boil.
Looks like heâs hit the drive-thru a few too many times. The way his belly hangs over his belt, the effort in each breathâhe looks just as uncomfortable as I feel watching him.
I swear Iâve spent way too much money on doctorsâprobably paid for more than a few of their houses or extravagant vacationsâjust for them to tell me Iâm overweight.
You donât have to keep shoving it in my face that I could lose a few poundsâI already see it every time I look in the mirror.
For some people, itâs easier said than done.
âGood morning, Arabella. I hope youâve been taking good care of yourself,â Dr. Callahan says.
âGood morning, Doctor.â
I sit, hands folded in my lap, already bracing myself.
âSo, Iâve looked at your test results, and I believe we need to revisit the idea of lowering your weight.â
âWhat?â
Just like that, my stomach knots, and my ears start ringing. He flips through his chart like itâs a menuâlike he didnât just repeat the same line Iâve heard every damn time.
âOverall, these numbers would look good with a normal BMI. I can refer you to one of the best nutritionists we have.â
âStop,â I say, my voice sharper now.
âIn the meantime, moderation is keyââ
âStop!â
I can feel the heat rise under my skin.
ââas well as daily exercise.â
He keeps going, like Iâm not even here. Like my voice doesnât matter.
âI said stop! Or would shut your trap be better? Thereâs nothing wrong with my exercise regimen. I exercise daily. I eat relatively healthy.â
He finally pausesâbut only to reload.
âIt might be something you need to do yourself. You know, stay away from the beer and the drive-thrus.â
Thatâs it.
I shoot to my feet, the exam table screeching behind me, and storm to the door. My hand trembles as I grip the knob. I yank it open, but before I walk out, I spin back around, heart pounding in my throat.
âNot everything is about weight. All that tells me is you donât know any more than you did the last time I was here!â
The waiting room blurs past me. I hit the door with my shoulder and step into the spring air, gulping like Iâve been underwater.
Iâm almost to the parking lot when my foot catches the curb. My ankle rolls, and I pitch forwardâright into a wall of solid muscle.
Strong arms catch me before I face-plant.
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