Doing It Right. MaryJanice Davidson
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“I don’t mind,” he assured her. “You can come over anytime. Do you want a key?”
“It’s not necessary,” she said with a straight face.
“I know that. But maybe it’ll be a little faster than picking my lock every … No?” She shook her head. “Ho, boy. That’s some childhood you must have had.”
She changed the subject—but later, when he thought about the conversation, he realized she hadn’t changed it at all. “How is the little boy?”
He looked up from removing ingredients from the refrigerator. “Little boy?”
She perched on a stool beside the counter. “He came in the ER with multiple stab wounds. Red hair, about seven years old?”
“Ah. He was stable when I left. Amazingly, the bastard who did the cutting managed to miss virtually every major organ and blood vessel. His mother’s boyfriend,” Jared added, whipping eggs in a stainless steel bowl. “Carved the kid up when Mama left him. In Cleopatra’s time, they used strangulation as the death penalty. Kind of makes you long for the good old days, huh?”
She nodded seriously, though he had—he thought he had—been joking. Dark humor, the kind he took refuge in when terrible things happened to little kids. To anyone. “Someone should kill the boyfriend,” she said matter-of-factly. “That kind never stops.” She drummed her fingers on the counter, thinking.
“Now wait a minute,” he protested. “I can see you trying to fit killing the boyfriend into your busy schedule—between bodyguarding me and grocery shopping and single-handedly cracking every safe on the block—and you’ve got to forget it. If you killed everybody you thought deserved it, you’d never be done.”
“Don’t you think someone who stabs a little boy five times deserves to be removed from the planet?”
“I think it’s not our call.”
She snorted, such an incongruous sound with her delicate exterior that he nearly laughed out loud. “Spoken like a true sheep.”
He grated cheese irritably. “What, because I don’t go around like Vince the Vigilante, I’m a sheep?”
“No,” she said patiently, “you’re a sheep because you don’t right wrongs.”
He slammed the bowl on the counter and leaned across it, until his face was two inches from hers. “I had that child’s blood up to my elbows,” he said evenly. “Don’t tell me I don’t right wrongs.” He leaned back, forcing his temper down. “And how’d you know about the kid, anyway? I didn’t see you in the ER all night.”
“I apologize.”
“Don’t be sorry, just use the door once in a while so I can see you coming and going.”
She didn’t smile, just looked at him with serious eyes. “You know what I meant.”
“Yes,” he said, whittling away at a shallot until it was a delicate pile of white and purple shavings. “I know and I accept with thanks. For the record, I run into plenty of people whose lungs I’d like to remove without benefit of anesthesia. But if I concentrated on that, I couldn’t do my job. Saving lives is more important to me than avenging them.”
She shifted on her stool, causing the white T-shirt she wore to mold to her breasts for a moment. He looked away before he accidentally cut off his thumb. “That sounds nice. You’re great at your job, I could tell. The nurses,” she added dryly, “seem especially impressed with your … hands.”
He waved the knife at her. “Go on,” he said modestly.
“It’s true.”
“I said go on. Do they talk about how tall I am, how handsome, how smart, how I’m the most fascinating man they’ve ever known, the finest doctor, the best volleyball player?”
“They talk about how it’s been a while since you were caught in the meds closet with one of the orthopedic surgeons.”
He winced. “One time! It was only one time. I was young.”
“It was last year.”
“I’ve grown decades since then in wisdom. What else do you want in your omelet?”
“Whatever you’re having. Don’t change the subject. Are you still seeing her?”
“God, no.” He poured two large glasses of milk. “She used me to get even with her fiancé. A ten-minute grope in the closet and she was off to confess her infidelity and demand he start paying attention to her, uh, needs.”
“Ouch.”
“Tell me,” he said gloomily, sliding the raw egg mixture into the pan. “And somehow I ended up with this ridiculous stud reputation. Most of the women who come on to me are looking for a no-commitment quickie and the ones I’d like to get to know think I’m a pig and won’t have anything to do with me.”
“That’s too bad,” she said, and he jerked his head up at her tone. She hadn’t sounded sympathetic. She’d sounded almost … pleased?
“It’s what I deserve,” he sighed, “for giving in to her womanly wiles.”
“What about your wiles? More milk, please,” she added when he opened the fridge to put the carton away.
“I am wile-less. And you never answered my question—how’d you know about the boy? And the orthopedic surgeon, for that matter,” he added under his breath.
“It’s an inner-city emergency room,” she pointed out, looking on with interest as he slid a perfect omelet onto her plate. “I could walk in on my hands and the only one to notice would be the triage nurse and the only thing she’d want to know was my insurance number.”
“Can you?” he asked, beginning to cook his own omelet.
“What?” she asked with her mouth full.
“Walk on your hands?”
She swallowed, dabbed her lips—full and pouty, his mind reported uselessly—grinned at him, then arched backward on her stool. In a moment her head and torso had disappeared and he could see her legs receding as she carefully walked away from him on her hands.
He applauded. She came back to her feet, slightly flushed and looking pleased, and took her seat, rubbing her hands on her thighs. “You’re amazing,” he said admiringly. “You can do everything.”
“You wouldn’t like me if you really knew me,” she said, then pressed her lips together so hard they went white. He had the feeling she wasn’t in the habit of making candid comments to near strangers.
“What’s not to like?” he said, trying to sound casual, to cover up the bald truth in his question.
She shook her head at him and finished her omelet in silence. “Wonderful,” she said, pushing the empty plate away. “The best breakfast