Guilty Secrets. Virginia Kantra
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“All right,” Nell said. “I want you to take inventory now and then again before you go home tonight. Let’s make sure we have a problem before we start worrying about how we’re going to solve it.”
She stomped down the hall, feeling the ghosts of her past breathing behind her. The last thing she needed was to make waves with the DEA. Especially with sharp-eyed, smiling reporter, Joe Reilly, cruising around like a shark scenting for blood.
Nell leaned over the counter that separated the office area from the medical aisle. “Hi, Melody. Has Mr. Vacek come in today?” Stanley Vacek was one of her regulars, an elderly man with a thick eastern European accent and a perpetual scowl who suffered from high blood pressure.
Melody King looked up from the computer screen and blinked, her lavender eyelids startling in her pale face. The office manager had long, mousy brown hair and an abused expression. “He was here a while ago. But I think he left.”
“He can’t leave,” Nell said. “He’s hypertensive.”
“That don’t stop him from walking out the door,” Billie observed on her way to take the vitals of the patient in Exam Two.
Nell frowned. “But he needed a refill on his medication.”
Melody stuck out her lower lip. “I didn’t ask him to leave.”
“No, of course not,” Nell said, automatically reassuring.
“I think he got upset the other guy was asking questions,” the office manager said.
Nell’s stomach sank. “What other guy?”
But she knew.
“That Mr. Reilly,” Melody said, confirming Nell’s fears. “I think Mr. Vacek thought he was from INS or something.”
“He’s not,” Nell said.
“I didn’t say I thought he was an immigration officer.” Melody lowered her voice. “I think he’s a cop.”
Lucy Morales pulled a chart from the stack on the counter. “Are we talking about the guy in the jacket? Because I think he’s hot.”
Irritation ran under Nell’s skin. Why? Because she agreed with Lucy? She pushed the thought away.
“Hot or not, he doesn’t have the right to disturb our patients.” She marched into the waiting room, relieved to have someone she could yell at without feeling guilty.
Patients filled the lines of chairs. A shrieking toddler flung himself backward off his mother’s lap. An elderly woman sat, her lined face passive, her hand clutching her husband’s thin arm.
Reilly was folded onto one of the uncomfortable chairs, one long leg stuck out in front of him. He was smiling and talking over the head of a little girl in purple barrettes to her mother, who was smiling and talking back.
Okay, so she couldn’t yell.
He’d still scared off grumpy Stanley Vacek. He scared Nell. Until the problem—potential problem—with her drug inventory was resolved, she didn’t want him in her clinic. For her patients’ well-being, for her own peace of mind, he had to go.
Nell cleared her throat. Reilly looked up.
“I’m sorry. I have to ask you to come back tomorrow.”
Reilly straightened slowly. He wasn’t a big man, only a few inches taller than Nell’s own five feet eight inches, but his physical impact was undeniable. His eyes, a dark, deep blue, were filled with weary humor. Cops’ eyes, Nell thought. Priests’ eyes. The kind of eyes that invited confidences and promised absolution.
Only she wasn’t confessing anything, and she no longer looked for forgiveness from the church. From anyone.
“What’s the problem?” Reilly asked.
Nell jerked her head toward the door. Reilly followed her across the room. She felt his gaze on her back like a hand.
She turned to face him, torn between apology and irritation. “You have to leave. You’re making my patients nervous.”
Reilly glanced back at the child’s mother, watching with undisguised curiosity from the row of chairs. “I was just making conversation.”
Was she being unfair to him? “You were asking questions.”
“So?”
“So, they think you’re a cop.”
“Not me,” he said. “My brother.”
Nell nearly groaned.
She liked cops. Most cops. Most of the time, nurses and cops were on the same side of the fence, separated from the public who depended on and distrusted them. They shared the same exhaustion, the same frustration, the same brand of black humor. But at this moment, with Ed Johnson frantically counting units of Vicodin, Meperidine and Oxycodone in the back room, Nell regarded the police with the same deep misgiving she felt toward…well, toward the press.
She moistened her lips. “Your brother is a police officer?”
Reilly nodded.
“Here in Chicago?”
He cocked his head. “Yeah. But we don’t talk much, if that’s what’s worrying you.”
She stiffened. “I’m not worried.”
“Scared, then.”
“I’m not scared.”
“Prove it.”
“What?”
Reilly shoved his hands in his jacket pockets. “Prove it,” he repeated, his gaze steady on her face. “Have dinner with me tonight.”
Hello. That came totally out of left field. He’d flirted with that child’s mother more than he had with her.
“Why?” Nell asked suspiciously.
He raised both eyebrows. “You need a reason to have dinner?”
“I need a reason to have dinner with you. I don’t know you.”
“You can get to know me over dinner.”
She shook her head, at least as flattered as she was intimidated by his invitation. “Thanks, but—”
“I write a much better story when I’m familiar with my subject.”
“I am not your subject.”
His eyes laughed at her. “So, we’ll talk about your clinic. I’ll even bring my notebook.”
He stood there, smiling and sure and annoying as hell. She had to get rid of him without tipping him off or pissing him off.
“Fine,”