about all. And whoâs to say Ryan wouldnât have done that if the job heâd coveted wasnât on the line? Sam had come along with the âfor better or worseâ vows. But when the worst happened, heâd used a sad little girl whoâd just lost her mother. He agreed that Ryan would have adopted her sooner if heâd really wanted the responsibility. But he hadnât wanted it.
Any more than Mitch had wanted to be responsible for his brother.
The thought crept in and squeezed his chest.
He tried to tell himself that he wasnât a son of a bitch like Arnold Ryan. The situation with his brother had been different. Robbie was a drug addict who couldnât get the monkey off his back and Mitch had made token attempts to help but all of it failed.
Maybe there was a good reason for that. Maybe heâd never wanted to be his brotherâs keeper in the first place.
He was just like Samâs stepfather.
If she had any sense, she would despise him as much as he despised himself.
Chapter Seven
W ith a quick, irritated flourish of his hand, Mitch scratched notes in a patientâs chart. âItâs Halloween, Sam. Surely thereâs something important you have to do.â
âThere is. And Iâm doing it right now.â
âCanât you give it a rest?â
âNo.â
Leaning an elbow on the high counter at the nurseâs station, he glanced at her. âWhy?â
She straightened the black pointy hat on her head. It went with the gnarled, warty fake nose, green face paint and black cape. Sheâd been told that the hospital employees got into the spirit of Halloween and dressed up, jobs permitting. Her job permitted, but today hadnât been easy. Thereâd been a subtle shift in Mitch, as if he werenât even trying, as if heâd already fallen short of the mark.
âItâs important to observe your progress at intervals during the coaching process so we can make any necessary adjustments.â
He tapped his pen on the chart and met her gaze. âIs that the politically correct way of saying that Iâm not making any progress?â
âAbsolutely not.â She shook her head and felt her hat tilt.
âBecause I have. Made progress,â he added. âFor instance, I could have called you a witch.â He was doing his best fake innocent act, but the devilish gleam in his eyes gave him away.
âAnd today that would be true in every sense of the word because Iâm getting into the spirit of the day.â She pressed her clipboard against her chest. âAt the same time Iâm giving off a vibe of approachability.â
âAll outward evidence to the contrary.â He tapped her fake nose. âNice look, by the way. Typecasting?â
âSticks and stones may break my bones but saying mean stuff will not discourage me from doing my job.â She glanced at her notes. âNow that thereâs a break in the E.R. action, can we talk about what happened with that earlier patient?â
âYou should have dressed up as a pit bull.â
âTsk, tsk,â she said, wagging her finger. âIâve got you now, my pretty.â
âNot yet. But, I could easily be had.â He raised his eyebrows suggestively.
âFocus, Doctor. You remember the little boy who fell and cut his knee?â
âYeah.â He blew out a long breath. âEvery news station does a segment on safe Halloween costumes. How is it possible to miss the fact that kids need to be able to see where theyâre going when theyâre dressed up?â
âItâs not like that mother pushed him down. She felt horribly guilty about what happened.â
âShe should.â
âShe cares about her child.â
âIf that were true, sheâd have paid attention to the warnings and just said no to the full-face rubber werewolf mask that severely restricted his vision.â
âInstead of
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