glaring at her, perhaps it might have been more helpful to suggest face paint for next year instead of an over-the-head mask.â
âIn terms of instant gratification, I find glaring much more personally satisfying.â
She moved closer to him when two orderlies wheeled a bed past her. âThe District in Green Valley Ranch has a party going on this afternoon and all the merchants are giving away a lot of candy. Pointing out an activity like that would be more helpful than reducing her to tears with a look.â
Mitchâs eyes sparked with something that made her insides quiver. âBet my glare against your fake nose that sheâll take better care of the kid next year.â
âIâm sure she will, but there are ways to get the message out without making her feel like the worst mother on the planet.â
âThat was a tad shrill, Miss Ryan.â He looked around at E.R. personnel who were glancing in their direction, then wagged a finger at her. âAnd right in public, too. Isnât there a rule about finding a more private place where you can rake me over the coals?â
Sam knew the gleam in his eyes meant that privacy plus Mitch Tenney equaled trouble.
But he was also right. One of the first things sheâd said to him after her first observation right here in the E.R. was that he could have talked to the teenager behind closed doors.
âIâm not raking you over the coals,â she said. âAnd thank you for reminding me that a public venue is an unacceptable location for this discussion.â
âNot unacceptable for me. Just my way of letting you know Iâm paying attention and making progress.â
His way of toying with her, and darned if she wasnât liking every minute of it. âFor the sake of discretion, letâs go into the break room.â
He shook his head. âThatâs the hard drive of the hospital rumor mill. Iâll buy you a cup of cafeteria coffee.â
âMake it an herbal tea and youâve got yourself a deal.â
âSamantha the twenty-something witch, politically correct, environmentally aware and herbally responsible. Do you have any idea how sexy that is to me?â
âOh, please.â She was onto this technique.
As long as he kept it light, she could resist. And he was teasing, but the word responsible made her think about that day heâd met her brother. When sheâd found out sheâd only been legally adopted because her father didnât want to look bad.
That had hurt. For years sheâd made excuses for Arnold Ryanâs treating her differently from his biological children. Sheâd believed she wasnât smart enough, or pretty enough, or good enough, when the real reason was that she wasnât his and heâd never truly wanted her to be. That was hard to hear, but she gave him credit for taking her in. It counted for something in her book.
Mitch had been incredibly sweet and supportive, right up until sheâd said out loud that her father had never wanted to be responsible for her. A multitude of emotions had crossed his face. Pain. Guilt. Disgust. Instinctively she knew that all of it was directed at himself. So far all heâd told her was that heâd had a brother, a twin. And there was animosity between him and his mother. He had a couple of hot buttons and she planned to toy with them.
They walked into the bustling cafeteria and secured their hot drink of choice, then found a table for two in a back corner.
Sam sat against the wall and set her mug on the wood-trimmed Formica table. Mitch slid into the steel-framed hunter green plastic chair across from her.
âSo, Sunshine, give me your best shot.â
One corner of her mouth curved up. âSuddenly Iâm âSunshineâ?ââ
âHow can starting off on a lighter note be a bad thing? Iâm not stupid.â
âNo one ever said you were.â And the words would never
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