loopy.â
âYeah, I wished Iâd gotten him on my phone. The guys back at the lab would have gotten a kick out of seeing him like that.â He laughed.
She frowned, wondering why a man in pain would be humorous. âSeeing someone hurt is funny?â
âYou too? Ah, hell, I thought youâd be different. Pretty boy is like honey to bears.â He shook his head. âLucky bastard. I meant him being stoned, not hurt. We take care of our own, in case you missed the memo,â he teased.
âSorry, but why would it be funny?â
âLet me put it this way. I once saw him polish off a bottle of Crown without so much as a slur.â
âImpressive.â Not to her, of course. âI donât drink.â
âGood girl. Now how about that walk?â
âNo thanks, I want to be here in case he wakes up.â She was using her scariest tactics to get Blake to take his pills. The hangover effect he was experiencing would take the rest of the day to clear his system. Abandoning him to take a walk didnât seem right. She told herself not to care whether it felt right or wrong, but again, she didnât listen.
* * *
It was four hours before Blake stirred. Sheâd gone into his room several times, each time being careful not to wake him. On the third visit, she was about to shut the door behind her when she heard, âAre you bored?â
She turned to see him struggling to sit up. When she moved to help, he held up a hand.
âWhat do you mean?â she asked.
âYouâve been in here three times. Iâd like to think it was because you cared. But since I got you into this sorry mess, Iâm thinking you canât wait to see the last of me.â
âIâm sorry; I didnât mean to wake you.â She chose to ignore his comment.
âSeeing you is the highlight of my day.â He dropped his feet to the floor and stood.
She watched carefully, vigilant should he fall. âSounds like youâre the one whoâs bored.â
âI am,â he said, deflating the little part of her ego heâd just stroked. âBut what better way to keep myself occupied than watch a beautiful woman walk into my bedroom?â
âYou think Iâm beautiful?â He was everything you could think of on a stick. Him saying she was beautiful was outrageous. Men paid her compliments all the time. But when youâd given them a hard on, it wasnât much of a compliment.
âThere is none more beautiful than you, Rhonda.â He sat where theyâd played cards this morning. âOutside,â he continued, âand inside. I know you have this whole tough thing going on.â He waved his hand in the air. âAnd itâs sexy as hell, a strong woman who tells you to shove it up yer arse with a smile that makes you wish you could take her to bed. But youâve a gentle soul. A kind soul. One I think youâd rather not have. Would it be too personal a question for me to ask why?â
He motioned to the chair across from him.
She obliged. âI donât understand the question.â Who didnât want their soul?
He leaned over the small table. âItâs like this. You see a bird with a broken wing and you take it home. Helping is a pain in the arse, but your heart wonât let you leave the injured birdie.
âYou wish you could. Walk away, that is, but you canât. Youâre compelled to help. Iâm that broken bird. And you wish like hell you could simply walk away, but even if you could, you canât.â
âInteresting premise, except I canât go anywhere. And if I could, why would I leave an injured man to fend for himself when I have some, if not all of the training to help? Iâd have to be very cold-hearted. Who would want to be that kind of person?â His assumption was hitting too close to home. It wasnât as simple as wanting to shut off that part of her that
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