Читать книгу Marriage On His Mind - Susan Crosby, Susan Crosby - Страница 10
ОглавлениеThree
Ice water. Someone had dumped a fifty-five-gallon drum of frigid liquid on her, Mickey thought as she jerked herself out of his arms.
“Shh, Dani,” she heard a woman say.
“But, Mommy—”
Mickey realized it was Stacy who spoke to the child, a little girl dressed in a summer shift like her mother always wore. A little girl with long, silky brown hair like her mother and dark blue eyes like...Ponytail. Her father.
Mickey’s hands flew up to cover her mouth as she realized what it all meant. He was married. Married to Stacy, the only person Mickey had spoken to at the games, the person she’d passed instructions to Ponytail through. They were a family.
And she’d kissed him. He’d given her a friendly kiss. Well, sort of. It had escalated into something else. But she’d pulled him back for another longer, hotter, deeper kiss. He could have stopped her, though. Couldn’t he?
Furious and embarrassed, Mickey snatched back her sunglasses and leapt onto the bench behind her, then the one beyond that. Another. Another. Lord, for a small stadium, it seemed endless. She couldn’t get out fast enough.
Jack watched her take off. A few seconds passed before he interpreted the look of horror on her face. Realizing the conclusion she’d jumped to, he scrambled to follow her.
“Coach, wait!” He had the advantage of longer legs, but she was being chased by a demon. He gave up trying to explain in private. “We’re divorced, Coach! I’m not married!” he yelled as she hit the top of the stadium, ready to take flight.
His plastic cleats spun on the concrete stairs and he tripped just as he pulled within arm’s reach, calling out as he stumbled, and fell with a thud.
“Jack!” She dropped down beside him, her hands fluttering over him.
“You know my name,” he said in surprise, pain welling as he sought her eyes through the sunglasses she’d shoved back on to free her hands.
“Well, of course I know your name.” She growled the words impatiently. “I’ve been sitting in the stands for weeks. How could I not know your name. Where do you hurt?”
“My right ankle.”
A crowd migrated up the stadium steps. Jack grabbed her hand as she started to move aside when the first baseman, Scott, knelt beside him. “Don’t go,” Jack said to her. “I need to talk to you.”
“You’re in pain.”
“Please. You misunderstood.”
“How’re you doing?” Scott asked as he ran efficient hands down Jack’s leg and ankle.
“Go away,” Jack ordered. “I need to talk to Coach first.”
“Could be broken, buddy. We should get you to the hospital ER.”
“A few minutes’ delay won’t hurt. Back off, Scott. Coach?”
She hovered over him, her expression serious. “I’m really proud of you, Ponytail. You did great.”
“Not Ponytail. Jack.”
She swallowed. “Jack.”
“Now tell me yours.”
“Coach. It’s Coach.”
“I’m not going to see you again, am I?” he asked, already knowing the answer.
“I don’t know. It’s a small town.”
“So, we may run into each other, but you’ll still avoid anything more personal.”
“I have to,” she whispered. “I’m sorry. I can’t change it.”
He squeezed her hand; his eyes closed briefly as a wave of pain washed over him. He couldn’t decide which hurt the most—his ankle or the fact he may never see her again. “I can’t ever remember feeling like that about a kiss. And you...you pulled me back for more.”
“I’m sorry,” she repeated helplessly, and he gathered she meant for more than the kiss.
Scott knelt beside him again. “Let’s go.”
He sat up, wincing as his leg was jostled. “Stacy can take me. You go back to the game.”
“Who’s the doctor here?” Scott asked.
Jack’s brows lifted.
“Gynecologists are allowed to treat broken bones, you know.”
“I’ll go with you,” said the third baseman, Drew, leaning over Scott’s shoulder. “You finish the game, Scotty.”
“Oh, great,” Jack muttered. “Will you give me a sucker if I don’t cry?”
“It was patients like you that made me settle on pediatrics,” Drew said, shaking his finger at Jack.
Jack eyed the woman beside him suppressing a smile. “Don’t you dare laugh, Coach.”
She raised her hands, palms out, and shook her head solemnly, although the curve of her mouth belied the attempt at seriousness.
He turned back to the men. “Look, if two of us leave, we’ll have to forfeit the game. If only I go, the game’s legal. It’d be nice to have one in the win column.”
“One of your two entirely competent physician-teammates will accompany you,” Scott said, brooking no argument “Choose.”
Jack focused on Coach. “Fill in, will you?”
“Me?”
“Yeah. You can play, I gather.”
“Well, yes, but it’s been a long time—”
“Come on, sub for me. We can bring the outfield rover in to cover first for Scott.”
The umpire announced they had two minutes to get the game started again or he’d call a forfeit. All three men turned to the woman known only as Coach.
“The game’s forfeited if I play. This is a men’s league,” she said.
Jack looked at Scott. “Is that true?”
“I hadn’t thought about it. Yeah, I suppose it is.”
“Look, I was responsible. Why don’t I take him?” she asked.
Once again she was the focus of their appraisal.
“I don’t have my car with me, but I imagine one of you would let me borrow—”
“Mine,” Jack said. “We’ll take mine.” He wasn’t going to give anyone else the opportunity to offer.
After being assured that Scott would call ahead to the ER on his cellular phone, Jack was helped out to the parking lot and into his Jeep by two spectators. He rested his foot carefully on the floorboard and leaned back stiffly. Coach had disappeared while they had negotiated the parking lot, then reappeared beside him before the car door was shut. Carefully, she set an ice-filled towel over his ankle.
“Scott thought it would help,” she said, looking up at him. “Is it too heavy?”
“It’s all right.” Forcing himself to relax, he slumped as she scrambled around the front of the car, climbed in and adjusted the driver’s seat for her shorter legs.
“Can you handle a manual transmission?” he asked as she started the engine, then regretted the question when she turned a you’ve-got-to-be-kidding expression on him. “Sorry. Do you know where the hospital is?”
“On Allendale, isn’t it? Across the street from the minimall?”
“Right.” The question in her voice confirmed his assumption—she hadn’t lived in Gold Creek long. He winced as she hit a speed bump.
Mickey glanced at him after she heard his quickly indrawn breath. “Sorry. Does it hurt a lot?”
He clenched the dashboard. “Let’s see. Should I be a real man and say, ‘Aw, it’s nothing’? Or should I tell you the truth?”
“It hurts like hell?” she ventured, risking a quick look his way as she slowed for a red light.
He closed his eyes. “The ice helps. Thanks.”
She negotiated the streets as slowly as traffic would allow, wishing he would talk more. After all, she was a captive audience. He could ask all the questions he’d been dying to ask. He remained quiet. It drove her crazy.
“Are you furious with me?” she asked finally.
Jack didn’t open his eyes. His silence had accomplished what he had intended: the conversational ball was in her court.
“Should I be?” he asked.
She groaned. “I forgot you were a lawyer. Answer a question with a question. What a lovely tactic.”
He kept his voice deliberately calm. “Do I seem furious with you?”
“I don’t know, Jack. What do you look like when you’re furious?”
He laughed softly at her retort. “The ploy usually works, you know.” He opened his eyes to a squint and enjoyed the sight of her, so close he could touch her if he chose.
“Give it your best shot, Ponytail. I grew up with three exceptionally tricky brothers. I’m prepared for anything.”
“Did they teach you to play baseball?”
“Nope.”
“You said you were out of practice. Does that mean you used to play a lot?”
“Yep.”
One corner of his mouth twitched. Oh, yes, she was tough. And smart, and quick. She’d turned the tables on him very nicely.
Mickey grinned his direction, trying not to gloat. She’d managed to outmaneuver him, but he was being a good sport about it. “Jack—”
“Look out!” he yelled.
She hit the brakes, barely avoiding crashing into the car that had come to a quick stop in front of them. “Are you all right?” she asked hurriedly as he moaned and shifted. She knew he’d hit a phantom brake pedal instinctively, ramming his injured foot against the floorboard.
“Yeah.”
No, she decided, hearing the grittiness of the single word. “Real men can say ‘ow,’ you know.”
He rubbed his chest. “I think you inflicted more pain throwing your arm across me than I did myself with my foot. Are you used to a child sitting next to you or something?”
“No,” she said abruptly, not realizing she’d put an arm protectively, automatically, in front of him. Not anymore, she added in silence. “Once again, I apologize for causing you pain.”
“Want to kiss it and make it better?”
She smiled at the windshield, grateful there wasn’t time to relive the past. “You wish,” she said, tossing a grin his way.
The hospital came into view.
“Coach—”
“I’m going to stop at the emergency entrance and find someone with a wheelchair,” she said, swinging into the well-marked driveway.
“Before you go—”
“Don’t.” She shifted into neutral, and pulled up the emergency brake, then turned to look at him. “It can’t go any further than this. I’m sorry. More sorry than you can imagine.”
“Just tell me why.”
“It’s too complicated.”
“Are you married?”
“Of course not.”
“Significant other?”
“None. I meant it when I said I’m in transition. There’s just me. There can only be me. I’ve really enjoyed the time we’ve shared, though. I hope I wasn’t too hard on you.”
“On the contrary, I’m grateful for your prodding.” He touched her shoulder lightly and trailed his fingers down her arm, crossing from fabric to skin on his journey, then locked his fingers over hers as she clenched the gearshift. “A favor?”
Her body reacted to his touch in ways she had thought dead and forgotten. Breath became hard to control; her pulse went from zero to sixty in less than five seconds; even her breasts swelled. She watched him take note of her response, one visible reaction at a time, which served only to make her breathing more shallow, her pulse speed uninhibited down an empty freeway and the tips of her breasts harden painfully.
His voice turned to velvet. “Could we share one kiss in private?”
She didn’t want to give him permission, but to relinquish responsibility to him and not be able to blame herself later. She wanted him just to take. He waited patiently for her to answer.
Jack heard the whisper of a yes only because he was watching her mouth. Not in any hurry, he pushed the bill of her cap around and pulled off her sunglasses. The pupils of her eyes constricted in the sunlight as he watched; her lips parted. Slowing his need, he pressed his mouth to the tender skin below her ear and felt her quivering response. Sliding his mouth along her jaw, he heard her whispered encouragement.
“Yes. Oh, God. Yes,” she breathed, exciting him beyond his dreams with her need.
First came the arousing feel of her lips against his, soft and fiery, then a sudden stillness as she held her breath, then a slow exhale accompanied by the slightest taste of an inquisitive tongue. She glided a shaking hand up his arm to his shoulder; her fingers dug into him. Oh, yes, this was heaven, he thought, curiosity somersaulting into desire as he slanted their mouths differently to deepen the kiss. We fit perfectly. The revelation meandered through his mind as they pulled each other closer across the center console. He slid his palm to her throat, felt the hammering pulse, then glided down—
Someone knocked on the windshield.
“You the one Doc Lansing called about?” a uniformed attendant asked through the glass.
Murder came to mind. Jack nodded in the affirmative, but his gaze stayed on Coach, who seemed to be taking a long time drifting down from her own clouds. “Who are you?” he asked her as the attendant pushed a wheelchair around to the passenger side of the car.
Her hands shaking, she fitted her sunglasses back in place and lifted her cap to turn it around and resettle it. “I’ll park your car and leave your keys with the ER receptionist.”
He couldn’t say goodbye, so he brushed a hand down her cheek and turned from her to shift himself into the wheelchair. He never looked back.
Mickey watched him disappear through the electric doors, then leaned her forehead against the steering wheel for a minute to get her bearings.
His kiss should be labeled by the government as hazardous to one’s health, for surely her temperature had elevated to a life-threatening degree. She leaned back and blew out a breath, her arms stiff, her hands locked on the steering wheel. He would be a significant roadblock in her need for independence. Too significant. She shoved the car into first gear.
After finding a parking place nearby, she sat on a bench under a tree for more than half an hour, giving him a chance to be taken into a room, then she climbed the ramp and entered the hospital. She glanced furtively around her but the waiting room yawned empty. She swept off her hat as she approached the reception window. “Excuse me,” she said to the woman working at a computer behind the counter.
“Yes? May I help you?”
“I, ah, I wanted to know about a patient who was just brought in with an ankle injury.”
“Are you a relative?”
“No. Just a...friend. Is he all right?”
“Let me check. Have a seat, okay?”
Mickey sank onto a bench. Dropping her cap on the table beside her, she picked up a magazine and flipped through it, seeing only a blur of words and pictures. Stark images of her last visit to a hospital emergency room flashed before her eyes. I’m sorry. There’s nothing we can do. Sorry... Nothing... Sorry...
Nothing.
The door from the ER parking lot whooshed open, startling her. She brushed a weary hand down her face and stood as Scott Lansing approached.
“How’s he doing?” he asked, his eyes asking questions he must have sensed she wouldn’t answer.
“I don’t know. He’s inside. Did you win?”
“Amazingly, we did. I’ll go check on him.”
“Wait.” Mickey caught his arm. From her pocket she dug out a set of keys. “Give these to him, please. I’ll be on my way.”
He hefted the keys lightly. “Hang tight. I’ll see how he is.”
After a few minutes, he returned. “We haven’t been introduced.” He extended his hand in greeting. “I’m Scott Lansing.”
“Yes, I know. How is he?”
“Ornery.”
“Please.” She realized how pathetic she sounded when the man dropped his attempt at humor and started speaking in soothing doctor tones.
“He’s going to be just fine. No break, just a bad sprain. You can go see him, if you want. He’s having his crutches fitted, then he can leave.”
She had to get out of here, away from the reminders, away from the past. “I...can’t stay. Tell him...tell him I’m glad he’s all right. And I’m sorry I caused him to be hurt.”
“Why don’t you tell him yourself?”
She could hear Jack’s voice as he called thanks to someone, then the sound of the electric doors swinging open. She took three steps back, turned and ran.
Jack concentrated on negotiating the metal crutches through the door, and looked up only in time to catch a glimpse of Coach’s tempting backside. He glanced at Scott.
“Stubborn as you, Jack, old buddy. Do you want to go to Chung Li’s or home?”
Jack moved toward the glass exit door, but she was already out of sight. “Pizza, I guess.”
“Sit down for a second while I pick up your prescription. Elevate that foot.”
Jack maneuvered himself to a cushioned bench. Beside him on the low table laden with well-used magazines sat an L.A. Seagulls baseball cap. He picked it up and turned it in his hands. Coach’s? It had to be. He checked it for a name tag; finding none, he lifted it to his face and breathed in the sweet, subtle fragrance of shampoo that lingered in the fabric. His body reacted with lightning speed to the scent, to the remembered taste of her mouth and her uncontrolled response. If they’d just had a little more time alone in the car, maybe he could have convinced her to trust him, or at least to meet with him again.
He spun the cap that his reluctant Cinderella had left behind. Folding it, he jammed it into his waistband, knowing he had to find her. Ignoring his long-trusted intuition, which told him he was inviting trouble by searching her out, he decided she was a woman in need of a happy ending. And he’d make a helluva Prince Charming.