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Midnight, Moonlight & Miracles. Teresa SouthwickЧитать онлайн книгу.

Midnight, Moonlight & Miracles - Teresa Southwick


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even close.”

      “Then I’m not dead?” A purely rhetorical question. The pain knifing through him was clear evidence that he was alive.

      “You’re still a member of the human race,” she confirmed.

      Maybe a member of the race. He wasn’t so sure about the human part.

      “Where am I?” He knew it was a hospital, but details were fuzzy.

      “You’re in the ER at Saint Joseph’s. You’re on a heart monitor, standard procedure for trauma patients.” She glanced at the beeping machine beside him and the screen with lines spiking across it. “Next time you decide to give Evel Knievel a run for his money, I suggest you wear a helmet. Didn’t you get the memo that protective headgear is the law? And it’s designed for the purpose of preventing nasty goose eggs like the one you’ve got there.”

      Pain roared through his head like an Amtrak train. But still he lifted his arm to touch his forehead, and winced when he found a good-sized lump that confirmed her words. He noticed thin, clear tubing connected to his arm. An IV?

      “Who are you?” he asked.

      “My name is Megan Brightwell. Do you know who you are?”

      “Simon Reynolds.”

      “Good. Do you know what day this is?”

      He thought for a moment. When he remembered the date, consuming pain roared through him again, but this time it wasn’t physical.

      “Yeah. I know.” He looked at her, wishing the protective haze hadn’t cleared so fast. “You’re a nurse? Then I guess goose egg is the correct medical terminology?”

      “Actually, that would be contusion, but I didn’t want to get too technical with a man who just scrambled his brains.”

      “What happened?”

      “You don’t remember?”

      “Nothing except riding the bike.” He shook his head, wincing as he instantly regretted the motion.

      “I guess I don’t have to tell you to lie still.” In spite of her teasing words and tone, there was a sympathetic expression in her eyes.

      The last thing he wanted, needed or deserved was her pity.

      Metal scraped on metal as she dragged a privacy curtain halfway around the space where he was lying. Beyond it, he heard a phone ring and muted voices. Pretty quiet. The last time he’d been here all hell had broken loose. Must be a slow night. Good. Someone would look at him before his injuries had time to heal. He wanted the hell out of here.

      “According to the paramedics who brought you in, one minute you were riding that motorcycle. The next you were playing slip and slide on the street—without the plastic mat.”

      “The roads were slick.”

      “Yeah,” she allowed. “Rain does that. And you just proved what everyone says—Southern Californians don’t know how to drive on wet roads.”

      “You’re not going to cut me any slack, are you?”

      “That’s not my plan. Do the words ‘slow down’ mean anything to you?”

      “And miss slip and slide?”

      “Silly me. What was I thinking?” she asked, her tone rife with sarcasm.

      In spite of the stinging, throbbing and aching that encompassed every single cell and nerve ending of his body, he registered a flicker of respect for this woman’s shoot-from-the-hip, call-a-spade-a-spade style.

      He shifted on the hard gurney, then wished he hadn’t. “I think I took a solid bounce or two.”

      “You have some nasty yet colorful lacerations and abrasions,” she confirmed.

      “Anything life threatening?”

      “You almost sound like you’re hoping.” A frown puckered her smooth brow.

      He shrugged and caught his breath at the pain that zinged him. “I just want to know when I can get out of here.”

      Except for that spot of worry between her brows, her skin was smooth and creamy. She was pretty. He couldn’t be hurt too bad if he noticed.

      “Is there someone we can call to let them know you’re here? Your wife maybe?”

      His chest tightened. “No.”

      “What about friends? Family?”

      “My brother lives in Phoenix. Since I’m not dead, there’s no reason to call him—or anyone else. Except maybe the doc so I can split.”

      “I’ll let him know you’re awake. He’ll be in to talk to you as soon as he can.”

      “Can’t you tell me what’s up?”

      “No. That’s the doctor’s job.”

      “Where is he? Playing golf?”

      “After evaluating your vital signs, he ordered labs and X rays. While waiting for those, he went to see the other patient.”

      He remembered going through the tests. Then her words sank in.

      “Other patient?” He frowned. “I didn’t hit—I mean when I went down—was it just me?”

      “As far as I know,” she said, “that patient is medical as opposed to accident trauma. When we triaged the two of you, he drew the short straw. Doctor’s been working on him for a while.”

      “If I came in second, I guess that means I’m going to live.”

      “You sound disappointed.”

      Maybe he was. She might look like an angel, but she didn’t act like one. But then, how would he know? No self-respecting angel would or should give him the time of day. Even if he believed in them, which he didn’t. Not anymore. Not since Marcus—

      Suddenly exhausted, he closed his eyes.

      “Stay with me, sleeping beauty.” Her voice was sharp. “Mr. Reynolds? Can you hear me?”

      Megan gently patted her patient’s face and squeezed his hand, because it was one of the few places without abrasions. Probably because he’d worn leather gloves. What kind of idiot would protect his hands and not his head?

      “An idiot with a death wish,” she whispered to no one in particular. She gently patted his face again. “Oh, no you don’t. Not on my watch.”

      “I’m not asleep. Who’s an idiot?” he asked, opening his eyes.

      She let out a relieved breath, grateful she’d easily roused him and he hadn’t slipped into unconsciousness. “So you were playing possum.”

      “I don’t play anything—”

      Anymore.

      The word hung in the air between them as clearly as if he’d said it out loud. She studied him. He wasn’t hard on the eyes. In spite of the fact that he looked like the loser in a close encounter of the pavement kind, he was incredibly good-looking. But she couldn’t help thinking he was in pain.

      Duh. Of course he was. The man probably had a concussion. But she couldn’t shake the feeling that she couldn’t see where he was hurting the most. And since when did psychoanalyzing become part of emergency room protocol?

      “No more pretending to be asleep, Mr. Reynolds.”

      “I wasn’t pretending. And the name’s Simon.”

      “It’s going to be mud if you scare me like that again.”

      He grinned unexpectedly, chasing the shadows from his face, making him even more attractive. Her heart skipped, and she thought it was a good thing she wasn’t hooked up to a monitor. With no evidence to the contrary, she could pretend she’d


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