Blake turned his head to hide a grin. So Ms. Prim and Professional was human after
all. The stain of color that darkened
her brown skin pleased him. She seemed
every bit as aware of him as he was of her.
Maybe
he should tell her he had no intention of leaving Hudson View, but he wanted to
see if he could break through her stiff exterior. Ms. Ginny Barr was one fine woman. He inhaled her subtle perfume. In the past, he’d met and dated beautiful
women and had appreciated them the way any man would. His intense and potent reaction to Ginny Barr
surprised him.
He
frowned. Some vague memory of having
seen her before arose. No way, he
thought. If he’d met her, he would have
pursued the acquaintance. He planned to
do just that, but not today. Her
wariness intrigued him; her coldness presented a challenge.
After
they returned to the nurses’ station, he smiled. “Thanks for the tour. I’m looking forward to our next meeting.”
Frost
gathered in her eyes. She walked
away. Instead of leaving, he leaned
against the counter and watched the sway of her hips. Once she vanished, he headed to the
elevators. Before going to the office
and a meeting with his father’s partners, he wanted to stop in Coronary Care.
Four
days ago, the call from Mrs. Connor, the family’s housekeeper, had accelerated
his plans to leave the university.
Though he would have welcomed another year as part of a prestigious
team, his father’s heart attack had made Blake realize he and his father needed
each other.
Blake
had been an infant when the Marshalls had adopted him. He’d grown up in a white home. As for his birth parents, he’d never asked
questions or entertained curiosity about them.
His adoptive parents had given him love, security and education. Unlike so many adopted children, he had never
rebelled.
Not
like Susan, and she hadn’t had adoption as an excuse. From infancy, his blonde, green-eyed sister
had fought every rule and restriction.
When their mother died, Blake had been in his last year of medical
school and too involved in building his career to have time for Susan. She’d chosen the wrong friends and the wrong
activities. Three years ago, she’d
become a runaway and a year later had died.
For months, Blake’s guilt had been a hot flame. Even now, the remains lay like embers waiting
to flare again.
He
paused outside the door of the cardiac unit and calmed his emotions. His father had never blamed anyone but
himself for not being there for Susan, and Charles Marshall had understood
Blake’s need to immerse himself in surgery.
After
pushing the door open, he strode past the desk and stopped in the doorway of
his father’s room. How old and drawn he
looked, Blake thought. Funny how he’d
always imagined his father as ageless.
Charles
Marshall opened his eyes. “I thought
you’d be in surgery. I had a knee on
this morning’s schedule.”
“Greg
suggested I take today to look things over and settle in.” Blake recalled the hint of anger in Greg’s
voice when he heard Blake’s plans to remain in Hudson View. “Tomorrow, there’s a knee replacement and a
hip pinning. I’ll scrub on them.”
“What
do you think of the ortho unit?”
“She’s
nice.”
Charles
Marshall laughed and the patina of age vanished from his face. “The unit, not the coordinator.”
“It
works.” Blake stared at the wall. What had that woman done to him?
The
older man leaned back against the pillows.
“Speaking of Ginny Barr. Didn’t I
tell you she was the best thing to happen at Hudson View for ages?”
“She
seems to be in control of the unit.” The
blatant admiration in his father’s voice alarmed Blake. Just what was going on?
“Is
that all you’re going to say. Ginny’s
bright and she’s gutsy. She’s risen
through the ranks and has a number of projects in the works for improving
patient care. Since I’m knocked out of
action, I hope you’ll lend her your support.”
He winked. “She’s a lovely
woman.”
A protest
rose in Blake’s thoughts. Then he saw
the grin on his father’s face. Blake
shook his head. There was no way he
would let his father play matchmaker. He
could handle the situation on his own.
For some reason, the prim Ms. Barr didn’t like him, but she offered a
challenge he couldn’t resist.
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