Dr. Dangerous. Kristi Gold
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Dr. Dangerous - Kristi Gold страница 6

Название: Dr. Dangerous

Автор: Kristi Gold

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия: Mills & Boon Desire

isbn: 9781408942468

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ have to wash dishes, or at least try to clear some of them away. Her mother would be so proud.

      Without speaking, Brooke rose and began stacking some glasses to one side of the sink until she had a makeshift fortress teetering on the edge of catastrophe. Finally she made enough room to draw some water. Now, to find some kind of soap.

      Bending down, she retrieved a half-full bottle of dishwashing liquid from the cabinet underneath and squirted a few drops into the sink. She washed the pot with the least dried on food, filled it with water, dropped the pack in, then set it on the gas stove to heat.

      While waiting for the water to boil, she went back to the sink and the Mt. Everest mess. After remarkably finding a clean towel and rag in the drawer, she dove into the task of dishwashing, her back to him while he waited at the table.

      The silence was almost as stifling as the unpleasant odor wafting from the dirty dishes. She struggled for something to say to break the awkwardness. “Looks like you’ve gotten to know every pizza deliveryman in the county. Pepperoni or the works?” She smiled over one shoulder and found him staring at her, his blue eyes sharp and intense.

      “Neither. Just the plain stuff for me.”

      “Really? I wouldn’t have guessed that.”

      “Why?”

      “It’s that whole doctor persona. I’ve always believed that most medical men have a predilection for the exotic. You know, fast cars. Faster women.”

      “That’s the problem with stereotypes. People get too bogged down in them.”

      She rimmed one glass with the cloth, over and over, until it squeaked. “So that’s not the case with you?”

      “Depends. Which one are you referring to? Cars, pizza or women?”

      Boy, oh, boy, did she want to know about the latter. Why, she couldn’t say. But she did. “All of the above.”

      “I like my old truck, which on a warm day can actually top fifty-five if I get a running start. I like my pizza with double cheese and sometimes sausage. And what was that last one?” he asked, amusement in his tone.

      “Women.”

      A chuckle rumbled low in his chest, lifting Brooke’s spirits a notch. “I like to know that they don’t have to have a running start to reach the speed limit, and covered in cheese is just fine by me.”

      My goodness. The doctor had a sense of humor. And she had a bad case of pleasant chills. “Well, those are certainly impeccable standards.”

      “What about you? What are your requirements in a man?”

      “A man?” She sounded as though she didn’t know the meaning of the word.

      “Yeah. What’s your boyfriend like?”

      She released a sharp humorless laugh. “Nonexistent.”

      “I’m surprised. Seems to me a woman as attractive as you would have a significant other.”

      The glass she’d been washing for a ridiculous amount of time slipped from her grasp and fell back into the sink, sending a fountain of water onto the front of her lab coat. She ignored the dampness but couldn’t seem to ignore his compliment or her pulse’s pitter-patter rhythm. Yet she had to if she wanted to keep her head on straight. “Nope, no significant other. I don’t really have the inclination at this point in my career.” Or the strength of will to investigate that possibility. Not after her one terrible experience with a man who’d used her, then discarded as easily as she’d just discarded the trash in Jared Granger’s kitchen.

      “Your career is the most important thing to you.” He posed it as a straightforward statement of fact, not a question.

      “Yes, you could say that. One day I plan to start my own clinic.”

      The chair creaked behind her, indicating he shifted in his seat. “So you have it all mapped out, huh? How long it will take to reach this goal, then the next, until it all comes together. Then the next thing you know, everything’s on course, just the way you planned it, not believing for a minute it can all come apart at the seams in a matter of moments.”

      Setting the last of the glasses aside, she faced him, knowing he spoke of his own life as much as he spoke of hers. “Sure. But I guess nothing’s guaranteed, right?”

      “Yeah. And that’s a damned bitter pill to swallow.”

      The familiar pain slid across his taut features once again. Brooke held on tightly to a thin rein of control. She couldn’t keep playing into the sympathy. She needed to stay focused. Remain objective.

      She retrieved the hot pack, wrapped it in another dish towel and applied it to his hand before going back to the dishes. She finished her chores while the allotted twenty minutes passed, enough time for the heat to relax his tendons, and all the excuse she needed to get back to the business at hand—helping him put his life back on track.

      “Did washing my dirty dishes give you some kind of thrill?” he asked as she took his hand into hers to begin the therapy.

      She stared up at him, surprised to find amusement in his eyes. “Nope, just dishpan hands. Why?”

      “You were whistling, like you really enjoyed it.”

      If the truth were known, it had given her a little boost. Because of her mother’s penchant for cleaning on a weekly basis to prevent aggravating Brooke’s asthma, she rarely did anything in the way of housekeeping, and she kind of liked the independence of not having someone standing over her shoulder, telling her she wasn’t doing it right. Not that she’d reveal that to the physician. She didn’t want him to erroneously assume that cleaning up after him would be a common occurrence. She hadn’t enjoyed it that much. And it wasn’t in her job description, either.

      “Believe me, Dr. Granger,” she said, “I’ll send you a bill for my KP duties.”

      “No problem.”

      She looked up from working his fingers and met his compelling blue eyes once again. “How much do you think I should charge?”

      “Whatever’s fair.”

      “How much do you charge for, let’s say, a quadruple bypass?”

      He smiled again, but only part way. “Are you making a comparison here?”

      “I think it’s only fair, don’t you? It took me over a half hour to consult with your dishes.”

      “At least they didn’t talk back. And they sure as hell can’t sue you if you happen to break one.”

      Another glimpse of wry humor. “Good point,” she said, pleased by the fact that his tension over her presence had seemed to ease. Unfortunately, she couldn’t say the same for his stiff, injured fingers, especially his pointer finger. She had her suspicions what the problem could be.

      She curled her own fingers into his palm. “Can you grip my hand?”

      With his brows drawn down in concentration, he moved his appendages somewhat. Not much, СКАЧАТЬ