Healing The Doctor's Heart. Shirley Hailstock

Healing The Doctor's Heart - Shirley Hailstock


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the light.

      “Close those!” he shouted. Blinking, he looked at her. Lauren could tell he didn’t recognize her at first.

      “What are you doing here? I don’t need some nanny showing up with her bag of tricks.”

      “You think I’m a person trusted enough to care for the well-being of children?” She thought about that for a moment. It gave her an idea. “Thank you.”

      “It wasn’t a compliment.”

      “And just to be correct, I don’t have a bag of tricks. What I do is pure magic.”

      “Really.”

      She smiled. “You never know.” Taking a step toward the bed, she surveyed the room. “It is still morning. If you don’t get moving, you’ll barely make it downstairs before it’s time for lunch.”

      “I don’t want any lunch.”

      “I do, and I don’t want to eat alone. So get up and get dressed. The housekeeper is gone for two days. This room smells like a gym and I imagine you do too.”

      Lauren didn’t wait for a reply. She hurried out of the room, although she did leave the door open.

      Twenty minutes later, he appeared in the kitchen. His hair was wet from the shower and he wore a wrinkled T-shirt, equally wrinkled shorts and no shoes.

      “Let’s get one thing straight,” he began.

      “That’s a good idea,” she interrupted him. “I’m here temporarily at the request of both you and your brother, so we need to have some ground rules.”

      “I—”

      Her hand came up, palm out, stopping him. “The housekeeper says you rarely leave that room when she’s here. From now on, you let her clean it.” She gave him a piercing glance. “Toast and coffee are already made.”

      She poured Jake a cup and handed it to him. He took it and drank.

      “I don’t like black coffee,” he said.

      “Then you should have put your own cream and sugar in it.” She indicated the items on the table.

      “I also don’t eat breakfast.”

      “I believe there is a list of things you don’t do, but that will change.”

      “Oh?”

      She raised one eyebrow. “You don’t intimidate me,” she told him. “Your brother filled me in on your accident and your attitude since then.”

      “I bet he did. Did he tell you I don’t need or want a babysitter, not even a nanny who performs magic?”

      “He also told me you don’t want to see anyone, but you shouldn’t be alone. And nanny or not, you’ve got me.”

      “Did he tell you that I might fire you the moment his plane left JFK?”

      She nodded. Jake’s eyes widened in surprise.

      “He figured that would happen. So, he gave me a key and told me I should let you know that I work for him, not you.”

      “Meaning I have no fire power,” he stated.

      “That’s the case.” She smiled, feeling like a fraud, but he didn’t need to know that. “On the other hand, I have the right to leave at any time. And I’m sure you’re planning to make my life miserable, so leaving will be my decision.”

      She got a grin out of him. It wasn’t a full sardonic power play, but the shadow of what was apparent.

      “So you’d better behave yourself. I can give as much as I get, Jake. Now, eat something. We’re going out as soon as you finish.”

      Lauren took her coffee cup and scooted out of the kitchen. She made it up the stairs and into her room before her courage gave way. Letting out a long breath, she leaned against the closed door, and took long, calming breaths. She’d never spoken so candidly in her life. She wondered what was to come. Would Jake really make her life miserable?

      He’d been different in the restaurant, but that was before she’d been sharing his life and his space. She would be staying in the apartment. The apartment was large enough for them to avoid each other, if he so chose, but as his companion she needed to interact with him. And he needed to interact with other people, as well. Her living here was convenient for her, too, as the couple she’d sold her brownstone to wanted possession as soon as possible.

      Knowing that Jake was in pain and knowing that he really needed someone he could trust while Caleb was away. Lauren had to stay. He’d be abusive at first. She was sure of that. He was angry and she would get the backlash. Before coming here, she’d talked with a psychologist friend and told her what she planned to do without revealing the name of her She hesitated. Could she call him a patient? She shook her head. She couldn’t think of him as a patient. If she did, she might unintentionally refer to him that way.

      Quickly, she unpacked her belongings and put them away. She didn’t bring much. Everything she hadn’t gotten rid of from the brownstone was in a storage unit, accessible, but not without inconvenience. Jake should have had enough time by now to get ready to go out. She hadn’t decided where they were going when she issued the order. It was designed for one purpose—to let him know she wasn’t going to be his doormat.

      He was waiting in the living room when she came down the stairs.

      “Where are we going?” he asked, his voice both gruff and challenging.

      “For a walk in the park.”

      “Why?”

      “You need the exercise.”

      “And you know this how?” he asked.

      “When I bumped into you, you were so thin, I’m amazed you weren’t the one on the ground.”

      “And you decided my welfare is now your responsibility?”

      “I’m not here as one of your doctors.” She had to remind herself as well as him. “But walking will give us time to talk, get to know each other, lessen some of the tension between us.”

      He eyed her keenly. She wondered if he was thinking again about how pushy she was. The thought made her feel powerful. She wasn’t aggressive by nature, but she would allow herself to be pushed only so far before she pushed back. And Jake Masters was used to doing the pushing.

      Not today, she told herself.

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      WHAT SHOULD HE FEEL? Jake asked himself. It had been so long since he’d felt anything but anger. And into his life plunges Lauren Peterson. If he wasn’t so opposed to her intervention, he’d find the situation funny. Especially now that he was sitting and waiting for her, showered and dressed as she’d ordered.

      It was ironic, he told himself. If Cal was here they’d both laugh at the absurdity of the situation. Jake had asked for Lauren. He had no idea she would be ordering him around.

      He’d read the report Cal had left with him. She was an elementary school teacher. There was nothing else in the report that was of any interest. He didn’t know exactly when she planned to leave the city, but since it was summer, school was not in session.

      He heard the door open upstairs and looked up. The sun hit her and for a second his breath caught. Red highlights added a glow around her dark brown hair. He knew that color, knew another woman with hair the sun highlighted just like that. She’d been his first love—Pamela Bailey. He’d looked across his tenth grade classroom and saw the sun shining through Pamela’s hair. Jake hadn’t thought of her in years. What was happening to him? He was never usually this nostalgic.

      Lauren was already on her way down the stairs and he followed her movements. She was taller than the average height for a woman, maybe five


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