Lightning Strikes Part 3
Mary Lynn Baxter
Lightning Strikes Serial Part 3As a devastating summer storm hits Grand Springs, Colorado, the next thirty-six hours will change the town and its residents forever…Lightning Strikes Part 3At Vanderbilt Memorial’s ER, the power goes out, casualties flood in, and hospital staff must fight for lives in the dark.Amanda isn’t ready to forgive Noah just yet…and Noah isn’t ready to confess why he walked out on her. But their problems aren’t the only ones. Karen’s daughter remains trapped in a cave. Noah’s sister Randi called but he still has no idea if she’s in danger or just a runaway bride. The storm has forced the citizens of Grand Springs to hold on tight to what matters most.Don’t miss the next book in this ongoing story, Strange Bedfellows by Kasey Michaels.
36 Hours Serial
As a devastating summer storm hits Grand Springs, Colorado, the next thirty-six hours will change the town and its residents forever….
Lightning Strikes Part 3
At Vanderbilt Memorial’s E.R., the power goes out, casualties flood in and hospital staff must fight for lives in the dark.
Amanda isn’t ready to forgive Noah just yet…and Noah isn’t ready to confess why he walked out on her. But their problems aren’t the only ones. Karen’s daughter remains trapped in a cave. Noah’s sister Randi called but he still has no idea if she’s in danger or just a runaway bride. The storm has forced the citizens of Grand Springs to hold on tight to what matters most.
Don’t miss the next book in this ongoing story, Strange Bedfellows by Kasey Michaels.
Dear Reader,
In the town of Grand Springs, Colorado, a devastating summer storm sets off a string of events that changes the lives of the residents forever….
Welcome to Mills & Boon exciting new digital serial, 36 Hours! In this thirty-six part serial share the stories of the residents of Grand Springs, Colorado, in the wake of a deadly storm.
With the power knocked out and mudslides washing over the roads, the town is plunged into darkness and the residents are forced to face their biggest fears—and find love against all odds.
Each week features a new story written by a variety of bestselling authors like Susan Mallery and Sharon Sala. The stories are published in three segments, on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and the first segment of every three-part book is free, so you can get caught up in the mystery and drama of Grand Springs. And you can get to know a new set of characters every week. You can read just one, but as the lives and stories of each intertwine in surprising ways, you’ll want to read them all!
Join Mills & Boon E every week as we bring you excitement, mystery, fun and romance in 36 Hours!
Happy reading!
About the Author
MARY LYNN BAXTER has written over forty books. She is now retired, and instead of creating romance and mystery in her head, she reads others who do. Her love of reading has never diminished, nor has her love for working out at the gym. Her latest passion, however, is beading flatware in her home. While her life away from the computer is certainly different, it is nonetheless fulfilling.
Lightning Strikes Part 3
Mary Lynn Baxter
www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)
Contents
Chapter Nineteen (#uc840e1cb-118e-5c08-a0f1-8070af567552)
Chapter Twenty (#u7e1fe5fe-3198-544e-b83b-1a8cd092f79e)
Chapter Twenty-One (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Two (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Three (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Four (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Five (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Six (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Seven (#litres_trial_promo)
Chapter Twenty-Eight (#litres_trial_promo)
Things are really heating up at Vanderbilt Memorial, despite the steady cold rain outside. Amanda and Noah can’t seem to keep their hands off each other. That’s not going to go over well with Amanda’s boyfriend, Gordon, especially after he just proposed! Amanda hasn’t accepted, but she hasn’t said no, either. She has a choice to make. Gordon, the steady loving one, or Noah, her true desire who might up and leave again, breaking her heart once again. Amanda isn’t ready to forgive Noah just yet…and Noah isn’t ready to ’fess up to where he’s been after walking out on her all those months ago. But their problems aren’t the only ones. Karen’s daughter is still trapped in the cave, due to the mudslide. Noah’s sister called but the static was so bad that he still has no idea if Randi is just a runaway bride or if she’s in true danger. The storm is still raging and only time will tell whose lives will be impacted next….
Chapter Nineteen
Noah Howell’s irritability was high.
The doctor rubbed his hand across his rough cheek and chin, uncomfortable with the itch caused by a long overdue shave. Maybe he ought to take this spare minute allotted him by fate and take care of that problem.
However, first things first: his mother. He needed to talk to Melissa, to let her know he had heard his sister Randi’s voice and that after running away from her own wedding, she was at least alive. He also needed to check on Melissa herself, the feeling of misplaced loyalty beginning to rear its ugly head.
Dammit, he was concerned for his family’s welfare, though he had to admit actions spoke louder than words. Hopefully, Melissa had remained at the inn and not tried to return home in this weather. Grand Springs was having torrential rains, with nonstop thunder and lighting. The power was still out across most of the city and the hospital ER has been crazy. Knowing his mother, she could jump either way. She was one stubborn woman, especially when she thought it would give her leverage over him.
Noah punched out the numbers to Squaw Creek Lodge, where Randi’s wedding was to take place, but the static was so severe that even if he got through, he wouldn’t hear a damn thing.
He slammed his smart phone down, feeling his irritation climb even higher. He had to get a grip on himself or he was bound to make a mistake in surgery, something he couldn’t afford, not at any cost.
Peering down at his hands and seeing that they were shaking did little to improve his disposition. If someone else saw him, doctor or nurse, they would think he was hitting the booze. He was drunk, all right, only not from booze.
Fatigue and anger provided him with a high that booze couldn’t touch. He was walking an emotional tightrope. Any moment, he expected to topple off and crash.
He had managed to let his personal life sneak into his professional one. However, he forced his work to take precedence.
The Collier youngster was first on his rounds.
Laura. A beautiful name for a beautiful girl. And she might not live through the day. Frankly, he was surprised she’d made it this far after such a horrific car accident.
Noah lifted his head, struggling against the rising tide of emotion in his throat. Physical pain and death surrounded him on a daily basis. That he could handle—what he’d been trained to handle. But this emotional tug-of-war going on inside his gut was another matter.
He had thought he’d been strong enough to deal with it. He’d been wrong. Dead wrong. Still, he had no choice but to go forward with his life, with his career. While that all sounded well and good, he didn’t want to go forward, dammit! He wanted to go back to Amanda and take up where they had left off.
“And people in hell want ice water, too, Howell,” he muttered. Only they weren’t going to get it, and neither was he. Amanda had found someone else. His gut twisted at the thought. But he had to face that fact and deal with it.
How? Now that he could put a name with a face actually made it worse. Disgusted with himself, he strode into the bathroom where he began to shave, still surprised he hadn’t been called to surgery, even with Malcom Riley on duty.
Typically, Saturdays weren’t noted for emergencies either in surgery or in the ER. But this Saturday was an exception as the town remained in a blackout crisis. Though at the moment, the rain had slowed, somewhat.
Noah stared at his face in the mirror and would’ve laughed if it hadn’t been so tragic. He looked awful, like he and the bottle were having an affair.
Spitting a wad of cream out of his mouth, he began shaving. Shortly, he ran his fingers over his face and felt better. His hair, however, was a lost cause. It was too long and too unruly, but until this siege ended, he’d have to let that go, something he’d bet Amanda’s new squeeze wouldn’t do.
Why, pretty-boy Gordon looked like he’d just stepped out of GQ. Noah made a noise that bordered on a grunt. Nothing had been out of place, not one stitch of clothing, certainly not one hair on old Gordon’s head. God forbid.
He’d bet Gordon even ironed his underwear.
Another sharp pang hit him. The thought of Amanda doing the things to and with another man that they had shared was threatening to drive him nuts, not to mention the blood-letting in his gut.
Was she going to marry Gordon? Most likely, so Noah had best get used to the idea. Or better yet, he could stop fighting Riley for chief of surgery and go to another hospital. There were plenty who would take him on staff.
No. He’d come back to Grand Springs, to Vanderbilt, and he intended to stay. Somehow, he’d get over Amanda, and if he didn’t—well, he’d have to live with that.
After all, he was the one who had screwed up, the one who had ruined the best thing that had ever happened to him. Some sins you never get over paying for, he reminded himself with brutal honesty.
Still, she wasn’t married yet. Noah brightened at that fact. And he knew Amanda still cared about him, at least sexually. That was a start. He definitely knew which buttons to push to unleash the passion she kept hidden behind that cool, controlled facade.
He hated playing games, though. He had no patience for such foolishness. But after seeing her with another man, he knew he would do most anything to have her. So much for all that bull about his work being his only mistress.
He wanted Amanda so badly he could taste it—taste her.
Noah muttered another curse, then stomped back into the office just in time to see an incoming text on his phone, calling him to ICU, which meant the summons was serious.
He raced out the door, instinct telling him the Collier girl was in big trouble.
* * *
“Suction, please.”
Nurse Beth Randall did as she was told, then looked at the monitor, then back at Noah. “Her blood pressure’s dropping, Noah.”
Noah shouted another order, then went back to work, looking for the bleeding artery. He’d been right. When he’d reached the special care unit, Laura Collier had been at death’s door. She had started to bleed internally.
“Get her upstairs ASAP!” he’d shouted, then trotted alongside the gurney himself.
Now, as he worked fast and furiously to save the girl’s life, he muttered out loud, “Hang on, Laura. Don’t give up.”
“Her pressure’s dropping.”
Noah didn’t know who spoke this time as there was a team helping him. Sweat poured out of every pore in his body. The nurse wiped the moistness off his forehead.
“Increase the suction!” Noah ordered, determined not to lose this girl. He couldn’t, not when her parents were standing outside the glass staring at him, fear mingled with trust.
“Noah, she’s—”
“I found it,” Noah practically shouted. “Clamp.”
“We’re losing her!”
“No, we’re not!” Noah lashed back. “She’s going to make it.”
Noah worked harder, feeling the sweat ooze out of every nerve in his body. “Come on, come on.”
“Noah, she’s gone,” the other surgical nurse said in a sad but calm voice. “I’m sorry.”
“Paddles!” Noah said through clenched lips.
After trying for ten minutes, Noah finally called it. “Time of death…15:42pm.”
Too enraged over his inability to save her and too sick at heart for her parents, Noah kept silent. Without looking at anyone, he turned and strode out of the room.
Minutes later, having changed out of his bloody garments, he walked into the small, private waiting room. Mr. Collier had both arms around his wife, who was sobbing against his chest.
Noah touched them both on the shoulder. When they looked up, he said, “I’m sorry, folks. I did everything I could.”
Mr. Collier merely nodded. Noah sensed he was having difficulty speaking as his Adam’s apple was quivering. For his wife’s sake, he seemed to be holding back his own tears.
“You…did all you could,” he said, after coughing several times.
Mrs. Collier lifted her head, her face pinched with a kind of pain that only those who had lost a child could understand. He’d been down that road….
“Are you…you sure she’s gone, Doctor?” Her chin quivered. “Could…could there be a mistake? I mean—”
Noah shook his head, a lump in his own throat preventing him from speaking. Then, after swallowing hard, he said, “No, there’s no mistake.”
“I see,” she said in a breaking voice. “Then our precious baby is truly with the Lord.”
“That’s a beautiful thought, Mrs. Collier.”
“Thanks…thanks again, Doctor, for all you did.”
“I’m sorry it wasn’t enough,” he responded, averting his gaze away from the torment in the mother’s eyes. That was when he saw her.
Amanda stood on the threshold, staring at him.
* * *
No doctor who was worth his salt liked to lose a patient. Amanda took it personally, which made the loss a double whammy. Now, as she watched Noah, she saw a reflection of herself. To him, his failure seemed magnified, the in-your-face kind that slaps you around. Because he was the ultimate control freak and perfectionist combined, it hit him harder than most.
To his credit, though, he hadn’t lost many patients. In fact, they could probably be counted on one hand. Still, one was too many, especially if it was someone who had her entire life ahead of her, such as Laura Collier.
Having to tell the family further magnified the tragedy. That was why when she heard that Noah had lost the girl on the operating table, she hadn’t even stopped to consider her actions.
She was considering them now, as she saw the bleak frustration in his eyes. She questioned her own sanity. Noah wouldn’t want her sympathy. He was the last person she needed to console. He was the last person she needed to be around, for God’s sake.
She had just come from having lunch with a man who loved her and who had proposed to her. Gordon would never leave her like Noah did. Though she hadn’t said yes to Gordon, Amanda intended to, which made seeking out Noah more dangerous than trying to run on a layer of thin ice.
What had she been thinking? She hadn’t. That was the problem. What must he be thinking? Something she didn’t want him to, that was for sure. So what was the answer? Turn her butt around and go back to ER where she belonged and where she should never have left.
She swung around.
“Amanda.”
The low, guttural sound of his voice froze her in place, though she didn’t turn back around. She waited, her mind clamoring with the knowledge she was making a big mistake. Only after he reached her did she make a move.
He followed her, though neither said a word. Once in the hall, she began walking. He matched her step-by-step until she stopped and stared up at him. “Look, Noah—”
It happened so fast that she couldn’t have prevented it even if she’d had warning. Making a feral sound, he grabbed her by the arm, then with his free hand opened the door nearest them, which happened to be a linen closet, and pushed her inside.
“What?”
“Shh, don’t talk.”
“But—”
This time his lips cut off her words as they slanted over hers with unerring and hot accuracy.
For a horrified moment, Amanda was too stunned to react. Taking advantage of that weakness, he delved his tongue into her mouth. She squirmed and tried to turn her head, but to no avail. Her head and back merely clashed with the solidity of the wall behind her.
Using her inability to go anywhere as an added advantage, his fingers strayed to the exposed column of her throat. She jerked her lips from beneath his.
“Noah—” she cried, her breathing laboring along with her heart, “this is…crazy.”
“Crazy or not, we both want it.”
“No.”
“Yes,” he ground out, dipping his hand inside her blouse.
The room spun. She had to stop him, she told herself, but she didn’t have the strength or the ammunition, not when he was touching her like this. Besides, her body was betraying her, the softness of her blouse giving way to allow his hand to have freedom to probe, to roam at will.
“You want me. Admit it,” he whispered.
“Noah—”
He ignored his name that came out on a sob, too busy lifting her hand to her breasts, then covering that hand with one of his own.
Oh, God! Amanda felt as if all the air had been sucked from her body.
“Now, can you deny it?” he rasped. “Your nipples are betraying you.”
“Please—” she begged, but for what she didn’t know.
“Please what? Please touch you here? And here?” His voice had taken on a feverish pitch.
He shoved back her coat, then placed his fingers at the top of her blouse and yanked. Buttons popped, then pinged on the floor, freeing her breasts and stomach.
She cried out in protest, but it failed to deter his hands and lips from seeking the bare, heated flesh. Trembling all over, she fought the emotions rising inside her, knowing now she’d already lost the battle.
She ached to give in, especially when his breath mingled with hers at the same time a hand ran down her leg and lifted her skirt.
Her eyes fluttered shut as he continued to tease, to nibble at her lips, feeling confident that he was in control of this sexual game.
But she knew he was not without his own vulnerabilities, that much of his so-called control had underpinnings of clay. Like hers, his senses were boiling, and only when he was inside her would he be satisfied.
And he didn’t let up. He continued to torment them both, thrusting his hips against hers. She felt his arousal hard and full when he began moving, rubbing…
The movement was like a sudden, static shock. Their groans became one as she stopped fighting, giving in to the needs invading her body. He’d won. On fire, and throwing caution to the wind, she imprisoned his tongue in her mouth and sucked.
“Amanda!” he groaned later.
It was in that moment she felt his fingers nudge her legs apart.
Chapter Twenty
“Has anyone heard from Dr. Sloane? Have they found her daughter yet?”
Amanda shook her head at her friend, Doris, then said, “No, and I’m worried, too, even though I haven’t tried to call her.”
“You probably wouldn’t have gotten through,” Nurse Liz Roberts said.
Saturday afternoon’s pace in ER remained slow, despite the fact that the rain continued, though not with the same vengeance as the night before. Still, no one was holding their breath, as at any time a new string of emergencies could erupt.
For now, most of the ER staff, in addition to Doris, were in the lounge having some much-needed refreshments.
“You’re right about that,” Amanda added, “though I can’t believe Victoria hasn’t been rescued by now.”
“Well, she hasn’t.”
All eyes turned and watched as Jerry strode into the room, a smile on his wide, clownlike face. Amanda tried not to concentrate on the skin that hung under his neck like a second chin.
Why hadn’t she noticed that before? If he had been a woman, she mused, he would’ve had plastic surgery. Suddenly angry at her inane meandering, Amanda blurted out, “How do you know she hasn’t been rescued from the cave?” During the night, Karen had gotten a call that her daughter had slipped into a newly-formed cave, created by the mudslides.
“I heard it on the radio just now.” Jerry headed straight for the candy machine. When he’d punched in the number, he turned back around. “Actually, it’s the talk of the town.”
“Gosh, how awful,” Liz said. “I wish there was something we could do.” She made a face. “Karen is part of our extended family, and there’s nothing we can do for her.”
“I know,” Amanda put in. “And like you, I feel so helpless.”
“She does have Cassidy to lean on,” Doris said, dipping into her bag of potato chips, then crunching loudly.
“Don’t be too sure about that,” Liz said in a frank tone. “He’s never been thrilled with this job or the hours.”
“Let’s not get off on their private lives, okay?” Amanda didn’t want to sound like a saint, yet she wasn’t about to gossip about a cohort and her marital problems.
“Besides,” she added, “I can’t imagine them not pulling together in a crisis of this magnitude. My God, their child’s life is in jeopardy.”
“You’re right,” Liz replied, slightly red-faced. “I guess I’m being too judgmental. It’s just that Karen is such a nice person, and I want all the best for her.”
“We all do,” Doris said.
As if he were feeling left out, Jerry chimed in, changing the subject. “The missing Sloane kid’s not the only one who’s making the news.”
Amanda stiffened. “Oh? You haven’t by chance heard anything about Randi Howell, have you?”
“Nope.” Jerry rubbed his burred head. “But that’s right—she’s missing, too. Cut out before the ‘I do’s.’”
Amanda shot him a sharp glance. “I guess that’s one way of putting it.”
Jerry shrugged. “Well, it’s the truth, or at least that’s the story going around.”
“Maybe, maybe not,” Amanda said, again uncomfortable discussing hospital personnel or their families. Where Noah was concerned, that doubled. When she thought about him and what had almost taken place between them in the linen closet, she literally panicked.
“Surely Noah knows something by now,” Doris said. “I should make a mental note to ask him.”
“All I can say is that I hope Randi’s all right.” Amanda walked to the window, fighting off the desire to leave the hospital and never come back. That was how disjointed and distraught she was. Noah’s unexpected come-on to her had jerked a knot in her life that she couldn’t seem to untie.
“So do you want to know what else I heard?” Jerry asked, biting into a Milky Way candy bar. “Or don’t you?”
Amanda wanted to tell him it wasn’t nice to talk with his mouth full, but she didn’t. It appeared that everyone and everything was wearing on her nerves. She should tread more carefully.
“Yes, yes, tell us,” Doris said. “We’re waiting with bated breath.”
“Yeah, right,” Jerry responded in a sullen tone.
Doris beckoned with her free hand; the other one was still in the bag of chips. “No, really, I’m listening. Spill your guts.”
“Actually, it’s no big deal,” Jerry said. “Anyone know Paige Summers?”
“I do,” Liz said, “though not personally. A friend of mine works with her. Don’t tell me something bad’s happened to her.”
“I heard she got stuck in an elevator last night.”
Doris shuddered. “Better her than me. Man, I’d have freaked out.”
“Me, too,” Amanda said, turning and moving away from the window. “Was she alone?”
Jerry took another bite of the candy and chomped on it. “Nope, or at least that’s what the announcer led me to believe.”
Amanda watched him, thinking he looked a bit like a cow chewing its cud.
“All I know,” Liz said on a sigh, “is that terrible things are happening to good people. What gets me is there doesn’t seem to be an end in sight, unless the rain does wash us away.”
“Heaven forbid, don’t even think like that,” Doris said.
“I wish that’s all we had to worry about,” Jerry muttered darkly. “My family’s stumbling around in the dark. They got caught without candles.”
“I’m sure yours is not the only one who’s in the same dire straits.”
Following Amanda’s words, the room fell silent. She stared at the clock and noticed that time seemed to be limping along. If only she could sneak home for a while, maybe she could get a better perspective on things, on what was happening inside her. Right now, her thoughts, her body, were obsessed with Noah.
And to think, he might be married to someone else as Dora had suggested earlier. Her heart rebelled. Surely, if that were the case, he wouldn’t have initiated that fiasco in the closet, touched her like he had.
When it came to Noah, what did she know? At one time, she would have sworn that she knew him better than he knew himself.
She almost laughed out loud. Boy, had she been fooled. Like Jerry had said about Randi, Noah had also “cut out.” Where he’d gone and what he’d done remained top secret.
Well, forget him.
She wouldn’t be used again. Unfortunately, she already had been. If he hadn’t pulled back, she would have let him make love to her in that closet—on the floor, against the wall, anywhere. It wouldn’t have mattered.
Thank God she’d come to her senses, because it mattered now.
“Are you okay?” Doris asked.
Everyone was looking at her. “Who, me?”
“Yes, you,” Doris said in a droll tone. “You were making a sound like you were in pain.”
“Don’t pay any attention to me,” Amanda said. “I’m just pooped.”
“Aren’t we all,” Liz said, pinching the bridge of her nose. “By the way, where’s Bethany? She’s been rather scarce lately.”
Doris raised her hand. “I know.”
“So, spit it out,” Jerry said. “If there’s some secret to getting out of this hellhole, Lord, do I wanna know it.”
“What would you do that’s so important?” Doris asked.
Jerry threw her a wicked grin. “Find me a willing woman and do some serious fornicating.”
“You’re sick, Jerry,” Doris said.
This time Jerry glared at her. “Thanks, sweetie. I’ll say something nice about you sometime.”
“If you two are going to behave like children,” Amanda remarked in a weary tone, “I’ll have to treat you as such.”
“Sorry,” Doris said.
But she wasn’t, Amanda knew, noticing the mischievous twinkle in Doris’s eye. She loved giving Jerry a hard time. And he gave it back, tit for tat.
“So where is Bethany?” Liz asked.
“With that preemie, the one the teenager had.” Doris wadded up the chip bag and tossed it in the garbage. “She’s smitten with that infant.”
“Well, it’s time she came back to her bailiwick,” Amanda said. “When you return to the desk, Jerry, call Beth.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Speaking of calling, I can’t believe you guys haven’t been screamed for.” Doris stared up at the clock. “How long’s it been?”
“Fifteen minutes on the dot,” Jerry said. “That’s a mother of a miracle.”
“What’s a mother of a miracle?”
They all swung around and stared as Noah walked through the door. Instantly, Amanda stiffened, then averted her gaze. But that quick motion hadn’t stopped her from first soaking up his image. He looked hard, so disgustingly male that every cell in her body responded, rendering her weak all over.
“That we haven’t been called back to the salt mines,” Jerry said.
“I’m surprised about that, too,” Noah said, walking to the coffeepot and helping himself to a large cupful.
“How’re things in OR, Noah?” Liz asked, filling the short silence that ensued.
It was as though everyone sensed the strain between her and Noah. If they only knew the half of it. But that wasn’t going to happen, Amanda reminded herself fiercely. The main reason being, she wasn’t going to let Noah take advantage of her again. If it was the last thing she did, she would stay out of his way.
Her insurance was to tell Gordon she’d take him up on his offer to back her in private practice. She had begun making plans. That should keep her busy and out of trouble.
Gordon’s proposal of marriage, however, was another matter.
“Holding its own,” Noah said, his tone grim.
Amanda forced herself back to the moment, though she had lost the gist of the ongoing conversation.
“I’m sorry about the Collier girl,” Doris put in. “Kids nowadays think they’re going to live forever. That’s why they don’t think they need health insurance.”
Ignoring Doris’s prattle, Amanda found herself unintentionally watching Noah, admitting that it was hard to keep her eyes off him. She saw immediately that the Collier girl’s death was still working on his psyche. He seemed coiled and ready to pounce, making him appear bigger, rougher and more dangerous.
“Amanda?” Jerry whistled. “You on another planet, or what?”
“Sorry,” she said, not having realized she’d been spoken to. “What did you say?”
“We’re headed back.”
“I’m coming with you.”
“Amanda.”
Noah’s voice stopped her. Reluctantly, she twisted around. “What?”
“Could you hang around a minute?” His eyes gleamed with stubbornness. “I’d like to talk to you.”
Dammit, he knew exactly what he was doing. He knew she would be less likely to turn him down in front of the others than if they had been alone. He was right. She didn’t want to give the gossip mill any more fodder.
She nodded, but she wasn’t happy. Her blood felt icy in her veins, telling her that she couldn’t afford to be alone with him again.
“I really should get back.”
“It won’t take but a minute, I promise.”
“All right.” Her tone was anything but gracious, which drew raised eyebrows from the staff.
Then, as if realizing they were unwanted participants, they scurried out the door. Amanda knew she’d get grilled later by Doris. Too bad. She’d take the Fifth in a heartbeat. Not even her best friend must know that Noah had touched her, much less anything else.
“Thanks for staying.”
His voice was gruff, and his eyes were teeming with an emotion she couldn’t identify. Nonetheless, it forced her breath out in an uneven spurt. “What do you want?”
“I knew this wasn’t going to be easy.”
Her eyes flashed. “Let’s cut to the chase, shall we?”
“Why the hell are you so uptight?”
“I’m not uptight.”
“You sure could’ve fooled me. And stop making me the bad guy here. You wanted me as much as I wanted you.”
Amanda’s face flamed with unexpected color.
“Dammit, Amanda, I don’t want to fight with you. That’s not what this is all about.”
She wished he wouldn’t look at her with such intense thoroughness, especially since she still couldn’t read what lurked behind those gorgeous eyes.
“Just what is it about, then?” she asked in a dull tone.
“Us.”
“I told you, there is no us.”
“I know better, and so do you.”
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