today?”
“Pretty good, actually.”
The doctor slipped her chart back into the slot on the side of the bed. “I’m glad to hear it. I’d like you to spend another couple of hours with us so that we can continue to monitor you. But if you feel up to it, and everything looks good, I’m prepared to discharge you tonight.”
After shaking her hand and getting an autograph for her daughter, the doctor exited the room and the nurse stuck her head back inside.
“Ms. Kelley, I wanted to check with you about another visitor who’d like to say hello.”
Quick to protect Dianna against reporters looking to get the first sound bite on the accident, Ellen replied, “She isn’t ready to make a statement yet.”
The nurse shook her head. “Oh no, this man says he’s a firefighter, not a reporter.”
Dianna’s heart practically stopped beating. “A firefighter?”
“Swear to God he’s one of the best-looking guys I’ve ever seen,” the young nurse said innocently.
“What’s his name?” Ellen asked, impatience ringing out in her tone.
“Oh, sorry, his name is Sam MacKenzie.” The woman looked nervous now. “Should I tell him you don’t feel well, Ms. Kelley?”
Dianna’s heart and mind rebelled at the thought of seeing him exactly at the same time that she realized how badly she wanted to see him.
How badly she needed to see him.
Having the nurse tell him to go away would be the easiest thing to do. The smartest thing to do.
It didn’t take a genius to know that a reunion with Sam wasn’t a good idea. He’d been the reason for her greatest heartache, and regardless of the lies she’d told herself, the truth was, it had taken her years to get over him.
But Sam had obviously come all this way to see her and she knew Ellen wouldn’t let up until she explained.
Most important, though, she refused to act like a coward.
“I’d be happy to see him,” she lied to the nurse, a false smile from her arsenal of pretend smiles plastered on her face.
“Send him in.”
CHAPTER FIVE
THANK GOD, Sam thought as he stood in the doorway, she’s alive .
Relief at seeing her sitting up in bed flooded through him a millisecond before his next thought caught him unaware.
She’s even more beautiful than the day I met her .
Even with a bruise on her cheekbone, even ten years older, she was still the most stunning woman he’d ever seen. In a matter of seconds, he took in the details of her face, her bright green eyes, her soft red lips, her high cheekbones, and her long, graceful neck.
The beautiful girl he’d been in love with had been transformed into a hell of a woman.
In the time they’d been apart, he’d never allowed himself to give in to the ridiculously powerful urge to watch her show, but there had been times he’d been unable to avoid seeing West Coast Update when he was waiting in the airport or sitting in a bar drinking a beer with the guys.
Six years after she’d left Tahoe, he still remembered the day he saw her interviewing a pop star. Her smile had been so big, so wide, her eyes so shiny and bright, he felt like he’d been shot straight through the heart.
All along, he’d assumed that she’d been torn to pieces by losing the baby, because that’s how he’d felt. As the camera zoomed in on her thousand-watt smile, he suddenly realized a baby would have held her back from the flashy life she’d really wanted.
Staring at her now on the hospital bed, he supposed he shouldn’t be surprised to see her look so glossy, so polished, but he’d always assumed she looked that way because of the cameras, or the lights, or that maybe the TV screen was distorting the truth.
In his head she had always been the same Dianna, the pretty girl who’d changed his world with a smile. But this woman was blonder, slicker, a thousand times more sophisticated-looking than the girl he used to know. People in hospitals never looked good. And yet, somehow, she did.
Dianna was in the middle of saying
Sonya Sones
Jackie Barrett
T.J. Bennett
Peggy Moreland
J. W. v. Goethe
Sandra Robbins
Reforming the Viscount
Erlend Loe
Robert Sheckley
John C. McManus