Tags:
Fiction,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Family Life,
Military,
Danger,
Courage,
safety,
Domestic Life,
clean romance,
heartwarming,
poachers,
Support,
rehabilitating,
Adirondack Woods,
Dark Memories,
Bronx,
Orphaned Bear Cub,
Conservation Officer,
Peaceful World,
Tragic Past Events,
Compassion
you very much. Would you like some tea?”
He shook his head and sat on her side chair, his size dwarfing it. “Are you ready for tomorrow?”
She sank onto the couch. “I have to be, right?”
“Right.”
“Or you’ll shoot Button.”
He regarded her gravely. “Wish you wouldn’t call her that.”
She hugged a pillow. “Why?”
“Because it makes her sound like a pet.” Liam leaned forward and the outdoorsy, masculine smell of him filled her senses. Normally, being alone with any man this late at night would terrify her. Instead, she felt alive and jittery, her stomach fluttering.
“If you pass tomorrow—” he continued.
“When I pass tomorrow,” she interrupted, lifting her chin despite her nerves.
He studied her, his strong face handsome. “When you pass tomorrow, you need to start thinking like a rehabilitator. If you treat the bear like a house pet, I’ll have to remove her.”
The thought knocked the breath out of her like ice water. “Button is going to make it here.”
She pictured the nearly finished enclosure, how the sides facing the house had been boarded up, the back open save for the fence. Would she only ever glimpse the bear through the feeding slot? How would she let Button know she wasn’t alone? It was important to have support after being attacked.
Liam nodded at her laptop. “Are you studying now?”
She nodded. “I’m not getting the material,” she admitted.
“Want me to quiz you?” Jinx had jumped into his lap and was kneading his stomach, purring like a race-car engine. He didn’t seem to notice the holes she’d punctured in his shirt as he petted her. When she turned and began shredding his pants, he pushed her tail from his face.
“That’s okay. I’m fine on my own.” He was acting kind, yet he was still a threat to Button if things didn’t work out. How to focus on the test with so many warring thoughts?
“So do you know whether or not all incoming wildlife should be treated with antibiotics to ward off infection?” he pressed, the fur in front of his mouth fluttering with every word.
Jinx’s purring filled the room as Vivie wrestled with the question. She’d seen it on the practice test but couldn’t recall the answer, so she went with her gut.
“Of course. It’s better to be proactive.” She tucked her jiggling foot underneath her opposite leg.
Liam pulled a protesting Jinx away and shook his head. “Wrong. Antibiotics are only effective against bacterial disease and some types of parasites, but not viruses. Plus, they have side effects. Misuse of antibiotics can cause development of resistant bacteria. Oral antibiotics can destroy delicate gut microbes, leading to diarrhea. Some types of antibiotics can cause fatal enteritis in some species. Antibiotic treatment should be given only after careful examination of an animal’s condition and consultation with a veterinarian.”
When he sat back, a smug look on his face, she remembered to close her mouth. “Do you have this whole manual memorized?”
Liam studied his hands, a wry flip to the corner of his mouth. “I have a photographic memory.”
Her eyes narrowed. “So you probably only had to read this once to know it, right?”
He nodded, abashed.
“Some people have it so easy,” she mumbled to herself. He had looks and brains, yet somehow she couldn’t resent him for it. The opposite actually, she thought, a blush creeping up her neck as she took in his strong jaw, dimpled chin and the width of his shoulders in his close-fitting T-shirt. He must have taken off his uniform shirt in the SUV...
“Why don’t you give your eyes a rest—I’ll read the questions and multiple-choice answers to you.”
Her traitorous heart leaped. That sounded good...too good...
“Why would you do that?”
His soulful eyes met into hers. “Because despite what you think, I’m on your side.”
She peered at him, sideways. “I want to believe that.”
“Do you think I want to put down the
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