Part 3 (1/2)

”d.a.m.n it, Rena, the guest speaker can start without you. Or they can just wait and eat cookies for a few extra minutes.”

h.e.l.l. Great way to calm her, by fighting. He mentally thumped himself.

She laughed.

Laughed? Which stunned the fight right out of him.

Soft, breathless, her laughs tripped out with a huskiness that would have been s.e.xy any other time but

was too weak for his comfort level.

”d.a.m.n, J.T. We even fight about who's going to take care of whom.”

She had him there.

Eyelids blinking slowly, holding closed longer every time, she stared back at him. He reached to take her

hand from her thigh. Her bracelets slid, chimed, two sliding from her limp wrist to tink, tink on the floor of the car.

”Come on, Rena, stay awake.”

Sirens wailed in the distance. About d.a.m.ned time.

She squeezed his hand without speaking, but her eyes stayed open longer at a stretch as she fought unconsciousness. He stared back, held her hand and willed her awake, sirens growing louder, closer. Pain glinted in her eyes, radiated from her tightening grip around his hand. His fingers went numb, but no way would he tell her, instead kept holding while praying the sirens would move faster.

Her gaze fell to their linked hands. Her grip slackened. ”Oh G.o.d, J.T., I'm sorry. I didn't mean to cut off your circulation like that.”

”No problem.” He needed to keep her distracted, talking. ”Reminds me of when you were in labor with Chris and transition hit you so hard and fast during the drive to the hospital. I was trying to recall all the coaching stuff I should be doing. Except I was scared as h.e.l.l I'd be delivering the kid on the side of the road. Remember that?”

”Yeah, I do.” Her grip firmed again. Not painfully this time, but holding on in a way she hadn't done in a long time.

Emergency vehicles squealed to a stop beside them. Doors flung open. He didn't want to let go. G.o.d, he'd missed her needing him. What a d.a.m.n selfish thought.

She frowned. ”J.T., I really have to tell you-”

A paramedic jogged toward them. ”Hold the thought, ma'am. Sir, please move so we can get her out faster.”

J.T. backed away. ”We'll talk later.” He would promise her anything, even one of those conversations she craved. ”Hang on and we'll talk all you want soon.”

The paramedic chanted a litany of encouragement to Rena while crawling through the pa.s.senger window to sit beside her. He placed a C-shaped collar to stabilize her neck, draped her with a protective blanket.

Then noise ensued, grinding and groaning of metal as the Jaws of Life pried her free. His wife's every wince sliced through him during the endless extraction.

Of course, he already knew just how difficult it was to cut Rena out of anywhere. h.e.l.l, he'd been trying to cut her out of his life for months without a lick of luck.

Christos Price hated whatever dorky unlucky star he'd been born under. It totally sucked being doomed to a life of geekdom.

Elbow hooked out the open window of his mother's car, Chris finished clearing the gate guard's station leading into Charleston Air Force Base housing. At least with his friends Shelby Dawson and John Murdoch he could be himself without worrying about being cool.

And he was anything but cool.

Chris accelerated past the never-ending pines and oaks lining the street. He could wear double his regular wardrobe of baggy cargo shorts, open b.u.t.ton-down s.h.i.+rt over a T-s.h.i.+rt, and the extra layers still wouldn't be enough to pad his bony body.

What guy wanted to be the ”spitting image” of his short, scrawny mama? Geez. Scrawny wasn't a problem for girls, but it really blew monkey chunks for guys. Especially when all the other dudes in high school were so freaking big.

He was tired of hearing that five foot eight was a respectable height for a sixteen-year-old and that he would hit a growth spurt soon. Easy enough for his dad to say from three inches over six feet tall with more muscles than a linebacker.

Then his dad would ask him to work out together. Like wrapping a few muscles around his spindly arms would help. Can't make something out of nothing. And that's exactly what he was.

Nothing.

Clicking the turn signal, Chris rounded the corner toward Shelby's house. At least he wasn't getting pounded at school anymore. His friend John Murdoch kept the bigger guys off him, the ones who called him a marching-band wimp just because he played the trumpet. Murdoch played the saxophone and n.o.body called him a geek. Of course he was tall, a senior, tall, a wrestler, tall and had a girlfriend.

Shelby.

G.o.d, she was so hot. Nice. Totally hung up on Murdoch.

And, hey, had he mentioned the guy was tall?

Except Murdoch was also a friend, which meant staying away from his girl. Not that she would have noticed a dweeb like him that way.

But man, he noticed her.

Her corner lot came closer. Shelby sat cross-legged on a quilt in the side yard playing with her little brother while Murdoch sprawled asleep. She didn't see him yet, and Murdoch was out for the count, so Chris allowed himself the rare moment to just look at her.

Her silky black hair swished over her shoulder in a ponytail. And-oh yeah-her bikini bathing-suit top with jean shorts showcased her belly-b.u.t.ton ring. Suh-weet.

He pulled into her driveway. Wanted to pull her right to him and kiss her. Of course, he was more likely to grow ten inches by the end of the day.

”Hey, Chris!” Her greeting floated through the open window. ”We're gonna order pizza in a minute. Can you stay?”

Even her voice was hot.

”Yeah, sure. Let me dig out my CDs first.” And will away the evidence of exactly how hot he found her. Layered clothes weren't helping him much today on a number of counts.