"You old coot," Claudia said. "Now don't go taking all the credit for yourself. This was God's doing, not yours, and don't you forget it."
Warren winked at Ellen over the top of Claudia's head and she knew he wasn't about to share credit for Sam and Annie's happiness with anyone, not even the Almighty.
Ellen cleared her throat. "I am very happy to report that Sarah Joy Butler joined us at 1:28 p.m. She weighs seven pounds two ounces and measures nineteen inches long. She has her mother's curly hair and her father's nose and right now I think it's safe to say she also has everyone's heart in the palm of her little hand."
"She's healthy?" Warren asked in a suspiciously husky voice.
"Very," Ellen said.
"And Annie," Susan said, "she's okay?"
"She did great."
Two of Sam's sisters looked at each other and grinned. "He fainted, didn't he," the one named Marie asked. "Sam never did like the sight of blood."
Ellen laughed. "I'm sorry to disappoint you but your brother maintained consciousness throughout the delivery."
Laughter and high fives and lots of happy tears filled the room as the two families celebrated the new addition.
They didn't even notice when Ellen slipped out the door, which was, of course, as it should be. She had done her job, helping Annie bring little Sarah Joy into the world but now the rest of it was up to them. She leaned against the wall and let her emotions seek their level once again. You would think she would be used to it by now but each time she saw a tiny head crowning, each time she heard a newborn baby greet the world, she was filled once again with a sense of wonder that carried her through until the next delivery.
But sometimes, like today with Annie and Sam, it was even more wondrous. To see them with their baby girl, to be privileged to witness the happiness on their faces and on the faces of the people who loved them –
"Are you crying again, Markowitz?"
She looked up through teary eyes as Hall approached. He was fresh from the delivery room himself, wearing the look of wonder she knew all too well.
"Boy or girl?" she asked him. "I know Aileen was looking for a boy."
"Aileen got her wish," he said, leaning against the wall next to her. He smelled faintly of Betadine and that made her smile. "Nine pounds, six ounces with lungs like his mother." She heard him drawn in a breath. "Annie?" he asked.
"A beautiful little girl," Ellen said as those damn tears flooded down her cheeks and splashed onto her scrubs. "Sarah Joy Butler." She provided the vital statistics and tried very hard not to notice that his own eyes filled with tears. "I have never seen so many people in a waiting room in my life."
"The Galloways stick together," Hall said.
"Looks like the Butlers do too." Lucky Annie, she thought. Lucky Sam.
Lucky, lucky Sarah.
They were quiet for a while, then Ellen stifled a yawn. "I think I'm going to call it a day," she said.
He looked at her and for the first time she didn't see Annie Butler reflected in his eyes. She didn't know if it meant anything at all but she was open to the possibility. "How about we grab some lunch at Cappy's?"
"I'd like that," she said then smiled at him. "I'd like it a lot."
They watched for a moment as Sarah Joy Butler took her place in the nursery next to Baby Boy Whitcomb. They held the hopes and fears and dreams of their parents tight in those little fists. A smile from either one of them could make a grown man cry.
She didn't know what Hall was thinking but she could guess. "Another day, another miracle," she said, pretending to dust off her hands. "All in a day's work around General Hospital."
He laughed and turned away from the window of sleeping dreams. "Ain't it the truth, Doc," he said. "Ain't it the truth."
"Cappy's in fifteen minutes?"
"Sounds great," said Hall. "I'll meet you in the parking lot."
Ellen was smiling as she hurried back to her office to change into street clothes.
It wasn't a miracle, but it would do for now.
==The End==
Page down for excerpts from The Marrying Man, I Do, I Do . . . Again, and At Last from Barbara Bretton
The Marrying Man - a novella
Chapter One
Catherine O'Leary Zaslow knew twenty-seven ways to kill a man and on that morning before Thanksgiving she contemplated a twenty-eighth. If looks could kill, her agent would be six feet under.
"I must be crazy," she announced as Max took her coat then handed it to his assistant. "I don't know how I let you convince me to come all the way down to Manhattan for this meeting. This is the day before Thanksgiving, Max. Normal people are home baking pies, not taking meetings."
"This was the only day Riley McKendrick could make it," Max said. "We had to grab him when we could."
Cat took a seat at the long conference table. "So who is this Riley McKendrick, the uncrowned king of England?"
"Better than that," said Max, taking a seat opposite her. "McKendrick's the best time management expert in the country. I know how you feel about organization, Catherine, but the time has come--"
"If you think I'm letting one of those schedule-loving lunatics into my house so he can alphabetize my spices and color-code the toilet tissue, you're crazy."
"Think how successful you'd be if you could actually find your computer in that rat-trap office of yours. I've been to your house, Catherine. I'm surprised you can find your children."
"You mind your business, Max, and I'll mind mine." What difference did it make if she had the organizational abilities of the average fruit fly? Everyone was clean, fed, and happy. If more was required in raising children, she couldn't imagine what it was. Besides, her kids weren't any of Max's business, her books were. And these days her mystery novels were number one on bestseller lists across the country.
"Frank Fairbairn's production has doubled since he hired a time management specialist to whip him into shape." Frank Fairbairn was her closest competition in the murder mystery field. Max looked downright wistful at the thought of double production.
"Frank Fairbairn is a man," Cat pointed out, choosing to ignore Max's statement about a time-management specialist. "His wife keeps his world running smoothly."
"Listen, if a wife'll get you back on track, I'll find you a wife."
"Jenny and I do just fine on our own." Jenny was her housekeeper, confidante, and partner in chaos.
"I know Jenny," Max reminded her. "That's not a very convincing argument. The woman can't make scrambled eggs without consulting the Joy of Cooking."
"I know why you're doing this," she said, tapping her index finger against the table top. "Last year it was a personal trainer, this year it's a time management consultant. You're too trendy for your own good, Max."
"Trends come and trends go," Max intoned, "but an organized life is forever."
She glanced at her watch. "What time was he supposed to be here?"
Max shifted uncomfortably. "Ten o'clock."
"It's ten-fifteen," she observed. "Sounds like the world's best time management consultant needs to have his credentials updated."
"This is Manhattan, Cat. He probably got stuck in traffic."
Cat rose then walked around to the other side of the table and placed a quick kiss atop Max's elegant, perfectly barbered head. "Dinner's at four o'clock tomorrow, Max. We'll pick you up at the train station at three-fifteen."
"Catherine, Catherine, Catherine! See reason, please. An hour with Riley McKendrick will change your life forever."
"Sure, Max," she said. "That and a magic lantern with a genie inside. No nearsighted weenie with an obsession for clocks and calendars is going to get close enough to--" She stopped, a frown creasing her forehead. Max's smile was incandescent. His eyes sparkled. He'd seen reason!
Her heart soared with delight until she realized Max was looking right past her toward the door.
"McKendrick!" Max said in a booming, hail-fellow-well-met voice he reserved for contract negoti
ations and Elite models. "We were about to send out a search party."
"Sorry," drawled a deep male voice behind her. "Flat tire on East 54th Street."
The number-crunching clockwatcher. She barely suppressed a groan. If she hadn't stopped to kiss Max on the head, she'd be safely in the elevator and on her way home.
No big deal. She'd turn, she'd smile politely at the poor dweeb in the doorway, and then excuse herself with dispatch.
She turned around.
She looked at him.
And her entire life seemed to pass before her eyes.
That was no dweeb. That was the Marlboro Man - in all of his untamed, uncivilized Wild West glory.
Her jaw dropped open and for a moment she wondered if she'd need professional help to get it closed.
The guy wore artfully faded jeans, a cream-colored sweater, and a leather jacket that looked as if it had a few stories to tell. Her gaze slid across his torso, down his long legs, to the boots. And not the kind of boots you'd find on some ersatz urban cowboy. These were the real thing, tough, worn, sexy as hell.
Same as the man who wore them. He was at least six-four and most of that was muscle. Hard, well-developed muscles, some of them in places she'd believed only Greek statues had muscles. Dark hair, green eyes, your basic Adonis. For a moment she considered swooning but thought better of it. This was the 90s, after all, and modern women were supposed to take things like amazing male pulchritude in stride.
He was the kind of guy you saw on the cover of a paperback historical romance, one of those perfect specimens that came complete with a bosomy blond companion clutching at his manly chest.
That couldn't be the clockwatcher. Maybe he really was a cover model and that was why he was looming in Max's doorway. If she could breathe at all, she'd breathe a sigh of relief. Max handled a few big name romance authors and he probably had a say in who posed for the covers. Riley McKendrick must be standing behind the Marlboro Man, hidden behind the cowboy's broad shoulders. You could hide a redwood tree behind those shoulders.
"Cat." Max's voice broke into her reverie. "I want you to meet Riley McKendrick."
She waited for a small, plain man to peer around the cowboy's shoulder but none did. It can't be, she thought, heartbeat accelerating. It's just not possible!
The cowboy smiled down at her. This was the man who watched clocks for a living? Men who looked like this guy did usually spent more time looking in the mirror. His teeth were white, shiny, and symmetrical. Instead of money, the tooth fairy had probably left porcelain veneers under his pillow.
"C. O. Lowe," McKendrick said, as her hand was swallowed up in his. "I know your books."
She nodded, aware that he'd said he knew her books, not that he either read and/or liked them.
"My name's Cat," she managed, wishing she had more experience dealing with cowboy Adonises, "and I'm not interested in getting organized." Blunt but true.
"That's what they all say."
"I'm sure they do," she murmured as reason made a delayed return, "but let me say it again: I don't know what Max promised you, but there's no deal. Not with me."
Max popped up between them, a referee in Armani. "Coffee," he said in an unnaturally cheerful voice. "That's what we need. Coffee." He looked toward McKendrick. "How do you take it?"
Talk about a loaded question. A voluptuous shiver rose up from the soles of her feet and she wondered if anyone would notice if she poured a pitcher of iced water over her head.
"Black," said the cowboy. "No sugar."
"Cat?" Max asked.
"With cream," Cat mumbled. "Two sugars. Decaf."
"Decaf?" asked McKendrick.
"What's wrong with decaf?" she asked.
"Most people drink coffee for the caffeine."
"I drink it for the taste."
"No taste in decaf."
"That's why the cream and sugar."
"That's illogical."
"So sue me."
Max mumbled something then vanished in search of refreshments. Cat considered the wisdom of following hard on his heels but the cowboy barred the way.
"So what exactly do you have against organization?" McKendrick asked, bracing an arm against the doorjamb.
In for a penny, in for a pound. "Organization is anathema to the creative spirit." Anathema, she thought with a grin. Let him chew on that for a while.
He didn't bat an eye. Was it possible, brawn and brains? Dangerous combination. "I've seen your office," he said. "Your creative spirit better come with a road map."
"What do you mean, you've seen my office?"
"Max sent me pictures."
"Max will need a road map of the intensive care ward if he doesn't stop doing things like that."
"Don't blame Max." The guy had a smile that could light up a movie screen. "I asked him for one."
"Someone should have asked me."
"Someone should've sent in a wrecking crew."
Max hustled back in, balancing three mugs of coffee and a plate of bagels. "Now this is what I call synergy. Two people at the top of their respective fields, coming together for mutual benefit."
"Sorry, pal." McKendrick shook his head. "No deal."
Cat glared at him. "What do you mean, there's no deal? That's not for you to say." She turned to Max. "There's no deal."
"Don't be hasty," Max said, looking from Cat to McKendrick. "We can--"
"Forget it, Max," McKendrick broke in. "She doesn't want my help.""
"Hold on just a minute!" Cat's voice rose in annoyance. "I don't need your help." A small but vital difference.
"Yes, you do," said Max, setting the coffee mugs and bagels down on the table. "You need a lot of help, Cat."
She was aware of McKendrick's eyes on her and she had to remind herself it was professional interest on his part, not personal. Not that she wanted it to be personal but there was something thrilling about being the focus of such undivided male attention.
Cat forced a laugh. "You're becoming very melodramatic, Max. Next thing I know you'll tell me this is a planned intervention for the hopelessly disorganized. It just so happens that I thrive on chaos."
"Your last two manuscripts were late."
"Jack had a tonsillectomy when I was finishing The Kindergarten Caper and we found termites right at the climax of Dead Cowboys Never Talk." She smiled sweetly at McKendrick. "No offense."
"None taken." His grin told her he knew otherwise.
She met Max's eyes. "A tonsillectomy is an act of God, right?"
"Only when it's your tonsillectomy."
"It was my son's. That's the same thing, isn't it?"
"Not to Global Publishing."
Max sighed longingly. "I know one author who finished up a book longhand in a storm cellar while a tornado ripped apart his house."
McKendrick helped himself to a mug of coffee. "I know of a writer who broke both arms and still made his deadline."
You would, she thought. "Those people need serious therapy. No one is that disciplined." Or that demented.
"Wrong," said McKendrick. "A hell of a lot of people are that disciplined." He paused for effect. "And that organized."
She shuddered. "What a frightening thought."
"Want to hear a really frightening thought?" Max volunteered, handing her a mug of coffee. "No more extensions on your deadline, Catherine. I know chaos and you're heading straight for it."
"I love you dearly, Max, but you're a bachelor. Your idea of chaos is misplacing your copy of the Sunday Times Book Review." She put down the coffee mug and gathered up her belongings. "Thanksgiving's tomorrow and I have a million things to do. Stuffing, turnips, the pies...."
"Tomorrow's Thanksgiving?" asked McKendrick.
"Didn't those cardboard pilgrims in the lobby tell you something?" Cat turned to Max. Some time management specialist. He didn't even know tomorrow was a national holiday.
Max cleared his throat. "Riley's been in Tokyo the last few months," he said, as if that could e
xplain away McKendrick's appalling lapse of memory.
"Pleasure?" asked Cat.
"Business," said McKendrick.
Max lowered his voice conspiratorially. "The Japanese government," he said. "This guy taught the Japanese something about organization."
"Wow," said Cat, who wasn't the slightest bit impressed.
She could almost see the lightbulb flash on over Max's head as he turned to McKendrick. "You'll be on your own tomorrow, Riley?"
"Looks like," said McKendrick.
Oh no, Cat thought. Don't do this, Max. Not with him....
"How long's it been since you had a homemade Thanksgiving dinner?" Max continued.
Was it her imagination or did a look of sadness flicker across McKendrick's movie star face? "Couldn't tell you, Max."
"That long?" Max asked.
"That long," said McKendrick.
Don't pay any attention to them. McKendrick's a grown man. This is a big city. Somewhere out there is a turkey with his name on it and he's smart enough to find it.
Max was a rat and a traitor. He knew she was a sucker for strays, especially around the holidays, and he was doing his best to manipulate her into issuing an invitation.
She'd choke before she uttered anything that even remotely resembled a dinner invitiation.
"Flannery's on East 47th has a pretty good spread," Max went on, "or you might want to try Stein's Deli near Rock Center. They have a restaurant in the back and the best turkey in the city."
"Thought I might drive on up to Boston," the cowboy drawled. "Celebrate Thanksgiving where it started."
"It started in Plymouth," Max said. "Why don't you--"
"--come to my house." It sounded like her voice but she had the insane urge to look over her shoulder for her Evil Twin.
Max beamed at her. Why not? She'd played right into his hands like the lily-livered, soft-hearted dope she was. Could she take it back? She struggled to find a way to erase her foolhardy words.
She needn't have bothered. McKendrick wasn't interested.
"Thanks for the invitation," he said. He probably practiced that sexy drawl into a tape recorder every night. "I'm not much for family celebrations."
A Soft Place to Fall (Shelter Rock Cove) Page 30