The Doctor's Private Visit

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The Doctor's Private Visit Page 1

by Altonya Washington




  Tiberius wiped the towel across his face, then slid it over his neck and down over his bare chest. The white cotton towel hungrily soaked up the sweat rolling down his body.

  As though she were in a daze, Capri walked up behind him and reached out. Tiberius jerked around when he felt the towel being pulled from his hands. The furrow on his brow vanished when he saw Capri. Speechless, his eyes followed her every move.

  Capri completed the task of wiping the sweat away from Tiberius’s body. Her dark stare followed the towel’s path over the chiseled expanse of his back. Gathering her robe from around her ankles, she stepped in front of Tiberius and knelt before him. She favored his wide chest with the same smooth strokes as his back.

  Satisfied with the results, she set the towel aside and began pressing soft kisses to the bulging pectorals that contracted beneath her touch. As her soft lips trailed downward across his solid abs, Tiberius leaned his head back and groaned. When Capri’s soft caress continued its path downward, Tiberius’s eyes snapped open and he grabbed her upper arms.

  “Capri, do you know what you’re doing?” he asked, his voice raspy with desire.

  Capri’s doe-eyed gaze was unwavering. “I want you. I want to make love with you.”

  “I hope you mean that. I’m not in the mood to be teased right now.”

  “I’m not teasing, I want this,” she said softly, sincerely.

  “I only want you to do this if you’re certain,” Tiberius warned her. He didn’t want her having any doubts.

  Capri kept her dark gaze focused on his warm brown one. Untying her robe’s belt, she pushed the silky material away from her body. “I’m certain.”

  Books by AlTonya Washington

  Kimani Romance

  A Lover’s Pretense

  A Lover’s Mask

  Pride and Consequence

  Rival’s Desire

  Hudsons Crossing

  The Doctor’s Private Visit

  Kimani Arabesque

  Remember Love

  Guarded Love

  Finding Love Again

  Love Scheme

  A Lover’s Dream

  ALTONYA WASHINGTON

  has been a published romance novelist for six years. Her novel Finding Love Again won the RT Book Reviews Reviewer’s Choice Award for Best Multicultural Romance in 2004. In addition to teaching a community college course entitled Writing the Romance Novel, she works as a Senior Library Assistant and resides in North Carolina. AlTonya released her fifteenth novel, Hudsons Crossing, in March 2009.

  ALTONYA WASHINGTON

  The Doctor’s Private Visit

  To those who’ve dared to flirt on the most

  delicious sides of temptation.

  Dear Reader,

  The Doctor’s Private Visit is a provocative story that I hope you’ll find as pleasurable to read as it was for me to write. Photographer Capri Timmons and Dr. Tiberius Evans rival their Miami setting for heat and allure.

  While crafting this tale, the word temptation frequently came to mind. And it’s the sheer force of temptation between Capri and Tiberius that relentlessly beckons them to give in to all their delicious and unexpected desires.

  Feel free to let me know your thoughts on this latest effort. E-mail me at [email protected], and visit my Web site at www.lovealtonya.com to keep up on all my projects, including the sequel to last year’s Kimani Romance release, Hudsons Crossing.

  Be blessed,

  AlTonya

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Epilogue

  Chapter 1

  Capri Timmons lay back on the gray suede couch and threw her shapely legs across the arm. She toyed with a lock of her curly, baby-fine hair, sighed, and tossed about impatiently.

  Roderick Jackson glanced up but tried to keep his attention on the glossy proof sheet lying on his desk. When Capri uttered another heavy sigh, Rod rolled his eyes toward her and shook his head. Tightening his grip on the huge magnifying glass in his hand, he tried once more to concentrate.

  Capri began humming a monotonous tune that sounded like a cat gurgling in a bucket of water. Rod gave up all hope of reviewing the proof sheet. He glared across his office at the petite caramel-colored beauty lounging on his sofa. “Something on your mind, Cappy?”

  “Uh-uh,” Capri denied absently.

  The look in Rod’s slanting coal-black eyes clearly stated he wasn’t buying it. Since he knew the strikingly beautiful thirty-one-year-old well, he waited for her to speak up.

  “In the meantime,” he murmured, reaching for the portfolio lying on the opposite end of the sofa, “make yourself useful.” He tossed the leather-bound tote to Capri. “Jerard’s proofs,” he explained when she studied him. “We need to pick his best shots for the Miami Hoods cover.”

  Capri’s face glossed over with a bright expression. “I know he’s on pins and needles about this,” she sighed, referring to her newest colleague who had just scored his first photo spread.

  Capri dove into the task and an easy silence settled between her and Roderick for the better part of thirty minutes. Scanning the gorgeous shots of some of Miami’s most elaborate dwellings, however, Capri couldn’t help but throw thought to her current issue.

  “I don’t think I’ll be much help here, Rod. These places are…incredible, all of them.”

  Low chuckling rose from the other side of the bright, chic office. “That’s why I didn’t bother taking them home. Kiva would have a fit drooling over the damn things.” He paused to make a notation regarding one of Capri’s shots. “All I’d hear is how she’d give her left arm to have a place like that,” he continued.

  Capri shared in the chuckling. “I know how she feels. And that’s in spite of the fact that you guys have your own palace already,” she was referring to Rod and Kiva’s home in Braxton Hills, one of Miami’s most impressive neighborhoods.

  “Oh yeah.” Rod’s attention was still quite focused on the work before him, “I remember Ki saying something about your thoughts on Miami life.”

  “Mmm, did she tell you everything I said?” Capri’s gaze was focused on Jerard’s shots as she spoke.

  “Just about,” he said as he slanted her a wicked glance. “When you’ve got lots of drama-queen friends, sharing can’t be helped, you know?” A grin crossed his handsome face when Capri tossed a wad of paper at his forehead.

  Capri propped herself up on her elbows as she lay flat on her stomach. “It’s just starting to wear me out mentally, you know? Living and working here. I guess I’m just craving a little distance in between.”

  Rod scratched his dark, short hair and nodded. “Yeah, I can understand that, but I hope you don’t start to think about leaving Miami permanently.”

  Capri sat up in the middle of the sofa and tucked her legs beneath her. “No, no, that’s not it,” she firmly assured Rod. “But I could see myself selling the condo for something…”

  “Less city,” Rod finished for her.

  “Crazy, huh?”

  Rod shrugged. “I expect nothin’ less from a drama queen.”

  After a moment, the two old friends burst into peals of laughter. Of cou
rse, Capri couldn’t totally deny that she had a wonderful home. Working for Grant and Shields Photography studio had earned both her and Rod respect in their field, not to mention incomes that would raise more than a few eyebrows.

  Rod was one of the head directors of photography. Capri had interned for him when she was in college and he’d just been hired at the studio. The two became fast friends and a romance had never sparked between them because Rod always thought of Capri as a little sister. In turn, Capri loved him like the brother she’d missed out on having as the youngest of four girls.

  “Let me see if I can get this straight.” Rod sighed, when his laughter had somewhat subsided. “You’re tired of city-living in condos and now you want a house?”

  Capri trailed her fingers through her curly bob and winced. “I hadn’t really thought of a house per se, just something a bit off the beaten track.” Her dark gaze shimmered then. “A home of my own would be…wonderful.”

  Rod leaned back in his chair and stroked the light beard that shadowed his face. “I just might be able to help.”

  Capri’s eyes widened like a child’s in a toy store. “You could?”

  “Now, don’t get all excited, but I know a doctor who rents out homes surrounding his estate.”

  Impressed, Capri’s arched brows rose slightly. “How do you know somebody like that?”

  Rod shrugged. “We grew up together.”

  “Uh-huh,” Capri grunted suspiciously, knowing there was a lot more to the simple statement. “What? Does he own the entire neighborhood or something?”

  “No, Cappy,” Rod assured her, chuckling softly, “but, his grandmother just about had the whole thing under her thumb. She died and left the main house and four homes surrounding it to her grandson. Think you might be interested if I could set it up?”

  Capri rested back on her heels and mulled over the offer. She thought about the pros and cons of living in a large fast-paced city, as compared to having her own private oasis miles away. She recalled Rod saying this doctor friend of his rented. While not having ownership of the property she’d reside in gave her pause, she believed she could set that aside for the moment. A change of pace, scenery and a bit more breathing room for a year or so could possibly do wonders for her current outlook.

  “All right folks, if that’s all, we’ll see each other for next week’s meeting on Wednesday at two o’clock sharp.” Dr. Oscar Addison stood before his obstetrics staff and watched his doctors and nurses vacate the conference room amidst the familiar rumble of laughter and chatter.

  Nurses Avra Vickers and Sandy Weisbeck cornered Dr. Tiberius Evans before he left through the room’s side entrance.

  “We’re still waiting for confirmation on that invite to our housewarming, Tibe.”

  “Right.” Tiberius sighed, his mouth curving in an apologetic smile as he remembered the date and the fact that he’d been hoping it would pass without the nurses recalling the invitation.

  Avra rolled her eyes toward Sandy. “I can see a ‘sorry ladies but I’m afraid…’ coming on.”

  Sandy added, “What’s going on now, Tibe? Don’t you realize we haven’t hung out together in…damn, way too long?”

  Tiberius rested a hand across his white coat. “I’ve just got a lot going on around here, that’s all.”

  “Well!” Sandy pretended to be exasperated as she clapped a hand to her cheek. “Av, I do believe I’m offended. Is the good doctor saying that we don’t have a lot going on around here, too?”

  “Mmm-hmm, I do believe that’s what he’s trying to say, Sand.” Avra’s lashes fluttered.

  “Don’t do this to me, y’all.”

  “Then just come.”

  “In every way.” Wicked intent flooded Sandy’s brown eyes with more sparkle.

  Tiberius could only chuckle at their determination.

  “Seriously, Tibe, you know that we’ll show you a fantastic time.”

  Sandy mimicked her roommate’s pleading expression. “Remember our last housewarming?”

  Nodding, Tiberius rubbed his fingers through his silky curls and envisioned the long-ago romp with the two uninhibited RNs.

  “Will you settle for me saying I’ll see what I can do?”

  Avra clapped her hands while Sandy clenched a triumphant fist. They decided to leave before he turned them down flat.

  “Oh, to be young again,” Oscar Addison sang from his position at the head of the long table across the room.

  Grinning, Tiberius slapped his palm against the side of his portfolio and turned back toward his older colleague. “It’s not all it’s cracked up to be, Doc.”

  “Is that cynicism I hear in your voice, young man?”

  Tiberius laughed out loud. “More than a little bit.”

  Oscar smoothed the back of his hand across the beard shadowing his dark face. “Aren’t you a little young to be so jaded?”

  “I don’t think you can ever be too young to latch on to good sense, Doc.”

  Curious now, Oscar Addison perched on one corner of the pine table with its rows of stout brass-toned lamps. “No, you’re never too young for good sense, but I’d have to disagree as it relates to using all your considerable charms on a very willing opposite sex.”

  “Well I’d say you’ve got quite a bit of charm left yourself.” Tiberius noted, grinning at the doctor he’d known since his early days of residency at Kelly Memorial.

  Dr. Oscar Addison had a charismatic demeanor which was as effective on his patients as it was on his staff. In spite of the love and admiration he drew from people like water from a well, he handled it all with a humbleness that Tiberius thoroughly respected.

  “You’re damn right, and I use it every chance I get.” Oscar began to scratch at the gray just starting to sprinkle his beard. “Used it more when I had youth to back it up.”

  Tiberius opted for a spot on the other end of the table. “I don’t think age plays such a huge factor. Look at Dr. T—he’s still kickin’ and he’s way older than you.”

  Oscar nodded, his expression brightening at the thought of his beloved mentor Alan Thomas. “There’s exceptions to every rule. Speaking of Dr. T, there’s something I wanted to run past you.”

  Tiberius set his portfolio on the table and waited. “Somethin’ wrong?”

  “Have you heard about Alan’s retirement?” Oscar pulled the black-rimmed spectacles from his face and eased them inside the front pocket of the denim shirt beneath his coat.

  “I was hoping it was a joke.” Tiberius shrugged. “But at seventy-one, I guess the man’s got a right.”

  “I think so, but before Dr. Alan Thomas leaves, we want to send him off in style and give him a retirement gala he won’t forget.”

  Tiberius nodded slowly. “Excellent idea.”

  “Glad you think so,” Oscar said as he pushed off the table. “We want you in charge of the memories portion of the event.”

  “The…what?”

  “Memories, Tiberius. Walking down memory lane?” Oscar added for clarification. “You can choose your own committee, handle it with your own style, but we want to see something that commemorates the man’s career. Perhaps a memory book presented to him at the end of the night, filled with little notes of well-wishes signed by the staff, past colleagues and what have you. Maybe you could combine that with some sort of roast.”

  “Good ideas, Doc. But do you really want me overseeing this?”

  “That’s why it has to be you.” Oscar chuckled through the words. “You’ll get the job done in a professional manner just to be rid of it and you won’t waste time bickering over petty nonsense.”

  Tiberius’s handsome face was a study in shock as he listened to Oscar Addison discussing ideas for meetings, choosing the committee and everything else involved in planning the surprise.

  “I’d hope you’ll have chosen your team by the first meeting. But the thing’s scheduled several months out, so there’s time.” Grabbing his paperwork, Oscar clapped Tiberius’s shoulder. �
�Perk up, I’m sure any of the nurses would be pleased to work on the project with you.”

  Tiberius responded with a knowing smirk. “Thanks, Doc.”

  Roderick smiled and nodded while holding his office door open for Capri. “Cappy, this is Avery Erickson. Ave, this is Capri Timmons.”

  Avery’s dark eyes lit up as they appraised Capri’s face and petite, curvaceous form. “Damn, man, you mean to tell me you get to work with this lady every day?” he questioned in playful disbelief.

  Rod chuckled. “I do.”

  Avery shook his head and turned to Capri. Taking her by the hand, he stared right into her doe eyes. “It’s nice to meet you, Ms. Timmons, and let me just say that you are incredibly beautiful.”

  Capri smiled and cut her gaze to Rod who was enjoying seeing her experience a rare case of embarrassment. “Thank you, but please call me Capri.”

  Avery dipped his head. “And please call me Avery.”

  Rod rolled his eyes at his friend and sighed. “Man, please stop this act. You know you work around hundreds of beautiful women all the time.”

  Avery never took his eyes from Capri. “Never any this beautiful,” he replied.

  The last thing Capri wanted to do was laugh in the face of the man who’d been chosen to do a series of spreads for the studio preparing a new men’s fragrance. Instead, she smiled and coolly extracted her hand from Avery’s grasp. Walking closer to Rod’s desk, she sat down and gave him a look that demanded he start the meeting immediately.

  “Well, Avery,” Rod called, rubbing his hands together, “I’m glad you find Capri so appealing, since she’s the photographer in charge of the shoot.”

  “You’re kidding,” Avery blurted, taking a seat and propping his face in his palm.

 

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