Out of the Shadows

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Out of the Shadows Page 12

by Loree Lough


  He’d invited them to dinner. He could only hope they’d forgotten, or that Gus would rather head home to catch that TV show he’d been raving about during the examination.

  Gus furrowed his brow. “You said I should take NSAIDs…?”

  Grateful for even the slight change of subject, Wade said, “Aspirin, ibuprofen—anti-inflammatory and fever-reducing products.”

  “Doctors,” Gus said on a laugh. “You guys could save us all a lot of time, y’know, if you’d just speak English to start with.”

  The man had a point, and Wade admitted it.

  “So what’s this I hear about dinner in Little Italy?”

  Patrice’s response was to wrap both hands around the strap of her purse, flexing her fingers on its buckle. “You sure you’re up for it, Dad?”

  “Yeah, Gus,” Wade said, “it’s been a long, hard day. We can take a rain check if you’re—”

  “You guys are kiddin’, right?” He looked from his daughter to Wade and back again.

  Patrice and Wade exchanged an uncomfortable glance.

  “Who knows when I’ll get another chance to wolf down some of Chiaparelli’s gnocchi?”

  “What does that mean?” Patrice said, laughing. “It isn’t like this is our last chance to have dinner in Little Italy. It’s only a twenty-minute drive from our house, so—”

  “Yeah, well, there’s a lot riding on those test results.”

  She stood abruptly and raised her hands, like someone being held up at gunpoint. “I won’t listen to that kind of talk. You’re going to be fine. You have to be fine—” she sat again, looking embarrassed at her outburst “—because I am not training another chess partner!”

  Nice save, Wade told her mentally.

  Sort of. She might have fooled Gus with that whole giggle-and-tease routine of hers, but you’re not foolin’ me. Wade had heard the tremor in her voice, had seen the way her hands trembled, too. The rapid rise and fall of her chest told him her pulse and heart rates had increased at the mere thought of losing her dad.

  If he had it in his power, Wade would snap his fingers and fix everything that was wrong in her life, starting with Gus. But since he didn’t, the least he could do was try to steer the conversation in a more positive direction. “So, how do you guys want to work this?”

  “Work what?” she asked him.

  “The trip to Chiaparelli’s—who’s driving?”

  Wade wondered how much longer the purse strap would hold up under all that nervous fidgeting; he knew why he didn’t want to go to dinner, but what was Patrice’s reason?

  “Need the van—” Gus slapped the arms of his chair “—for Ol’ Bessie, so I guess you’d better ride with us.”

  “That’d be great if I didn’t have surgery first thing in the morning. How ’bout I just follow you over there?”

  “Sounds good to me,” Patrice said, smiling stiffly.

  She’d been so relaxed, completely at ease with him during dinner at her house. Could Gus’s uncertain condition be the cause of her jitters? Or had she been thinking what he’d been thinking—that this…whatever it was, developing between them, wasn’t such a good idea?

  He hoped not. And that made no sense. No sense at all.

  Wade stood, hung his lab coat on the tree behind his desk and shrugged into his sports jacket. “Ready?” he said, holding the door.

  Gus rolled toward the door. “I was born ready, so let’s blow this pop stand!”

  As Patrice walked beside her father to the elevator, Wade followed close behind, telling himself this had to be the last time he saw her on a personal basis. Had to be. Once he had his—what had he called it?—nyawkee, Patrice would drive him home. And that would be it. Period. End of story. Because it wouldn’t be fair to string out this…this whatever it was, any longer than necessary.

  Wouldn’t be fair?

  Fair to whom?

  Gus grumbled about the weather, asked Patrice about her day; she told him about a kid who’d nearly pulled Mort’s leg off, then said something about a puppet show for the kids. Before Wade knew it, he heard Gus say, “Well, this is our floor.”

  Wade had been so deep in thought, he barely noticed they’d entered the parking garage, let alone that they were standing at the first-floor elevator. “I’m on three,” he said, hitting the up button. “I’ll meet you over there, okay?”

  Gus nodded. “Park out front. I’ll spring for valet parking.”

  “You don’t have to—”

  “Hey, it’s only fair, since you’re paying for dinner.” He wiggled his eyebrows. “Besides,” he added, straight-faced, “I have a favor to ask you.”

  Wade waited to hear what it was.

  “You up for hoistin’ an old cripple into the restaurant?”

  Patrice gasped. “Dad, really!”

  “What,” he said, laughing, “you think maybe the Politically Correct Police will slap cuffs on me for saying ‘cripple’?” He spread his arms as if to say look at me! “If I don’t have a problem with the word, why should anybody else?”

  “Chiaparelli’s doesn’t have wheelchair access,” Patrice explained to Wade.

  He squeezed Gus’s shoulder as half a dozen clichés flitted through his mind: When life gives you lemons, make lemonade; make the best of a bad situation; don’t cry over spilt milk…. He had to give the guy credit, because self-pity was the last thing Gus wanted.

  “Okay,” Wade said, “but I think it’s only fair to warn you…I had Caesar salad for lunch.”

  Smirking mischievously, Gus made a rolling motion with his hands. “And that’s relevant because…?”

  “Well,” he said, looking around conspiratorially, “you might not get arrested for saying ‘cripple,’ but I’ll bet my garlic breath violates some kind of law.” He fanned a hand in front of his face.

  Gus rolled himself over to his van. “I like this guy, Treecie,” he said over his shoulder.

  Wade found himself following, then, without so much as a second thought, he helped Gus into the passenger seat.

  Funny thing, but Wade liked Wade in the presence of these people. It made no sense, really, feeling so comfortable with this middle-aged, wheelchair-bound guy and his pretty daughter, considering he’d spent so few hours in their company. But there it was, easy to read as the graffiti on the garage’s concrete.

  “I like him, too,” she said, “even if he is a doctor.”

  Wade waited until Patrice walked around to the driver’s side of the van to ask Gus, “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  Putting a hand beside his mouth, he whispered, “Last guy who broke her heart was a doctor.” After a quick check to make sure Patrice couldn’t hear, he quickly added, “Matter of fact, so was the one before that.”

  Wade wasn’t too proud that members of his profession had hurt her. Worse still, she’d fallen hard enough for the bozos that they could hurt her in the first place.

  But what did it matter if he was her first love or not, when after tonight, they’d only be together professionally…if at all?

  “See you in a few minutes,” Patrice said, sliding in behind the steering wheel.

  As Gus slammed the passenger door, Wade winked and saluted, then headed for his car.

  Winked and saluted! Confused by his own spontaneous behavior, he shook his head. The longer he was around her, the more he behaved like a knobby-kneed youngster, and frankly, Wade didn’t know if he liked the feeling; if this “kid stuff” was a sign he’d started back-sliding to boyhood, was there a chance his acne would come back? Grinning at the thought, he headed back to the elevator.

  During the drive from Elliott General to High Street, Wade pondered his peculiar actions. On the one hand, he couldn’t deny that Patrice’s optimism and enthusiasm were contagious; being around her made him feel energetic, younger than he had in years. Amazing in itself, he’d felt a hundred years old, emotionally, since before he could vote. And the way she looked at him, as if he’d invented the airplane and earned
a hero’s medal and won a Pulitzer, well, what man wouldn’t like being around a woman like that!

  On the other hand, she scared him witless, because though he’d dated several women over the years, not one had managed to get him thinking the C word, let alone thinking about saying it out loud. Commitment wasn’t his style. Or so he’d told himself since before he could vote….

  When he pulled up behind the van in front of the restaurant and watched her climb out of the driver’s seat with a peppy little hop, his ears went hot and his hands got cold. If he didn’t know better, he’d say he was coming down with something.

  Something like love?

  Scrubbing both hands over his face, he groaned. Get a grip, man, before—

  Patrice knocked gently on the hood of his car. He looked up, saw her wave as she passed in front of him. And while she was busy helping Gus out of the van, an image flashed in his mind: Patrice, in a rocking chair, humming nursery rhymes to their baby girl. Their baby girl!

  He shook his head. If you know what’s good for you—and her—you’ll cut it out, and pronto!

  Handing his car keys to the valet, Wade joined Patrice and Gus on the sidewalk. They both looked slightly self-conscious, as if the prospect of getting Gus inside might be more traumatic for him than for Gus. After giving the situation a quick once-over, Wade decided the door was plenty wide enough to accommodate the wheelchair. Grabbing its handles, he rolled Gus nearer the porch. Patrice held the door open as Wade backed the chair up the steps.

  The hostess guided them to their table, sliding a chair aside to make room for Gus. They were barely settled when a resonant baritone called, “Patrice? Patrice McKenzie, is that you?”

  Her blush told Wade she’d recognized the man’s voice; the fact that she didn’t turn around told him the guy was probably one of the doctors Gus had mentioned.

  A tall, swarthy man in his early thirties stepped up to the table. “Patrice,” he said, “it really is you.”

  She pressed her fingertips to her temples for a moment before looking into his face. “John. What a surprise.”

  If John noticed that her voice had lost every bit of its beautiful musicality, it didn’t show. The way he stood, ramrod straight and hair slicked back, reminded Wade of a silent movie actor.

  Crouching beside her chair, John shook Gus’s hand. “Good to see you, too, sir.”

  Patrice’s dad grunted and pumped John’s arm up and down. If he kept that up, Wade thought, water might just start to trickle from John’s fingertips!

  “This place is a little, uh, unposh for the likes of you, isn’t it, John?”

  As if he hadn’t heard Gus’s sarcasm, John nodded toward a table near the back wall. “Birthday party.”

  Gus peered around him at the merrymakers. “You with the blonde or the brunette?” Then he turned to Wade. “See,” he whispered loudly, pointing with his thumb, “this guy left Treecie for a blonde.” He said it matter-of-factly, as if ordering an iced tea from the waitress.

  It was almost imperceptible the way John’s lips thinned and his eyes narrowed. Almost.

  Smiling, Patrice turned slightly in her chair. “Whose birthday?”

  Said a bit too brightly, Wade thought.

  John smiled.

  More like a sneer, Wade decided.

  “You remember Jenna?”

  “Of course” was her snappy retort. “Your youngest sister.”

  Who could blame her for sounding piqued, Wade thought; the guy’s tone made it clear he didn’t think Patrice was smart enough to remember.

  “Jenna’s the brunette,” John said to Gus.

  Patrice tilted her head. “My. I haven’t seen her in… How long has it been?”

  Her eyes were glittering, as if she was getting ready to let it fly with both barrels. A decent person would’ve warned John to back off. But Wade wasn’t feeling particularly charitable toward a guy who had hurt Patrice.

  “So how is Jenna?” Patrice asked.

  Said like any woman scorned, Wade mused…with just the right amount of icy bitterness in her voice.

  “It’s been nearly five years,” John said, feigning hurt that she hadn’t remembered. “Say, here’s an idea. Why don’t you join us, and ask her yourself.”

  “We were just about to order,” she said.

  John looked at Wade then, as if seeing him for the first time. “Who’s your…friend?”

  Laughing, Gus said, “Sorry, seems we clean forgot our manners.” He slapped Wade’s forearm. “This good-lookin’ young fella here is Dr. Wade Cameron.” He slid a disapproving glance to John. “Wade, meet John Travers. He’s a doctor, too.”

  John’s hand shot across the table. “Good to meet you,” he said as Wade shook it.

  “Same here.” Liar, he told himself.

  John adjusted the knot of his navy silk tie. “What’s your specialty?” He tugged at his French cuffs, revealing diamond-studded cuff links.

  Who wore those things anymore? Wade wondered. “Cardiology,” he said. “Yours?”

  “Plastic surgery.”

  Wonder how much work he’s done on himself? “I see.”

  “Well, John,” Gus put in, “we don’t want to keep you from your little party. You have a good time, y’hear? And do wish the birthday girl many happy returns.” With that, he picked up his menu and motioned for Wade and Patrice to do the same.

  But John wasn’t so easily dismissed. He pulled out Patrice’s chair and took her hand. “Seriously, you have to come say hello. Mom would love to see you again, and you know Jenna always thought the world of you….”

  She did it with grace and ladylike charm, but there was no mistaking her mood: “I think not,” she said, sliding her hand from his grasp.

  If they hadn’t been in a crowded restaurant, Wade would have hugged her for that!

  “Well, then. Yes.” John cleared his throat. “See you later.”

  Or not, Wade thought as the man walked stiffly away.

  “Jerk,” Gus muttered.

  “Da-a-ad,” Patrice whispered. “It was a long, long time ago. Let bygones be bygones, okay? I have.”

  “That’s because you’re a better person than I am.”

  “No…it’s because I prayed about it. You know…‘what would Jesus do’?”

  “I think even Jesus would o’ had a hard time bein’ nice to that guy.” He put down his menu. “’Cause for one thing, he’s a jerk.”

  Wade didn’t quite agree with Gus. If John passed up a chance at having Patrice in his life, he wasn’t a jerk. He was a fool.

  “I need to use the ladies’ room,” she said, rising. And grabbing her purse, she looked at Wade. “If the waitress asks what we’d like to drink while I’m gone, will you order me a glass of water with a lemon wedge, please?”

  What was it with this woman? If she put her mind to it, she could probably brand a man with those big brown peepers of hers. She blinked once, twice, luscious lashes dusting her freckled cheeks.

  On second thought, Wade decided, she could brand a man with those eyes even if she didn’t have a mind to. “Uh, sure,” he stammered, “glad to.”

  “Don’t be too long,” Gus cautioned.

  Patrice clutched her purse to her chest and pouted prettily. “Only long enough for you to tell Wade how John Jerk broke my poor widdo heart.” She punctuated her comment with a giggle and left them alone.

  If he were a praying man, Wade would have prayed Gus wouldn’t do that. He didn’t want to hear the details involving Patrice’s feelings for some other guy.

  Unfortunately, the Green-eyed Monster seemed to have taken a nasty bite out of him; picturing her with another man made Wade want to punch the nearest wall. He’d never been jealous over a woman. The fact that he had the feeling now unnerved him, scared him.

  But the bigger problem, as he saw it, wasn’t how he felt, but why, because only one thing could explain it.

  He’d gone and fallen in love with the Monkey Lady.

  Alone in the la
dies’ room, Patrice stood at the mirror, applying lipstick, fussing with her hair and hoping she wouldn’t run into John again before leaving the restaurant. It hadn’t been a messy breakup—because she’d chosen to walk away with her dignity intact. Which might have been easier, if he hadn’t been so honest about his reasons for dumping her.

  He believed her never-ending devotion to Gus was unnatural, unhealthy and, quoting an issue of Psychology Today, called her an “enabler.” “Gus will never be able to live on his own if you don’t quit babying him,” he’d said. To this day, she hadn’t figured out why he’d felt it necessary to add, “Besides, I’m seeing someone new.” She’d asked him to please keep the particulars to himself, yet John felt duty-bound to “fess up”: “She’s the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen, perfect in every way.” Patrice hadn’t needed a Mensa membership to figure out what that meant.

  Staring into the mirror at the scar, Patrice slid her comb back into the outer pocket of her purse and remembered how, when they’d first met, he’d said the scar didn’t matter. That’s what they’d all said…at first. And you believed them, you little ninny. Like the rest, Wade had said it, too. Would there come a time when being seen in public with her would be a burden for him, as well?

  “Say it ain’t so, Lord,” she prayed, looking at the sad-eyed woman in the mirror. “Let him be the one….”

  Rolling her eyes, she sucked in a deep breath, let it out slowly. Get back out there, she told herself, before you drown in self-pity! Raising her chin a notch, she slung her purse over one shoulder and made her way back to the table, determined to make the best of this evening, of every evening she might have with Wade—because who knew when he’d want to put a stop to things?

  You silly twit, she chided. There’s nothing to put a stop to! He’d been the perfect gentleman; hadn’t made a single promise, hadn’t so much as hinted at a future with her. He was a good guy, so his sweet gestures, his kind words, had merely been a result of his basic decency.

  If she’d conduct herself like a grown-up for once, instead of a teenybopper in the throes of a knee-weakening crush, maybe she could avoid looking like a colossal fool a week, a month, six months from now; maybe she could sidestep another shattered heart.

 

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