by Aysel Quinn
Table of Contents
Title Page
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Praise for Aysel Quinn
Dedication
Story
Other Books You Might Enjoy
Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
Physical Therapy
by
Aysel Quinn
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.
Physical Therapy
COPYRIGHT © 2014 by Aysel Quinn
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Contact Information: [email protected]
Cover Art by RJ Morris
The Wild Rose Press, Inc.
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Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com
Publishing History
First Sweetheart Rose Edition, 2014
Digital ISBN 978-1-62830-331-5
Published in the United States of America
Praise for Aysel Quinn
“A fun and fanciful romance in an unexpected context.”
~Janet Enova
Dedication
For Palin
Searing pain crawled through my entire body as I crumpled to the ground, unmindful of the sweat-damp mat crushing into my flesh as I writhed. I was only vaguely aware of the random people hovering over me until one of them, in a staff uniform, pushed down on my shoulder. I thought it was a gentle poke, but I screamed to high heaven as if my arm had been torn out of its socket.
Dizzy and nauseous, I was helped to my feet and led out of the gym to my waiting car, my roommate, Nell, behind the wheel. I hadn’t seen her leave, but I hadn’t seen much at all after the accident. I would never listen to Nell about anything, ever again. Just because she thought it would “bring that Tasha pep back” didn’t give her license to drag me to a gym where she had to know I’d somehow injure myself. So maybe I was a little weak in the muscle area, and maybe I was about as flexible as a flagpole, but what of it?
I was happy being tone-less. Mostly. Thank you, stupid Sean and your stupid new model girlfriend for that mostly. Jackass.
It took Nell three months after Sean dumped me for that conniving Brazilian bimbo to convince me to use her gym guest pass, and one hour for me to dislocate my shoulder and tear two tendons. In yoga class. At least it was that fast-paced yoga with a long name, like Hurtsalotavada, but still. I knew a terrible idea when I heard one, and I should have listened to my gut.
Nell seemed properly remorseful as she drove me to the hospital and stayed with me through the rounds of x-rays and waiting and doctors and waiting and sling-fitting and paying. That one hour of yoga cost me two thousand dollars, two weeks off work due to painkillers, and the promise of more wretched pain in physical therapy. At least I didn’t have to have surgery, but I still wanted to bill Sean.
****
I dreaded going into the bleak-looking medical building and shuffled my feet as I approached the door to the physical therapy suite. As I expected, the waiting area was full of teenage boys and elderlies. Great. The atmosphere of the room was as hostile as I felt inside, no one looking forward to being poked, prodded, and generally made miserable. I filled out the necessary forms, and realized as I reviewed my therapy prescription that recovery demanded my presence here twice a week for two dismal months. I sighed and took a seat to await my doom.
Only a few minutes had passed when a scrubs-clad woman with violent red hair beckoned and practically shoved me into a tiny room, almost empty except for an odd massage table/hospital bed combo, and a giant open cabinet full of labeled drawers.
“Please remove your clothing from the waist up and wear the gown, ties in back.” The woman didn’t even look up from my chart. Rude witch.
She turned to leave and spoke over her shoulder. “Your therapist will knock in five minutes. Please be ready.”
This was going to be as hellish as I had expected. I had learned how to manage my clothes one-handed, but getting my shirt over my bad shoulder was still a challenge. I’d barely thrown on the worn, candy-printed gown before the ominous knock occurred.
“Come in.” I was muttering again, my nerves getting the better of me. I didn’t like pain.
The door creaked open with cringing slowness, and my chart appeared again, this time held in front of the face of a man. A youngish man with a mop of unkempt, brown hair and the body of Adonis. If Adonis shopped at the Gap. I still couldn’t see his face, but his defined muscles were displayed perfectly by simple khakis and a white polo with the clinic logo on it.
I was still staring at his chest when he spoke. I barely heard what he said because the cadence of his voice made me feel like a cake peering upward in rapture as it awaited a blissful stream of molten ganache to cover it.
“Tasha DuPont?” The voice spoke again, and I felt myself sway slightly like a drunkard.
I tried to recover what dignity I had left. “Um, yeah, DuPont, like the appliances. I’m sorry, I didn’t hear you. I’m really nervous right now.”
How true that was. I finally managed to raise my head enough to see his face. Good thing I could blame nerves, because the brown eyes I peered into were making me shake on the inside. He was so gorgeous, and that was a really weak adjective. He’s my therapist? Gah.
I wondered a little why he wasn’t speaking yet. Probably because I was a trembling freak who looked like she was about to fall over. He moved a little then, shrugging his shoulders, and took in a breath to say something.
“No problem. This place isn’t exactly a spa.” He threw a little crooked smile at me, and I felt simultaneously less anxious and more like a moony adolescent. “I’m Ethan Stone, and I’ll be helping you out for the course of your therapy.” He continued before I could even respond. “Looks like you damaged yourself pretty badly. I don’t often see this type of injury in your demographic.”
He looked like he was chuckling, but I got a little mad at the comparison to an old lady. “I was at the gym.” I made some excuse to sound like I was actually not an awkward weirdo.
“Hmm. Usually these tears are common in football or tennis players. You know, the really hardcore sports. Were you playing when this happened?”
I decided to give up. After all, I’d have to get used to this unreal demi-god for the next two months, and he might as well be prepared when I managed to break my leg in the therapy room. I spewed my words like the drunk guy at an office party.
“Okay, yeah, I’m, well, I’m really klutzy. Like, really, really klutzy. I’ve only been to the gym the one time, because I’m perpetually scared of injury, and this time it was in yoga. My friend dragged me, and it just—it hurt so hellishly much. I don’t know what happened, I was just trying to keep up, and then it felt like someone was shooting a flamethrower at my shoulder.”
He looked stunned, brows lifting and mouth hanging open, but he quickly recovered and smiled. “Whoa there, not a problem. You don’t have to be embarrassed; lots of people hurt themselves, and at least you’re aware of your…predispositions. Caution is the first step to avoiding further injury.”
&nbs
p; He nodded his head like a lifeguard reciting the rules of the pool. At least I felt more at ease now. He must have noticed, because he relaxed his posture.
“All right,” he went on, “let’s get down to business. Today, I’m going to assess the extent of your injury, and then we’re going to take it easy with some massage and heat wraps. We’ll save the tough stuff for next time.” He winked at me.
Winked! All the “we” language was making me feel like I wasn’t alone in this awfulness, a trick I’m sure was practiced and used with all patients, but it still worked.
He peered straight into my eyes. “This type of injury requires diligence, so do you think you can commit to your recovery entirely?”
I didn’t need to pause this time. “Definitely. I want this to go away.”
He smiled again. I was pretty sure my body healed a little every time that happened. Some regions certainly felt better.
“Good. Apart from the time we spend here, I’m going to send you home with some exercises and a schedule. You’ll need to follow it exactly if you want to heal properly, but we’ll go over that at the end today. Do you have any questions before I take a look?”
I paused for a moment, attempting to secure an expression of serious contemplation on my face. In reality, I was trying very hard to not question at all. Are your large hands indicative of other largish type things? was not exactly appropriate. I was going to silently shake my head in the negative, but my brain spit out a random cover up. “What did I do to piss off the ginger witch so much?”
The heat of an extreme blush immediately burned through my cheeks, and I covered my face with my palms. “Shoot, I’m so sorry! I don’t know what’s wrong with me right now.”
Instead of the outrage, distaste, or awkward coughing I expected, he burst out laughing. Not a calm chuckle of amusement, but a rambunctious guffaw that sounded at the same time boyish and enthralled. I let one eye peer between two fingers and raised a brow.
“I’m sorry, really. It’s just about damn time somebody called her what she is.” He kept chuckling, so I uncovered the rest of my face.
“Glad to be of service,” I managed.
“I like you, Ms. DuPont; you’re just a little bit saucy. Sorry if that was inappropriate. It’s just refreshing to work with someone not…” He waved his hand back in forth with indecision as he spoke, a wide smile taking over his face.
“Ancient or pubescent?”
“Exactly. Or male. You must have slipped through Sabrina’s clutches.” The smile didn’t wane, and it became infectious.
I found myself grinning back without effort, all nervousness gone. “What do you mean?”
“Sabrina is the ginger witch and she sort of…has a thing for me.” He flashed a tight little smile and shuffled his feet as he looked at the floor. “She tends to filter my clients to avoid competition. I mean, it doesn’t matter, because I’ve already made it very plain she disgusts me, but still. She must have been really rude to you.”
“Yeah, a bit. I guess I must be competition.” Well now, where did that come from?
“Definitely. You’re definitely competition.” He nodded, and something changed in his gaze even though his smile remained fixed.
There were a few seconds of silence, and I began to feel the return of the nerves, although not for the expectation of pain.
He sucked in a breath and shrugged his shoulders as he had before. “Well, I should probably take a look at the injured area to gauge inflammation and assess your range of motion. May I?”
“Have at it.”
He approached me then, and I tensed in anticipation of his touch. He raised a hand and used one finger to draw the neckline of the gown down to expose my shoulder. I still had several nasty looking bruises, but I was strangely not embarrassed by my deformity. Probably because I was still on drugs.
He traced the line of my collarbone around the cuff of my shoulder with two fingers, gently sweeping along my skin. He felt the area for treatment purposes, but my imagination made it seem like a caress. I tried to keep my breathing steady, but it hitched when he circled for the second time.
“Hurt?”
“A little,” I breathed, surprised to discover I wasn’t lying. He withdrew his hand then, and my flesh felt cold with the sudden loss of heat from his palm.
“Sorry about that. There will be some discomfort, but it shouldn’t be too bad. I’ll be quick with the measuring.”
He gently manipulated my arm and rotator cuff as he spoke, and though I gritted my teeth through the pulling and prodding, his soothing voice and faint scent of Old Spice and hand sanitizer sufficiently distracted me from the pain.
“Well, it’s not so bad really, but it’s going to take work to heal the injury without inflicting further strain. Next time, we’ll use the TENS unit to relax the area.”
He turned to rummage through several drawers and retrieved a pile of towels and two small bottles before continuing, “We’re going to have to strengthen your core to support your shoulders, but for now let’s get those muscles relaxed. How’s a massage sound?” He winked again, knowing the answer.
“Anything that doesn’t involve me moving sounds amazing.” I let myself smile at him without holding back, and the bottles slipped through his fingers as he lost his grip.
Hmm. Nah, he couldn’t possibly be interested in me. He was a Greek god and I was a mere mortal, freakishly pale and awkward as hell. Dumped in favor of a South American model. Still, Greek gods were always after mortal women, weren’t they? True, but only the unspeakably gorgeous Helen types who could do yoga successfully and had alien butts of perfection. Bummer for me.
“Slippery,” he muttered, before gesturing for me to hop up on the table. “Lie face down and keep your bad arm down by your side.”
He hesitated, shuffling his feet for a moment, then went on. “Would you feel more comfortable with a nurse present?”
“Who? Ginger witch? I’m sure she’d love that.” I successfully lightened the mood again, and he relented.
“It’d almost be worth it. All right, this may feel cold at first, but it shouldn’t be too bad. Let me know if you’re uncomfortable at all.”
I waited to feel his hands on me, but the stretch of non-contact seemed interminable. He seemed afraid to really touch me, but that was probably my imagination again. It must be the therapist thing. He drew the back of my gown open and undid the ties that held the sleeve on my bad arm, chastely tucking the fabric against my side. I heard the cap of a bottle click open, and I was so focused on waiting for his touch I was entirely unprepared for its reality.
Some sort of spice-scented oil straight from heaven coated his palms, making his flesh feel like satin as it glided across my back. He never put much pressure on my overheated self, but he somehow managed to knead out the tension from my whole body. It was bliss. He manipulated my shoulder every once in a while, but I was too zoned to notice. I finally couldn’t hold in a groan anymore, and let out the same noise a diet-starved actress makes when she sneaks into a closet with a box of Krispy Kremes.
“So good,” I muttered with my face buried in the table hole.
He stilled his hands, and I could hear him breathe in the silent interim before he spoke. “Good. Don’t want to overdo it though. Let’s get some heat on you to relax.”
Seriously? An Ethan massage could never be overdone, and I was combusting on the inside without the need for extra heat. He had magically prepared some sort of damp hot-pad he wrapped around my shoulder. The position demanded that my bad arm extend out a little, and I could feel cooler air suddenly hit the side of my chest, exposed now as the fabric of my gown shifted. I didn’t care one bit.
“Just relax for a few minutes and I’ll be back with your exercise regimen.” He turned toward the door.
I couldn’t halt the verbal avalanche that affected me while in his presence. “Wait! I mean, could you stay? You know, nerves and all?”
He paused with his hand on the doorknob
, his brow wrinkling as he considered how bizarre I was. “Are you sure you can relax with me standing here?”
“Of course not, that’s weird. You’ll have to talk.” Where was this crap coming from? I was flirting. I didn’t flirt!
A small laugh escaped. “Give me a topic.”
“Chipmunks,” I said, simultaneously trying to understand the pathways of my own brain.
“Hmm. Well, they’re kind of creepy. I’ve never actually seen one in real life, but that Alvin fellow is just dark. It’s like he uses his freakishly high voice to hypnotize children into wandering into his lair of twisted psychedelic mania. I also—”
“Okay, okay, I get it,” I laughed outright. “You can talk about anything, so how about therapy. Why are you here giving massages to men?”
“What are you implying?” And the crooked smile was back. “The lack of variety in my clientele is not my choice, let me tell you. You’re the highlight of my day.” His face grew more thoughtful as he explained, “I used to play a lot of sports and had to come to places like this when I got hurt. It was always hell, and when I got to college I had the choice to become a coach for some Podunk high school, or do this. I wanted to help people, you know, make this a less awful experience.” He shrugged and flashed his gaze to the linoleum.
Okay, seriously, did this guy have a flaw? Maybe he was stupid. That was a stereotype, but he had to be. “Don’t be embarrassed, I think that’s great. I really expected this to be awful, and it isn’t, because of you.” Too honest, must change subject. “Next question, what do you think of Proust?”
I always asked this on a first date, not that this was a date at all, and a guy would always respond in one of three ways: a dumb blank stare, some sort of canned response learned from a college prof (which told me he had never actually read Proust and had no opinion whatsoever), or, well, this…
“Proust, huh? I could only get through one of Remembrance’s volumes. I know that’s more embarrassing than my magically inspiring career story, but seriously. That whole thing with the madeleines and all that crap about memories you don’t really remember shaping your life. It’s all just nonsense to me. I’m not going to spend my life trying to regain the lost thoughts of my childhood when I could spend it being a functional adult.” He paused for a moment and looked down. “Suddenly, I really hope you don’t like Proust.”