'Good-'
'Yeah, yeah. Good luck, Luke.'
With a shake of his head and a surprising smile, Luke hung up the phone. Quiet surrounded him, and his smile went nostalgic. God, he really missed having his brother around. They'd had some amazing times growing up in Texas, roaming their grandfather's fields with little to no supervision, finding trouble more often than not, but always finding it together, and suddenly, the thousand miles separating them seemed so huge. Maybe he'd take a vacation when this was over.
Right. A vacation.
He never took time off.
Well, he would, he decided. It'd be his own little reward for getting through the next two and three quarters months of Saturdays.
And one Faith McDowell.
Finishing stripping down, he showered, and was practically asleep by the time he padded naked from the bathroom straight to his bed.
Carmen had made it for him, complete with pillows neatly lined up against the headboard and the heavy comforter he never bothered with, all pulled up nice and smooth. He wasn't used to sliding into a nicely organized bed, as his mornings were usually a race to get ready while trying to remember where he'd left his keys and wallet. He couldn't spare the time to make his bed. Besides, he was just going to mess it up again at night, so he never understood the need to waste those extra few moments in the mornings.
But he had to admit, it felt good. Closing his eyes, he prepared to let sleep claim him, but for some reason, his mind once again ran over the day's events.
Despite being so busy, the clinic had run smoothly, he'd give Faith that. Her patients were carefully tended to and cared for with a personal touch he had to admit had surprised him.
Faith…
When he finally dozed off, she was
Chapter 4
Faith had her usual Sunday and Monday off, and since the clinic was closed, she considered a bike ride, a movie… even a shopping spree. Instead, she made the mistake of looking in her office. Seeing the stacks of paperwork waiting for her there, she ended up working both days.
On Tuesday, Healing Waters opened to slightly more patients than any time since Dr. Walker's public disdain. Wednesday, the same.
The rest of the week went by without event, other than each day showing an extremely slight increase of business, with references from the hospital and local doctors starting to pile in.
Hope among the staff surged, and Faith felt so great she didn't even crave chocolate.
By Saturday, their schedule was busting at the seams, with a shocking number of people asking to be put with Dr. Walker.
Seemed he really was a savior-theirs.
Suddenly Faith could see the light at the end of the tunnel, the day when they'd be fully operating in the black. When it got there, she'd take her first big sigh of relief since using her retirement funds to open the place. But for now, she had a lot of holding her breath left to do, and a lot of writing with red pencil on the books.
Still, the hope that had begun like a small seed in her chest earlier in the week blossomed, and she couldn't contain her smile as she came downstairs from her little apartment into the staff room.
Shelby, Guy and Catherine-their herbalist-were sitting at a table sharing wheat muffins and arguing over which one of the wildflowers in the vase in the center of the table provided the most calming effect. The muffins were clearly from Shelby-their resident health nut-and the coffee was from Guy, who needed caffeine by the bucketful.
Faith joined them, her stomach going happy, but before she stuffed in her first bite of muffin, Luke opened the back door.
Immediately the dynamics in the room changed from light and easygoing to speculative. Shelby, Guy and Cat all looked at Faith, clearly waiting for her reaction in order to decide upon theirs. So she did what she had to do even though she had no idea how she felt at the sight of him. She smiled brightly. 'Well, good morning, Dr. Walker.'
Looking at least far more rested than he had last Saturday, he nodded curtly. 'Schedule?'
Okay, so he wasn't an easygoing, exchange-banalities kind of guy.
And he probably would rather be doing anything else today.
'Here.' Shelby handed him a copy of the day's schedule, then checked her watch. 'Oops, gotta run.' She nudged Cat and Guy, both of whom made a big spectacle out of leaving Faith alone with Luke.
'Subtle,' he said when the door shut behind them.
'Don't tell them, they think they pulled it off.' Leaning back against the counter, casually crossing one long leg over the other, looking unreasonably gorgeous and edgy in his dark trousers, and dark shirt sleeves shoved up to the elbows revealing forearms corded with strength, and big, clean hands, he studied her with an inscrutable expression. 'So what's up? You going to fire me?'
Startled, she laughed. 'Why would I do that?'
He lifted a broad shoulder. 'Because last week we clashed over just about everything except breathing.'
She looked into his light, light eyes and was startled by the vulnerability there. 'We didn't clash on our passion over healing people.'
'Imagine that… common ground.' His gaze held hers for an immeasurable beat, during which time she couldn't have looked away to save her life. In her quest to resent him last week-resent him and need him at the same time-how had she missed the fire, the passion burning in his eyes?
'Actually,' she said, 'I didn't expect you to show.'
'I promised three months.'
'Your hospital promised.'
'Same thing. I don't go back on my word.'
'Even when it goes against the grain?'
'You're healing here. I'm a healer. It's what I do, it's my life.' He shrugged, and with a few words, spoke volumes. 'I'm here for the duration.'
She'd always,
'So it begins again.'
She caught the slight quirk of his lips and wasn't as successful in hiding her own rueful smile. 'It begins again,' she agreed.
'Good day to you, then.'
'And you.' She followed him into the hallway and toward the patient rooms. And yes, maybe she stared at his very fine butt just before he shrugged into a doctor's coat, but she doubted there was a woman alive who wouldn't have done the exact same thing in her position.
'Emma Connelly,' he said, studying the first chart.
'Oh, she's mine.' Faith reached for the paperwork. 'We have you starting with the walk-ins this morning. Room six first, there's a man waiting for you. He's suffering from allergies and-'
'It says here Emma Connelly is terminal. Ovarian cancer.'
'Yes.' Faith hugged the chart to her chest at the ache his words invoked. She'd known Emma for four years, watched her battle through the vicious cancer with everything she had. There was little left, and Healing Waters was dedicated to making her last days as comfortable as possible. 'The aromatherapy is the only thing that eases her headaches these days. She gave up her meds, they made her so ill she couldn't function. Guy gives her