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Take Your Medicine |
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©
Copyright, Arianna Hart |
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All Rights Reserved |
| ISBN:
1-59998-107-6
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Note: Arianna Hart's Books are intended
for those readers 18 years old or older. |
Excerpt :
After waving to the security guard, she rounded the corner and
clicked the lock for the door, lighting the interior of the car.
Automatically, she looked in the backseat for intruders. She did so
out of habit, but almost jumped out of her skin when she actually
saw a body in the backseat. She was digging through her purse to
dial 911 when the back door opened and a man stumbled out.
“Stay back! I’ve already dialed 911 and if I scream, hospital
security will be over here in a heartbeat!” Macayla backed up and
prepared to defend herself. Mentally she kicked herself for telling
the security guard to stay at his station. She was only going across
the street, she was a black belt in karate, what did she have to
fear? What an idiot.
“Macayla! Calm down.”
“How do you know who I am? Did you read the registration? Why are
you still here, run away before the cops get here!” Macayla was
still digging in her bag for the phone. What was the point of making
them so small if they got lost in your purse?
“Macayla, it’s me, Jared. Jared Romero, Connor’s friend. Remember?”
Macayla took a better look at the tall stranger leaning against her
car. “Move into the light,” Macayla ordered him. Her hands shook,
and her heart pounded. If it was indeed Jared, she had a lot more to
worry about than if it was a stranger.
The first time she met him he had broken into her apartment and she
held a gun on him, while wearing nothing but a towel. She had
threatened to shoot him between the legs before she found out he was
just bringing a phone so she could have contact with Samara while
she and Connor were on the run.
Samara was Macayla’s best friend in the world, and Connor was her
husband, who just happened to be Jared’s best friend. Jared hadn’t
taken kindly to having a gun pointed at him and paid her back by
kissing the life out of her. She had seen him on two other
occasions, and in both experiences she had ended up the loser.
As he moved into the pool of light cast by the street lamp, Macayla
noticed the broad shoulders, the height, the sheer power of him. She
didn’t even need to look at his face to confirm his identity, but
she looked up at him anyway. He was close to a foot taller than her
five foot three inches, but she refused to be cowed by his size. She
boldly stared at his chiseled features.
Oh yeah, she remembered the dark black hair, brutally cut in the
military fashion. It did nothing to detract from his looks. His eyes
were hazel, with more green than blue, and bloodshot now. His nose
had been broken at least once, but it only added character to his
stunning face. He had high, sharp cheekbones and a strong, stubborn
chin. If it weren’t for the nose, he could pose in any magazine
across the country.
“Satisfied?” Jared asked with a snap in his voice. He lurched over
to the truck and practically fell over.
“What’s wrong with you? Are you drunk?” Macayla ran over to make
sure he didn’t land on his face. He was pale as chalk and she could
feel the heat coming off his skin. When she wrapped her arm around
his waist, he hissed in pain.
“What’s going on? Are you hurt?”
“Gunshot, in my side, not serious, but I’m losing blood. That’s why
I came here, to you.”
“Well, I didn’t think you were having a baby, but I didn’t expect a
gunshot. What am I supposed to do?”
“Get it out, stitch me up, and let me go on my way, without any
awkward questions.”
“Why should I do that?”
“I just knew you’d ask questions. Do you think I could lie down
while you grill me? I’m not feeling too good,” Jared said as
dehydration and blood loss got the best of him and he passed out in
the car.
“I just knew you’d find a way to avoid answering my questions,”
Macayla mumbled as she pushed his heavy legs in the back of the
truck. “Don’t you dare bleed all over my seats. This is the first
new vehicle I’ve had in almost ten years, you better not ruin my
interior.”
Running into the office, she grabbed as many things as she could
think of. She had a decent medical kit at home, but she didn’t have
everything she’d need for minor surgery. As it was, she only had
access to a local anesthetic and taking care of that bullet was
still going to hurt like hell.
Macayla drove the short trip to her condo with her mind in
overdrive. Where had he gotten shot? Why did he come to her? How was
she going to lug his big body into her condo without anyone seeing
her? It was after midnight, she should be able to pull around to the
front door and get him out, then park the truck in her garage.
Her garage led into the basement of the condo, but Macayla didn’t
want to drag him up a flight of stairs if she could avoid it. She
didn’t know if she even could. He was really big, and dead weight
was always hard to lift. She tried to put the word “dead” out of her
mind.
“Come on, Romero, wake up. I don’t know how I’m going to get you
into the house by myself.” Macayla gently slapped his face, and when
he didn’t wake up she slapped him a little harder.
“All right. I’m coming.” Jared had the glassy-eyed look of someone
with a fever, and he could barely stand, even with her help. Macayla
had already unlocked the front door and had it propped so she
wouldn’t have to fight with her keys and Jared at the same time. She
managed to help him through the door before he passed out again.
“Damn it, Romero, couldn’t you have at least made it to the living
room? Now I’m going to have to drag you across the floor and you’ll
probably get blood stains on my carpet.” Macayla tried to bite back
her anxiety. She had no idea how long ago he’d been shot, and she
had no way of giving him more blood. She could give him IV fluids,
but that was it. If he lost too much blood, she would either have to
take him to a hospital, or watch him die.
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