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She swallowed and winced. "We didn't die."
"Doesn't look like it." Gently he cupped her head and held a cup of water so that she could sip through the straw. "Just take it easy."
There was a fear lurking deep inside her. But she had to know.
"Are we burned badly?"
"We're not burned. A couple of singes, maybe."
Relief made her s.h.i.+ver. "I can't feel anything, except-" She reached up to touch the bruise on her forehead.
"Sorry." He pressed his lips to the lump, felt himself begin to tremble, and drew back again. "You got that when I tackled you."
She opened her eyes then. They felt weighted. Her whole body felt weighted. "Hospital?" she asked. Then her breath caught as she focused on him. Scratches on his face, a bandage at his temple, and a larger one that started just below his shoulder and nearly reached the elbow. His hands, his beautiful hands, were wrapped in gauze.
"Oh, G.o.d, Ry. You're hurt."
"Cuts and bruises." He smiled at her. "Singed my hair a little."
"You need a doctor."
"I've had one, thanks. I don't think she likes me. Now shut up and rest."
"What happened?"
"You're going to have to move your office." When she started to speak again, he held up a hand. "I'll tell you what I know if you keep quiet. Otherwise, I'll just leave you to stew. Deal?" Satisfied, he sat on the edge of the bed. "Deirdre tried to call you in Colorado," he began.
When he finished, her head was throbbing. Impotent fury ate away at the remnant of the sedative until she was wide awake and aching. Antic.i.p.ating her, Ry laid his hand over her mouth.
"There's nothing you can do until you're on your feet. Not much you can do then. It's up to the departments-fire and police. And it's being handled. Now I'm going to ring for the nurse so they can take a look at you."
"I don't-" Her protest turned into a spasm of coughing. By the time she'd regained control, a nurse was gesturing Ry out of the room.
She didn't see him again for more than twenty-four hours.
"You could use another day here, Nat." Boyd crossed his feet at the ankles as he watched Natalie pack the small overnight case he'd brought her.
"I hate hospitals."
"You've made that clear. I need your word you're taking a full week off, at home, or I'm calling in the troops. And not just Cilia, but Mom and Dad."
"There's no need for them to fly all the way out here."
"That's up to you, pal."
She pouted. "Three days off."
"A full week. Anything less is a deal-breaker. I can be just as tough a negotiator as you," he said with a grin. "It's in the blood."
"Fine, fine, a week. What difference does it make?" She s.n.a.t.c.hed up the water gla.s.s and drank. It seemed she could never get enough to drink these days. "Everything's in shambles. Half my building's destroyed, one of my most trusted executives is responsible. I don't even have an office to go to."
"You'll take care of that. Next week. Hawthorne has a lot to answer for. The fact that he didn't know you and Ry were in the building isn't going to save him."
"All for greed." Too angry to pack the few things Boyd had brought her, she paced. Her body still felt weak, but there was too much energy boiling within to allow her to keep still. "Draining a little here, a little there, losing it on speculative stocks. Then draining more and more, until he was so desperate he risked burning down entire buildings just to destroy records and delay the audit records."
She whirled back. "How frustrated he must have been when I told him I had duplicates of everything that was lost in the warehouse fire."
"And he wasn't sure where you kept them. Fire destroys everything," Boyd pointed out. "So, he'd take one of the buildings, and hope. If he didn't hit, the confusion in the aftermath would keep everyone so busy, you wouldn't get around to the audit until, he hoped, he'd managed to replace the siphoned funds."
"So he thought."
"He doesn't know you like I do. You always get things done on time. The office was his last shot, and the most desperate, since he had to do it himself. When we picked him up and he found out you and Ry had been in there and that he was facing attempted murder charges, he gave us everything."
"I trusted him," Natalie murmured. "I can't stand knowing I could be so wrong about anyone I thought I knew." She glanced up as the door opened.
"Good to see you, Ry," Boyd said, and rose. This looked like his cue to make a quick and discreet exit.
Ry nodded at Boyd, then focused on Natalie. "Why aren't you in bed?"
"I've been discharged."
"You're not ready to leave the hospital."'
"Excuse me." Boyd slipped toward the door. "I have a sudden urge for a cup of bad coffee."
Neither Natalie nor Ry bothered to say goodbye. They only continued to argue in raspy croaks.
"Do you have a medical degree now, Inspector?"
"I know what shape you were in when you got here."
"Well, if you'd bothered to check in since, you'd have seen that I'm recovered."
"I had a lot of details to tie up," he told her. "And you needed to rest."
"I'd rather have had you."
He held out the flowers. "I'm here now."
She sighed. Should she let him off the hook so easily when she'd been pining for him for so long? And why shouldn't she make him pay a bit for dumping her for the most ridiculous reason?
"Why don't you go take those daffodils to someone who needs them."
He tossed them on the bed. "I'm going to go talk to the doctor."
"You certainly will not talk tomy doctor. I don't need your permission to leave the hospital. You didn't ask me for mine. And I did not need rest. I needed to see you. I was worried about you."
"Were you?" Encouraged, he lifted a hand to her face.
"I wanted you here, Ry. Dozens of other people came, but obviously you didn't see the need-"
"I had work," he shot back. "I wanted to get the evidence on that sonofab.i.t.c.h as soon as possible. It's all I can do. I'd kill him if I could get to him."
She started to snap back, then felt an icy chill at the look on his face. "Stop that." Unnerved, she turned her back on him, away from the murder in his eyes, and tossed a robe in her case. "I don't want to hear you talk that way."