opened the side door of the ambulance and pressed him to sit on the step. Then flicked her penlight over his eyes, trying not to notice the intriguing shades of blue radiating from his shrinking pupils.
âIâm fine. I need to be out there finding that punk before he shows up on your doorstep.â
She checked his blood pressure, her own spiking at the notion that some creep might show up at her apartment. âThe deputies are following all our calls, and Dan is with me. I will be perfectly safe. You need to rest.â
âIâve rested enough,â he said in a growl.
She lost her patience. âThen spend time with your brother. Considering where he turned up Friday night, he clearly needs help sooner rather than later.â
* * *
The next afternoon Cole shifted in his truck seat, trying to get comfortable. He was still on sick leave, so heâd been parked in the coffee shopâs back lot with a birdâs eye view of the ambulance base since Sherri arrived for her shift this morning. Sheâd been right about him needing to spend time with his brother, and as much as her scolding had stung, Cole appreciated her concern. Heâd kind of enjoyed her playing paramedic on him again, tooâ looking so intently at his eyes that heâd started to feel as if she could see into his very soul. He hadnât been able to get her deep blue eyes off his mind since. He just wished she exhibited half as much concern for herself.
Thankfully, the punk hadnât come back, and so far not even an ambulance call had come in to break up the monotony. He couldnât help but admire how easily sheâd sloughed off the homeless guyâs threat yesterday and joked about a prisonerâs marriage proposal.
Yeah, it was how most frontline workers dealt with the junk, but sheâd seemed genuinely unaffected.
Cole glanced at his watch. Eddie would be getting out of school in another forty-five minutes, and he didnât want to miss him again. Unfortunately, if the kid heâd spotted skulking around the ambulance base yesterday was also in school, he might show up just when Cole needed to leave.
Cole unscrewed his thermos cap and eyeballed the last few ounces of day-old coffee.
Forget it.
Time to grab a fresh cup. As he pushed open the door, movement along the fence behind the ambulance base caught his eye.
He soundlessly pushed his truck door closed and hunched down behind the hood.
A kid clambered over the chain-link fence. Same black hoodie hiding his face.
The instant he moved toward the ambulance baseâs side door, Cole dashed forward and face-planted him into the dirt. Wrestling the guyâs arm behind his back, he hissed, âWhat are you doing here?â
The punk stopped fighting. âCole?â
Coleâs stomach tanked. âEddie?â He grabbed a fistful of his brotherâs hoodie and hauled him to his feet, scarcely restraining the urge to connect his fist with Eddieâs nose. He clearly didnât know him anymore. âHow could you?â
Eddieâs eyes ballooned. âHow could I what? I came to apologize to Sherri.â
âRight.â Cole felt sick. âThatâs why youâre skulking over the fence, instead of walking up from the street.â
âI didnât want the other guys to see me. I wanted to catch her alone.â
Cole swallowed a rush of bile at how that sounded. He shoved his brother through the hedge flanking the parking lot toward the coffee shop next door. âWe need to talk.â
âIâm telling the truth!â
Cole opened the coffee shop door and motioned Eddie to a window seat.
âI always liked Sherri. She was nice to us.â
A waitress sashayed over, clunked two empty mugs on the table, and flashed Cole a welcoming whatcha-doing-later smile. âYou must be new here. I never forget a face.â She had pouty lips and an over-the-top makeup job that he supposed some guys would
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