The Nurse Who Saved Christmas

The Nurse Who Saved Christmas by Janice Lynn Page A

Book: The Nurse Who Saved Christmas by Janice Lynn Read Free Book Online
Authors: Janice Lynn
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Contemporary
Ads: Link
obviously could only go one speed. Head-on.
    He shucked out of his shirt, groaned again at the feel of her hands rubbing over skin, over his shoulders, down his back. The pleasure Abby found in his body thrilled him, had him aching for more. She craned her neck to kiss his throat, his shoulders, his chest. Frantic, quick kisses that seared his flesh.
    “So beautiful,” he repeated, breathing in the spicy scent of her skin.
    “If anyone in this room is beautiful, it’s you,” she whispered, pressing a kiss to his clavicle and reaching for his belt at the same time. “Hurry, Dirk.”
    If he hurried, everything would be over. Fast. She was driving him crazy. Each and every cell in his body had caught fire and burned with need.
    Letting her pull his belt free, Dirk slid over her, pinning her beneath him, loving how she wrapped her arms around him, clinging to him.
    “Hurry,” she urged. “I need you.”
    Dirk kissed her until he thought he might explode, until their hands locked on to each other’s ratherthan continue the frenzied exploration of each other’s bodies.
    “I need you, too, Abby.” More than he’d ever imagined possible. Rolling slightly to his side, he reached for his waistband, planning to strip off his pants.
    That’s when he heard the sound of cold reality.
    His cellphone.
    “Don’t answer it,” she moaned, taking over where he’d stopped undoing his zipper. Her fingers brushed against him, and he inhaled sharply.
    He wanted to ignore the phone, but he wouldn’t.
    “I’m on call.” How he wished he wasn’t. “No one would call me this late unless there was an emergency.”
    Abby’s face paled in the glow of the firelight. “Oh, God. I forgot.”
    He understood all too well. She made him forget, too.
    Going into the foyer, he grabbed his jacket from the floor and removed his phone from the inside pocket. He listened to the caller for about thirty seconds then raked his fingers through his hair. “No problem. I’ll be right there.”
    He hung up the phone and met Abby’s soft, concerned gaze. She’d followed him into the foyer, stood next to him, her arms crossed protectively over her gorgeous body.
    “It’s okay. I understand,” she said before he spoke. “My phone will likely ring at any moment.”
    “Probably.” He went back to the living room, got his shirt, buttoned it with a lot less enthusiasm than he’d removed it, although with just as much haste. “There’s been a gas leak in an apartment high-rise. One death.Dozens suffering inhalation injuries and respiratory distress. Patients are being diverted to several hospitals.”
    Stooping down and providing him with a delectable view of her backside that tempted him to say to hell with everything, Abby plucked up the blanket from the floor. She wrapped it round her shoulders, as if she didn’t want him to see her almost naked body now that they’d been interrupted. “I’ll get changed.”
    He started to speak, to tell her to get some rest while she could, that perhaps they’d already called in enough nurses without her. But her phone started ringing from inside her purse.
    She gave a shaky laugh. “Wonder who that is?”
    While she took the call, Dirk finished dressing, got his coat. A gentleman would wait until she finished her call, but he didn’t. He left.
    She already knew he wasn’t a gentleman. Hell, he’d slept with her the day they met and had been about to take advantage of her yet again.
    Still wanted to take advantage so badly every cell in his body protested against the interruption.
    She’d be wise to stay far, far away.
    Perhaps that’s why they’d been interrupted.
    To give them both time to think about what they were doing. For Dirk to recall that Abby deserved better than what he’d give. For Abby to recall that she was young and beautiful and not bitter at the world, that she saw the goodness in life, the positive.
    Things Dirk had quit doing long ago even if Abby had made him forget that for

Similar Books

Kindred

J. A. Redmerski

Manifest

Artist Arthur

Bad Penny

Sharon Sala

The Other Man (West Coast Hotwifing)

Jasmine Haynes, Jennifer Skully

Spin

Robert Charles Wilson

Watchers

Dean Koontz

Daddy's Game

Normandie Alleman