
About The Five of Wands
by Sara Bell
49 pages
/ 20800 words
Available file types - html, lit, pdf, prc, epub and Sony Reader pdf
Dr. Travis Gordiani's life
has officially gone to hell in a hand basket. A senior resident at a
prestigious Atlanta hospital, Travis should be on top of the world. Instead,
his love life sucks, his father hates him, and his work days are miserable
thanks to a blue-eyed, black-haired pain in the ass named Jeremy Bowman.
That Travis thinks Jeremy is one sexy SOB just makes it that much worse.
Travis is pretty sure his life can't sink any lower when the unthinkable
happens and he's accused of harming a patient and then covering his tracks.
More shocking than that is having Jeremy Bowman come charging to his rescue.
Jeremy Bowman isn't the kind of guy who's afraid to admit when he's wrong,
and he was wrong about Travis Gordiani in a big way. Far from being a
spoiled daddy's boy, Travis is a stand up guy. A mouth-wateringly hot, hunky
stand-up guy. No way in hell would Travis ever forge patient records, and
Jeremy intends to prove it or die trying.
Sample
"I've had the day from hell, Bowman." He wadded up his
napkin. "Go away."
"I feel you. My day sucked the big one, too." Jeremy took a swig from his
glass of iced tea. He pointed at Travis' salad. "You always live off that
rabbit food?"
"Maybe." Truth was, Travis liked junk food as much as the next guy -- right
at the moment he'd give his last dollar for a three-cheese pizza with extra
sauce -- but this was the first time in four years he could remember Jeremy
ever starting a conversation that didn't begin with an insult. Travis felt
like he was treading water in the deep end with no way out of the pool. He
decided to proceed with caution. "You always eat like that?" He pointed to
the burger, which actually didn't look half bad now that he thought about
it.
"Only when I lose a patient." Jeremy took another bite. His eyes closed
again, but not before Travis saw a flash of raw pain.
"Shit." Travis tossed his greens around with his fork. They'd all been
there, but that didn't make it any easier. The first time he'd lost a
patient, Travis had been an intern working a trauma rotation in the E.R.
There'd been a bad wreck on I-285, a mom and three kids in a minivan hit by
an eighteen-wheeler going eighty. By some miracle, the kids had made it
through with only minor injuries, but the mom was already bleeding out by
the time the rapid responders rushed her through the trauma unit's doors.
Travis and his attending at the time, Dr. Ramona Stowe, did all they could,
but the patient died five minutes after they started working on her.
He could still remember the look of devastation on the husband's face when
Ramona gave him the news.
He looked at Jeremy, who was wiping the grease off his fingers with a
wet-nap. "Sorry."
"I keep telling myself it was her own damned fault." Jeremy guzzled his tea,
then set down his glass and wiped his mouth. "Heart patient, been coming
here for years, always seemed to end up with me." He balled the used wet-nap
and tossed it onto the table. "Three confirmed blockages, suspected cardiac
event last year around this time. Wouldn't follow up with any of the
specialists I set her up with." He let out a long, slow breath. "Husband
brought her in this morning, complaining of angina." He pinched the bridge
of his nose like he was staving off a headache. "She arrested while I was
doing her workup. I tried to restore a normal rhythm after she coded but
I..." He looked away. "I pronounced her at 10:43."
Travis wasn't sure what possessed him, but almost of its own free will, his
hand found the back of Jeremy's and squeezed. "This one isn't on you." He
smiled at the other man for probably the first time since he'd known the
guy. "Contrary to your opinion of yourself, you aren't God."
Travis half expected Jeremy to pull his hand away and revert to the nasty
status quo between them. Instead, Jeremy laughed, the sound rusty but real.
He turned his hand over and folded his fingers in with Travis' like someone
who desperately needed the connection. Travis was still marveling at the odd
shift in their dynamic when a shadow fell across their table.
"Excuse me." Matthew was standing over them, mouth set in a hard line. "I
thought I was in the cafeteria." He looked down at their joined hands. "Not
a gay bar during happy hour."
Travis cursed the white-as-paste skin he'd inherited from his mother. He
knew he had to be the same shade as the uneaten cherry tomatoes on his
plate. He had no idea which way Jeremy swung, but given the way the guy felt
about him -- temporary reprieve not withstanding -- he figured Jeremy was
going to be furious at Matthew's implication. Travis tried to take back his
hand.
Jeremy wouldn't let go. He looked up at Matthew, cocky as he ever was. "You
think I'd need to take him to a gay bar to get my freak on?" Sounding once
again like the Jeremy Bowman Travis knew, he said, "I think maybe I'd take a
page from your book and sneak into one of the changing rooms down in
radiology to bang him." He trailed his thumb over the back of Travis' hand,
right where Matthew could see it. "Isn't that where you and that X-ray twink
you're fucking go for a nooner every other Thursday?"
Matthew gripped the plastic tray he was holding tight enough to break it.
Giving the two of them the dirtiest look in his repertoire, he said, "Enjoy
your lunch," and stalked off.
"'Enjoy your lunch?'" Jeremy shook his head. "Somebody really needs to teach
that guy the value of a good exit line." |