She felt him before she saw him.
The weakness and the strangeness of their situation must have made her more vulnerable than she’d thought, because when she finally turned and saw Dr Parker Radcliff in the light, all she could think was, Hello .
Over the last month, she’d seen him more than she’d wanted to, catching glimpses of him as he’d gone from meeting to meeting, or when he’d swung by the front desk of the ER. She’d told herself she shouldn’t even notice him, that he was nothing to her now. And she’d almost convinced herself it was the truth.
But now, seeing him up close in his street clothes with a good dose of five o’clock shadow, she was suddenly too aware of the strong angle of his jaw and the masculine hardness of his body.
Too aware that he’d just saved her life.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Though she’s tried out professions ranging from cleaning sea lion cages to cloning glaucoma genes, from patent law to training horses, Jessica is happiest when she’s combining all these interests with her first love: writing romances. These days she’s delighted to be writing full-time on a farm in rural Connecticut that she shares with a small menagerie and a hero named Brian. She hopes you’ll visit her at www.JessicaAndersen.com for info on upcoming books, contests and to say “hi!”
CAST OF CHARACTERS
Dr Amanda (Mandy) Sparks– Four years ago she left Boston General with her heart in pieces. Now she’s back and ready to prove herself. But when a killer sets his sights on her, can she turn to the man she once loved for help?
Dr Parker Radcliff– Running Boston General’s ER and consulting for the police force leaves Parker with little patience for emotions and no time for drama—until Mandy turns his world upside down again by getting mixed up in a dangerous case.
James Stankowski– The young police detective is Parker’s only close ally. Can their friendship survive betrayal?
Anabella “Cutthroat” Cuthbert– The CEO of Boston’s powerful UniVax Pharmaceuticals knows more than she’s saying about the strange deaths occurring near Boston General.
Jeremy Deighton– This young, enthusiastic politician is looking to clean up the streets of Boston. How far will he go to succeed?
Paul Durst– This brilliant scientist is on the verge of a huge breakthrough…if he doesn’t have a breakdown first.
JESSICA ANDERSEN
www.millsandboon.co.uk
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To Denise Zaza and Allison Lyons for always
encouraging me to dig deeper.
Chapter One
“I’m sorry, Doctor, but Ms. Dulbecco died early this morning.” On the phone, the nurse’s voice softened. “Did you know her personally?”
Mandy Sparks gripped the handset tightly and turned her back on the chaos of the Emergency Services Department, so her coworkers—or one coworker in particular—wouldn’t see how badly the news had upset her. She looked down, and her long blond hair fell forward past her face, forming another barrier between her and the rest of Boston General. “I didn’t know her well. She was a patient, that’s all.”
But to Mandy there was no “that’s all” about it. As far as she was concerned, every case was special, every injury or illness a personal battle.
“She went peacefully,” the nurse offered, as though that made a difference. And in a way, it did. Mandy hadn’t been able to pinpoint the cause of Irene Dulbecco’s pain, but she’d been able to make the forty-something mother of two more comfortable. She’d gotten Irene stabilized, and had sent her upstairs to the Urgent Care Department, where her husband and kids could visit more easily. Then, Mandy had gone home and crashed for six hours of badly needed sleep.
Logically she knew the staff members in Urgent Care were the best at what they did, but now she wondered if things would’ve gone differently if she’d stayed.
“If there’s nothing else, Doctor…” the nurse said, drawing out the last word to indicate that it was time for her to move on to the next call.
It wasn’t just her, either. The prevailing motto at BoGen these days seemed to be “move ’em in and push ’em out, and don’t get emotionally attached,” which Mandy found more than a little disturbing. Or maybe she was painting everyone else with a brush that belonged strictly to the department head, Parker Radcliff.
As far as she was concerned, Radcliff pretty much embodied the word disturbing .
“That’s all,” Mandy finally said into the phone. “Thanks for—” She broke off when the nurse disconnected before she’d finished, but kept the phone pressed to her ear for a moment longer, in order to buy herself some time to regroup.
I shouldn’t have come back here , she thought, closing her eyes and pinching the bridge of her nose in an effort to delay the incipient headache. I should’ve taken the job in Michigan .
Unfortunately the smaller hospital in Ann Arbor had lacked the clout of Boston General, and Mandy needed at least another eighteen months of top-flight E.R. experience and a solid recommendation if she wanted a shot at winning next year’s Meade Fellowship. With good E.R. openings in short supply, she’d been very lucky that her previous employment at BoGen had automatically moved her ahead of the other applicants.
Now, though, barely a month into her second stint at the hospital, she was starting to think she’d made a big mistake.
“Are you going to stand there listening to the dial tone all morning, Dr. Sparks?” Radcliff’s voice said unexpectedly from directly behind her, interrupting her thoughts with the sarcasm he seemed to save just for her. “Or were you planning on seeing patients at some point today?”
Mandy stiffened, but forced herself not to stammer and retreat. Instead she took a deep breath, tossed her hair back from her face and turned toward the man she’d once—in a bout of youth and stupidity—thought she loved.
Radcliff’s wavy, dark brown hair was tipped with silver at his temples, and faint creases fanned out from his dark blue eyes. Those small signs of mortality should’ve made him seem approachable, but the square set of his jaw and the coolness in his eyes formed an impenetrable barrier. He wore a crisp white lab coat, its breast pocket embroidered not with his name or title, but with two words: The Boss.
On any other man it might’ve been a joke.
On Radcliff, it was simple fact.
Four years ago, she’d been a lowly resident and he’d been the head attending, and ten years her senior. Now he ran the entire E.R., and spent more time on paperwork than medicine, which was lucky for her, because it had allowed her to avoid him since her return to BoGen. In turn, he’d limited their contact to snippy memos about increasing her patient turnover and keeping expensive tests to a minimum. On the few instances they’d been forced to interact face-to-face, they’d both made sure they were surrounded by a crowd of other staffers.
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