Her nervous system short-circuited. She ignored the unabashedly curious looks the blonde threw in her direction and focused on breathing. She took absolutely nothing in as their dinner plates were removed and dessert and coffee were served. The anticipation simmering in her veins was of the all-consuming variety.
Arthur had just asked the table if anyone would like a refill on the nightcap when a bundle of small boy appeared on the terrace in his pajamas and threw himself at his father. Maciah, Arthur’s nine-year-old son, babbled some incoherent words to Arthur, bringing the entire table to a halt.
She thought it was a night terror at first. The little boy’s eyes were wide and he was hyperventilating, trying to pull air in. His father pulled him onto his lap, smoothed his hair and told him to take deep breaths.
Maciah’s small chest inhaled and exhaled. “James is hurt,” he sobbed.
His father frowned. “He’s in bed.”
The little boy took another deep breath, his voice shaky as it tumbled out. “We wanted to have some fun, too, so we decided to build a fort on the cliff. Only James fell and hurt himself.”
The internet CEO’s wife gasped. Diana sat up in her chair. Arthur took his son’s face in his hands. “James is on the cliff?”
“Y-yes. Daddy, there’s all sorts of blood.”
Diana was on her feet. “Call an air ambulance,” she instructed Dana. She flicked her gaze to Maciah. “Can you show Daddy and I where James is?”
He nodded and slipped off his father’s lap. They raced outside and over to the edge of the cliff in front of the house, which was bounded by a tall fence. Maciah slipped through an opening she hadn’t seen. Diana followed, Arthur and Coburn behind her. Her heart lurched as Maciah pointed to a jagged ledge about five feet down from the edge, the sheer face of rock beneath it terrifyingly steep. James was lying on the ledge, barely visible in the darkness, his ragged sobs piercing the night air.
“We need light,” she said tersely. Someone ran up to the villa and came back with a flashlight. She shone it down on the ledge, her pulse accelerating at the awkward angle the boy’s leg lay at, but more so because of the amount of blood spurting from it. He had ruptured an artery.
“Is the ledge steady?” she asked Maciah.
He nodded. Coburn cursed. “You don’t know if it will take your weight.”
“We’re about to find out.”
He caught her hand in his. “I’m going down first. If it’s stable you can come down.”
“Coburn—”
“Nonnegotiable.”
She held her breath as her husband levered himself over the edge of the cliff and down onto the ledge with the stealth of a man who had climbed some of the world’s biggest peaks. Arthur looked as if he was in shock, his face white as Coburn stood up gingerly, testing the steadiness of the rock.
“It’ll take both of us.”
She sat on the edge of the cliff, turned and eased herself down, Coburn spotting her with a hand to her back. She knelt beside the gray-faced little boy, forcing herself to ignore how high they were over the rocky shore. Using her fingertips, she found the source of the bleed and pressed down hard to stem the flow. It was the femoral artery. A major one. Not good.
“Take off your shirt,” she ordered Coburn. “I need to bind the wound.”
When he didn’t respond immediately, she flicked her gaze up to him. He was staring at all the blood. “Coburn,” she bit out under her breath, “I need binding material now.”
Her husband emerged from his trance, tearing his shirt down the front. He shrugged it off and started ripping it in strips. She grabbed the first one and bound it around the little boy’s thigh to stop the bleed. An agonized cry escaped James. “More,” she ordered Coburn. “Give me as many as you’ve got.”
She glanced at the little boy’s chalk-white face, worried he was going to go into shock. “James,” she said softly, “did you know I’m a doctor? That I put people back together again?”
His lips trembled but he didn’t acknowledge her. “So you’ve hurt your leg,” she told him gently. “It isn’t anything we can’t fix. We just need to get you to a hospital so we can do that. You’ll get to ride in a helicopter. Won’t that be fun?”
His weak nod was a good sign. She reached for the strips Coburn handed her. “I’m going to tie your two legs together to stop them from hurting so much. Can you be brave for me?”
He nodded on a little sob. She set her jaw, knowing it was going to be painful for him, and went to work. It was her job to be immune to the little boy’s tears, but his terrified wails as she stabilized his broken leg against the other tore at her heart. They were hundreds of yards above a rocky shore. His leg had been spouting a waterfall of blood. She got it.
She secured James’s legs. Coburn climbed up on the cliff so Arthur could come down and talk to James with her until they heard the whir of the helicopter blades. She climbed up on the cliff then, so the ambulance crew could get the little boy on a stretcher and pass him up onto solid ground.
It wasn’t until everyone was securely on firm ground and James was being loaded into the ambulance that her knees buckled. Coburn caught her, sliding an arm around her waist.
“I’m terrified of heights.”
“I know.”
The raw emotion in his gaze brought tears dangerously close to the surface.
“You are insanely brave, Diana Grant.”
She didn’t feel brave. She felt very close to the edge, too much emotion attacking her from every direction.
The ambulance crew secured James. Arthur stepped into the back to go with them. Coburn bundled her into the car and drove down the mountain. Diana looked out the window and thought about what could have happened. That little boy could have taken a wrong step and...
“It didn’t happen.” Coburn flicked her a sideways glance. “You can’t live your life in what-ifs.”
“Is that what you think I do?” she asked quietly.
“Until you decided to drop yourself into war-torn Africa, yes. That was a departure.”
It had been. She sat in the car when they pulled into the driveway of the cottage, in a complete state of inertia. Coburn opened the door and reached down to scoop her out of the seat. She didn’t argue, merely rested her head on his chest as he let them into the cottage, carried her upstairs and deposited her on the floor of his suite’s bathroom while he turned on the steam shower. She looked down at her dress. It was so stained with blood it might as well have been red, not blue.
She reached around to unzip her dress, but her hands were shaking too hard to accomplish the task. Coburn moved behind her and brushed her hands out of the way. The whisper-soft touch of his lips against the sensitive skin between her neck and shoulder sent a shiver down her spine. “You were a goddamned superhero tonight.”
She shook her head. “It’s my job.”
The rasp of her zipper raked across her heightened senses. “It’s not your job to walk out on ledges when you’re terrified of heights to save a little boy. You didn’t even blink.”
Another shudder vibrated through her. “I was so terrified something would happen and we would plunge into the water.”
“But it didn’t stop you.” He pushed her dress off her shoulders, his hands coming up to cup her breasts while his mouth returned to that spot that drove her crazy. “I have never been so proud of anything or anyone than I was of you tonight.”
Her heart squeezed. “I have skills, Coburn. I need to be using them.”
“I know that.” He pressed his fingers into her shoulders and turned her around. “I have continually underplayed your job. I’ve never fully understood until tonight when I saw you with James how amazing what you do is.”
Something that felt a lot like hope sprang to life inside her. Maybe this could work between them. Maybe they could change. Maybe she just needed to stop thinking, stop analyzing as she always did and follow her heart. Give them a chance.
Coburn unhooked her bra and tossed it to the floor. His heated gaze roamed over her swollen flesh, the greedy edge to it making her insides quiver.
“I swear to God that scene at the dinner table nearly set me off,” he muttered, sliding his thumbs over the partially puckered peaks of her breasts to bring them to aching erectness. “You should have let me finish it.”
Fire raced through her veins. “That was not happening.”
“Now it is,” he murmured in her ear. “Get in the shower, Diana.”
She stepped into the shower, her jellylike legs barely holding her in the wake of his softly issued promise. The hot, heavenly spray poured down over her as Coburn stripped off his bloody clothes. She turned into the jets, letting the hot steam take her, washing away the nightmare of the past two hours.
Coburn stepped in behind her, the huge steam shower more than large enough for both of them. In fact she thought it might have been designed with half a dozen people in mind. But her husband wasn’t keeping his distance. He washed himself quickly, then picked up the lemon-scented soap and started working on her. His hands built a lather down her back, over the curve of her buttocks, which he lavished with an inordinate amount of attention, and then the length of her legs.