She stops as she notices my silence and narrows her eyes at me. "Oh, what is it, Logan?"
Oh yeah, this little meltdown is about to go fucking nuclear.
Chapter Three
Quinn
One Week Ago:
It's almost 3 a.m. by the time I get home from what will be my last team meeting at the hospital for the next few months while I work on the outreach program at my Father's company. I'm grinding my teeth and muttering under my breath as I stand in the lobby of my loft building, hammering the elevator button, and it's not even the fact that it's late and the birthday bash I was invited to is long over that's got me pissed off either. It's that leaving my team after that whole thing feels like giving up, and admitting defeat.
It also seems totally fucking unfair.
‘It's just not appropriate, Quinn. I can't be seen dating one of my staff. Especially one that's a shoe-in for team leader."
In theory, Andy has a fair point, except it loses just a little bit of credibility when I walked into his office a week ago to see one of the other young Doctors on the team blowing him.
And honestly, that's not what has me so furious. I mean it's not like I ever thought Andy was "the one" or anything, and it was hardly a passionate affair, unless you count hidden dates and maybe four fairly unsatisfying intimate encounters over as many months as passionate.
And I don't.
What I'm pissed about though is just the hypocrisy of it, and I hate hypocrisy. It's telling me "being professional" is the reason things have to end when you've got Vicky fucking Spears's lips wrapped around your cock in your office.
But again, that's not even what has me so angry tonight. No, I'm practically steaming at the ears because Andy decided to announce at the end of our last team meeting - almost as an afterthought - that we were going to have a new team leader.
‘Mad' is your boyfriend ditching and probably cheating on you. ‘Fury' is having every head in the room turn expectantly towards you just as Andy announces that skanky, cock-sucking, slut-bag Vicky Spears will be stepping into the role of technically being your boss after you get back from working at Archer Holdings.
Perfect.
So, I'm already thinking about which Netflix series I'm going to binge with a bottle of red wine upstairs as the elevator doors ding open, and it's right then that the scream freezes in my throat.
The man is slumped against the wall of the elevator, bloodied and out cold. He's shirtless, his muscled, tattooed body covered in bruises and cuts and blood, and for a horrified minute, I wonder if I'm looking at a corpse. But then the doctor in me kicks into gear instantly, and I'm dropping down next to him to feel for a pulse.
My heart jumps into my throat as he suddenly gasps awake, his hand jerking to grab my wrist and his eyes are wide and wild as he stares into mine. I stutter out a gasp as I find myself staring into the most piercing brown-green eyes I've ever seen. Eyes the color of the forest, flecked with gold.
His eyes dart around the elevator in wild, jerking movements, and I can see the veins in his neck pulsing as he jerks forward.
"Hey, hey!" I say, putting my hands on his bare chest and gently pushing him back against the wall. The muscles beneath his skin feel like rippling iron under my hands, and I feel myself blushing at how absurdly unprofessional it is to think of this bleeding stranger with those kind of descriptors.
Especially bleeding strangers as staggeringly good looking as this one.
His dark hair is buzzed short, and even with a thick beard covering his chin, I can see how handsome he is from the prominent cut of his cheekbones and the dark, smokey look in his eyes.
"I need you to relax, okay?" I'm pressing him back down as gently as I can. "You've been in some kind of accident, and I'm going to help you."
He lunges forward again, a crazy look in those handsome eyes. "You-"
"I'm a doctor."
Ok, clinical virologist, but close enough, I mutter to myself. I didn't sit through four semesters of triage and two years of late-shift E.R. work not to be able to do something in a situation like this.
"Listen, I'm going to help you while we wait for the ambulance-"
"No." His voice is like sandpaper on wood. Rich and rough, with a touch of something warm there. He momentarily looks much more awake and alert as his face darkens. "No ambulance, no hospitals."
I'm suddenly very afraid of what that implies, as well as suddenly very aware that I'm alone with a beaten and bloodied stranger who for all I know could have just come from murdering his whole family or something.
He must see the fear shoot through my face, because his look softens for a moment. "Look, just- no ambulance. Please."
I bite my lip, my hand still hovering near my purse and my cellphone, but there's something utterly bewildering and unexplainable about the sincerity in his eyes that has me wanting to trust him. He winces, his hand pressing against his ribs, and it's then that I realize how much he's bleeding from some wound there.
"Oh my God, you need to let me call an-"
"You're a doctor you said?" He coughs violently, tilting his head back against the wall and gritting his teeth for a second.
"Yes?"
"Good, you're hired."
I frown. "Wha-"
"Reach in my left pants pocket."
"Um, excuse me?"
"Just do it." He coughs, wincing.
Warily, I lean closer to him, wondering when he's going to tie me up, or ax me to death, and reach into his pocket.
I blink at the fat wad of $100 dollar bills I pull out, that are dyed rust colored around the edges from his blood.
"Ok, what's-"
"That's your fee," he whispers out with a grimace. "For patching me up." He's looking paler and paler by the second as he leans his head back against the wall, and I notice his breathing is coming slower and slower by the rising and falling of his muscled, tattooed chest.
"I'm not taking this money."
Oh HELL no am I taking a bloody wad of hundred dollar bills from a complete stranger. I want no part of that, actually.
His brow furrows, and I can see him trying to open his lips, but I'm already whirling around and hitting the button in the elevator, the doors closing behind us.
"I'm not taking this money," I say again, this time yanking my t-shirt off over my head and pushing his hand away as I press the cotton to his open wound. "But I am going to help you. Just don't die on me, alright?"
He momentarily opens his eyes once more, and when he grins, I can't tell if it's because he's glad I'm going to help him, or the fact that I've taken my shirt off. Maybe both.
"Top floor," he whispers hoarsely.
"Wait, what?" As dumb of an idea I know it was, I was just going to drag him into my own apartment on the second to top floor. As far as I knew, the apartment above me was empty.
"I live-" he coughs blood and then he's going slack in my arms. "I just moved-"
Oh, wonderful. The hot, muscled bleeding guy dying in my arms is my new upstairs neighbor.
"Thank you, really." He says with that deep, baritone of a voice. He's sitting up now in his bed, which is weirdly the only piece of furniture in the whole apartment. His color is coming back, and there's a clean bandaged wrapped around the stitches I've just put on the wound on his ribcage and another bandage taping down the other heavy cut on his brow.
I nod at him quietly, as I start to pack away the medical supplies I grabbed from my own apartment.
"Look, take the money, seriously." He says, nodding at the bloody stack of bills sitting on his empty kitchen counter.
I choke out a small laugh. "Yeah, uh, no. Thanks though."
"Why not?"
I look up at him, and he's got this cocky, devilish smirk on his face, his teeth shining white through the dark beard covering his chin. And for maybe the fifth time since finding him, there's something so familiar about him that strikes me in a funny way but that I just can't place.
"Because I don't want to know what happened to you tonight, but I also know a stab wound when I see one."
The grin fades from his lips, and he nods at me. "Fair enough." He clears his throat. "It was a fight; a boxing match."
"I said I didn't want to know."
He laughs. "Yeah but you seem like the curious type."
"Oh, and you figured that out from the full two hours you've known me, half of which you were passed out?"
"I'm good at reading people."
I cross my arms over my chest, over the fresh tank-top I've changed into. "A boxing match doesn't usually involve knives."
He grins and shrugs, "Some people are bad at losing."
"So you won?"
He nods at the kitchen counter. "That wad of cash I keep trying to get you to take is twenty five thousand dollars."
Holy shit.
I shake my head. "You know you could have died tonight if I hadn't found you, right? I mean why do this?"
"Eh, it's just what I do I guess." He says, leaning back against his headboard. He winces for a second and I can see a red bloom at the bandage on his side.
"Shit, you're bleeding. Hang on, let me change that bandage again." I move towards the bed and sit on the edge as I bend down to examine him.
"So is that why you fight then? That money?" I nod my head at the kitchen counter.
He laughs dryly. "Not at all, actually."