Maverick In The Er
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To make matters worse, she was oddly unsettled by her task, which was ridiculous because she’d cut off clothing before without a second thought, and on a number of men more handsome than Trey. If she wasn’t almost finished, she would have turned over the job to one of the hovering nurses, who clearly would have been thrilled at the honor.
“Do you run?” she asked, trying to deal with her view of his leg clinically.
“Yeah.”
His knee was too swollen for her to pull the free leg off, so she sliced the fabric lengthwise and laid it open. “You’ll have to postpone your daily jogs for a while.”
“You think?”
She smiled at his sarcasm. “You really are holding true to the stereotype about doctors being lousy patients.”
“I’m entitled. This whole thing was so stupid! It should never have happened.”
The guilt she’d been holding at bay reappeared. “Maybe next time you’ll let me handle it.”
His battered face didn’t hide his skepticism. “And what would you have done? Ended up at the bottom of the pile with me? Or, worse yet, instead of me?”
His outrage was obvious and she understood why. Men hated appearing weak. Being caught off guard and injured because of a misplaced punch would, in their opinion, epitomize the very trait they hated. Now, if he’d earned his wounds because he’d thrown a few blows of his own, they would have become badges of honor.
“Maybe you’re right,” she conceded, “but you shouldn’t feel embarrassed either. In fact, once news gets out, you’ll become more popular than you already are.”
“I guess.” He didn’t sound too happy about his new status, which surprised her. David had always preened under extra attention and she’d expected Trey to do the same.
“Can I have some ibuprofen and ice for my knee now?” he complained.
“The ice is coming right up,” she said. “We’ll save the pain reliever until after your CT scan.”
“BP is one forty-five over eighty,” the nurse broke in to report. “Pulse is sixty-eight.”
“Your blood pressure is a little high—”
“Of course it is,” he snapped. “Getting caught in the middle of a fight will do that.”
Sierra exchanged a wry glance with Roma. Clearly the charge nurse held Sierra’s opinion about Trey’s attitude. She looked as if she was ready to comment when another nurse brought a fresh ice pack, breaking the moment.
Sierra secured the bag to his knee with elastic wrap. “This’ll hold it in place while you’re visiting Radiology. After you’re back and Dr. Abernathy sees you, we’ll wrap your knee more securely.”
“What? No Lachman’s? No pivot shift test?”
She smiled as he referred to the two tests performed to diagnose an ACL injury. “Knowing an orthopedist will do those himself, do you really want me to manipulate your knee and leg just to prove I know how? “
“True. Good idea to wait.”
Sierra stepped aside. “I’ll see you when you get back.”
For the next hour, past the time Sierra’s shift should have ended, a steady stream of staff members approached her to ask how Trey was doing. Even the people who were just reporting for duty had heard of the mishap and begged for details.
The two prisoners stopped her in the hallway to gruffly pass on their apologies to Trey before their caretakers herded them to jail.
“What was all that about?” she asked Ben and Lamont, who acted rather pleased with themselves as they perched on the counter beside her.
“We let it be known they’d better be on their best behavior if they ever come here again because we don’t take kindly to our staff getting hurt,” Lamont replied. “The next time they lose their cool and need something more than a few stitches, we’ll use drugs that produce some unpleasant side effects.”
“Like impotence, incontinence, hair loss, skin blemishes, boils, diarrhea and blurred vision,” Ben chimed in.
“Not to mention anal leakage and flatulence.”
Sierra looked at her two colleagues in amazement. “You didn’t.”
“We did,” Lamont assured her, before he exchanged a wide grin with his partner-in-crime.
She laughed. “You guys are awful. You both look so meek and mild-mannered, but underneath you have an evil streak.”
“Hey,” Lamont protested without heat, “we protect our own. Now that we’ve done our good deed for the day, we’re going home. Are you sticking around?”
“Only until Radiology turns Trey loose.”
While she waited, she impatiently checked the computer for his test results. One by one, the reports filtered in.
Normal chest film. No skull fracture. No concussion.
All she needed now was Dr. Abernathy’s recommendation and she could grant Trey his wish. Of course, she could have granted it sooner if she hadn’t gone overboard with the X-ray requests, but she wasn’t going to risk overlooking anything. There would be hell to pay if she did, not only from her boss and Trey’s, too, but also from Trey’s adoring public.
Finally, an X-ray technician wheeled him into the trauma room. His normally relaxed mouth was pinched with apparent pain and the orbit of his other eye was slowly turning dark.
“What do you know,” she said cheerfully. “Your eyes match.”
He looked so forlorn she wanted to give him a hug. Now, that would cause the rumor mill to kick into gear…
“Great,” he said glumly. “By the way, my CT scan was normal. Any chance I can have that ibuprofen now?”
Because she’d seen the report on her screen just moments ago, she agreed. “Absolutely.”
While she doled out two pills, then two more when he glared at her, Nathan Abernathy rushed in, apologizing for his delay. Sierra looked on as he conducted his own exam, including the tests Trey had previously mentioned. A few minutes later, Roma waved to her from the doorway.