A Lot Like Christmas (Wishful 11) - Page 40

“Jesus. I’m so sorry.” She pressed a cheek against his shoulder, just holding on, and he welcomed it even as he cursed himself for the weakness of needing it. Needing her.

“I should’ve been there. If I’d been there, I could’ve done something. And instead I was here, with you, pretending I could have another life.”

For a long moment, she stayed silent. “Am I correct in assuming that they wouldn’t have run the mission without another medic as part of the team?”

“Yeah.”

“Another medic with the same training as you?”

“Yes, but—”

“No, no buts. You cannot blame yourself for this, Ryan. The only one at fault here is whoever set up that tripwire. Not you, not whoever was standing in your stead, not anyone else on your team. Be angry. Grieve the loss. But don’t blame yourself.”

There were sense and logic to her words, and everything in him wanted to reject them. “Easier said than done.”

“If you’d pulled away from me sooner, if you’d been there for Robbie, you wouldn’t have been here today for Percy. Even if I’d managed to get in the door, I wouldn’t have known what was wrong or what to do. I’d have waited for the fire department, if for no other reason than I wouldn’t have been physically able to get Percy off the floor. I wouldn’t have had the training to know he needed water or that he needed to stay awake.”

It was easy, far too easy, to see the picture she painted. To see the probable outcome. He wanted to block it out, deny the possibility, but she was still talking.

“There was a medic on the team, and Robbie didn’t make it. Maybe if you’d been the medic, Robbie still wouldn’t have made it, and that’s horrible and tragic. But then Percy might be gone, too. And that wouldn’t have been your fault either, because even here, outside a warzone, tragedies just happen. There’s only one of you, and you can’t carry everyone on your shoulders, no matter how impressive they are. No matter how much you believe you can control everything, you can’t. And I think, somewhere deep down, you know that.”

Knowing and accepting were two very different things.

“The other day, you accused me of hiding out from my life, of making do with what I have here instead of doing whatever was necessary to get back to my real life.”

Hearing his words, Ryan winced. “I can’t believe I said that to you. I was wrong. Dead wrong.”

“I accept your apology. But you weren’t speaking to me, were you? Not really. You were angry with yourself because you don’t want to go back.”

“Yes,” he whispered.

“Then maybe you shouldn’t.”

He whipped his head toward her. “What?”

“If you’ve reached a point where you’re that reluctant and conflicted about going back after a few weeks off, if you’re questioning your ability to compartmentalize yourself in order to do the job, then maybe you’re getting to the point where you shouldn’t be doing the job.”

That there was more than a kernel of truth to what she said scared him down to the marrow. He wanted the choice. All those down-the-road plans were for when he was ready to walk away. He didn’t want to be forced into the decision because he wasn’t capable anymore. He wanted to leave on a high note. On his own terms. Not as a failure. “It’s not that easy. I have obligations to my team, a contract. I—”

She held up a hand. “I’m not saying walk away today. But give yourself permission to think about it. Seriously consider it. You chose an incredibly difficult profession. I can’t even fathom how hard you worked to get where you are. One of the elite. But you can only do that effectively if you can maintain your edge. Psychologically, that’s got to wear on a person. That doesn’t make you weak or a failure. It makes you human.”

Somehow, staring into her big, blue eyes, that didn’t seem like such a bad thing. How was it that this woman understood him so well after so little time? How had he come to crave that so much, so fast?

“Mr. Malone?”

He jolted at the voice, rising to his feet as the doctor approached

him. A white lab coat flapped around her legs.

“I’m Dr. Campbell. I wanted to let you know that Mr. Gannaway is going to be okay. We’ve stabilized him, and expect him to make a full recovery, though we’d like to keep him for a full forty-eight hours to make sure we get his levels worked out. Provided everything goes as expected, he can go home Christmas Day.”

“That’s fantastic news. Thank you.”

“However—”

Of course there was a “but” to this scenario.

“He’s got to start taking care of himself. I’ll be making recommendations for follow-up care so he can learn how to manage his diabetes,” she said.

Tags: Kait Nolan Wishful Romance
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