âYou werenât my doctor, but I noticed you.â
Brady smiled; there was that dimple again. âI secretly hoped that you noticed me, too. But I get it. There are so many patients, we become a number.â
âYou certainly werenât a number.â Sheila took the wounded bull riderâs hand. She braved a look into his eyes.
Suddenly she rose, pulling away from him. âWhat am I doing?â
âIâm sorry. I shouldnât have told you that.â
Sheila shook her head. âYou understand that nothing can ever happen between us? It would cost me my job. Nobody is worth that sacrifice.â
âRelax, Doc.â Brady shrugged. âIt was just a harmless flirtation. It wonât happen again.â
âGood.â His admission was oddly reassuring and uncomfortable at the same time. âIâm going to finish my rounds and then Iâll be back to see you.â
Brady winked. âIâll be here when youâre ready.â
Sheila shouldnât have read anything into his reply, but the undercurrent was undeniable. No man had ever had the ability to ruin her, but if she wasnât careful, this one just might.
AMANDA RENEE was raised in the Northeast and now wriggles her toes in the warm sand of coastal South Carolina. Her career began when she was discovered through Mills & Boonâs So You Think You Can Write contest. When not creating stories about love and laughter, she enjoys the company of her schnoodle, Duffy, camping, playing guitar and piano, photography and anything involving horses. You can visit her at www.amandarenee.com.
For Dad
Thank you for always supporting me.
I love you.
Prologue
The roar of the crowd faded as he sailed through the air. Gravity defying seconds morphed into an eternity until he struck the dirt with a resounding thud. A frenzy of blurred images danced before him in the deafening silence. He scrambled to his knees, searching for the safety of the arena fence. Muted shouts began to seep through the murkiness. Adrenaline triumphed over the growing ache that tore through his left leg. Then darkness overshadowed him. Once more, he was plucked effortlessly from the ground like a twig in a summer twister. The bullâs head slammed into his spineâthe sudden blow burning his lungs.
His arms desperately clawed for something to hold on to as the bull violently swung his head from side to side, but he found only the beast beneath him. With each twist and snort, the animal stole another breath from his body. And then nothing.
No sound.
No pain.
His world slipped away with a single thought... Gunner.
Chapter One
âIâll never understand what motivates someone to climb on top of a one-ton animal hell-bent to drive them into the ground.â Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Sheila Lindstrom reviewed Brady Sawyerâs chart one final time before she headed down the hall to give him the news heâd been waiting two months to hear.
âBull riders are nothing more than stubborn cowboys looking for an adrenaline fix,â Marissa Sloane said. The junior orthopedic surgical resident assigned to Sheilaâs service at Grace General Hospital tossed her coffee cup in the trash behind the nurseâs station and scanned the patient whiteboard. âLook at it this way, bull riding helps keep us in business. Besides, I think you have a soft spot for the cowboy. Youâve monitored his case ever since he was admitted and he wasnât even your patient. Well, at least not until today.â
âOnly because I was on rotation that night and assisted on his initial surgery.â The trauma team had airlifted Brady from the arena and heâd coded once while en route. âIâm still amazed he made it through the first twenty-four hours, let alone is strong enough for release to a rehabilitation facility.â Sheila was glad sheâd been wrong. Seeing a patient leave the hospital in remarkably better condition than when they arrived was its own reward.
âAnd you get to go with him.â Marissa playfully elbowed her.
âIâm hardly going with him. The hippotherapy center is part of my job.â The orthopedic surgeon residency program provided services free of charge to the Dance of Hope Hippotherapy Center located fifteen minutes away in Ramblewood, Texas. The facility, which used horsesâ movements to treat a number of conditions, had been a huge incentive when Sheila interviewed for the residency program four years earlier. âDouble-check the OR schedule for me and see if thereâve been any changes. Iâm scheduled for an arthroscopic rotator-cuff repair this morning.â
âIt doesnât hurt that heâs extremely good-looking.â Marissa logged into the hospitalâs electronic medical records system. âYouâre still set for nine oâclock.â