up,” Matt said quietly. “Any man in his right mind would grab you and never let you go.”
A warm blush swept up into Kai’s face. Leaning back, she felt the accumulated tension flowing out of her limbs. “As you get older, you get wiser. No more relationships with carrier pilots, believe me. I learned my lesson the hard way.” The silence was ebbing between them. “Why is it so easy to talk to you?”
“Chemistry, maybe,” he murmured, watching the tension drain from her face. “Feeling better?”
“Yes.”
“Well enough to eat?”
“N-no.”
His gray eyes grew dark. God, why did Boyce have to attack her? There was no need. Matt studied Kai closely. She was a fighter. In this case, a good trait to possess. Her survival might hinge on her ability to think in a crisis.
“How about more coffee? Looks like you’ve finished off that first cup in a hurry.”
“Please.”
Her hand trembled as she held the cup, and he wanted to reassure her that everything would be all right. Hopefully in another twenty-four hours Kai would be home, in a safe and comfortable environment. But he couldn’t say that. He couldn’t promise her anything.
“I’ll bet your hospital patients think you’re pretty special,” Matt said, circumventing the anxiety he saw registering in her eyes.
“They become like family to me for that three to six months when they’re recovering in the orthopedics ward.”
“Then you deal with a lot of the military men who are wounded or injured in action?”
“Yes, mostly pilots who ejected from their planes or guys who were injured on the decks of the aircraft carriers. Both are terribly dangerous jobs. When we get them, they’re all doped up with painkillers and usually heading for the first of three to seven operations while they’re with us.”
“Not something I’d ever want to experience,” Matt muttered.
“But you’d risk a prison sentence for kidnapping. I find your choice hard to understand.”
He shrugged his broad shoulders, wanting to divert her from her need to know more about him. The less she knew, the better he would be able to maintain his cover in order to complete this job. “So you patch up men’s broken bodies? It’s got to be a natural high to see them get out of those hospital beds and walk again.”
The first genuine smile curved her lips. “There’s no greater feeling. Unless it would be to have a baby.” Kai ran her slender fingers through her hair, trying to tame it into order. She longed for a brush or a comb.
“You want children someday?”
“Absolutely.” And then she shared a shy smile with him. “If I can find a man who doesn’t love his aircraft more than me.”
“Maybe you’ve limited your field of choice. You could marry a civilian.”
“Are you joking? What civilian male is going to get up and leave his steady, secure job every three or four years when I get orders to transfer to another military base?”
“Women do it for men all the time. Why shouldn’t a man do it for the woman he loves?”
“You’re serious, aren’t you?”
It was Matt’s turn to smile. “Sure am.”
“You’re one of the few men I’ve met who hasn’t hidden behind that particular double standard, then.”
“I’m the idealist now,” he admitted. “Marriage means compromises. It won’t survive without them.”
“You’re talking from experience.”
He nodded. “I was married once. We each had certain priorities that had to be met. We found ourselves bending and giving. It wasn’t so tough. Matter of fact, it made the marriage better.”
Her eyes grew troubled. All of Kai’s instincts told her Matt Taylor was a rare human being. Now her assumption was being proven. “With that kind of attitude, I don’t think you’re divorced.”
“No, I didn’t divorce.” His voice softened, and he shook off the powerful feeling of loss. “Let’s talk about you. I’m a boring and depressing subject.”
“On the contrary, you’re intriguing. I have a feeling you’re hiding much more than you’re telling me.”
“Wouldn’t you if you were in my place? When this is over, you could get me identified to the cops on the basis of what we’ve talked about. I can’t risk that. It’s safer to talk about you.”
Kai glanced at her watch; nearly an hour had passed. She felt more emotionally stable. “If I get out of this,” she told him throatily, “I’ll never forget you or your kindness.”
“You’ve struck a soft spot in me, Kai Easton.” Matt appeared embarrassed. “I don’t know why or how, but you have. Maybe it’s your pretty green eyes affecting me.” Or maybe it was her, the woman who had reached out and touched the hidden chords of his heart and filled him once again with a vibrant life. “What do you do in your time off?”
Kai leaned against the wall, sliding her arms around her drawn-up legs. “Behind the apartment where I live there’s a wooded, hilly region. I love going for long walks just to get rid of the tension. I try not to think about my patients then.”
“You take your work home with you?”
“There’s no one to divert my attention from it. Sometimes I’ll invite a couple of guys who are on the mend home on a Saturday afternoon and treat them to a home-cooked meal.” She smiled. “Most of them have been confined to a bed for at least three months and are then transferred to a wheelchair. They haven’t seen much sunshine or been outdoors, and they have very few visitors. I try to get them out of the hospital for a couple of hours.”
“That way you maintain some semblance of home life for yourself.” Matt grinned. “Makes me almost wish I was one of your patients. But not quite.”
“I’d rather you be my patient than my kidnapper.”
“I’m not the type that likes to be mothered.”
Kai gave him a veiled look filled with irritation. “I’m not a frustrated mother or housewife.”
“Oh?”
There was a glitter of anger in her emerald eyes as she met his indecipherable look. “I would hardly ‘mother’ the man in my life, for your information.”
“Really?” Matt baited.
“There’s a huge difference between mothering a man and being a friend to him.”
“I’m teasing, Brat. Although,” he drawled, “you look pretty when you get that Irish dander of yours up.”
The glimmer left her eyes. “Or are you just trying to get my mind off the present situation?”
A slow smile crept across Matt’s sensual mouth. “Could be.”
“Why are you afraid of being known as a good guy?” Kai demanded.
He rosé stiffly to his feet. “Haven’t you heard? Good guys finish last.”
“Not in my book.”
He gathered up the blanket. “Don’t put me on any ‘good’ list. I’ve got feet of clay just like everyone else. Maybe more so than most. Why don’t you lie down and rest? I’ll leave the sack of food by the bunk in case you get hungry later.”
Fear leaked into her voice, and she stared at him with wide eyes. “Where are you going?”
“Not far. Just out into the warehouse. You’re looking tired, and I want you to