âAlmost immediately. He'll be a little groggy, but the cadaver kidney is workingâclearly, we need to keep a very close eye on itâbut the magic works straight away.' Taking her by the shoulders, he steered her out of the OR and pointed towards a door. âI need to talk to the parents and my covering on-call staffâ¦I'm not rostered on this weekend but I trust them completely,' he explained. âGo sit down in there and wait for me. I'll be in shortly to debrief.'
âI should really get back to my desk. I've got an important case coming up next week that I really need to do some work on.'
His eyes darkened as he shook his head. âAnd you can work all through the night and every hour of the weekend once you leave here. But, Ivy, it's been a long day. Just go in there and sit for a few minutes. You are allowed to rest. In fact, I insist and I'm the doctor. This is my domain and I call the shots. Go. I'll be in soon.'
âOkay. Okay.' To be honest, she was feeling just a little too exhausted to argue. God only knew how he felt after concentrating so hard for so long, and now he had to pull on a smiling face and meet anxious parents. It had been an emotional day, and a seemingly endless one. âYou can have two whole minutes, but then I do need to go. Cases don't get won by sitting around, doing nothing.' She started to walk towards the door and her heart lifted at the promise of a seat, but she couldn't resist adding, âButâ¦for the recordâ¦'
His eyes flashed with something as he turned back to her. âYes?'
âYou did really well.'
âI know.' His shoulders relaxed and he laughed. âPraise from you? Wow, what can I say?' He patted his heart and with a sarcastic grin said, âIt means so much.'
âIt should. I don't give it lightly.'
She slipped into the staffroom, slumped onto the sofa and kicked her shoes off.
Wow
. That felt good. Rubbing her left foot with both hands, she massaged the gnarls and dips and scars and eventually managed to get the blood flowing properly, and gradually the numbness started to ease. What they'd achieved in there had been truly amazing. In Matteo's words, they'd given Joey a future. That was something to be proud of. But how could he do this, day in, day out? How could they all? It was exhilarating but so emotionally draining.
One thing she knewâhe'd been right when he'd suggested she live a little in his world. Now she felt she understood that it was intense and necessary and so, so important.
But so was hers. Behind-the-scenes stuff that kept them all focused and kept everyone away from harm. They both had their roles to play.
But nowâ¦exhaustion dropped over her as she laid her head back and closed her eyes, just for a momentâ¦
âHey, Ivy.'
Was it a dream? A dark, soothing voice that worked magic over her skin. âIvy?'
Not a dream. Actually, here in person. Better than a dream. Or worse. She was here. He was here. Alone. Andâ¦hell, she was sleeping. That
was so not the way she wanted people to see her, especially people like him.
Her eyelids shot open. He was close, kneeling on the floor next to her, an easy, teasing smile on his lips. âIvy? Are you okay?'
âOh. Hello, Matteo. Iâ¦erâ¦' She sat bolt upright, shoving her feet back into her shoes. Had he seen? âWhoa, how long was I asleep for? I should be getting back to work.'
âNo. Wait. Here.' He handed her a hospital-issue white porcelain cup with something that smelled like heaven in it. âDrink this first. I smuggled it in from Enrico's so don't breathe a word to anyone.'
He'd brought her coffee? Staring at the cup, she grimaced. âDid you put poison in?'
âMe? Poison the enemy? I wouldn't stoop so low. Besides, I get the feeling I've won this part of the battle.'
âI think I'm starting to see things a little from your point of view. But that doesn't mean I'm backing down or admitting a darned thing.' She took a sip and smiled, leaning her head back against the lumpy cushions. He'd brought her coffee? She didn't want to read anything into that. âIt's perfect. Thank you. How did you know what I liked? Guesswork?'
âWhen I described you to Enrico he said you always have the
caffe lungo
.
Americano
â¦
Grande
â¦whatever you all call it here. Strong and black.'
She didn't know what to say. âThank you. That's very nice of you.'
When he'd stormed into her office that first day she hadn't imagined he could be like this. She'd jumped to the conclusion that he was all mucho macho Italiano. And, yes, he was. But he was so much more than that. So much more that she was trying hard to resist. And he was making it harder by the minute.
âIvy.' His eyes shot to her foot and back again, his voice softer. âWhat happened?'
Oh, wow again. Straight to the point. âThat? Nothing much. It was all so long ago.'
âAnd yet still you try to hide it.' Slipping her shoe off, he examined her foot, holding it firmly when she tried to wriggle it away. âAn accident? A car? Crush injury or something?'
âA-ha. Or something.' What to say? She took a breath and thought, struggled for a moment. This was too personal, she never spoke of it, never referenced itâhad tried to put that experience to the back of her mindâbut even so, it fuelled her job every day. Would it matter if she told him? Was that opening up too much of herself?
Yes. âLook, it's not important. Thanks for an awesome day. I'll get going now.'
His hand closed over her foot. It was warm.
It was safe. The safest she'd felt for a long time. âI'm not going to let you walk out of here until I know what caused this. I know that's hard for you. I know you don't understand the need to be open. But it will be fine to talk of it. It will help. Maybe. I want to know. For you.'
For you. God, what did that mean? But trying not to talk about it would make it seem like an even bigger issueâand, really, she wanted to downplay it.
âIâ¦erâ¦' She didn't know where to start, so she just started at the beginning. âI was four. My stepdad was new to us, not married to my mum yet, in fact they'd not long met, and he was trying to show offâto
bond
. He had me by the feet and was swinging me round and round and at first I was enjoying it. But his grip was so, so tight and I was going too fast and too high and no matter what I said he just kept on doing it to impress my mum. I started to panic and wriggled out of his grip. Hit the floor. Broke my ankle.'
âOuch.'
âYep. Mum didn't believe it hurt as badly as it did so I tried to walk on it. A few days later it was just so swollen and painful I talked her into taking me to the hospital. Turned out it was broken in a couple of places and had started to heal badly. The orthopaedic surgeon was new andâ¦well, let's say he wasn't in the right head space to
be working. He attached an external metal frame to fix itâbut he didn't do it properly. The upshot was I ended up with a badly deformed foot and twelve more surgeries to try to fix it.'
âWhen you say not in the right head spaceâ¦?'
The all-too-familiar anger rippled through her. âDrunk. On whisky and power.'
âOh.' He started to stroke over the scars that snaked round her foot, her ankle, her calf, the knobbly, mottled skin more sensitive to his touch. And again she tried to pull away. How many men had flinched at the sight of it? How many had laughed at her? How long had she endured the teasing at school and beyond? The revulsion? His eyes widened. âThat's a real shame. I'm so sorry.'
âDon't be. It's in the past.'
He let her foot down then settled himself on the other end of the couch. Lifted her foot again and continued to stroke it as if it was the most normal thing he'd ever done. He smelt of dark brown Betadine, that distinctive hospital smell, but over-laced with his own particular scent of spice and pure raw man. âBut you are still affected by it, Ivy, I can see.'
âPlenty of people have worse than this, you only have to spend a day in this hospital to see that. It doesn't hurt much.' Actually, it did. Not a day or an hour went by without pain, but talking about it made it worse. What had hurt much more had been the reaction from everyone else.
Cripple.
Ugly. Time-waster.
Her own mother hadn't been bothered enough to listen, to care, to fight.
âBut that's why you're here, doing this job.'
âYes.' She twisted round and leant back on the arm of the sofa to get comfortable. As if having a man like Matteo touching her skin would ever be a comfortable experience. It was terrifying. It was lovely. âSure, that's my calling. Righting the wrongs. Capturing the evildoers and taking them to task. Saving the world. Maybe I should get a cape too. Super-Lawyer.'
âSure, you'd look cute in Lycra. We could be a dynamic duo. But now I understand a lot more about you.' He paused, waited until the smile had faded. âAnd he apologised, this man?'
âThe surgeon? Never. But he was eventually struck off after he got caught doing a similar thingâmaybe six years later. Turns out he was a serial drunk and had hurt a lot of people over the years.'
âAnd the man who was swinging you round and round?' His face darkened. âYou went through too much because of him.'
She thought about how much to say. Did it matter? Was she breaking any of her own cardinal rules by just talking to Matteo? It was only words. She could do words easily. She just didn't
have such a great handle on emotions. Especially not these new onesâdesire, lust, need.
âMy mum married him. They all said it was my fault for wriggling while he was swinging me. Said he thought my screams were because I was having fun, not because I was frightened. And Mum was so bowled over by him she believed anything he said. She wasn't interested in my version of events, or in seeking any recompense from the surgeon, or to try make sure he didn't maim anyone else's kid.' It was all too much trouble.
âSo that's why you distrust people too. Ah, you are textbook.' He raised his eyebrows and wagged a finger at her.
She grabbed it and twisted slightly. âGlad I'm so transparent when I thought I was much more complex.'
âAnd twelve more surgeries?'
She shrugged, trying at the same time to shrug off the memory and the pain she'd endured time after time after time. And learning to walk. Over and over. âYep. Internal fixations, pins, plates. Infected wound debriding⦠You could say I was more of an in-patient than an out-patient for a lot of my growing up. It got to the point that I used to take myself to my out-patient appointments on the bus on my own.'
âAs a child?'
âAs a young girl. A teenager. Mum wasn't very good at the parenting details of being a mother. There were always too many other things for her to doâ¦' Or, rather, men to pursue. Relationships to sort out. Dramas. Lots and lots of dramas. Unfortunately, not one of them had involved looking after the only child she'd ever had. âIt was just easier to do it on my own than try to rely on her. Although, obviously, she had to come to sign the consent forms for the surgeries, but she didn't tend to hang around much.'
It had always felt as if it had been just too much of a hassle for her. That her needs had been a hindrance to her mother's social life. Until, that was, every time her mother's life had imploded, and then she'd clung to Ivy the way she'd clung to her husbandsâwith the desperate, all-consuming need that they all learned to despise in the end. The need that Ivy had seen once too often in her friendsâthe need for a man that overwhelmed them.
So she'd vowed never to be like that. Ever. Never to let a man take over, to take so much of her that there was too little left. But she didn't feel in any danger of that happening with Dr Delicious hereâshe knew exactly the score with him. He was the kind of guy who didn't offer any promises, and that was just fine, because she didn't want any.
The stroking of his hands had become more intense, the sensation he instilled reaching more than just her leg. It was travelling through her, heating every part of her. He nodded. âSo this is why you're so independent and argumentative? Because you want justice. And because you need to be heard. Because your mum let you down.'
She thought about it, and, yes, he was probably right, but she didn't want him to know that. Like a lot of things, it was easier to shove them deep down than face them. âI suppose you could say that my relationship with my mother is as broken as my foot.' In fact, the thought of even discussing anything other than the weather with her mum brought Ivy out in hives. As far as she was concerned, it was better to be on her own than risk her heart again. A girl could only take so much emotional fallout.
âThanks for the psychology lecture. But I'm just who I am, Poison Ivy, who won't tolerate defective people thinking they're immune to the law or to recrimination. Or surgeons who think they're God. Or people who don't take me seriously. Okay, so I've learnt to be like this, but I'm not ashamed of it.'
âYou are Ivy. Yes. And you are stronger for your experiences.'
âAnd do you know, I don't think I've ever really talked about them before.' Not in so much
detail. So God only knew what the hell that meant. That she'd exposed her weakness, not only allowed him to see her scars but discussed them too.
Suddenly she felt a little vulnerable. She shrugged her foot from out of his hand and scuttled her feet under her bum as she sat up, inadvertently shuffling closer to him as she resettled herself. âSo, please, please, don't say anything to anyone, I don't really want this to be hospital gossip. Every surgeon's going to think I'm on some kind of witch hunt and I'm not at all. I just want to do my job to the best of my ability, and scuttling out dodgy surgeons is only a tiny part of it. The rest is to put systems in place to prevent these things happening again.'