(Mass Market Paperback)
Welcome to Leo's--Where Anything Can Happen
A proper lady lets loose on Open Mike Night--and opens her heart to a different kind of man...
A Texas RAnger and a candy shop owner have a blind date--with a deliciously unexplected outcome...
A widowed party planner meets a handsome doctor, but fears losing her heart for the second time...
A journalist runs into an old college flame--she's determined to be all business, but he ahs another agenda...
Welcome to Leo's
A stylish D.C. supper club patrons come to enjoy rich, savory gourmet food, sip intoxicating cocktails, and drick in the soulful sounds of live music. It's the perfect place to dine, unwind, catch up--and mayhbe even fall in love...
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 03, 2001: All three stories had me wishing that they would last a little longer,I didn't want to stop reading the stories. They made my heart ache, they made me cry and feel absolutely wonderful when I finished each one. I definitely say read this book!
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 01, 2001: I loved this book so much. I read it within two days because I couldn't put it down.
Welcome to Leo's--Where Anything Can Happen
A proper lady lets loose on Open Mike Night--and opens her heart to a different kind of man...
A Texas RAnger and a candy shop owner have a blind date--with a deliciously unexplected outcome...
A widowed party planner meets a handsome doctor, but fears losing her heart for the second time...
A journalist runs into an old college flame--she's determined to be all business, but he ahs another agenda...
Welcome to Leo's
A stylish D.C. supper club patrons come to enjoy rich, savory gourmet food, sip intoxicating cocktails, and drick in the soulful sounds of live music. It's the perfect place to dine, unwind, catch up--and mayhbe even fall in love...
Loading...| Second Chance by Rochelle Alers | 1 |
| Eye of the Beholder by Donna Hill | 87 |
| Main Agenda by Brenda Jackson | 161 |
| Sweet Temptation by Francis Ray | 247 |
Chapter One
Leigh Walcott stood in the doorway to Lawson's Gourmet on Washington, D.C.'s Connecticut Avenue, waiting for the downpour of rain to subside long enough for her to make it to her car without getting soaked through to the skin. The early spring humidity was so oppressive that she had left her raincoat in the car.
As usual, she had purchased more than she could carry, bat it had been a while since she had shopped exclusively for herself. Adjusting her oversize leather tote, she reached into its cavernous depths. It bulged with containers filled with pâté de foie gras, delicate crackers, petit fours, several bottles of her favorite wine, and a bouquet of cellophane-wrapped pale pink tulips. She withdrew a small, compact umbrella and pressed a button, and it opened smoothly with a soft, swooshing sound.
She had gotten up earlier that morning, berating herself for neglecting the most important person in her lifeherself. It was the first time in months that the whirlwind activity of her business had slowed enough for her to claim a week to devote to her personal entertainment. As she was a professional event planner, her days, weeks, and months were filled with an ongoing, never-ending cycle of conventions, office parties, baby and bridal showers, weddings, bar and bat mitzvahs, family reunions, conferences, graduations, and retirement dinners. This was the first week in more than six months that she had nothing listed on her calendar, and she intended to take advantage of the coveted eight days.
She had forced herself to get out of bed,despite the fact that she was bone-tired and it was raining. However, it had been raining in D.C. for the past three days. Most people in Chocolate City complained about the absence of sunlight, dreary damp days and nights, but only under their breath. The winter had passed without a single flake of falling snow, with most days unseasonably warm and dry, prompting many meteorologists to predict a water shortage if the below-normal precipitation continued into the spring and summer.
Leigh had planned the week to include preparing her favorite dishes, viewing a few of the movie videos she had purchasedmany months ago still in their original cellophane packagingcatching up on reading one or two of the many books lining the shelves of the built-in bookcases in the office of her spacious apartment, and listening to music from stacks of CDs.
Afterward, she would take a deep breath, exhale, then start up her hectic schedule all over again. Next Sunday she was expected to be on hand at the wedding of a senator's daughter. The young woman had elected to have a civil and religious ceremony. She was to be married by a Supreme Court justice, followed by an Episcopal mass at the Washington Parish Christ Church. The church's history boasted that it was the oldest ecclesiastical edifice in the District, and its congregation included many of Washington's present and past notable citizens, including presidents Jefferson, Madison, and John Quincy Adams.
The falling rain slackened and Leigh clutched her leather tote to her chest while balancing the umbrella with her right hand. She waited for traffic to slow down, then sprinted across the street. She felt the moisture seeping through the canvas covering of her deck shoes as she waded into a deep puddle. A car sped by, sending a shower of water off the roadway like a geyser. The swirling puddle splashed up, washing over her and pasting the fabric of her khakis to her legs and thighs.
Swearing softly under her breath, Leigh concentrated on reaching the opposite curb. A soft cry of surprise and fear escaped her parted lips when she misjudged the height of the sidewalk and her right foot slipped off the curb. Painsharp, burning, and blindinggripped her ankle, radiating up her leg and not permitting her to keep her balance.
One moment she was standing, and within seconds she found herself seated on the curb, moaning in agony. Biting down on her lower lip, she blinked back tears. Her pulse raced uncontrollably as she struggled to maintain her composure.
"Are you all right, lady?"
She registered a soft male voice somewhere above her. Shifting her umbrella, she glanced up at the dark brown faces of a young man and woman. "I just twisted my ankle." The explanation was squeezed out between-clenched teeth.
"Do you think you can stand up?" asked the young woman, her large, expressive eyes filled with genuine concern.
Leigh shook her head. Her umbrella rested beside her on the sidewalk, while the falling rain pasted her professionally coiffed, chemically relaxed silver-gray hair to her scalp.
"I don't think so." Even if she could stand up, she doubted whether she would be able to maintain her balance. Not with the intense throbbing pain.
The young man swept back his jacket, plucked a cellular phone off his waistband, and dialed three numbers. Meanwhile his female companion picked up Leigh's umbrella and held it over her head in an attempt to protect her from the falling rain.
She was in pain and thoroughly embarrassed. She was sitting on the curb of one of the busiest, trendiest streets in the capitol district, temporarily disabled. Two teenagers had come to her aid while other well-dressed D.C. professionals in designer couture rushed past her as if she were a piece of discarded debris floating along the curb and into the sewer.
She had lived in D.C. for the past ten of her fifty-three years of living, and never had she felt more detached than she did now. People talked about New Yorkers being cold, distant, but the same could be said for D.C. citizens. She had come to the realization that the only thing that elicited a spark of interest in the residents of the nation's capital was a political scandal.
A smile softened the young man's classically handsome features as he hunkered down beside her. "The police are sending an ambulance to take you to the hospital."
Leigh's thickly lashed hazel eyes crinkled in a forced smile. "Thank you."
"No problem, lady. My sister and I will wait with you until they come."
Staring at her rapidly swelling ankle, Leigh experienced twin emotions of annoyance and embarrassment. She was annoyed because she should have been more careful and embarrassed because she was sitting on a street corner in the rain like so many homeless people she saw on the streets of the city, existing in their private world of anguish and hopelessness.
Her gaze swung back to the youth who had come to her rescue. "What's your name? Somehow I'd like to repay you for your kindness."
"My name is Kyle Jackson and my sister is Keisha. But you don't have to pay us. Our dad is a D.C. cop, and"
His words were drowned out by the sound of a wailing siren. The vehicle eased up along the curb, the driver mindful of not splashing more water onto Leigh's already-soaked clothing.
The emergency medical technicians worked quickly, lifting her and her bulging tote onto a gurney, and within minutes she stared up at the ceiling of the ambulance speeding toward the municipal hospital.
Dr. Scott Alexander turned off the overhead lights in his spacious office, closed the door, and unconsciously emitted a sigh of relief. It was the first time in a very long time that he looked forward to relaxing. It had taken years, thirty-seven to be exact, for him to permit something other than medicine to become an integral part of his life.
Several years ago he had driven from his apartment in a Federal-style Georgetown row house to McLean, Virginia, to visit a friend whom he had not seen in more than twenty years. He had passed an abandoned farmhouse with a FOR SALE sign listing a realtor's telephone number. He'd stopped and copied down the number, and it wasn't until a week later that he called to inquire about the property. The agent set up an appointment to show him the house and surrounding acreage, and three months later he closed on a 1912 farmhouse and carriage house that sat on thirty acres amid overgrown weeds and a riot of wildflowers.
More than two years had elapsed since he had purchased the dilapidated property, but now the structure had been fully restored to its original grandeur, along with a total landscaping makeover.
Tomorrow when he awoke he would begin his day as Scott Alexander, not Dr. Alexander, chief of the Trauma Unit at the city's largest municipal hospital. He was scheduled to start an unprecedented month-long vacation, and he intended to use the time to begin the leisurely process of settling into his new home.
He made his way down the highly waxed hallway, nodding and smiling at the nurses and technicians as they wished him an enjoyable vacation.
"Dr. Alexander!" Turning, Scott stared at his secretary as she quickened her pace to reach him before he left the building. "I'm glad I caught you," she confessed. "Dr. Franklin just left a message. He wants you to call him at home anytime after nine. He says he has good news for you."
He nodded, smiling at the highly skilled, efficient middle-aged woman. "Thanks, Merilyn."
Merilyn Hawkins returned his smile. "Enjoy your vacation."
"I have every intention of doing just that." There was a hint of laughter in his deep, soothing voice.
"You go, Chief," Merilyn whispered under her breath.
She had worked for Scott Alexander for more than six years, and she could not remember the last time he had taken more than three consecutive days off for what he called vacation leave. Once he had submitted the vacation request for a month's leave, rumors were circulating around the city's largest municipal hospital that Dr. Scott Alexander had discovered something that held a greater appeal than medicine. She surmised that perhaps he had become involved with a woman but dismissed that notion as soon as it entered her head. She had known Scott to date several women; however, none of them had even come close to getting the brilliant doctor to commit to a permanent relationship.
Scott walked through a set of double doors and made his way along a winding, narrow tunnel and stepped into an area and the bustling activity of the Emergency Room. Residents, nurses, and technicians were attending to a half-dozen children who were screaming for their parents.
"What happened?" he asked a nurse as she attempted to calm a little boy who wouldn't let her touch his injured arm.
The woman stared at him, vertical lines appearing between her clear blue eyes before realization dawned. She had not recognized Dr. Scott Alexander. His mixed-gray hair was concealed under a denim baseball cap that matched his long-sleeved shirt and jeans.
Her frown deepened. "Some idiot ignored the flashing red lights on a school bus and plowed into several kids who were crossing the street."
She reached for the child again and he let out a blood-curdling scream: "No! Don't touch it!"
Scott signaled a passing orderly. "Get him to Radiology." His order was issued in a soft, no-nonsense tone. The powerfully built man scooped up the protesting child and carried him out of the waiting room.
Scott's gaze swept around the space, lingering on the lone figure of a woman sitting in a corner, her right foot elevated on a chair with a plastic bag filled with ice taped to her grotesquely swollen ankle. He studied her profile, noting the rigid set to her delicate jaw. There was no doubt that she was in pain.
Turning, Scott walked over to the reception desk, an expression of annoyance tightening his handsome features. Two of the three workers were taking medical information from the parents of the injured students, while another practically reclined on her chair in front of a computer terminal, filing her nails.
"Miss Voss, may I have a moment of your time?"
The clerk sat up quickly, dropping the emery board when she recognized her boss's authoritative voice. She could not believe her bad luck. First she had cracked her acrylic nail, and now the chief of the department had caught her filing it. She was still on probation, and she doubted whether Dr. Alexander would forget the incident when he had to sign off on whether she would become, a permanent employee.
"Yes, Doctor?"
"Has anyone taken care of the patient with the foot injury?"
The young woman glanced at the computer screen. "She was seen in triage and is now waiting to be x-rayed."
"How long has she been waiting?"
"Almost ninety minutes."
Scott shook his head. "That's thirty minutes too long."
Since becoming chief he had instituted a policy that no one should have to wait longer than an hour in the Emergency Room before being seen or treated. A triage team had been set up to evaluate each patient before referring them to the appropriate medical professional.
"Give me her chart," he demanded. He had not bothered to disguise the annoyance in his voice.
The clerk handed him a chart, and he scanned the computer-generated sheet. Fifty-three-year-old Leigh Walcott had twisted her right ankle. The physician's assistant had indicated that because Ms. Walcott could move her toes he concluded the ankle was not broken.
"Get me a lab coat, Miss Voss. And please try to take care of your nails on your own time."
The clerk shot up from her chair, embarrassment staining her pale cheeks. She considered herself lucky to escape with only a verbal reprimand. She had heard from veteran employees that Dr. Scott Alexander ran his department like a storm trooper. And she had also heard that he was a workaholic, controlling, but an extremely compassionate doctor. This was one time she hoped that he was in one of his compassionate moods.
* * *
"Ms. Walcott?"
Leigh opened her eyes, tilted her chin, and stared up into the large, dark penetrating gaze of a tall man with close-cropped coarse salt-and-pepper hair. She glanced quickly at the ID badge hanging from the pocket of his lab coat.
Her gaze widened as she studied his facefeature by feature. Dr. Scott Alexander was so breathtakingly male that she found it difficult to speak. His features were strong, each one carefully defined to make for an arresting face. His forehead was broad and high, nose bold with a straight bridge and slightly flaring nostrils, cheekbones pronounced, giving his face a rawboned appearance, and his mouth was firmthe thinner upper lip offset by the sensual fullness of the lower one. His eyes were large, dark, intelligent, and penetrating. However, it was his coloring and the texture of his skin that held her entranced. His complexion was flawless, nearly poreless, and called to mind a smooth whipped dark chocolate mousse. If it had not been for a neatly barbered mixed gray mustache, she would have doubted whether he'd claim any facial hair.
"Yes?" She had finally recovered her voice, and the breathless quality sounded foreign even to her own ears.
Scott sat down on an empty chair beside her. "I'm Dr. Alexander, and I'm going to treat your ankle. I've ordered a wheelchair for you so you can be taken to have your ankle x-rayed."
She emitted an audible sigh of relief and flashed a wry smile. "Thank you."
Returning her smile, he tilted his head at an angle. "How did you injure it?"
Heat suffused Leigh's face. Dr. Alexander's sensual smile made him even more attractive. Almost as attractive as the man who had captured her heart and refused to let her go. The tightness around his firm mouth had vanished with his smile, the frown creasing his forehead had disappeared, and the deep grooves in his lean cheeks appeared, drawing her attention to his strong chin.
"I feel like such a klutz. I misjudged the sidewalk."
Scott's smile broadened, the minute lines around his eyes crinkling attractively. "You're lucky you didn't fall on your face." And it would have been a pity if you had injured your very beautiful face, he added silently.
Lowering her lashes, she averted her gaze. It had been a long time, a very long timethirty years to be exactsince she had found a man attractive. The first and only man in her life had been her late husband. She had married Leonard Walcott at twenty-one, given birth to their son at twenty-two, then lost both at twenty-three when a drunk driver claimed their lives in a head-on accident. She had spent three weeks in a New York City hospital after a plastic surgeon had reconstructed her face, but it had taken years before she was able to put her life back together.
"You're right, Dr. Alexander. I am very lucky."
His gaze moved from her thick, damp hair down to the smoothness of her golden brown face. She had given her age as fifty-three, and despite her silvered hair he found her skin as radiant as that of a woman in her early thirties. Her bone structure was exquisitehigh, prominent cheekbones, a short rounded nose, delicate chin, full, pouting mouth, and minute mole on her left cheek. However, it was her eyes that had garnered his rapt attention. They were large, round, and filled with an intelligent gentleness; the color was mesmerizing; sweeping black lashes highlighted the brilliance of shimmering pinpoints of golda gold that was an exact match for her flawless complexion.
He did not know what had prompted him to treat Leigh Walcott as his patient, because since he had become an administrator he had not had the responsibility of being an attending physician. He also did not know why he had memorized the personal information she had given the admitting clerk. He knew Leigh's age and address, the name and address of next of kin, and her marital status. Glancing at her small, delicate hands with the bare fingers verified that she probably wasn't engaged.
His gaze returned to her entrancing profile, wondering how long she had been widowed. He doubted whether it could have been too long, because he was certain that any woman who looked like Leigh Walcott would not remain single for any appreciable period of time.
An orderly pushed a wheelchair into the waiting area, stopping at the admitting desk. His expression of surprise was apparent when he steered the chair to Scott and Leigh.
"You ordered a chair, Dr. Alexander?"
Scott stood up, nodding. "Yes. Please help Ms. Walcott into the chair and I will take her up to Radiology."
In less than a minute Leigh found herself seated in a wheelchair, her leather tote on her lap, and Dr. Scott Alexander maneuvering the chair down a corridor and into an elevator.
She stared at the elevator doors as they closed, and the panic began. Years of pain, grief, and loss came rushing back as if it were the cold, wintry night thirty years before. Even though she closed her eyes, she still could see the wipers leaving icy streaks on the windshield; she remembered squinting against the bright, watery lights from oncoming traffic and could hear the slip-slap of tires on the snowy roadway. She remembered everything with painstaking clarity before the exploding sound of metal, plastic, and glass mergedthen the pain and an enveloping, comforting blackness. A shadowed existence that lasted a weeka week wherein she hadn't known that three lives were lost within seconds: her young husband, their infant son, and the intoxicated driver whose out-of-control vehicle had crossed a median to collide head-on with hers.
Her fingers tightened on the arms of the chair as her chest rose and fell heavily. Tears leaked from under her lids, and she cried silently for the loss of her loved ones and a part of herself.
Scott saw her shoulders shaking. He reached out and placed a large comforting hand on her shoulder, his fingers tightening on the delicate bones under the damp pale blue button-down oxford blouse.
"It's all right, Leigh," he crooned in a deep, comforting tone. "I'm going to take care of you."
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