“Yeah, I’m fine.” Reese smiled and snuggled the baby closer to her neck. “I better get going. I left Bri at the station chasing down missing-person leads.” She picked up the bag with the baby’s supplies. “Would you mind if I stopped by the clinic later?”
Tory’s green eyes darkened. “You never asked before.”
“I don’t want you to think I’m being…overly protective.”
“I like it when you worry.” Tory tenderly stroked her fingers along the edge of Reese’s jaw. “And you never need to ask if it’s all right to come and see me. You might want to ask Randy if it’s all right.”
They both laughed.
“I already know what he’ll say.” Imitating his mildly exasperated tone, Reese said, “She’s behind, and you’ve got thirty seconds.”
“Well, I’m glad that you never listen to him.” Still smiling, Tory linked her arm through Reese’s and together they walked to the door. Her melancholy had disappeared, and when she thought ahead to her day, the prospect of seeing KT seemed far less daunting.
Pia walked east along Commercial Street, enjoying the sunshine and the smell of the sea. She knew that within a few short weeks, summer would be gone and fall would be fast upon them. She didn’t mind, because fall was her favorite season. The sun still held the power to warm her at midday, and the nights were cool enough for her favorite leather jacket the one that had been her brother’s when he’d been a teenager and that had been handed down to her when she was fourteen, despite her mother’s protests. In addition to the weather, which pleased her, October brought Women’s Week seven days on either side of the Columbus Day holiday marked by a large influx of lesbians to town and a general atmosphere of celebration. Even though she’d grown up in Provincetown and had been exposed to the social and sexual diversity of the village since her earliest days, she still thrilled to the atmosphere of community when the town was filled with women in love. Or, sometimes, simply in lust.
As Pia climbed the wooden steps to Provincetown Realty, her mind suddenly skittered to KT O’Bannon. While she’d been working on the surgeon’s hand, her attention had been completely focused on the wound and the challenges of rehabilitation. She hadn’t allowed herself to think about the devastation, or the tremendous tragedy it would be if her treatment failed to overcome the damage. It hadn’t been difficult to see what the injury had done to the surgeon. Beneath her undeniably self-possessed and forceful facade had run a river of pain.
Pia gave herself a mental shake as she pushed through into the large, single-room office. Her task was clear. She needed to bring to bear every ounce of skill and experience she had acquired over the last eight years in order to return KT O’Bannon to the life she had known before some maniac had taken it from her. If she could do that, she would be well satisfied.
“Pia!” the woman behind the desk exclaimed. Her blond hair was stylishly coiffed, her blue eyes were subtly highlighted with expertly applied makeup, and her tailored blouse and slacks accentuated a willowy figure. At forty-eight, she looked thirty-five. “What a nice surprise.”
“Hi, Mom.” Pia had her father’s dark coloring and slender, wiry stature. Combined with her mother’s elegant bone structure, they made her appear more exotically attractive than classically beautiful. “How’s business?”
Her mother shrugged. “It’s the end of the season. Rentals are down, but we’re gearing up for the off-season maintenance projects.” In addition to selling real estate in the increasingly competitive Provincetown market, her mother’s business also managed several of the condominiums in the village. “You’re in town early. Shopping?”
“No, I just dropped by to ask you a question about the third-floor unit. Is it still vacant?”
“Yes. Why?”
Suddenly, Pia was plagued with second thoughts. Just the day before she had decided it wasn’t a good idea to get involved with KT O’Bannon in any way other than purely professionally. Now she was contemplating recommending to the surgeon that she rent a unit in her mother’s guesthouse. The house that was twenty feet from her own front door.
“Do you have a possible tenant?” her mother asked curiously.
“Uh…I might.” Pia rested her hip on the corner of one of the cluttered wooden desks opposite her mother’s. The part-time agent who worked for her mother was not in, and they were alone in the warm, sunny room. “I have a new client, and I know that she’s looking for a place to rent. It would be…convenient…I mean, she’d be close by and I know the unit is empty and she’s going to be here at least for several months…” And I don t know why, but I just wanted to help her out.
“A client, you say?”
Pia nodded. “Yes. A surgeon from Boston Hospital. She has a hand injury.”
Her mother grimaced. “Sounds serious.”
“Very serious, I’m afraid.”
“What is she doing while she’s here?”
Elana Torres regarded her daughter intently, and Pia wondered what her mother might have seen in her face, her mother was usually very good at reading her moods, often too good. As difficult as that sometimes was, Pia’s inability to keep very much a secret from Elana had kept them connected even during the most chaotic periods of Pia’s life. The first had been when Pia had realized she was a lesbian at the age of nineteen. She’d tried to hide it, only because her first crush on a fellow college student had been so intensely passionate that she hadn’t wanted to share the feelings with anyone. She hadn’t been ashamed, she’d been in awe.
But her mother had seen the truth the first time she’d seen the two of them together. After dinner the night that Pia had brought Rose home, her mother had taken her aside and asked pointedly about the nature of their relationship. Unwilling to lie, Pia had told her that they were in love.
“Are you sleeping together?”
“It’s not about that, Mom.”
Her mother hadn’t been happy, and their relationship had been strained for several years. Gradually, however, their deep affection for one another had overcome the estrangement that had resulted from her mother’s disappointment that Pia would not marry and produce grandchildren, at least not in the traditional fashion. In recent years, her mother’s concern had shifted more to the fact that Pia wasn’t married in any fashion whatsoever. It was one of the few topics they didn’t discuss.
“Pia?”
“Hmm? Oh…what is she doing? I don’t know. I’ve only met with her twice.”
“But you’re finding her a place to live?”
“No,” Pia said hastily. “I just thought of the unit, and it seemed like a reasonable solution.”
“Here,” her mother said, reaching into a drawer. She extended a set of keys. “The next time you see her, show her the unit. If she’s interested, she can drop by and I’ll go over the lease with her.”
Pia backed up a step and unconsciously put her hands behind her back. “No. I’ll just tell her to stop by”
“Don’t be silly. This will save a step.” Elana tossed the keys to Pia, forcing her to catch them on the fly. “You must have a number for her. Just give her a call and ask her to, drop by this evening and have a look.”
“I, uh…all right,” Pia acquiesced, feeling foolish. “I’ll…I’ll call her.”
“Good.” Elana narrowed her eyes. “Are you all right? You seem…distracted.”
“No,” Pia replied vehemently, ignoring the butterflies in her stomach at the thought of calling KT O’Bannon. “I’m just fine.”
When KT arrived at the East End Health Clinic at a few minutes before eleven a.m., there were already ten people in the waiting room. She nodded to Randy, who was seated behind the intake desk. His royal blue shirt matched his eyes, which were narrowed at her suspiciously.
“Is Dr. King in yet?” KT asked in what she hoped was a friendly tone.
“She’s in her office.”
KT extended her hand across the counter. “I’m KT O’Bannon. We met briefly yesterday. I’ll be working here from now on.”
“So I understand,” Randy shook her hand, because it was required of him. “Today will be a good warm-up. We have fifty patients scheduled.”
“Wonderful,” KT muttered as she moved toward the doors leading to the rear. A minute later, she knocked on Tory’s office door, waited for a response, and entered when Tory called out,
“Come in.”
“Good morning,” KT said.
“KT.” Tory passed a single sheet of paper across the top of her desk in KT’s direction. “This is the shift schedule for the next month. If you have a conflict because of your therapy or…anything, let me know as soon as possible so I can make adjustments.”
Slightly surprised by Tory’s formal and perfunctory manner, KT lifted the sheet of paper and studied it. “Looks fine to me.”
“Good.” Tory took a breath, surprised at the undercurrent of nerves. “The majority of the patients will have chronic, common medical problems such as hypertension or diabetes. If you have questions about the management, just check with me. I don’t imagine it will take very long for you to catch on.”
“All right.”
“If there’s anything you have a question about or are uncertain of”
“Vic, I won’t take any chances. I”
“If you don’t mind,” Tory interrupted, “I’d prefer that you call me Tory.”
KT blushed. She’d been the only one to ever call Tory Vic. It had begun in medical school when the computer had mistakenly listed her as Victor King on all of her class rosters. The teasing about Victor had led to KT calling her Vic, and it had just stuck. But the old endearment had no place in their present relationship.
“Of course,” KT said stiffly.
“Well, I imagine we’re already behind, and the day is young.” Tory stood. “There’s an empty office down the hall. You can use that. Feel free to ask Randy to get you anything you need in the way of supplies.”
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