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Because
of a Boy
by Anna DeStefano
Harlequin Super Romance ISBN
0373714491
(this link opens a new browser window)
Nurse Kate Rhodes is duty bound to
report the abusive father of one of her charges—despite the lawyer who proclaims
the man's innocence.
Stephen Creighton isn't in the habit of getting involved in his cases. For him,
it's get in, fight like hell, get out. But he has to invest more when he finds
out Kate's actions have put his clients' lives in jeopardy. And now the father
and son have gone into hiding.
With the father being sought by the authorities and the son in desperate need of
medical treatment, it's a race against time. One Stephen and Kate can win only
if they work together… Something that's even harder to do when the tension
between them becomes white-hot passion.
CHAPTER ONE
"What do you think you're
doing?" Kate Rhodes asked the man standing beside her patient's hospital bed.
The well-dressed stranger stalled in the process of handing the boy something… A
miniature sports car. The man raised his deep blue eyes from Dillon, squinting
as he locked on to Kate's glare. He gave her a disarming grin.
One she had no trouble resisting.
Her mission as a child had been not falling prey to her brother's Southern
charm. It was either that or be in constant trouble for the mischief Martin
could so easily talk her in to. Now that she'd reached the wise age of
thirty-two, sophisticated stuffed shirts brandishing easy smiles didn't rate a
raised eyebrow.
"Visitation for minors is limited to immediate family only," she said in her
no-nonsense nurse's voice as the tall, dark-haired man gave Dillon the car.
"But he knows Papa." The ten-year-old, who was usually so withdrawn, flashed a
megawatt smile.
The bruises mottling Dillon's right cheek and eye kept Kate from sharing his
enthusiasm.
Dillon's joy was palpable whenever his papa was around. The two of them were
inseparable at the homeless shelter where Kate volunteered most of her free time
away from the hospital. Dillon's unquestioning love for his only parent was what
made this situation even harder to accept.
"Look what I got!" he exclaimed, his flawless English colored by a heavy South
American inflection.
He held up the plastic Corvette, but Kate could only see the electric green cast
that protected his thin arm. His severe ankle sprain had been wrapped to
stabilize the joint, and elevated to reduce swelling. Injuries resulting,
supposedly, from Dillon's latest accidental fall—this time, down the Midtown
Shelter's basement stairs.
An accident Manny Digarro had no better explanation for than his only child was
more clumsy than other kids his age. Accident-prone. What's a father to do?
"That car rocks, tough guy." She smiled as she walked to the bed.
"It's the one Papa said we couldn't buy when we saw it in the store Monday
night."
The same night the little heartbreaker had been rushed to Atlanta Memorial's
emergency room—for the third time in two months, Kate had discovered after
reading his chart. Though this was the first time he'd been admitted to
Pediatrics.
"The boy's father asked me to bring the toy by." The man's small talk didn't
distract her from his too-observant gaze. "Seems the nurses at the admissions
desk refuse to discuss Dillon's condition when Mr. Digarro calls. He wasn't sure
of his welcome if he came himself."
If the hint of judgment in his voice weren't enough, the worry on Dillon's face
was all the motivation Kate needed.
"I'll speak with you outside, Mr.…?" She was polite, but he was definitely
leaving.
He merely smiled.
Was she supposed to swoon or something? As if she hadn't seen dimples and
perfectly straight teeth before!
Screw polite.
She half dragged him toward the hallway. "Play with your car for a minute,
Dillon," she said over her shoulder.
She kicked at the magnetic device that secured the bottom of the door against
the wall. Once the door whooshed shut behind them, she released the man's arm,
stopping short of wiping her hand on her cartoon-covered scrubs.
Just barely. "You're so out of here." She headed for the nurses' station to page
Security, picking up her pace when she heard his footsteps behind her. "I don't
know who you are, but—"
He edged around her, putting his body between her and the nearest phone, and
bringing her to a skidding halt.
"I'm Stephen Creighton," he announced. "And I represent the innocent man you're
so determined to keep away from that child."
"You bet I'm keeping Manny Digarro away from his child!" The nurse who'd rushed
Stephen into the hall was furious. "If he does show up here, which I suspect he
won't, the staff won't let him anywhere near Dillon."
Stephen didn't have to read her name badge to know she was Kate Rhodes, the
woman Manny Digarro had warned him about. The homeless shelter volunteer who'd
befriended the immigrant family last week, then two days ago had lodged a formal
complaint of child abuse with the APD— Atlanta's police department.
"Mr. Digarro's done nothing to deserve this treatment," Stephen insisted, the
soul of reason.
"You can't separate him from his son. Dillon fell down those stairs, and his
father is beside himself worrying about—"
"From the looks of the old fractures on Dillon's X rays, someone should have
done more than separate your friend from his son years ago."
"Client," Stephen corrected. "Manny Digarro is my client. A good man that I'd be
honored to call my friend—regardless of the color of his skin, his ethnic
background or his current inability to afford his own home."
Kate's eyes narrowed. If her spine got any stiffer, she'd break in two.
"This isn't about them being homeless, or from another country, or anything
other than protecting an abused boy from further harm—by someone who's supposed
to love him."
"My client does love his son. Very much. He—"
"Belongs in jail! In addition to his current injuries, Dillon has poorly healed
breaks on both arms, his left wrist and ankle. Weeks-old contusions on his
chest, to go along with the shiny new ones on his face. And don't get me started
on the poor dental hygiene and the vitamin deficiency we suspect is causing his
complexion to be three shades lighter than a healthy child's should be."
"Do you find oral hygiene and a healthy glow common among the homeless Nurse
Rhodes?"
She crossed her arms. "Once we have the results of the tests Dillon's
pediatrician ordered, I'm confident—"
"What tests? Manny hasn't signed consent forms for treatment…."
"In the case of suspected abuse, doctors can sign on the child's behalf. The
tests have been run. Once their results are in, not being able to visit Dillon
will be the least of your client's concerns. Until then, Manny Digarro should be
thankful that restricting his access to the pediatric floor is the only option
the other nurses and I have."
The golden-haired beauty's chest rose and fell. The warm green eyes that had
smiled down at Dillon sparked with fire.
It was inappropriate, under the circumstances, to find Kate Rhodes's temper
tantrum arousing. But that kind of passion was hard to come by in Stephen's
world—especially in the defense of another person's well-being. And certainly
not in someone so meticulously put together. Stephen would bet tomorrow night's
poker stake that Kate rarely let a hair slip out of place, let alone her
emotions.
Too bad this wasn't the time or place to push her buttons further, just to see
what she'd do next.
Work the case, man. "You only met the Digarros a week ago," he said, as if
reason would work better the second time around. "You didn't see Dillon's
accident. Admit it—you don't know for sure what happened, any more than I do."
"Dillon fell, violently, down a flight of stairs. Only his father seems to have
witnessed it, just like all the other accidents. What else do I need to know?"
"Manny's no more a threat to his child than I am," Stephen assured her. "He's—"
"An abusive bastard who's never going to hurt his son again! Dillon is
terrified. He's barely spoken to anyone since he got here."
Stephen blinked and focused past the righteous indignation that he'd label
racism or sheer ignorance in someone else. There was genuine fear in Kate's
voice.
Most people took one look at an impoverished immigrant like Manny Digarro and
saw someone they couldn't trust. Someone they didn't want to be any closer to
than they had to be. But Kate Rhodes spent several evenings a week working to
help the homeless community. Shielding them from a world too often unconcerned
about the well-being of the most needy.
And now she was hell-bent on protecting a child she'd convinced herself had no
one else in his corner.
"Manny Digarro's terrified, too," Stephen countered. "He's watched his son have
one accident after another, and tried to care for him the best he could, while
working countless dead-end jobs to keep them off public assistance. Now he's
being told that's not good enough. That Dillon doesn't belong with him. I'm here
to make sure someone in this hospital hears my client's side of the story before
a terrible mistake is made."
She sized up his Brooks Brothers suit. "Where did Manny dig you up," she wanted
to know, "if he's struggling so badly?"
"At the legal aid center, where he'd heard someone would listen to him, instead
of taking one look at his ethnic background and worn-out clothes and figure he
was a no-account… 'bastard,' I think you called him, who beats up on his kid to
get his jollies."
Her eyes widened. But instead of biting back, she breathed deeply and squared
her shoulders.
"Bait me all you want. But my first clue your client was a no-account bastard
came while assessing the damage to Dillon's body, not Manny's fashion sense. And
you've gotten all the details about Dillon's condition that you're going to.
Leave, Mr. Creighton. Or I'll have Security make sure you do."
He stood his ground, soaking in the honesty and integrity rolling off her. Kate
Rhodes wasn't on some blind mission to punish an innocent father for
socioeconomic circumstances he couldn't control. Instincts that had never let
Stephen down screamed that this woman could help his client, if he could only
get her to listen.
She started to walk around him. He grabbed her arm. His mistake was instantly
obvious.
She didn't jerk away from his touch. She cringed. The agitated breathing that
she'd brought under control just seconds before, stopped completely.
Frightened eyes snapped to his face, then dilated.
"Let me go," begged the woman who'd just verbally handed him his ass. "Please,
let me—"
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