âWell, no wonder.â She folded her arms in front of her chest in classic defensive position. Just because she had a crush on him didnât mean she would permit herself to be crushed by him.
âYouâre practically a god around here. Nobody can believe you actually chose to come to Pittsburgh when you couldâve gone to any hospital in the country. Needless to say, without exception, people speak reverently to you.â
âIt seems that Leo isnât the only one on this team who overexaggerates.â Trey looked irked. âAnd maybe you can explain why Pittsburghers are forever apologizing for the city. Why do they feel the need to put it down, especially if a nonnative says something complimentary about the place? Which brings us to, Why wouldnât I actually choose to come here, Sheely?â
âWhy would you choose Pittsburghâs Tri-State Medical Center when you couldâve gone to Johns Hopkins or Mass General or Duke or places equally prestigious? Is that a rhetorical question or am I supposed to answer it?â
âYou see, you just did it again!â Trey exclaimed. âAnother putdown of your hometown. Whatâs with you Pittsburghers?â
âWe donât like bragging, so we donât embellish. We simply state the factsâwhich is what I was doing,â retorted Callie. âYou went to medical school at Duke and did your surgical residency at Johns Hopkins, then on to Mass General for your neurosurgery residency and fellowship. You could write your own ticket anywhere. Why would you come toââ
âDonât forget to mention my exclusive New England prep school and my undergraduate bioengineering degree from MIT, Sheely.â
âWhich enables you to custom design the surgical instruments that youââ Callie broke off and stared at him. âYou were being ironically droll.â
âAnd that makes you gape?â
âMore drollery?â
âAh, your jaw drops even farther.â
âAll right, I admit Iâm stunned. For your to joke about your hallowed credentials is something like hearing a saint wisecracking about divinity.â
âSheely,â he paused and frowned. âDonât put me on a pedestal.â She had the usual misconception about the blueness of his blood, Trey realized, and her next words confirmed it.
âI donât have to, youâre already up there. I expect you were born thereâand youâre well aware of it, too.â
A man like Trey Weldon, brilliant, handsome, successfulâa man like that, who had it all, had to be aware of his status, his desirability. And not only neurosurgically speaking. He was one of the most eligible bachelors in the cityâin the entire state of Pennsylvania, not to mention his own native state of Virginia!
Callie herself had seen how women here at the hospital practically threw themselves at his feet. She and Leo and Quiana enjoyed countless jokes about that. At least, Leo and Quiana enjoyed the jokes. Callieâs laughter rang hollow in her own ears. Worse, she could only imagine how very sought-after Trey was in exalted social circles, far removed from the hospital grounds.
She took another long look at his bare chest, and fury abruptly flared within her. âAnd we arenât in aâ¦a gym!â she snapped. âPut on your shirt. Please,â she added, because, after all, she was talking to her boss.
Trey picked up the scrub shirt heâd dropped onto a chair and pulled it over his head, inside out. âIâm not following.â He gave an exasperated huff. âWhat on earth are we talking about now, Sheely?â
Scowling, he ran his hand over his brown hair, a dark-chestnut shade, always cut short for practical and hygenic reasons.
Callie caught herself wondering if his hair felt as thick and springy as it looked. It took a moment for her to remember what theyâd been talking about. âWeâre discussing your beyond-impeccable credentials,â she said edgily.
Trey gave a wave of his hand, visibly impatient. âLetâs get back to the real subject at hand, Sheely.â
Callie proceeded to describe in detail each of Scott Fritcheâs minor but time-consuming mistakes. âItâs not an enormous deal, Trey, though Leoâs done his best to make you think it is. Weâve both watched other residents, with more experience than Scott Fritche, do far worse with no unfavorable results. So you seeââ
âWhat I see is that Arkis and Turner were right. You really did save Fritcheâs ass in there, Sheely. Not to mention our poor patientâs cranium.â Trey folded his arms in front of his chest, but the gesture wasnât a defensive one for him.
Oh, yes, he was infinitely gifted in the body language of intimidation. However, Callie wasnât intimidated. Instead, observing the way his muscles rippled when he moved his arms, studying the breadth of his shoulders, she wasâ¦aroused.
She was practically ogling him! Callie caught herself and quickly averted her gaze, fixing it on the poster tacked up on the wall beyond him.
It was an advertisement for the Hospital Auxiliaryâs Annual Springtime Ball, a popular fund-raiser held in early April, when the regionâs weather was still more like winter than spring, despite the calendar.
Unlike those charity balls sponsored by exclusive womenâs clubs, where the price of admission was astronomically high, thus limiting the guests to the social elite, the Tri-State Hospitalâs auxiliary set aside a large block of tickets at lower prices, affordable to the hospital staff.
Everybody from student nurses to interns and residents, from the hospital administrators and lordly attending physicians to various corporate benefactors, politicos and the local pillars of society, attended the Springtime Ball. Somehow, the eclectic mix worked. Each year the ball topped the previous oneâs record for ticket sales and attendance.
Callie had gone every year since nursing school. Often with Jimmy, sometimes with other escorts, always friends. This year sheâd made no plans to attend. She couldnât seem to work up any enthusiasm for going.
Her eyes darted to Trey. He was glaring at her.
âSheely, if it isnât too much trouble, could you stop drifting off and at least make a pretense of staying on topic? That would be Scott Fritche who endangered my patient in the OR. Remember?â
Callieâs eyes, dark as onyx, grew round as saucers. âThe patient wasnât endangered, honestly.â She caught her lower lip between her teeth and took a deep breath. âI was right there, Trey, I knew what to do. Of course, I wouldâve called for you the second before anything could have gone wrong.â
Trey straightened, looking even taller to her. âYou know I expect my team to be like cogs in a perfectly run machine, Sheely. We simply canât afford any mistakes and we canât succumb toââ
âI know. And woe to the cog that slips, even slightly. Leo and Quiana and Iââ
âThis isnât about you three, I know how good you are. Youâre the best in the area. I watched you for six months before handpicking you myself for my team. But Fritche is another story entirely. If heâs no good, weâve got to get him out of the neurosurgery program sooner rather than later, before he does irreparable harm.â
âTrey, before we go any further with this, maybe you should know that Leo holds a personal grudge against Scott Fritche. I donât think Iâd be exaggerating to say that if Leo could hurt Scott, he would. Oh, not physically. But heâd certainly settle for