“Since we were kids.” He glanced over at Vince and gave his head a rueful shake. “The most stubborn person I’ve ever had the misfortune to meet.”
Sally would have laughed at the doctor’s assessment of her boss, but she was too worried about her job to find anything amusing. “How long will he have to stay in the hospital?”
“I’d like to keep him a week, at the very least.”
“Like hell you will.”
Sally and the doctor both glanced over to find Vince awake and struggling to sit up.
The doctor quickly placed a hand against Vince’s chest. “Unless you want me to put another knot on your head, I’d advise you to stay put.”
Obviously too weak to put up much of a fight, Vince sank back against the pillow and squeezed his forehead between his fingers. “What’d you give me? I feel like I’ve been on a three-day drunk.”
“It was a cocktail, all right, but not the kind you might expect.”
Judging by Vince’s weakened state, Sally had to believe whatever the doctor had given him was strong.
“I’m getting out of here.”
The doctor looked down his nose at Vince. “You’ll leave when I say you can.”
Vince dropped his hand to scowl. “Don’t be a jerk, Pat. You know I hate hospitals. Cut me loose so I can go home.”
“You’re in no condition to take care of yourself.”
“I’ll be fine as soon as the drugs wear off.”
“You had a heart attack,” the doctor reminded him. “Which is exactly what I’ve been telling you was going to happen if you didn’t cut back on your workload and get rid of some of the stress in your life.”
“There’s nothing wrong with my heart,” Vince grumbled.
“No, there’s not,” the doctor agreed. “Not this time, at least. The tests we ran indicated no damage was done to your heart. But you did suffer a concussion when you fell, which requires round-the-clock monitoring. Last I heard, you lived alone.”
Vince glanced at Sally. She backed up a step, fearing she knew what he was going to suggest.
“Sally will take care of me.”
She groaned inwardly.
The doctor turned to peer at her. “I thought the clerk said you were his secretary?”
“She is,” Vince replied for her, then gave Sally a warning look. “And she can earn her salary at my house as easily as she can at my office.”
The doctor kept his gaze fixed on Sally. “Would you seriously be willing to stay with this lug for a week?”
Sally stole a glance at Vince. The message in his eyes was clear: if she liked her job, she’d do as he said.
Turning back to the doctor, she forced a smile. “If that’s what Vince wants.”
“You’ll be doing more than monitoring his sleep,” the doctor warned her. “I’ve been telling him for years to slow down. This week he’s going to do just that. No work. Period. And under no circumstances is he to leave the house. I want him resting, and when he’s not resting, I want him relaxing and that means no phone calls and no e-mail. In fact, no contact with the outside world whatsoever. I don’t want anything even remotely related to business anywhere near him. Got it?”
She nodded. “Yes, sir.”
“And work on improving his nutrition. His eating habits are worse than a nine-year-old’s.”
“Yes, sir. I’ll see that he eats properly balanced meals. What about his physical activity? Should I monitor that, too?”
The doctor glanced at Vince, then shook his head. “No. In fact, it would probably do him some good, considering he spends most of his time sitting on an airplane or behind a desk.”
“I’m sure I can think of something to keep him active.”
The doctor studied her a long moment as if judging her ability to carry out his orders. “All right,” he finally agreed, and headed out. “I’ll write up instructions and sign his release.”
As Sally watched the doctor disappear from sight, the enormity of the task she’d taken on sunk in. Panicking, she whipped her head around to level Vince with a threatening look. “Don’t you move so much as a muscle. I’ll be right back.”
Flinging back the curtain, she ran after the doctor. “Dr. O’Connor! Wait!”
He glanced over his shoulder, then stopped and turned, a smile tugging at one corner of his mouth. “Changed your mind already?”
She dragged in a breath, choosing her words carefully, knowing she might very well be putting her job on the line. “I’m a secretary, not a nurse. I’m not sure I’m qualified to take care of someone who’s had a heart attack. What if he should…” She swallowed hard, unable to voice her fears.
Chuckling, he shook his head. “Don’t worry. Vince isn’t going to die.” He lifted a brow and added, “Though you might consider killing him before the week’s over.”
“But he had a heart attack,” she said in frustration. “I’d think he’d need to stay in the hospital for at least a couple of days.”
“Under normal circumstances, I’d keep him overnight.” He shrugged. “But his attack was mild. More a warning, really. What he needs is rest and lots of it. Keeping him in the hospital, in Vince’s case, would actually do him more harm than good.”
Sally gave him a dubious look.
Chuckling, the doctor gave her shoulder a reassuring pat. “Trust me. He really is better off at home.”
And home is exactly where Sally took Vince.
Thanks to another shot of Dr. O’Connor’s wonder drug prior to leaving the hospital, he slept throughout the ride. Sally was grateful for the reprieve. It gave her time to get a grip on her anger with her boss for putting her in such an awkward position.
Heck, she didn’t want to spend the week at his house! Not with him in residence. He was hard enough to get along with when he was well. She couldn’t imagine what a forced convalescence would do to his already disagreeable personality.
She shot a scowl at the passenger seat where Vince slept, his head tipped back, his jaw slack, his lips parted. Spoiled brat, she thought resentfully. Using her job to coerce her into agreeing to act as his nursemaid. And if he thought he’d found himself a way to avoid following his doctor’s orders, he had a new think coming. She intended to see that he followed them to the letter. Before the week was over, he’d be begging Dr. O’Connor to admit him to the hospital.
She parked her car close to the front door and rounded the vehicle to help her patient out.
“Vince?” She gave his arm a none-too-gentle poke. “We’re home.”
He roused slightly. “Home?”
His slurred speech let her know the shot was still working.
“Yes, home.” She took his arm and gave it a tug. “Come on. I’ll help you inside.”
It seemed to take him forever to unfold his long legs from the interior of her compact car. Her one regret was that he was too sedated to be aware of his surroundings. He’d really hate knowing he’d ridden in a six-year-old economy car, when he was accustomed to tooling around in a sporty and luxurious Lexus SC.
Pleased that she’d reduced her boss to slumming, she helped him to his