/1/121780/coverbig.jpg?v=d729b34b2c2f553b9904ed6acd9869ff&imageMogr2/format/webp)
forty seven seconds left on the clock an
efore the
The momentum. The way a man's center of gravity shifts just before something goes wrong. So while the Seattle Storm faithful a
ust check Marcus W
rase
nel mouth. Webb's helmet snaps back. His knees buckle wrong, that terrifying, boneless way that turns every j
ready
t, grabbing my medical kit from the
nto the surface itself, fifteen years of muscle memory keeping me upright even as I crouch beside Marcus. He's conscious, tha
" I snap twice in front of h
luggish, b
urts,"
Don't m
them furious and loud and in my way. I'm aware of them the way you're aware of weather, a distant, ir
tact. I press carefully along his left knee, the one that
iner appearing at my shoulder. "Poss
es from behind me. Low. Ce
e in my bac
weeks, but I already know that voice the way you know a
owly and t
his helmet. He's watching me with those unsettling gray eyes, not light gray, not soft gray, but the gray of storm clouds th
e me?"
Marcus. "Webb's taken harde
wing a whistle. None of that exists. There is only this enormous, arroga
with considerable effort. "But thank you for your medical opinion, Mr. Kane. Do you w
e surprise, more like the involuntary re
overre
on my patient." I h
tanding, closer than he needs to be, close enough that I can see the small scar through his left ey
teps
e the whole time, like the concession cost
on't let myself exhale unti
ain and a concussion protocol that will keep him off the ice for two weeks minimum. His knee got lucky. His head got luckier. I
everythi
olutely
ion until my pulse does something reasonable. Twenty six years old. One year out of residency. Youngest team physician in Storm history and only the
e a hockey player explain injur
shake
lms flat agai
ys the guy you put on ice when you need to change the game's emotional temperature, but his file tells a more complicated story. Older injuries managed with unusual self discipline. Pain tolerance that bord
's the part that bother
t a mistake. I
nd step back out into the corrid
tches me by
sweat and the particular shar
. V
d out of his gear, dark jeans, a gray henley pushed to the elbows, hair still damp from a shower. Without the pads he's somehow s
and also because it's true. The gash on his cheekbone has been bleedin
kno
eds st
kno
ion on his face. Not quite sheepish, I don't think Jax Kane does sheepish, but somethi
d," he says. "Night sta
act, closed. The night trainer locked up forty minutes ag
le
in my office,"
shifts
lly furnished with a desk and a medical recliner, but it has good lighting and everyt
ssion booth, requiring extensive coaxing before they'll actually use it. He sits with his elbows on his knees and h
eed a loca
ip
ook
e says. "It'll take long
ravado worth arguing with. His expression tells me it is
. "Tell me if you
cut is clean, two centimeters, just below the cheekbone, the kind of thing that opens easily in a fight and closes just as easily with three n
youth hock
r half a second.
ing," I say.
weren't just being careful.
on't answer it, which is
track?"
econd suture. "
" A pause. "Wh
where down the corr
compressed version of a story I don't tell, and something in my tone
ad is, "I'm not so
third suture. His
you to be," I
angry ab
." I hold the needle steady. "I'm not asking you to feel guilty, Mr. Kane. I'm asking you to unde
face. Brief. Complicated.
t one. "Keep it dry for forty eight hours.
him for the tape when his
Just there. Warm. A quest
mpletel
e," he says. He sounds
uld
aded with something darker at the edges, like cloud cover before a storm breaks. Close enough that the logical, professional part of my brain
e is not read
ceptibly, across the inside of my wrist, just the ghost
cliner. Moves toward the door with that particular eco
My voice is level
, and for a moment he's just a silhouette, e
ay," he
lea
ng moment, looking at nothing, my wri
, and write the most clinically detached
/1/121780/coverbig.jpg?v=d729b34b2c2f553b9904ed6acd9869ff&imageMogr2/format/webp)