Borrowed Billionaire #5 Set it on Fire

Borrowed Billionaire #5 Set it on Fire by Mimi Strong

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Authors: Mimi Strong
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1: Out of the Sea
    The Yellowstripe Basslet, a cheery pink and yellow fish, darted in front of me as I tried to hold on to my consciousness.
    I had to keep breathing normally through the scuba diving regulator and not panic. That meant not looking down at my leg to see why it was bleeding. I swam to Suzanne and tapped her on the shoulder. Bubbles plumed up. She took the longest time to turn around, and before she did, I felt hands on me.
    Luthor. He was there.
    Everyone was wildly waving around, trying to communicate, and my head was reeling. I felt like I might throw up, which I knew could kill me. I'd choke to death, under the sea.
    Luthor grabbed my shoulders and brought his face close to mine. He gazed into my eyes, and I found strength in him.
    We all swam up together.
    The surface, above the water, was chaotic. People were yelling. Suzanne was crying, and Simon was a wreck. 
    We got on board the boat, and they got my scuba suit peeled off. I had an ugly gash on my leg, near the shin, from the stingray.
    Despite my injury, I had to pat Suzanne's hand on the boat ride back to the resort. Lucky for me, Luthor Thorne was a rock. He didn't say much, and I could see the tension in his jaw when he thought I wasn't looking, but he put his arm around me and told me I would be fine. I believed him.
    “You'll be back diving in no time,” he said.
    I avoided looking at my leg, and looked at him instead. The nausea that had first hit me underwater came back with a vengeance. I turned and threw up over the side of the boat, into the churning water. As I was throwing up, tears ran down my cheeks, my nose was running, and I was a revolting mess.
    Luthor got out his clean shirt and mopped off my face once I was done heaving.
    One of the men on board the boat tried to reassure me, saying, “The nausea is a side effect of the stingray's poison. Try to stay calm. The faster your heart beats, the more quickly the poison spreads.”
    Him telling me this only made my heart beat faster, of course. I turned and threw up again, even though it was just dry heaves.
    Stingrays don't normally attack people. The one who got me must have been startled when I stepped on him, and stung out of reflex alone. They're flat as pancakes and rest at the bottom of the sea, where they blend in perfectly. As I tried to stay calm and not throw up on Luthor, the helpful man on the boat advised me to slide my feet along the sand if I were to go wading in at the shoreline. At that point, I didn't want to get in any water ever again, let alone the ocean.
    We got back to the resort, and I was treated there by a woman doctor who was staying at the resort.
    She treated me in the kitchen, for better access to boiling water.
    Luthor hovered around, as nervous as Suzanne and Simon. I tried to send them all away, but they wouldn't leave my side.
    Luthor offered to fly another doctor in, but the woman assured him she had it under control. She squeezed my ankle and examined the injury.
    I gasped and saw white light, and stars, too. “I'll have that mojito now,” I joked.
    The woman, an Australian doctor, shook her head. “No mojito tonight. But I have good news. It doesn't look like the stinger embedded. You could still have an ultrasound to be certain, but the wound looks clean. You got lucky. Didn't nick an artery or anything precious.”
    Glancing down at the gash, I said, “My shin is precious to me.”
    She flashed a large silver needle and applied topical freezing to the area, then quickly stitched the wound.
    The treatment for the stingray venom, strangely enough, is hot water. We soaked my lower leg in a bucket full of water as hot as I could stand it. Apparently, the heat denatures the venom.
    Me and my little party were shifted over to near the dish washing station, and before too long, the kitchen got busy with preparations for dinner.
    The doctor finished the stitches, packed up her kit, and patted me on the knee. “I think you'll live,” she said,

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