she looked in the direction of her kidsâ area. Smaller, sadder than his, it hadnât been used yet. Sheâd never had a child come by with a parent in tow or not. But she would. It would happen. She had to believe that.
From behind her a low growl said, âWanna dance?â
Naomi screamed and clutched her chest as she spun around. It wasnât until sheâd hit Rig in the shoulder that she really knew who he was. âYou scared me!â
âYou socked me, woman!â
âNatural response. Right up there with the screaming.â
Rig grinned, and his dark eyes danced as he held out his arms, and invited her to do the same. âCome on. Thatâs what this old wooden floor wants.â
Naomi backed up, her heart still racing. What if she did dance with him? Without music? Oh, God, she must be losing it. He might bite her again. She shook her head and said, âI was thinking it wants a good waxing. Hey, speaking of things that need a little shining up, are you going to keep dressing like that?â
He looked down at himself, at his jeans and dark brown shirt, and then back at her, his arms outstretched. âMy jeans not tight enough for the cowboy lovers out here? I can get some Wranglers on the weekend, no problem.â
âJeans, though? And I know Dr. Pedersonâs white coat is too wide for you, since you donât have a beer gut the size of Oregon, but wouldnât it do for a couple of days until we get your own?â
He dropped his arms easily and moved to run his fingers over the bookcase sheâd also picked up with the used office furniture. âI donât like to be fancy. People talk to me more when Iâm not. My clothes are clean, I can assure you of that. On another subject, what the hell? Look at these books. Depressing. Cancer, cancer, oh, goody, myeloma and leukemia, more cancer, and some more cancer.â He slid his hand over the second row of books. âAnd it looks like this is the death and dying shelf. Cheery. Matches the rest of the vibe in here.â
Naomi spun around, looking at her creation. Yeah, maybe she hadnât decorated it enough yet. But it wasnât about the decorating, it wasnât about what it looked like. What mattered was what it contained, what was at its heart. It was suddenly vastly important to her that he got it. Pederson never had. But maybe Rig could.
âMy dad always wanted a small-town practice, but he never got one. He worked in a neighborhood that straddled two districts of Los Angeles. All day his practice was full of rich clients, and he kept them healthy.â It felt strange to talk to someone about it, but she kept going. âNext door, he opened a center like this for the lower-income community to come for advice. For resources. Under his watch, it turned into the community gathering place. They had lectures and classes, even dances sometimes. Everyone went there to get all their information, about stress, and health, and diet, and there was always someone, a volunteer or my dad at night, who was sitting there with all the answers. Free health checks. It was organic. Lovely. Everything free. Heâd be so proud if he knew I was doing this.â If she pulled it off. And maybe she wouldnât. Shit.
Rig looked seriously at her. As if he was really listening. âWho comes in here now?â
âNow?â Naomi grimaced. âNo one. Iâve seen two people in here on the nights Iâve sat here with the door open, and they scuttled out as soon as they saw me.â
âIt does kind of have a Christian Science reading room feel, doesnât it?â
Naomi yanked the curl next to her ear. âDammit. Really? I was hoping to avoid that.â
âYeah. Iâm thinking people expect you to preach the word if you lie in wait behind that table. Why is this so important to you?â
Naomi couldnât say the words that mattered: My father expected me to do more
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