Page 251 of Soft For A Roi


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Because she did.

“Stop acting like you don’t have a heart condition…”

Yeah.

She wasn’t supposed to know that: her or my mother.

But she went looking for me.

And found more than she needed.

I thought back to my doctor’s days ago. Routine. Private office in Marseille. Clean. Expensive.

Our family doctor stood across from me, stethoscope still around his neck, brows slightly furrowed.

“Take a breath again.” He put his stethoscope to my back

He listened longer this time.

Too long.

Then he stepped back.

“There’s a murmur,” he said.

I shrugged. “So?”

“It could be nothing,” he replied, calm but measured. “Or it could be something structural.”

I didn’t react.

Didn’t care.

“I want to run an echocardiogram,” he added. “Today.”

I exhaled through my nose.

“Do what you need to do.”

They took me to a different room.

Dim lights.

Cold gel on my chest.

Screen flickering with images of my heart, I didn’t care to understand.

After it was over, the nurse cleaned me with alcohol pads and then stuck a sticky heart monitor to my chest.

Later, back in his office.

He slid paperwork across the table.

“You have to wear that monitor for fourteen days,” he said.

I glanced down.

Didn’t even really read it.