Page 4 of Property of Short


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CHAPTER TWO

SHORT

Godfuckingdamnit! Someone turn out the light.I’m going to kill whoever changed the bulb in my room, as it’s far too fucking bright.Wait a damn minute, why is the overhead light shining directly into my eyes? My bed’s not even beneath the bulb. It’s off to one side.

That confoundedbeep… beepsound isn’t helping any either. I’m going to kill the fucker that’s doing it if they don’t switch it off.

My eyes open as slits.Hold on, my room isn’t painted white. Raising my eyelids fully, I come completely awake with a start, immediately recognising my surroundings.I’m in the motherfucking hospital.But how, and why?

I would only have been brought here if it were a matter of life or death. Doc just normally digs a bullet out, patches us up, gives us painkillers, then lets us get on with the job of healing our own selves. To be here suggests my injury must be serious.

Life threatening?I do a quick assessment. My chest feels like a ton of weight is sitting on it, and my thigh throbs, butapart from that, I feel sufficiently alive to doubt I’m knocking at death’s door.

How did I get here?

I rack my brains, shaking my head to try to clear the fog in it. Suddenly, it all comes flooding back—the Mojave Devils, me taking a knife to the chest and a bullet to the leg. Tensing, I start thinking that if I’m here, the pigs are probably around waiting to question me as soon as I return to consciousness. That’s the reason we usually deal with our injuries in-house. Coming to the hospital gets the wrong assholes asking questions. Before I go talking to anyone, I’m going to need to know what the club has told the medical staff.

Speaking of the club, shouldn’t someone have been sitting with me? Not just to comfort but to protect me. When one of our own is in a hospital, they’re a sitting duck for anyone wanting retribution.

And revenge was the cause of my injuries, I recall.

Fuck, I’ve got to get out of here. I’ve got to get back to the clubhouse, talk to the brothers around the table, and tell them what the MDMC suspects. If we can’t find a way to throw them off the scent regarding the disappearance of Griz, we’ll always be watching our backs.

Is Winchester alright? He’d taken a nasty blow to the head. Is he in the hospital as well? I know Paint is alive or was when I passed out. I recall him fussing over me, and saying something completely out of left field when he was talking on the phone. He was discussing a tobacco pouch, which means nothing more to me now than it did at the time. While I lay dying, was he really pining for a smoke?

Knowing lying here isn’t going to get answers, I pull myself up, and only then notice all the wires attached to me and a white bandage across my chest. For a second, the effort hasme breathing deeply and…Oh fucking hell, that hurt. I stay completely still, thinking it’s probably best not to move at all.

Then my eyes catch something, or rather someone, to the side of me. It’s Saint, asleep, his mouth open, and drool on his chin. I hadn’t been left alone at all, but for all he’s worth, I could well have been. I wish I had the mobility and energy to kick him.

“Asshole,” I rasp. “You supposed to be protecting me?”

Saint awakes with a start, wiping his hand over his eyes first, then over his chin to mop up the drool. Looking sheepish, he catches my eye. “Shit, Bro. Just catching forty winks. I’ve been here all night.” Gradually, his senses come back to him. “How you feeling?” he asks as he stands and walks around to the monitor that’s the culprit for the incessant beeping. “Your oxygen levels look better than they did.”

I don’t care about minor details. There’s only one question I want answered. “Why the fuck am I here?” I hiss. “Why couldn’t you and Doc treat me at the club?” I refer to the medical professional we pay well on retainer, on the understanding that he’s available to treat all our injuries whenever we need him.

Saint flicks his eyes toward the door. It’s closed, but he’s still cautious about being overheard. “Clumsy asshole that you are, you tripped and fell on a knifein the clubhouse.” He emphasises the last three words. “You had a pneumothorax.” As my eyes glaze, he clarifies, “You punctured your right lung.” He shakes his head, half closes his eyes and looks guilt-ridden. “Couldn’t get there in fuckin’ time but talked Paint through the way to keep you alive – and, by the way, you owe him a pouch of tobacco.” Before I can start to process that, he continues, “Doc came out to where we found you, but said you needed emergency surgery, he didn’t have the equipment for. That’s why you’re here.”

I’m not stupid. I pick up the critical parts of the story. One that I owe Paint for some unknown reason, and second, maybe no cops will be involved if the medical staff thinks it was anaccident. Raising my chin, I let him know I understand. Then remember I have another injury. “My thigh?”

Lowering his voice, Saint leans in close. “Doc removed the bullet and stitched you up before the ambulance arrived. May not look pretty, as he had to do it fast. Doctors here think you’re accident-prone, and that bandage is just another injury.”

“They gonna put me on a psych hold for playing with knives?” I ask drily.

Saint snorts. “Better that than the cops.”

I hear him. Loud and fucking clear.

Just then, the door opens, and a nurse peeks her head around it. She brightens when she sees I’m awake, then frowns, probably because I’ve moved from the prone position she left me in.

After entering, she examines the monitor display, then announces, “The doctor wanted to see you when you came around from the anaesthetic. I’ll go tell her now.”

When she leaves, Saint throws me a meaningful glance. Again, I raise my chin to show I understand.

I’m obviously a priority patient, or a novelty, as it’s only minutes until the doctor appears. At first, she seems more interested in reading what’s on the tablet she’s holding and checking my stats before she gives her attention to Saint. “Could you leave us alone for a moment, please? I’d like to examine my patient in private.”

I’m no weak-ass woman or child, and Saint isn’t a relative, so he’s got no well-founded excuse to stay. He does pointedly look at the doctor’s name tag before leaving the room. That alone gives me a sense of security. If the medic does me wrong, then my VP will ensure she finds herself facing the whole club.

Once it’s just me and her in the room, the doctor doesn’t waste time. “Mr. Ranger,” she starts, reminding me how much I hate my government name. Folks might say my road name’snot much better, but it was honestly earned. My actual surname I only inherited from folks who’d wished I’d never been born. The mistake they’d had to live with, and one they’d never let me forget. “I’m having a little difficulty understanding how you got stabbed.”