Page 305 of Desert Wind


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I laughed because he expected me to.

I did everything right.

Every single thing.

And inside, I kept seeing Dylan’s hand.

Still.

Held.

Not mine.

Around three in the morning, Lily found me in the supply room staring at a shelf of saline flushes like they had personally betrayed me.

She stepped inside and shut the door behind her.

“You saw him.”

I reached for a box I did not need. “Saw who?”

“Do not insult me while I’m running on stale coffee and righteous concern.”

“I’m working.”

“You are hiding in a supply room.”

“I’m restocking.”

“You’re holding pediatric nasal cannulas.”

I looked down.

I was.

I put them back.

Lily folded her arms.

She had lost the soft hospital cardigan she wore on breaks, and her scrub top had a smear of something suspicious near the hem. Her glasses sat crooked on her nose. She looked exhausted and deeply dangerous in the way only a tiny nurse from Idaho could after thirteen hours of other people’s emergencies.

“I saw his fiancée,” I said.

Lily’s face softened.

I hated that.

Compassion was dangerous. It found cracks.

“Des.”

“No. Don’t.” I held up one hand. “Not yet.”

She closed her mouth.

I leaned back against the shelves and pressed my palms flat against the metal edge behind me.

“He was awake,” I said. “Georgia was holding his hand. He saw me.”