as in nine months ago?â
âUm, I think so.â Or maybe it was two years and nine months ago.
âTake another vacation, Roger. Take it now.â
Roger nodded, wondering where in the hell he was going to fit a vacation into his work schedule. âOkay, a vacation. What else?â
âChange your life. Find out what stress is killing you and fix it.â
âButââ
âWhatever it takes, Roger. Do it now. â
Â
T HERE WAS SOMETHING really rewarding in being a fill-in office-plant girl, Dr. Amber Smithson thought as she watered a tastefully trimmed fern. Mandolin Hospital hadnât had greenery, or at least none that she remembered. Back then, Amber had thought her work environment was clean and simple. Now she realized it had just been sterile and dead. Which was why she got a special thrill now out of helping corporate America find some green life in a very non-green world.
This wasnât her real job. It was just a way to make ends meet and help out the real plant ladyâMaryâwho was in bed right now suffering from an extremely painful spell of rheumatoid arthritis. Mary was a good friend who couldnât afford to lose her plant job. So Amber filled in, got to play with plants and, best of all, got to remind herself why she had left the high-pressure life of high-end medicine.
Right now she was in the lobby of RFE, a robotics firm with high-dollar products and mega-dollar research. Pressure was in the very air up here, just like it had been at Mandolin. They might not be working on human bodies, but they were gambling with big money and big ideas. No one could afford to fail and Amber could taste the edge of panic that infected the air. Just like it had at Mandolin.
But she was well free of that, right? she asked herself. For the last two years, sheâd been exploring alternative medicine just like sheâd always wanted. No one talked to her about liability, no insurance company told her how to treat a patient, andâsadlyâno one paid her bills.
Yes, sheâd survived all on her own, but her patients were more likely to pay in apple pie than in dollars. Her bank account was getting tight, and her family would only help out if she gave up all her ânonsenseâ and came back to traditional medicineâpreferably at Mandolin. Up until now, sheâd refused. But all too soon, an empty bank account was going to force her to make a difficult compromise.
But that wasnât a problem to be faced now. No, right now was for plants, RFE andâ¦yes!â¦Mr. Roger Martell. The CFO of RFE had just walked into the building, and Amber was perfectly perched behind a planter to spy on the gorgeous man.
Heâd caught her eye months ago, when Amber had first subbed as plant girl. Hell, the man caught every womanâs eye. Tall, dark, stylish and a power executive in every way, Amberâd been secretly spying on him whenever she worked as plant girl. Just being in the same room with him made the air feel electric, as if every second of his day was filled with important decisions. God, he was everything she missed about her old lifeâthe urgency, the power and the feeling that she was doing something vitally important. That was Rogerâs aura in a nutshell, and naturally, heâd barely stepped into the front lobby when the receptionist started buzzing people.
âRogerâs back,â the woman said into the phone. âYes, Iâll let him know.â She didnât hang up as she handed the man a stack of pink message notes. âGinny wants to meet with you in a half hourââ
âHour and a half, at the earliest.â
The receptionist didnât miss a beat as she spoke into the phone. âItâll be an hour and a half, Ginny. He knows itâs urgent.â She hung up the phone and passed him two large manila envelopes.
âJesus,â he moaned. âI was only gone an hour.â
âIt