Until Cobi (Until Her/Him #7)(5)



_______________

“You’re free to leave, but I want you back here in a couple days so I can look at your stitches,” Dr. Ross says, jotting something down in my file before meeting my gaze. “But if you have any nausea or if your headache gets worse, you need to come back to the emergency room.”

“Sure,” I agree, then I look toward the door when someone comes into the room. I take in the older gentleman and let out a relieved breath when I see a badge clipped to his belt. I also see he’s carrying my purse and a white plastic shopping bag in one hand.

“Don’t forget to come back. Normally there is nothing to worry about after getting stitches, but from time to time, infection can set in, and I want to make sure that doesn’t happen,” Dr. Ross adds, pulling my attention back to him.

“I’ll be sure to come back,” I assure him, as the officer comes closer to my bed and Dr. Ross looks at him.

“Detective Frank, this is Ms. Emmerson. They told me you’d be in to escort her out of the hospital. I appreciate it. Things have been a mess since the story broke.”

“Anytime,” Detective Frank replies, giving me a small smile before he looks at Dr. Ross. “It’s going to be a while before the story dies down. You might wanna get a couple more security guards on the front door to manage who’s coming into the building. I stopped one reporter on my way up and sent them back outside.”

“I’ll talk to the head of the security department and see what they can do,” Dr. Ross says, looking annoyed. I can’t say I blame him; I’d be annoyed too if my place of work was overrun with media.

“Let me know if you need my captain to make a call.”

“Will do,” Dr. Ross tells him, and then his eyes come back to me. “Take some Tylenol when you get home, and rest. I’ll see you in a couple days.”

“Sure.”

He lifts his chin toward me then does the same to the detective before he leaves.

“Mayson wanted to come himself, but he’s tied up on a case,” Detective Frank says, and I focus on him, blinking in surprise. Why would Cobi want to come himself? “He also gave me this to give to you.” He hands me my purse and the plastic shopping bag.

I open the plastic bag, seeing a pair of sweats and a plain white shirt. Cobi sent clothes for me? What the heck?

“He didn’t have to do this.” I hold up the T-shirt. “My friend would’ve brought me clothes when she came to pick me up,” I inform him.

“We spoke before I came here. We think it’d be better if your friend doesn’t come inside to pick you up, and Mayson doesn’t want you having to wander the hospital in that gown or to have to go home in it.” Okay, there was a lot there to take in, but before I have a chance to reply, he continues. “He also said you still need to give your statement. You up for that right now?”

I’m not really up for it, but still I want this done. “I’d like to get it over with.”

His face softens. “How about you call whoever is picking you up then go change. We should be done by the time they get here.”

“Right.” I dig into my purse and pray my phone is there, and then pray it’s still charged. When I see it is, I call Brie to let her know I’m being released, and Frank tells me where she should meet me. When I hang up with her, I go to the bathroom, taking the plastic bag with me.

I change quickly, ignoring the fact that the shirt smells like what I imagine Cobi would smell like—mysterious and masculine. I also ignore the fact that both the shirt and sweats are huge on me, meaning they possibly belong to him. It’s odd enough that he sent something for me to wear; I don’t think I could handle knowing they actually belong to him. After I’m dressed, I sit with Frank, who records my statement while writing it down in a spiral notebook that he pulls from his back pocket. When we’re done, just like what was promised, I’m escorted through the hospital and out a back door to where Brie is waiting for me.

“Have your parents called?”

At Brie’s question, I finish buckling my seat belt then look at her. “No.” And they haven’t. I got a couple of messages from people both Brie and I work with, but nothing from my parents. It’s not surprising. My mom and dad either don’t know what’s going on, or are so high and drunk they don’t care about what happened.

“Seriously?” she asks, putting her car in reverse and backing out of her parking spot right next to the door I just exited through.

“They never call me unless they need something,” I remind her, and her face tightens in anger.

“Your face is all over the news, along with the fact that you were shot at. Ken has been calling me all day asking if I’ve heard from you. He’s worried, and you know he never worries about anything.” She’s wrong; Kenyon, her fiancé, worries all the time. Maybe not about day-to-day crap, but he’s protective of the people he cares about, and because I’ve been best friends with Brie since forever and have known him since they started dating when we were freshmen in college, he’s protective of me too.

“Kenyon also cares about me. My parents don’t and they never have.”

“You’re their daughter, their daughter who could have died last night.” She hits the steering wheel in frustration.

Aurora Rose Reynolds's Books