“Making music—” she mused.
“—Not my music. Xan and Cadell are the primary songwriters. Tryp chips in a few songs.”
“So you don’t write music.”
Peyton looked over at the other wall. “Not since I joined the band. They had all the music they needed for the next album before I signed the contract, and I’m not really a band member. I’m an independent contractor, a hired musician for the next year with an option to extend.”
“But you’re a rock star.”
“A reluctant one.”
“But every guy wants to be a rock star!” Raji insisted.
“You keep saying that, ‘rock star.’ It’s losing its meaning.”
“Still!”
“I didn’t ever want to be a rock star.”
“Then why are you still in KV?”
Peyton’s hands tightened to fists on the bedsheets as he searched for an answer. “I don’t know.”
“Dude, you need to look at your life. Now, me? I’ve got everything worked out. I’ve worked my ass off to get stellar grades all my life, got into the best universities and a damn fine medical school and residency programs, and I’m right up there with the best residents in my year. I go into the hospital every day and every night and every waking minute of my life. I shank clogged arteries and malformed ventricles. I saw through bones and cut out hearts and sew them into other people. I battle the other residents to be the head of my class and make damn sure the attending physicians know it. I fight the God of Death every damn day and win. I’m within a few years of a magnificent job offer at a top hospital, as long as I keep fighting, every day. Then, I will save people’s lives and rake in a boatload of cash while doing it.”
“Sounds like you’ve got it all figured out, you with your seductive tattoos and your beautiful, dark eyes.”
She laughed. “You betcha, you with your hot, shredded abs and your muscular arms.”
She had followed his lead. Nice. “Maybe I should have you organize my life for me.”
Her eyes lit up. “Give me an hour, a spreadsheet, and a bottle of tequila, and we’ll hash out a life plan for you that you won’t want to deviate from.”
“I don’t think we’d need to drink a bottle of tequila to do that.”
“The tequila isn’t for you, buddy. It’s payment. You don’t think I would do that for free, do you? I’ll need good tequila, too. Top shelf stuff.”
“Oh, as payment. I would have thought that bossing people around would be your idea of fun.”
“Ugh, I boss people around all day at work. I demand that my patients stop eating deep-fried sticks of butter smothered in mayonnaise. I design treatment regimens for the nurses and PAs to follow. I teach the poopy-butt, short-coated medical students which end of the needle to stick patient with. Hint: Stick them with the pointy end. They pay me to boss everyone around. You should pay me to boss you around, too.”
He laughed. “Sounds good. Plan my life. The next time the band tours Mexico, I’ll ship you a bottle of the finest, artesan tequila.”
“Okay, deal. What do you want to do with your life?”
“That’s what you’re going to tell me.”
“Jesus Christ on a cracker, Peyton. You’ve got to give me something to start with. What did you want to be before you joined Killer Valentine?”
Peyton paused, thinking back those five months. “I wanted to be a classical pianist, I think.”
Raji sat up, pulling the white sheet around herself and over one shoulder like a superhero’s cape. “You think? You don’t know?”
That was a tough question. “When did you decide you wanted to be a heart surgeon?”
Raji shrugged, and the sheets slithered down her smooth shoulder to her arm. “I’ve always wanted to be a doctor.”
“You didn’t want to be a ballerina or an astronaut?”
“Those are childish ambitions. I’ve always wanted a high-power, high-level surgical career.”
Which was specific and very un-childish. “And how did you know to want to do that?”
She shrugged. “My father is a psychiatrist. He always told me to go into hard medicine, not squishy science. Not that he was qualified to give anyone advice about how to live your fucking life.”
Interesting. “So, your parents told you to be a doctor.”
She frowned again. Peyton liked the way her pretty little nose wrinkled. “Sort of. I picked the cardiothoracic specialty.”
“The what?” he laughed. “Sounds like you teach exercise classes.”
“Cardiothoracic! The cardio part means the heart, and the thoracic part means the thorax, the rest of the chest including the lungs.”
“I’m just a musician. I don’t even know if I could pronounce that.” He smiled at her, wide enough that he knew the dimple on his left cheek would dent in.
She giggled. “Oh, my God, you’re cute. Cardio, like exercise. Thor, like that hot blond guy in the movie. Acic, like if you eat something that tastes like buttcrack. Ass! Ick!”
“All right. Cardio. Thor. Ass! Ick!” he half-shouted, waving his hands. “Was that right?”
She laughed out loud at him. Her throaty, jubilant laugh enticed him even more. “Close enough. We’ll have to work on it.”
“Why did you choose such an unpronounceable specialty?”
“Because it was the hardest of the hard sciences, I guess.”
“And I chose piano performance at Juilliard, the most elite of the classical music conservatories. I finished my Master’s in June, just weeks before I joined KV.”
“Now we’re getting somewhere. So, you have a Master’s degree. That opens up some interesting paths you could take. Damn, I wish I had my computer and a nice, blank spreadsheet right now. What is your degree in? How long does it take to get a Master’s degree in music?”
“Piano performance, minors in composition and voice. One year past one’s bachelor’s degree.”
She rolled away from him a little. “Wait, you just finished your bachelor’s one year ago? You’re how old?”
“I’m twenty-three.”
Her dark eyes widened a little. “Oh. Huh.”
One of her legs reached for the edge of the bed.
Peyton raised one eyebrow at her. “Is that a problem?”
“Uh, no?” She stared at the ceiling. “I mean, you fuck like you’re older.”
He cracked up. “I’m afraid to ask what that means.”
“Oh, don’t be. It means better. Longer, you know, stamina-wise. Good technique. Gives a damn about the woman. That sort of thing.”
“Have you had a lot of older lovers?” He laughed a little, letting the smile sparkle at her. He knew what he was doing, being charming, being sexy. He’d had a lot of practice.
“Not a lot. Just, you know, the normal amount. Since I’ve done my bachelor’s and four years of medical school and three years into my residency.” She said the next part slowly, enunciating clearly. “Because I’m twenty-nine.”
“Oh. Okay.” Peyton shrugged. He didn’t see why this was any sort of a revelation.
“That’s okay with you?”
“Why, were you going to change it if I wasn’t?”
She chuckled. “Okay, good point. So, back to your career and life plan. Your dad must have been a classical musician,” Raji said, her voice lingering over the words like she was trying to restart the conversation.
“No. He’s a lawyer.” Peyton settled back on his pillow.
“So, shouldn’t you have become a lawyer, then?”
“God forbid.”
She was grinning again. “Oh, did you break your daddy’s heart by becoming a musician?”
“My father was devastated for at least fifteen minutes when I told him that I wanted to be a concert pianist and would not be attending Yale Law. Four buildings at Yale bear the Cabot name, mostly because several of my underachieving ancestors needed to grease Yale’s gears to be admitted. But New Englanders don’t express such undign
ified emotions longer than is absolutely necessary—”
Raji said, “They sound like my kind of lizard people.”
“—so that was the end of it. But that’s not what I meant. My father is not a real lawyer who takes cases for money. I meant he’s rich. We’re rich.”
Raji laughed. “Must be nice.”
“I’m not complaining about it. I can do anything I want in life, or nothing, and not worry about money.”
“So this life plan is a waste of time. You can just float around on your family’s money. Don’t you want to have your own money, though?”
“My grandfather left me millions in a trust fund. A lot of millions. More than millions.”
She frowned. “But your grandfather should have left his money to your father, right?”
“Oh, no. Inheritance in wealthy families skips generations. My grandfather left me his money, and then my father will leave his money to my theoretical kids someday. That way, the family trust pays half the inheritance taxes instead of paying them every generation, plus everybody gets the bulk of their money earlier in their lives.”
Raji’s jaw dropped. “That’s shady.”
“Of course. We’re wealthy. Everything we do is shady.”
The look in her dark, sultry eyes was nothing short of aghast. “Dude, you are getting less and less sympathetic by the second.”
Peyton worked hard not to laugh. Damn, she was cute. “Really? Most of the time, when I mention that I’m a rock star and I’m loaded, women seem to like it.”
“Fuck you. I’m a fucking cardiothoracic surgeon.” She grinned. “If I do one surgery per week, I’ll make buttloads more money than you earn off the interest on your millions, and I’ll do way more than one surgery a week. But you’re cute when you’re full of yourself, there with your eight-pack of abs and big, strong biceps and shockingly green eyes.”
Peyton laughed and propped himself up on his elbow to look down at her. The sheet rose where she was still breathing hard. He said, “I like you better and better, the more we talk.”
She smirked. “You didn’t like me before? Could have fooled me.”
“I liked you a lot before, and now I like you better and better,” he clarified. He traced the curve of her shoulder with one finger. “You, there, with your pretty, little face and your huge, dark eyes and your fascinating tattoos on your skin that I want to lick every time I look at them.”
Every brain cell in his head screamed out at Peyton to stop talking, that he might say too much and get caught up in an unwise relationship. His father never screwed a woman unless a non-disclosure agreement and settlement document had already been signed.
But sometimes, the truth is unwise, and sometimes, you have to leap.
If anyone in Killer Valentine had cared about Peyton’s music, that might have made a good song.
It was true, though. All during the night, through the dancing and writing the toast and fucking her, Peyton had liked Raji more and more.
A cute little crease appeared between Raji’s slim eyebrows again. “Well, you shouldn’t like me at all. I’m going to be a heart surgeon because I don’t have a heart. It takes a stone cold bitch to literally rip a person’s beating heart out of their body and let them die.”
“Is it still beating when you rip it out?” he asked, grinning at her. “Sounds like it would be tough to grab onto, flopping around like that.”
“Well, no,” she admitted. “We stop both the hearts, and we use a bypass machine on the recipient.”
He laughed.
“But I still rip it out! And, you know, donors don’t need a bypass machine. They die on the table.”
“Of course.” Peyton gathered her under one arm. “Come back to my hotel with me tonight.”
“Oh, hell, no. I have an early flight back to California tomorrow.”
“Then let me grab my phone to get your number. It’s in my pants on the floor. I could call you sometime.”
“That’s another ‘oh, hell, no,’” she said. “I don’t need rock stars phoning me at all hours of the day and night when I’m in the on-call room or wrist-deep in someone’s chest.”
“I could get you comp tickets when Killer Valentine is playing in Los Angeles.”
“As tempting as that is, I can buy my own tickets, Peyton. I’m a goddamn heart surgeon. I could buy a box seat if I wanted to.”
“I thought you said you were still doing your residency.” It was Peyton’s turn to grin. He was a wealthy guy, and a lot of his friends had ended up in medicine. He knew residents were paid meager stipends.
Raji frowned. “Well, I will be able to, and I can afford nosebleed seats now.”
He laughed again. “You are the oddest little person.”
“Why, because I’m not impressed with your money?”
“All my life, I’ve been warned about gold diggers who will try to get knocked up to get money out of me, to only date women whose families I knew, and all that rot.”
“So it’s because I’m not impressed with your money or your rock star fame.”
“That’s pretty much it, and because you’re impressive in your own right.”
Raji shoved his shoulder, and he fell back laughing. She said, “That’s right, buddy. I could rip out your heart and sew it right back in, and maybe I’d sew it in backwards just to make things interesting. Come on. We’d better get out there before people start whispering that the heart surgeon has snuck off to shag the rock star.”
“You go ahead,” Peyton said. “It would look better if we didn’t both reappear at the same time.”
“Good point!” She availed herself of the facilities and waved at him as she slipped out the door, not too noticeably tousled.
Peyton cleaned himself up and then stripped the sheets off of the bed, balling them up to carry them upstairs. He had crashed at Cadell’s house a couple of times when the band had stopped in New Jersey to record demos, so he knew where the laundry room was. It seemed impolite to leave a sticky bed in their wake.
Peyton Cabot of the Connecticut Cabots was unflaggingly polite.
Chapter Six
Mammals and Cold-Blooded Lizard People
* * *
After Raji boinked Peyton-Cabot, she’d assumed that he would wander off into the party because he had gotten his, leaving her sore and with a stupid, grinning afterglow from the bone-shattering orgasm.
But he hadn’t.
Instead, he’d hung out with her, talking and asking her questions, drawing her into long, winding conversations with the other band members—Killer Valentine band members oh my God oh my God—about music and philosophy and the meaning of life and how good the wine was.
He stroked her back or shoulder a couple of times.
That was weird, right? They’d both gotten what they’d wanted—a mind-blowing fuck—so shouldn’t Peyton drift off into the past and leave her the heck alone?
But she laughed and had a great time with him all night.
Eventually, hours later, as the sun rose over the hedges and other houses in the high-rent subdivision, they lay on the carpeting of the living room while the other KV band people and their significant others lounged on the couches and chairs. Raji had ended up draped over Peyton like a lazy cat. Wood smoke from the fire pits lingered in their clothes, just enough like cigarette smoke to make Raji crave a cigarette even though she had quit years before. The huge, curved television silently played a repeat of some old reality show.
Raji’s friend Andy was curled up in her new husband’s arms. Andy was belly-aching again about how her patients died too much.
Because Raji was a cardiac surgeon, most of her patients had lived at least part of their lives before she sliced them open in a last-ditch attempt to keep them going a while longer.
Quite honestly, many of Raji’s patients had brought their troubles upon themselves with way too much rich food and no exercise. Raji could rationalize their deaths, even if she felt callous while she did it.
> Kid patients hurt more when they didn’t make it. They had just been dealt a bad hand, and there was no way to rationalize any of it.
Raji and Andy had replayed this conversation dozens of times. Losing patients was part and parcel of being a doctor, especially a surgeon. Sometimes, no matter how careful you were, no matter how you did everything perfectly to the micrometer, patients died.
Sometimes, horribly.
One of Raji patients had died on her table the previous week. She hadn’t nicked an important artery or vein. She hadn’t made a mistake. The postmortem video in Grand Rounds had completely absolved her of even the smallest fuck-up.
He’d thrown a clot.
A blood clot had traveled from somewhere on him to his lungs, resulting in a pulmonary embolism. Pulmonary embolisms were one of those unknowable things that just happened. Even right on the operating table with every drug and device at her fingertips, Raji hadn’t been able to save him. No one could have. He’d coded, and it was over.
Losing a patient really broke Andy up.
But not Raji. She cut to cure, and she had no inconvenient feelings about it.
Xan Valentine, the charismatic lead singer, lay on the couch with his wife, Georgie the keyboard player, twined around him. His hand rested on her long, brown hair, and he stroked her head absent-mindedly.
Georgie mumbled to Andy, “You could go on tour with us.”
Raji had talked to Georgie a couple of times that evening and liked her, and it was nice that she was trying to solve Andy’s problem of being a big ol’ wuss.
Over Raji’s head, Andy argued with Georgie, “I’ve wanted to be a doctor my whole life.”
Georgie said, “You can’t let six-year-olds make career decisions for you. I wanted to be a professional sailor.”
“Did you?” Xan muttered to his wife. “I have a yacht. We should sail somewhere.”
Peyton’s chest flinched under Raji’s cheek.
Cadell said to Andy, “You’d still be a doctor. We need a doctor. Emily could go with us. You could monitor her for rejection. Oh, jeez. We should go to the hospital to check on her.”
A Billionaire for Christmas Page 3