But as he opened his mouth, she dove in first, blurting out, 					“I’m sorry, Lucas. There’s no reason for me to take my crappy mood out on you. I 					guess I should have stayed home and popped a sleeping pill instead of surprising 					you.”
   				“I’m glad you didn’t.” Even if his inability to do anything for 					her was killing him. He was a doctor, for God’s sake. Shouldn’t he be able to 					fix this? Fix her?
   				“You know what’s sad?” she said after a minute. “I think you 					mean that.”
   				“I do mean it.”
   				“I know. But just because you’re my best friend doesn’t mean 					you have to put up with all this maudlin shit.”
   				“It isn’t maudlin if it’s how you’re really feeling.”
   				“Sure it is—the two aren’t mutually exclusive, you know.”
   				She sat down on the grass, pulling her knees up to her chest 					and wrapping her arms around them. The innate defensiveness, the wariness, of 					the position struck him. Made him sad. So that when he sat down beside her, he 					made sure to give her plenty of personal space.
   				For the first time in a very long time, he was unsure of what 					to do, what to say. Still, he had to try—for both their sakes.
   				“The Department of Public Health isn’t your only choice here, 					you know. As you yourself acknowledged, you’re one of the leading field 					epidemiologists in the world. You can write your own ticket at some university 					here. Hell, if we’re being honest, you know you can write your own ticket at the 					CDC. You don’t have to let them send you all over the world. You can stay here, 					work in America. There’s a lot going on here that isn’t the flu— tuberculosis, 					the resurgence of hep C,
   new strains of MRSA. Disease is disease, but at 					least it’s not like it is over there. When you’re here, it doesn’t hurt the same 					way.”
   				Kara was already shaking her head, as he’d known she would. 					This was an old argument between them, one that neither of them ever truly won. 					“If not me, then who, Lucas? I am good at my job. 					Damn good. Besides, the CDC has already lost two of their most experienced 					epidemiologists this year. If I punk out, how many more people are going to die 					because the person they send isn’t as thorough as I am?”
   				“How long before you die?” he 					countered.
   				She shrugged off his concern. “I’m careful.”
   				“That isn’t what I meant and you know it. I haven’t said 					anything because you always put up no-trespassing signs, but I’ve been able to 					see what this job is doing to you for a while now.” Every trip Kara went on she 					came back a little more tired, a little more distant, and each time it took 					longer for her to bounce back. She left a piece of herself in every country she 					went to, a piece of her heart—a piece of her very soul. The things she had 					managed to hang on to were joined together so precariously that he often 					wondered how long it would take before she fell apart completely. He wrapped an 					arm around her shoulders and pulled her into a loose embrace. Part of him 					expected her to fight—Kara was fiercely independent and she’d already shared 					more of herself tonight than she usually did—but she didn’t. Instead, she 					wrapped an arm around his waist, laid her head on his chest.
   				As she did, his body stirred to life, despite the 					circumstances. Cursing silently, he did his best to ignore
   his very 					inappropriate arousal in the hopes that it would go away if he didn’t 					acknowledge it. After all, the last thing she needed was to feel like her best 					friend was putting the moves on her when she was at her most vulnerable.
   				Of course, it didn’t work—it never did with her—which just 					pissed Lucas off more. But Kara was everything he admired in a woman—strong, 					self-sufficient, involved, intelligent, kind. He might know intellectually that 					being stuck in the friend zone was exactly where he wanted to be, but sometimes 					convincing his body of that fact was a lot more difficult.
   				Embarrassed and more than a little annoyed at his lack of 					control, he started to pull away from her.
   				Kara made a low, humming sound of protest and her arm tightened 					around him.
   				“Not yet,” she said, tilting her head up to look at him with 					eyes made luminous by tears and the dim lights of the park. “Don’t pull away 					yet.”
   				* * *
   				KARA COULD FEEL LUCAS’S discomfort. His body had stiffened 					against hers and she knew she should let him go. She’d already cried on him, 					yelled at him and dumped her problems in his lap. Now she was clinging to him 					like he was the only thing standing between her and insanity. No wonder he was 					uncomfortable.
   				Needy much?
   				Still, she wasn’t quite ready to let go of him. Being near 					Lucas, absorbing his warmth and feeling the steady beat of his heart comforted 					her in a way nothing had in a very long time. Squeezing even closer, she closed 					her eyes and tried to block out the fears and memories clamoring inside of 					her.
   				She focused on Lucas instead, on the gentle rise and fall of 					his chest as he breathed.
   				On the warm, delicious scent of him, like a pine forest on a 					bright, sunny day.
   				On the feel of his muscled body against her, so big and capable 					and comforting.
   				When she was with him, she felt safe in a way she never really 					had before. She’d been on her own a long time—her mother had died the summer 					before she met Lucas—and she was more than capable of taking care of herself. 					Still, there was something nice about knowing, really knowing, that Lucas had 					her back.
   				Oh, she’d never ask him for anything important—the last thing 					she wanted was to be a burden to him—but still, it was nice to know that someone 					was there if she needed something. Nice to know that he 					was there.
   				Turning her head a little, she glanced up at Lucas through her 					lashes. She didn’t know what she expected—maybe that he’d be looking out at the 					park, maybe that he’d be deep in thought. Maybe that he’d just be relaxing and 					enjoying sitting here as much as she was. But when she looked up, she found him 					staring at her, his jaw clenched tight and his eyes glittering like 					sapphires.
   				Her breath hitched in her throat. Sitting there, he looked 					dark, sexy and just a little bit rumpled. Basically like his normal, gorgeous 					self, and while that had never fazed her before, something about this particular 					moment had her heart kicking into high gear. Her stomach fluttered even as her 					mouth went desert dry. Trying to get some moisture back, she rubbed her lips 					together. Licked them. And felt Lucas stiffen against her even as a deep, 					rumbling growl started in his chest.
   				“Kara.” It was a warning, and a blatant one at that, and she 					felt it sizzle along every nerve ending she had. Drowning now in the scent and 					sight and sound of him, she reached up and rested her hand against his cut-glass 					jaw. Stroked her thumb over his dark stubble and lost herself in the pools of 					his eyes.
   				“Kara.” He whispered her name this time, his hand coming up to 					cup her own face. “What are you doing?”
   				She shook her head. She had no idea what she was doing and she 					didn’t want to know. For this moment, this instant, she just wanted to feel 					something other than the despair that was her constant companion. Wrapping her 					other hand around the back of his neck, she pulled him slowly, inexorably 					closer.
   				He didn’t fight her, didn’t shrug her off, didn’t make a joke 					like she half expected him to. Like she’d been half afraid he would. Instead, he 					watched her, eyes wide-open as they closed the distance between their mouths one 					small centimeter at a time.
   				And then, when her whole body was trembling in anticipation, he 					kissed her.
   		 			 				CHAPTER FOUR
   				IF SOMEONE HAD ASKED HER if she’d ever planned on kissing 
					     					 			 					Lucas, she would have told them—quite truthfully—that she never had. If that 					same person had asked her if she’d ever thought 					about kissing him, she would have lied like a rug and told them the same thing. 					But nothing she had ever thought about in passing, nothing she had ever 					imagined, could have prepared her for the jolt that went through her as Lucas 					brushed her lips with his.
   				It was a quick kiss, just a passing press of his lips to hers, 					really, but as he pulled away, he looked as stunned as she felt. Then she was 					reaching for him, her fingers tangling in the silky, cool strands of his hair as 					she pulled his face to hers. If they were going to do this, then she wanted a 					real kiss from Lucas. Even more, she wanted the real Lucas, not the one he 					usually showed to the women he dated.
   				It only took a moment before his lips opened against hers, 					moving in a gentle sucking motion that had her trembling and her hands grasping 					at his shoulders for support. He laughed a little and wrapped an arm around her 					waist to ground her. But as his tongue darted out to lick gently at the corners 					of her mouth, she acknowledged that it was going to take a lot more than a 					supporting arm to keep her steady.
   				But, as she pressed her body against his, she realized she 					wasn’t the only one trembling. Lucas was as shaky as she was. Somehow, that 					realization made what they were doing so much more real—and so much more 					delicious.
   				He sucked her lower lip between his teeth and her mouth opened 					on a gasp. It was the invitation he was waiting for, his tongue darting inside 					her mouth to tease and tangle with her own.
   				There was a strange ringing in her ears, one she tried to 					ignore as she lost herself in Lucas. It was probably her subconscious’s way of 					telling her that this whole thing was a really bad idea. But she ignored it—or 					at least, she tried to. All of this was overwhelming enough without facing the 					consequences of her actions at the same moment she was acting. Besides, for 					these few minutes when she was in Lucas’s arms, she wanted to forget what she 					was doing out here. Forget all the pain and ugliness and devastation she’d seen, 					and all that was to come because she wasn’t strong enough to find a way past the 					bureaucracy.
   				She wanted to lose herself in Lucas, to immerse herself in the 					desire whipping between them. He must have felt the same way, because his arms 					tightened around her, pulling her up to her knees so that their bodies were 					flush against each other, chest to chest, thigh to thigh. It was his turn to 					delve his hands into her hair, to pull on her curls until her head tilted at an 					angle satisfactory to him.
   				It alternately felt like they had been kissing for seconds, 					then hours. Long, luxurious kisses that made her lips burn and her head whirl. 					It felt good to kneel here, lost in the desire pumping through her body. She’d 					felt dead inside for so long, had deliberately tamped down on her emotions so 					that she wouldn’t feel the pain of what she did on a daily basis. It felt 					amazing to say to hell with it. To toss her 					inhibitions and worries and anguish to the wind and just feel.
   				But Lucas broke the kisses off abruptly, pulling back and 					staring at her. She whimpered, tried to cling to him and he cursed even as he 					fumbled for her purse. “Your phone’s ringing,” he told her breathlessly as he 					handed it to her.
   				She felt pretty breathless herself, and also pretty stupid, as 					she realized the bells she’d been hearing hadn’t been coming from inside her at 					all.
   				“Whoever it is has called three or four times,” Lucas told her, 					his voice a few shades deeper than normal. “It must be important.”
   				She checked the call log. Her heart sank as she saw that her 					worst fear was true—her boss’s private number. Already? she wanted to scream. Couldn’t she have just one day, one 					night, to herself before they came for her? Before she had to hurry down and try 					to contain an epidemic when they refused to give her the tools—and the time—that 					she needed?
   				She gestured to call him back, but the hand holding the phone 					was shaking so badly that she couldn’t even punch the call button. Seeing her 					dilemma, Lucas wrapped his own hand under hers, held her steady. “It’s okay, 					Kara,” he murmured to her, his thumb stroking across the back of her hand. His 					touch soothed her like nothing else could.
   				Her boss picked up on the first ring, grim and to the point. He 					didn’t even say hello, simply, “They have an outbreak of Ebola in Eritrea.”
   				“Ebola?” she asked, a little stunned. Beside her, Lucas 					stiffened, made a sound of protest, but she turned her head, focused on the tree 					right in front of her. She couldn’t afford to let him distract her right now. 					Until she made a decision one way or the other, this was her job—whether she 					liked it or not.
   				“How long since the outbreak started?”
   				“Three weeks.”
   				“Three weeks? And it hasn’t burned itself out? Did it start in 					a major city?” Ebola was a disease that sounded, and looked, incredibly 					frightening, but it wasn’t something that usually created long-term epidemics. 					It was an awful way to die, but it was fast and it wasn’t airborne—it could only 					spread through contact with bodily fluids. Which usually made it pretty easy to 					contain. Plus, with a high mortality rate, it usually died out—once its hosts 					died out—pretty quickly.
   				“They don’t know where it started—figuring that out is your 					job. But right now it’s in every major southern city—Om Hajer, T’io, Assab, Os 					Mara. It might be in the northern cities, as well, but we just don’t know that 					yet.”
   				“A couple of those cities are awfully close to the Sudanese and 					Ethiopian borders.”
   				“That’s what we’re afraid of.”
   				“Has it spread?”
   				“Based on the information we’ve been given, we don’t think so. 					I’ve reached out to health organizations working in both countries and am 					waiting to hear back. But my gut tells me if it hasn’t already jumped the 					borders, it’s going to soon.”
   				“But how is that possible? You can’t get Ebola from sitting 					next to someone on the bus, and those who have it get sick so quickly that they 					don’t have much chance to travel.”
   				“I am well aware of that, Kara.”
   				“I know, Paul. I’m sorry. I’m just trying to wrap my head 					around this. Are they sure it’s Ebola? And why weren’t we contacted before this? 					If it’s been going on three weeks, that’s a lot of deaths. Did they call in the 					World Health Organization instead?”
   				“WHO got the call at the same time we did.”
   				“Why did they wait?”
   				“The Eritrean government isn’t known for its willingness to 					allow outsiders in. They don’t want anyone to witness what goes on inside the 					borders.”
   				She knew that. But this was a disease that could kill a lot of 					people if it was already in the major cities. How could that not have mattered 					to them? Then again, it was just more of the same political bullshit she’d been 					struggling with for months now.
   				Frustrated, angry, she blew out a steady stream of air. No 					matter how long she was in this business, she would never understand how a 					government could stand by and watch its people die, simply to protect itself. 					The whole thing was anathema to her.
   				Her mind racing, she repeated her first question. “Are they 					sure it’s Ebola?”
   				“Frankly, I don’t think they know what the hell it is. They say 					it’s Ebola and it has all the markers of the disease, but the growing infection 					rate doesn’t make sense. And their labs aren’t our labs. I won’t be happy until 					we have a team in the field.”
   				“Is this thing airborne?”
   				“They say no. Again—”
   				“I know, I know. You want a team there. When?”
   				“Thre 
					     					 			e weeks ago.”
   				She laughed, though the sound had no humor in it. “Right.”
   				“I’m putting together a meeting for two o’clock tomorrow 					afternoon—I guess that would be this afternoon, since it’s past midnight. I’ve 					scheduled a flight out at eight o’clock. You’ll head up the team.”
   				It wasn’t a question, but she said “yes,” anyway. There was no 					doubt she’d be on that airplane. From the second she’d seen his name on her 					caller ID, she’d known it would lead straight to this. Some mutation of Ebola? 					Hemorrhagic viruses were her specialty. Morbid as it sounded, she’d been waiting 					her whole career for something like this to happen.
   				“What time can you be here?”
   				“I’m out right now. I need to get home, repack.” God, had she 					even gotten the last of her laundry done? “Catch a few hours’ sleep if I’m going 					to be alert in the meeting. And I’m going to need to refill my field kit.”
   				“I know. I’ll have everything ready and waiting for you.”
   				“Please. I’m a mess, totally jet lagged and nowhere close to 					organized. If you organize it then I go over it, there’s less chance I’ll miss 					something.”
   				“So what time?” he asked again.
   				She turned around, grabbed Lucas’s wrist to look at his watch. 					It was one-thirty. “If everything goes okay, I can be there by ten.”
   				“Good. I want you up to speed before the rest of the team gets 					here.”
   				Panic had her heart racing and her breath quickening but she 					refused to give in to it. She didn’t have a choice—she had to keep it together. 					Lucas must have heard something in her breathing, though, because this time he 					reached for her free hand, threading his fingers through hers and squeezing 					tightly.
   				It wasn’t much, wasn’t a huge gesture of comfort, but it was 					enough to cut through the fear and get her focusing on what needed to be 					done.