that. But then you don ât really know him. Maybe thatâs precisely what he deserved.
âTheyâre letting me out today. After here.â
Silence fell as she worked, tugging at a particular stubborn piece of thread that had decided to stick to his flesh. He didnât show the faintest reaction.
Feeling the need to speak into the space of silence, she supplied, âThat will be nice.â
His blue eyes flicked to her face then, like he couldnât help himself from looking at her when she uttered such a perfectly stupid thing.
That will be nice.
As though he would be attending a picnic or a baseball game. She heard his voice all over again telling her she didnât know fuck all about this place . Her face burned at the memory.
For a split second the corner of his mouth twitched. Her hand started to shake a little and she had to pause to regain her composure and adjust her grip on the scissors. With him this close to her, she felt certain he was examining the pimple on her chin. She was twenty-Âsix but still had the occasional breakout. Stress didnât help and there was no denying that working here stressed her out.
Pulling the last bit of thread from his skin, she released a shuddery breath. âThere, now.â Taking a step back, she deposited the trash and tools onto the tray. Moistening a little antiseptic on some gauze, she lightly patted the wound where fresh blood trickled out.
âI donât think it will be too deep a scar. Maybe I can give you some Mederma to help minimizeâÂâ
âThatâs okay,â he cut her off, and she flushed. Of course, he wouldnât care about a new scar. That was for Âpeople in her world who cared about things like their income tax and whether they would get that upcoming promotion.
âOkay.â She rubbed her hands on her thighs, mostly for something to do with them. âIâll call for a guard to escort you.â She gripped the edge of the rolling tray, wanting to flee but knowing she wasnât done. She had a job to do and she wasnât doing it right if she only did half of it. Deep breath. âWhy donât I check your ribs again?â
He hadnât mentioned they were causing him any problems, but she told herself she was just being thorough before releasing him back into the general population.
He stared at her blankly for a moment, his face as hard and implacable as stone. Almost like he didnât understand her.
âAre you still wearing the bandage?â She reached for the hem of his white uniform shirt, ready to assist him. The fabric hung past his waist, so her fingers inadvertently brushed his thigh.
His hand shot out and locked around her wrist. She stalled, freezing at his grip on her. Her heart lurched into her throat at his viselike fingers.
âItâs fine,â Knox said, his voice thick and gravelly.
Their eyes held.
âI already removed the bandage,â he added.
Briar moistened her lips and shivered as his gaze dropped to her mouth. âAnd youâre not in any pain?â
He shook his head once. âIâm fine.â His fingers unfurled from around her wrist, slipping away.
âLet me check,â she insisted.
Something flared in his eyes and her skin shivered, breaking out in goose bumps. It occurred to her that he was probably not the kind of man accustomed to being ordered around by a woman, unless, of course, it was a female corrections officer.
He seemed like the kind of man that took charge. Her gaze skimmed the immense breadth of his shoulders, the broadness of his chest, the way his biceps bulged. She had a sudden image of him with a woman. In a bedroom. Well, on a bed. She snapped her gaze off his body with a mental curse. So. Wrong.
Her gaze fell to his hands. They were big, blunt-Ânailed with long tapering fingers, his wrists solid with a light spattering of hair on the backs. She could visualize those hands,