He repeated the title slowly. They had been married for three months. They barely saw each other, but hearing that sterile, corporate title come out of her mouth made a hot spike of irritation flare in his chest.
Audra twisted her torso, trying to break his iron grip on her waist. "I can walk on my own. I don't need your assistance."
She reached her hand out into the empty air, her fingers grasping blindly for the cane she had dropped.
Jakobe stared at her. He watched her pale fingers grasp at nothing.
The irritation in his chest rapidly morphed into a dark, unexplainable anger.
He didn't let her go. He didn't bend down to pick up her cane.
Instead, right in front of his shocked assistant, Jakobe bent his knees slightly.
He swept his left arm under the back of her knees and kept his right arm firmly wrapped around her back.
Audra let out a short, breathless gasp as her feet left the floor.
Jakobe lifted her effortlessly into his arms, holding her in a tight princess carry.
The sudden loss of gravity terrified her. Because she couldn't see, the sensation of floating made her stomach lurch.
Her hands flew up and clamped down hard on his broad shoulders. Her fingernails dug into his expensive suit.
"Put me down!" Audra hissed, keeping her voice low. "Are you out of your mind?"
Jakobe's jaw locked. The muscle in his cheek ticked. "Shut up, unless you want every doctor in this wing staring at you."
Audra clamped her mouth shut. She knew he was right. Any public scene would be front-page news by morning.
She went completely rigid in his arms. She felt the steady, powerful rhythm of his strides as he carried her down the hall.
Two nurses walked past. Audra heard them gasp, but A.C. Rowe immediately shot them a lethal glare, silencing them.
Jakobe remembered the room she had stumbled out of. He walked straight toward it.
A.C. Rowe rushed ahead and pushed the heavy wooden door open.
Jakobe carried her inside. His dark eyes scanned the standard private room. He noted the cheap furniture and the small window. His upper lip curled in disgust.
He walked to the bed and lowered her down.
The moment Audra's back hit the mattress, she scrambled backward like a cornered animal. She pulled the thin blanket up to her chest, creating a physical barrier.
"Thank you for your help, Mr. Hartman," she said, her voice shaking slightly. "You can go back to your acquisition now."
She used the title again. A clear dismissal.
Jakobe stood over her. The sight of her cowering away from him felt like a physical insult.
He didn't leave. He slowly unbuttoned the center button of his suit jacket.
He grabbed the metal chair next to the bed and dragged it across the linoleum floor.
The harsh scraping sound made Audra flinch.
Jakobe sat down. "A.C.," he said, not taking his eyes off Audra. "Go get the director of this clinic. Now."
Audra's heart hammered against her ribs. "What are you doing? This violates our agreement! You have no right to interfere."
Jakobe leaned forward. His large frame cast a heavy shadow over her.
"The agreement states I have the right to protect the Hartman family's public image," he said, his voice dripping with cold authority. "My wife wandering the halls blind like a vagrant damages my assets."
He used the coldest business logic he could find to justify the violent need to protect her that was currently tearing his chest apart.
Audra opened her mouth to fight back, but no words came out.