Читать книгу Her Hot Highland Doc - Annie O’neil - Страница 11

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CHAPTER TWO

BRODIE PULLED HIS hand out of Kali’s and received an indignant stare in response.

“What? Now I’m not fit to see to a first-degree burn? I am a qualified GP, I’ll have you know.”

This time there was fire behind her words. She was no pushover. He liked that. Decorum ruled all here on Dunregan and it had never been a good fit for him. It was what had forced him to head out into the world to explore who he could be without That Day branded onto his every move.

Enough with the bitterness, McClellan. You’re not a teenager anymore.

“No, that’s not it at all.” Brodie waved away her presumption, opting to get over himself and just be honest. “I think the booking agency might not have been entirely forthright with you.”

“What are you talking about? Four weeks—with the possibility of an extension. What’s there to know beyond that?” Her forehead crinkled ever so slightly.

“I...” Brodie hesitated, then plunged forward. No point in beating round the bush. “I’ve recently finished my twenty-one-day clearance after three months working in an Ebola hospital. In Africa,” he added, as if it weren’t ruddy obvious where the hospital had been.

Three countries. Thousands dead. He’d wanted to make a difference. Needed to make a difference somewhere—anywhere—before coming back here. And he had done. Small-scale. But he’d been there. A pair of hazmat boots on the ground in a place where “risky” meant that sharing the same air as the person next to you might mean death. Only to come back and face a sea of incriminating looks.

Is this what you had in mind, Dad? Making me promise to work on the island for a year after you’d gone so I could be reminded how much of an outsider I am?

He shook off the thought. His father had been neither bitter nor vengeful. It had been his fathomless kindness and understanding that had driven the stakes of guilt deep into Brodie’s heart.

“Hmm...”

Kali’s green-eyed gaze remained steady apart from a blink or two. Could she see the inner turmoil he was fighting? Filial loyalty over a need to cut loose? To forge his own path.

Kali’s voice, when she finally spoke, was completely neutral. “Guess they did leave that bit out.” She considered him for a moment longer. “I am presuming you wouldn’t be here if you hadn’t had the all clear so...it does beg the question: what am I doing here if you’re good to go?”

“Ah, the mysteries of life in Dunregan begin to reveal themselves.” This was the part that rankled. The part where Brodie found himself slamming doors, spilling boiling water and leaving unsuspecting GPs with their muck-covered bicycles by the side of the road on a stormy day.

“Some of—most of the patients are concerned...about being seen by me.” Total honesty? All of them. Fear of catching Ebola from Ol’ Dr. McClellan’s son had gripped the island.

Or...the thought struck him...maybe they had simply preferred his father and were using the Ebola scare as an excuse to refuse his treatment. Now, that hurt.

He cleared his throat. One step at a time.

“Even though you’ve had the all clear?” Kali’s voice remained impartial. She was fact gathering.

“Right. Apparently most folk round here don’t put much faith in the Public Health Office’s green light.” He snorted derisively. “And to think of all the viral infections I’ve treated here. Rich, isn’t it?”

He stopped himself. He was going to have to check the bitter tone in his voice. Yeah, he was angry. But he was hurting much more than he was spitting flames. And to add on moments like these—moments that reminded him why he wanted more than anything to live somewhere else. Oh, to be anonymous!

“I’m going to presume, as someone who has also taken the Hippocratic oath, that you wouldn’t have returned to your practice until you felt well and truly able to.”

Despite himself, he shot her a look. One that said, Obviously not. Otherwise I wouldn’t be so blinking frustrated.

“Don’t shoot the messenger, Dr. McClellan! I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t check with you.”

“Fair enough.”

And it was. It just felt...invasive...being questioned again. And by someone who hadn’t been through the post-Ebola wringer as he had.

Kali might be a fully qualified GP, but her face was unlined by personal history. With skin that smooth, no dark circles under her eyes, excited to be working in Dunregan... She had to be green around the ears.

“What are you? Two...three days out of med school?”

She looked at him as if he’d sprouted horns. The rod of steel reasserted itself.

“Old enough. Apart from which, I don’t really think that’s any business of yours.”

“No.” Might as well be honest. “You just look—”

“Yeah, yeah. I know.” She all but spat the words out, crossing her arms defensively across her chest. “Baby-faced.”

“Not exactly what I was going to say,” Brodie countered. Arrestingly beautiful would’ve been more accurate. Her smooth skin was entirely unweathered by life, but now that he was paying more attention the wary look in her eyes spoke of wisdom beyond her years.

“Well...” She adopted a tone one might use for toddlers. “I’m a fully fledged grown-up, just like you, so you can rest easy, Dr. McClellan.”

“Brodie,” he countered with a smile.

He was warming to Kali. The more they spoke the more it seemed they might be two of a kind. Quick to smart when someone hit the right buttons. Slow to trust. A well-earned friendship if you ever got that far.

“Well, guess you’re just lucky. Good genes from your parents, eh?”

She stiffened.

More sensitive territory, from the looks of things. Maybe her relationship with her family was as terrific as the one he had with his. One wayward brother, a meddling auntie and a godsend of a niece who’d stepped in at the reception desk when his “loyal” long-term sidekick had flown the coop. Okay...so they weren’t that bad. But right now he was feeling a bit more me-against-the-world than he liked.

“So...you were working in Africa...?”

Score one to Kali for deftly changing the topic!

“Right, sorry.” Brodie regrouped with a shake of his head. “Okay—long story short: I did the work through Doctors Without Borders who—as I’m sure you will appreciate—have some pretty rigorous safety systems in place for this sort of thing. I was lucky enough to be working in one of the newly built facilities. Upon my return to the UK...” he glanced at the date on his phone “...which was about five weeks ago, I went to a pre-identified debriefing under the watchful eye of Public Health England.”

“PHE? I know it.” Kali nodded for him to continue before noticing Ailsa coming down the corridor, her arms laden with patient files.

“Oh, Dr. O’Shea! Glad to see you in some dry clothes. If you’d just like to hang yours on the radiator in the tea room at the back there—where we came in—they should be dry in no time. I’ll see about finding you a white coat as well, but folk don’t stand too much on formality here. What you have on now will do just fine.”

Ailsa squeezed between the pair of them on her way to her office, giving Brodie a bit of a glare as she did. He gave her a toothy grin in return. He knew he was a pain in the bum, but that was what number one nephews were for!

Ailsa Dunregan was a brilliant nurse. And a vigilant auntie. It meant more than he could say that she hadn’t fled the coop like the rest of his staff. Well, the receptionist. Best not get too hysterical.

He returned his focus to Kali. All gamine and sexy looking in his castoffs. Who knew a scrubby T-shirt and joggers could look so...rip-offable?

He gave his head a quick shake. Kali was showing professionalism. Now it was his turn.

“Okay, the clinic is going to be opening soon so—in a nutshell—there’s a twenty-one-day incubation period. I stayed near a PHE-approved facility and did the following: I took my temperature twice a day, called my ‘fever parole officer,’ did a full course of malaria prophylaxis, because malaria symptoms can mimic Ebola symptoms. Any hint of a fever and I was meant to isolate myself and call the paramedics—like that doctor in New York. Who also got the all clear, by the way,” he added hastily.

“Where did you do all this?” Kali asked.

“I stayed in London so that I was near an appropriate treatment center should any of the symptoms have arisen, and I spoke regularly with hospital staff just to triple-check everything I was experiencing was normal.”

She quirked an eyebrow.

“It makes you paranoid. Hemorrhagic fever ain’t pretty.” He checked his tone. Kali hadn’t said a word of judgment. She wasn’t the enemy. Just a GP doing her job. His job. Whatever.

He started over. “Three months in protective gear, vigilant disinfections and then nothing. I’d never realized how often people sneeze on public transport before.” He tried for a nonchalant chortle and ended up coughing. Sexy. Not that he was trying to appeal to Kali on any level other than as a doctor or anything.

“Right.” Kali took back the conversation’s reins before his thoughts went in too wayward a direction. “I take it you’ve spoken with everyone? The islanders?” she clarified.

He swallowed. Not in so many words...

* * *

Kali watched Brodie’s Adam’s apple dip and surge, her eyes flicking up to his in time to see his gaze shift up to the right. So that was his tell.

She was hoping he hadn’t felt her fingers shaking earlier when she had held his palm in hers. Countless self-defense courses hadn’t knocked the infinitesimal tremor out of her hands. But when Brodie had thrown the Ebola grenade into her lap years of medical training and logic had dictated that she’d be fine. Instinctually she knew that she had a jacked-up instinct for survival. It had never come to that, but if she needed to fight for her life she had the skills to give it her all.

“Depends upon what you mean, exactly...by ‘spoken with.’” Brodie’s gaze returned to hers, his fingers dropping some air quotes into the space between them. As their eyes met—his such a clear blue—she wondered that anyone could doubt him. They were the most honest pair of eyes she had ever seen. She felt an unexpected hit of disappointment that she wouldn’t be here in Dunregan longer than a few weeks.

She shook her head, reminding herself they were in the middle of a pretty important conversation.

“So, you’ve not held a town hall meeting or anything like that?”

Just the look on his face was enough to tell her he hadn’t.

“Maybe you’ve had an article in the...what’s the local paper?”

“The Dunregan Chronicle.”

“I’m asking, not telling,” she reminded him when his tone lurched from informational to confrontational. “Have you had anything published? An article? An interview?”

“No, I’ve been a bit busy burying my father, amongst other things,” Brodie snapped, instantly regretting it.

Quit shooting the messenger, idiot!

He gave Kali an apologetic glance. “I thought the ever-reliable gossip circuit on the island would cover all of my bases. Which it did. Just not in the way I’d thought.”

“Look. If it’s all right, I’m going to stop you there,” Kali jumped in apologetically. “I’m really sorry to hear about your father. Now—not that the nuts and bolts of how this island works aren’t interesting—I really need to get a handle on how things work right here.” Kali flicked her thumb toward the front of the clinic. “If you’re happy to meet me after the clinic’s shut I’d love to hear all about it. Your work in Africa,” she qualified quickly. “It sounds fascinating.”

“It was an unbelievable experience. I’ll never forget it.”

Wow! The first person who’d actually seemed interested!

“So...” She gave her shoulders a wriggle, as if to regroup.

A wriggle inside his shirt, with more than a hint of shoulder slipping in and then out of the stretched neckline. A tug of attraction sent his thoughts careening off to a whole other part of his—er—brain? Another time, another place?

Focus, man! The poor woman’s trying to speak with you.

“If I was in your shoes I wouldn’t want me here either. It’s your practice! But I’m here to help, not hinder.”

He nodded. Wise beyond her years. Those green eyes of her held untold stories. He’d been wrong to think otherwise.

“Can we shake on it?” She thrust her hand forward, chin jutted upwards. Not in defiance, more in anticipation of a problem.

He put his hand forward—the one he hadn’t burned—for a sound one-two shake.

“Are we good?”

“Yes, ma’am?” He affected an American accent and gave her a jaunty salute.

Her eyes narrowed a bit.

Okay, fine. He blew that one.

“We’re good. I’ll steer clear of tea duty.”

She furrowed her brow at him in response.

Quit being such a jerk. Like she said, she’s here to help!

She shifted past him in the corridor, leaving the slightest hint of jasmine in her wake. “I should probably go introduce myself up front.”

“Yes—yeah. On you go. Caitlyn’s my niece and is about as much of a newcomer to the clinic as you are.”

“Excellent.” Kali gave him a polite smile. “She and I can forge into unknown territory together, then. And don’t worry about the tea. I’m more of a coffee girl.”

Her tone was bright, non-confrontational.

“We’ve not given you much of a welcome, have we?”

Kali rocked back on her heels with a squelch, not looking entirely sure how to respond until she saw the edges of Brodie’s lips tweak up into a slow but generous grin.

“Ailsa’s great!” Kali shot back with her own cheeky grin. Adding, “I’ve yet to make a decision on the boss man...”

“He’s a real piece of work.” Brodie was laughing now. “But he’s good at his job.”

“I don’t doubt that for a minute.”

And he could see she meant it. He was a good doctor. A little shy on bedside manner, but—

“Oh, and as for that hand of yours—you probably don’t need a bandage, but it might be a good idea to put some topical sulfonamide antibacterial cream on there. Although, as you probably know, some new studies suggest it might actually lengthen the healing time.”

Brodie gave a grin as Kali shrugged off her own advice before tacking on, “I’m sure you know what’s best, Old Timer...” as she pushed through the swinging door into the front of the clinic.

Kali gave as good as she got. Just as well, given his zigzagging moods.

Brodie put his hand to the door to talk Caitlyn and Kali through their intro but stopped at his aunt’s less than subtle clearing of her throat.

“And what can I help you with on this fine day, my dear Auntie?”

“You’re not thinking of going in there and looming over Caitlyn, are you?”

“No.”

Yes.

“Give the girl a chance. She’s only just out of school and she doesn’t need her uncle hovering over her every step of the way.”

“What? Do you think I might accidentally breathe too much in the reception area and frighten away even more patients?”

“Brodie McClellan.” Ailsa wagged a finger at him. “You’d best think twice about pushing so hard against the support system you have. Caitlyn’s here until she starts university in September—but after that... Only a few months for you to make your peace with everyone. Including...” she steeled her gaze at him “...Dr. O’Shea. She’s here to help, might I remind you?”

“Help for something that’s not actually a problem?”

“You know what I mean, Brodie. C’mon.” She gave his shoulder a consoling rub. “You can’t blame folk for being nervous. And besides, you’re only fresh back. It’ll give you time to settle back in. Mend a couple of fences while you’re at it.”

She gave him her oft-used Auntie Knows Best stare.

He could do as she suggested. Of course he could. Or he could go back home and pack his bag and head back on another Doctors Without Borders assignment until Kali was gone.

A hit of protectiveness for his father’s surgery took hold.

Unexpected.

Or was it curiosity about Kali?

Interesting.

He leaned against the wall and gave his aunt his best I’ll-give-it-a-try face.

“So, after all the miraculous recoveries of the bumper-to-bumper patients we normally have over the past couple of weeks, do you think they’ll come flooding back now that we have Kali here?”

“Most likely.”

His aunt had never been one to mince words.

“So what am I meant to do? Just twiddle my thumbs whilst Kali sees to folk?”

“I suspect she’ll need some help. You would be showing her the good side of yourself if you were to talk her through a patient’s history. Give her backup support if she needed it. Prove to her you’re the lovable thirty-two-year-old I’ve had the pleasure of knowing all my life instead of that fusty old curmudgeon you showed her this morning. I’ll tell you, Brodie—I didn’t much like seeing that side of you. It’s not very fetching.”

“Fine.” He pressed back from the wall with a foot. “Maybe it’d be best if I just leave well enough alone. Let you two run the show and I’ll—I don’t know—I’ll build that boat I always had a mind to craft.”

The words were out before he could stem them.

“You mean the one your father always wanted to build with you?” Ailsa nodded at the memory, completely unfazed by his burst of temper. “That’s one promise you could make good on. Or you could put all of that energy you’ve got winging around inside of you helping out the new doctor who’s come all the way up here to get you out of a right sorry old pickle. Then make good on the other promise you made to your father.”

They both knew what she meant.

“I’m here, aren’t I?”

“That’s not what I meant, nor your father and you know it, Broderick Andrew McClellan.”

Brodie had to hand it to her. Whipping out all three of his names—that was fighting talk for Ailsa.

She pursed her lips at him for added measure, clearly refusing to rise—or lower herself—to his level of self-pity. And frankly he was bored with it himself. He’d never been one for sulky self-indulgence. Or standing around idly doing nothing.

He had twiddling his thumbs down to a fine art now. Not to mention a wind farm’s worth of energy to burn. He gave the wall a good thump with the sole of his boot.

Ailsa turned away, tsking as she went back into her office to prepare for the day. Which would most likely be busy now that Kali was here.

“It’s not like I was away having the time of my life or anything!” he called after her.

She stuck her head out into the corridor again, but said nothing.

“People were dying in droves!”

“Yes, you were an incredibly compassionate, brave man to go and do what you did—and it’s a shame folk here haven’t quite caught up with that. But with you looking like you’ve got the weight of the world on your shoulders it’s little wonder you’ve become so unapproachable.”

“Unapproachable! Me?” He all but bellowed it, just as Kali walked into the hallway—only to do an immediate about-face back into the reception area.

Ailsa gave him an I-told-you-so look. Brodie took a deep breath in to launch into a well-rehearsed list of the things wrong with Dunregan and her residents, and just as quickly felt the puff go out of him. It would take an hour to rattle off the list of things wrong with himself this morning, let alone address the big picture.

For starters he’d been rude to Kali. Unprofessional. Then had thrown a blinkin’ tantrum over a burn that had happened solely because he’d been slamming around a kettle of boiling water in a huff because he had to tell yet another person why he was toxic.

The word roiled round his gut.

He wasn’t toxic! He was fit as a fiddle set to play for an all-hours fiddle fest! But he knew more than most it ran deeper than that. How to shrug off the mantle of the tortured laddie who’d sailed out on a handmade skiff with his mum, only to be washed ashore two hours later when the weather had turned horribly, horribly fierce?

He knew it was a miracle he’d survived. But he would’ve swapped miracles any day of the week if only his mother could have been spared.

“You know, Ailsa...”

His aunt gave him a semi-hopeful look when she heard the change in his tone.

“A second pair of hands round this place would be helpful longer term, wouldn’t it? Female hands. You’re wonderful—obviously—but Dad always spoke of having a female GP around. Someone not from Dunregan to give the islanders a bit more choice when they need to talk about sensitive issues.”

As he spoke the idea set off a series of fireworks in his brain. New possibilities. With Kali on board as a full-time GP he wouldn’t have to kill himself with office hours, out-of-hours emergency calls, home visits and the mountain rescues that cropped up more often than not during the summer season.

Not that he minded the work. Hell, he’d work every hour of the day if he could. But working here was much more than ferrying patients in and out for their allotted ten minutes. And if he was going to make good on his deathbed promise to his father to work in the surgery for at least a year he wasn’t so sure doing it alone would get the intended results...

His grandfather and his father had prided themselves on being genuine, good-as-their-word family doctors. Their time and patience had gone beyond patching up wounds, scribbling out prescriptions and seeing to annual checkups. Here on Dunregan it was personal. Everything was. It was why his father’s premature death from cancer had knocked the wind out of the whole population. Everyone knew everyone else and everything about them.

Sharing the load with Kali might be the way he’d get through the year emotionally intact. Maybe even restore some of his tattered reputation. Everyone who’d ever met his father thought the world of him. John McClellan: treasured island GP.

The same could not be said of himself.

Ailsa eyed him warily. “You’re not just saying this to get out of the promise to your father, are you?”

“No.” He struggled to keep the emotion out of his voice. A bedside promise to a dying father... It didn’t get more Shakespearean than that.

“Well, my dear nephew, if you’re wanting Dr. O’Shea to stick around you best check she’s not already legged it out the front of the clinic. You need to show her the other side of Brodie McClellan. The one we all like.”

She gave his cheek a good pinch. Half loving, half scolding.

He laughed and pulled her into her arms for a hug.

“What would I do without you and your wise old ways, Auntie Ailsa? I’ve been a right old pill this morning, haven’t I?”

“I’m hardly old, and there are quite a few ways I could describe your behavior, Brodie—but your way is the most polite.” Ailsa’s muffled voice came from his chest. “Now...” She pushed back and looked him square in the eye. “Let me get on with my day, will you?”

As she disappeared into her office so, too, did the smile playing across his lips. Here he was, blaming the islanders for the situation he was in, when truthfully all his frustration came from the fact that he loved his father and his work and right now the two were at odds. Not one part of him was looking forward to the year ahead.

Truthfully? He needed Kali O’Shea more than he cared to admit. If he could convince her to stay she might be the answer to all his prayers. A comrade in arms to help him get through the thicket of weeds he was all but drowning in.

He jogged his shoulders up and down.

Right. Good.

Time for what his father had called a “Starty-Overy, I’ve Done A Whoopsy.” His behavior this morning had been childish. He might as well give it the childish name. Then start acting his age and focus on winning over the mysteriously enigmatic Dr. Kali O’Shea.

* * *

Kali tapped at her computer keyboard a second time. Then pressed Refresh. And again.

Weird.

There didn’t seem to be anyone next in the queue. She stuck her head round the corner into the office where Brodie had been lurking... Okay, not exactly lurking. He’d been “on hand” in case she needed any information. But it had felt like lurking.

“Hey, does the computer system get jammed sometimes?”

“All the time is more like it,” he answered with a smile.

Her stomach grumbled. Kali’s hand flew to cover it, as if it would erase the fact it had happened.

“Er...”

“Hungry after only seeing three patients?” Brodie teased.

“Something like that. I was too excited for my first day at work to eat breakfast.”

“Only fifteen more patients to go before lunch!”

“Or...” She drew out the word and thought she might as well push her luck. “I do seem to recall an offer of a cup of tea and a biscuit.”

He blinked, dragging a tooth across one of those full lips of his. Distracting. Very distracting.

“Would you like it if I put on a pinny and pushed a wee cart along to your office for delivery, Dr. O’Shea?”

A flush of embarrassment crept up her cheeks. He was an experienced doctor. Her superior. Had she pushed that envelope too far?

“Ach, take that nervous expression off your face, Dr. O’Shea. I’m just joshing you.” He stood up from his desk and gave her shoulder a squeeze. “A nice cup of tea is the least I can do an hour after I promised it.”

He dropped her a wink and her tummy did a flip. The sexy kind.

Oh, no. Not good. Not good at all.

“Right, well...I guess I better check with Caitlyn who’s next.” She gave the door frame a rap, as if that was the signal for action. Then didn’t move.

“Anything good this morning?”

“Depends upon your definition of ‘good,’” she replied with a smile. She liked this guy. He was a whole load nicer than Dr. McCrabby from this morning. “A prenatal check, a suspected case of the flu—which thankfully wasn’t more than a really bad cold—and a check on a set of stitches along a feisty four-year-old’s hairline. Rosie Bell, I think her name was.”

“That’s her mother. The daughter is Julia.”

“Right—that’s right. I mean, of course you know it’s right—you know everyone.” She stopped herself. She was blathering. “The stitches were just fine. She had them put in on the mainland, at the hospital, there...so...that was a quickie. Everyone has been incredibly welcoming...”

So much for no more blathering.

A shadow darkened Brodie’s eyes for a moment. He abruptly slipped through the doorway and headed down the hall. “Best go get my pinny on and leave you to it, then, Dr. O’Shea.”

“Thank you,” she said to his retreating back, wishing the ground had swallowed her up before she’d opened her big mouth.

But it was the truth. Everyone had been really welcoming and it felt amazing! Never in her adult life had she been part of a community, and this place seemed to just...speak to her.

Her tummy grumbled again.

Dinner.

She would ask Brodie to join her for dinner and then maybe she would stop saying the wrong thing all the time. Fingers crossed and all that.

“Who’s next, please, Caitlyn?” Kali stuck her head into the receptionist’s room, willing herself onto solid terrain. Seeing patients was the one thing in the world that grounded her. Gave her the drive to find some place where she could settle down and play a positive role in her patients’ lives.

“Sorry, Dr. O’Shea... I’ve been trying to send it through on your computer screen. I’ve not yet got the hang of the system with all of these patients showing up like this.”

Kali peeked beyond Caitlyn and out into the busy waiting room.

“It’s not normally like this?”

“Well...” Caitlyn used her feet to wheel herself and her chair over to Kali, lowering her voice to a confidential tone. “Since I started last week it’s all been mostly people here to see Auntie Ail—I mean, Sister Dunregan. But most of the people who canceled appointments when Unc—Dr. McClellan came back seem to have all magically turned up now they’ve heard you arrived...”

“I only got in last night.”

“Aye, but you were on the public ferry, weren’t you?”

Kali nodded. It was the only way onto the island unless you owned a private helicopter. Which she most assuredly did not.

“Word travels fast round here.”

Kali laughed appreciatively as the outside door opened and another person tried to wedge her way onto the long window seat bench after giving Caitlyn a little wave in lieu of checking in.

“Hello, Mrs. Brown. We’ll see what we can do, all right? You might have a wee wait,” Caitlyn called.

“That’s fine, dear. I’ve brought my knitting.”

“So people are just coming along and trying their luck?” Kali’s eyes widened.

“Something like that.” Caitlyn nodded. “No harm in trying, is there? Hey!” Her eyes lit up with a new idea. “I bet you’ll get in the paper!”

Kali felt a chill jag along her spine and forced herself to smile. “Well, I doubt me being here is that big a deal.”

“On this island? You’d be surprised what turns up in the paper. There was a notice put in when my hamster Reggie died.”

She pulled her chair back up to the window that faced the reception area and started tapping at the computer keyboard to pull up the next patient’s information.

Kali crossed her fingers behind her back, hoping that her arrival on Dunregan didn’t warrant more attention than a full waiting room. That she could deal with. Public notice? No. That would never do. So much for unpacking her bags and staying awhile.

“Oh! Dr. O’Shea—I’m such an airhead. Sorry. Would you mind seeing Mr. Alexander Logan first? He’s just come in and says it’s an emergency. He didn’t look all that well...”

“Absolutely.” Kali nodded.

Medicine. And keeping her head down. Those were her two points of focus. Time to get on with medicine.

Her Hot Highland Doc

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