Read The Doctor Claims His Bride Online
Authors: Fiona Lowe
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Medical, #Romance
Understanding crossed her face. ‘I wondered why there seemed to be such a high rate of kidney problems here. I don’t suppose all those dogs help.’
‘Actually, the dogs are in the clear. Mange is caused by a different mite altogether and doesn’t cause human scabies.’ He stood up and walked over to Alice. ‘Skin disease is also linked to high rates of gastroenteritis and pneumonia in kids. Their bodies are so busy fighting the skin infection, they have no reserves left to fight other bugs.’
Mia’s blue eyes shimmered as the reality of poverty and overcrowding hit home. ‘So next week I get creative on how to tackle the scabies problem.’
Her compassion and caring wafted over him and for a brief moment he wondered what it would be like to have her care for him.
Every protective barrier shot back into place with a loud clang.
Women don’t care for you. They leave you when you love them
.
‘So what’s the treatment plan for Alice?’
Mia’s question broke into his thoughts, grounding him. Giving him a perfect reason to leave Kirra today and avoid the wedding. ‘Good old penicillin, and ongoing treatment with antibiotics. She’ll need an echocardiogram, an ECG and a full blood examination, as well as bed rest. I’ll take her to Darwin.’
Mia’s pen paused over her notebook and she stared straight at him, confusion darkening her eyes. ‘But we can do all that here except the echocardiogram.’
‘Which is why I’ll take her to Darwin.’ The words rushed out brusque and snappy.
She raised her brows and walked over to a list pinned up on the wall, trailing her long, slender fingers down the paper, pausing halfway down. ‘The cardiologist is due here for his bimonthly visit on Friday and it clearly says, “Echo clinic.”’
She spun back to face him, a conspiratorial smile flitting across her cheeks. ‘I can sweet-talk the appointments clerk into accepting Alice, and as you say over and over, if we don’t have to evacuate a patient so much the better. And that way you won’t miss Susie’s daughter’s wedding.’ Her expression was one of ‘situation sorted’. ‘I’ll get the penicillin injection.’
His chest tightened as if bands of steel circled his torso. ‘Patient care is far more important than attending a wedding. She needs bed rest and I’m taking her to Darwin today.’
Mia’s gaze immediately narrowed, zeroing in on his face with uncompromising intensity. ‘Of course patient care comes ahead of a wedding.’
‘I’m glad we’re on the same page.’ He breathed out, not realising he’d been holding his breath. ‘You can go to the wedding and represent the clinic and I’ll take Alice to Darwin.’
‘I don’t think so.’ She tossed her head and a fine layer of red dust floated around her, looking like a halo. ‘This treatment plan goes against everything you’ve ever taught me. It goes against everything you believe. She’s sick but not as critical as Jimmy, and you kept him here.’
Her words rained down on him, their truth harsh
and accurate. ‘I believe I’m the doctor, Mia, and I make the final decisions about patients in my care.’
Mia folded her arms across her chest, her eyes glinting like sparks from a welding iron.
‘Primum non nocere.’
First do no harm
. The Hippocratic oath.
Anger simmered inside him, as much against himself as Mia. ‘What about it?’ He strode over to the desk, planning on ringing Royal Darwin Hospital. Alice would benefit from some good food and real rest in hospital.
‘I want to know the
real
reason why you’re evaccing a non-critical patient on a Saturday afternoon.’
The walls of the clinic seemed to close in on him. He had to deflect her, make her stop. ‘I don’t have to justify my medical decisions to you. I’m the doctor, you’re only the RAN.’
She flinched, the tremor running along her jaw and down through her body, but she held her ground. ‘You do have to justify your decisions if they’re coloured by something personal.’
He dropped the phone back in the handset as her soft words pierced him. He turned to look at Alice, whose eyes were wide with confusion, not understanding what was going on. He rubbed the back of his neck. Hell, what was he doing? He couldn’t take her to Darwin. Mia was right. He couldn’t let his personal feelings affect his medical judgement.
He raised his gaze to Mia’s—a gaze full of steely determination and concern. Concern for him—despite the cruel barb he’d just sent her way.
He didn’t want to see concern or pity in her eyes. That had been why he’d left Brisbane. ‘Alice will stay here.’
‘Good.’ She smiled at him as if he was a recalcitrant child finally doing the right thing. ‘I’ll organise for Jenny to come and sit with Alice.’
There was no way he was going to that wedding. ‘No need to do that. I’ll stay.’
She shook her head vehemently. ‘You’re not needed here. You’re the island’s doctor and that comes with responsibilities other than just treating patients. You’re going to support one of our most experienced health workers by attending the wedding of her daughter.’ Her eyes flashed as her hands gripped her hips. ‘We will get Alice settled and Jenny installed. Then, before we go to the church, you’re going to tell me what on earth is going on.’
Right then he realised he’d lost the battle. After two years on the run his past had finally caught up with him and he had nowhere left to hide.
‘A
LICE
’
S
temperature has come down and she’s asleep.’ Mia poured a large glass of cold mineral water and pushed it toward Flynn, deciding not to beat around the bush. ‘You once said to me that everyone here is running away from something, so what brought you here?’
Brown flecks flashed against green, his eyes defiant. ‘I lived here for a couple of years as a child and I thought I’d come back.’
Surprise rocked through her. So that was why he seemed to belong so well. But she wasn’t going to let him fox her with sidetracking. She studied his face, tight with tension. ‘So you’d always planned to work up here?’
He met her gaze for a moment and then it slid away. ‘Not exactly.’ He took a long drink from the cold glass, his Adam’s apple moving rhythmically against his strong neck.
She held onto coherent thought by a thread and took a sip of her drink.
His long fingers tracked across the circle of condensation on the table, the lines of moisture converging into a wide puddle. ‘I’d survived a gruelling selection
process and had accepted a position at Central Brisbane Hospital and was about to commence dermatology.’
Mineral water spurted into her nose and she immediately started to cough. She couldn’t imagine Flynn working in one of the least exciting branches of medicine, and working regular hours inside a large hospital. ‘Dermatology?’
He shot her an accusatory look. ‘What?’
She wiped her mouth with a tissue. ‘It’s just that I can’t picture you in that role. I’m not sure dermatology would really have suited you.’
He stared at her for a moment, his expression almost contemplative before it hardened. ‘Yeah, well, it didn’t work out. Turns out I was just the understudy in my own life when I thought I had the lead role.’
‘Pardon?’ She had no idea what he meant but her gut clenched at the antagonism in his voice.
His mouth firmed into a grim line and he spat out the words, precise and harsh. ‘My fiancée—the one that was so keen for me to do family-friendly dermatology—stood me up at our wedding in front of three hundred friends and peers. She eloped with my best man.’
His pain speared her. No wonder he didn’t want to go to the wedding. ‘Oh, that totally sucks. And you had no idea?’ She caught his searing look. ‘I’m sorry, stupid question. Of course you wouldn’t have.’ She thought of Steven, who had bailed on her but in less public circumstances, and for the first time in a year was able to think slightly more kindly toward him.
He folded his arms across his chest. ‘Even in hindsight I didn’t have a clue.’
‘We only see what we want to.’ She wanted to take some of his pain away but her words sounded hollow.
His jaw tightened. ‘Well, in that case, I guess I wanted to believe that neither Brooke, who professed to love me, nor my best mate, who was like a brother to me, would rip my heart out. I got that wrong.’ He slammed his fist into the palm of his hand, making a slapping sound.
She touched his arm. ‘Those are reasonable expectations, Flynn. Trust is part of love. Love can’t happen without it.’
He picked up his drink and her arm fell away. ‘Yeah, well, I’m not up for that much these days.’
Her heart ached for him and unexpected anger against his fiancée and friend simmered inside her. ‘So Brooke and…’
‘Dan.’ He ran his hand through his hair. ‘Yes, I believe they’re still together living in
our
house.’ He flicked her a look. ‘We don’t exchange Christmas cards.’
‘They’re living in your house!’ Her indignation flooded over the words.
A bitter smile tugged at his lips. ‘Oh, it’s a good story. It’s got all the elements—heart-warming friendship, money, lust and betrayal. It would make a good telemovie.’
His biting humour lanced her and she bit her lip. ‘I’d offer you a drink but…’
This time his smile was wry and warm. ‘Yeah, but the clinic’s a dry zone.’ He leaned back on his chair, a resigned look on his face. ‘Dan and I had been mates since high school. We pretty much did everything together, even medicine. We shared digs at uni and then
when we graduated and were sick of paying rent, we bought an old terrace house in inner Brisbane, complete with a rusting wrought-iron lace veranda. It was tumbling down around us.’
She caught a hint of a happy memory cross his face. ‘The ultimate renovator’s dream?’
‘More like a nightmare, but some days it was very cathartic to come home from work and rip out a wall.’ His jaw tightened. ‘I met Brooke when she was a final-year medical student, not too long after we’d bought the house, and the three of us renovated it together.’
‘Brooke and Dan didn’t get along very well and they had some monumental clashes. But I desperately wanted my future wife and best friend to be good friends. Dan and I had been mates since boarding school and he’d been with me during some tough times with my family. I didn’t want to be in the situation where I got married but lost my best friend.’
Mia tried to keep her face neutral but felt her brows draw in as the paradox struck her.
Flynn grimaced. ‘I know, pretty ironic considering the outcome.’
She had crazy desire to defend him to himself. ‘I think it was the aim of a caring and loving guy.’
His look of derision silenced her.
‘Anyway, I became the peacemaker. I actively pushed them together so they could try and get to know each other. I did a hell of good job. Dan not only got the girl, he got the house.’
Outrage pounded her. ‘But I don’t understand how they ended up with the house.’
‘When Brooke and I got engaged I thought the house would have to be sold but as the wedding got closer, Dan offered to sell his share to us so it could be our home. Brooke was so enthusiastic about the idea, saying how much she wanted to raise children in a house renovated by love, that I ended up agreeing.’
His abrupt laugh was full of scorn. ‘Never fall in love, Mia. It makes a complete fool out you.’
She knew that all too well, but this was his story so she stayed silent.
Flynn’s foot started to tap against the floor, his leg rigid with tension. ‘Dan and I had power of attorney for each other. When the bank called about the transfer papers, I was caught up at the hospital in A and E in the middle of dealing with multiple burns victims after an apartment block had caught fire. The wedding was two days away and Dan offered to go with Brooke to the bank.’
Realisation thudded through her. ‘They bought your share instead of selling his? But surely you could have contested that in court?’
‘I could have.’ His voice sounded flat in the quiet room. ‘But the humiliation of standing at the altar with three hundred pairs of eyes staring at me and announcing that my wedding was off, combined with the whispers that followed me around at work for the next few months, was enough.’
She wanted to wrap her arms around him and stroke away the pain of his betrayal. ‘And Kirra was a long way from Brisbane?’
‘Got it in one.’ He shifted in his seat. ‘And that’s my story.’
Except she had a niggling feeling that he hadn’t told her everything. ‘So how long are you planning on hiding here?’
He flicked her an intransigent look. ‘I’m not hiding. I’m living and working.’
She pushed on. ‘But you don’t get to meet many women here.’
‘That would be the plan.’
The growl in his voice told her to back off and, as much as she didn’t want to, she decided she would, for now because she didn’t want to alienate him. Meanwhile she was glad she wasn’t in Brisbane because she had an irrational urge to let down Brooke and Dan’s tyres, spraypaint their yuppie front fence and prank-call them at three in the morning.
She suddenly realized that today’s church service would be the first time Flynn had been to a wedding since his own. No wonder he’d tried so hard to avoid it. An hour ago she’d pictured herself sitting in church with one of the school teachers but now she knew that wouldn’t be possible.
She had to go to the wedding with Flynn.
Just thinking about sitting next to Flynn in a narrow and cramped pew, shoulders brushing, thighs touching, had her blood pounding with need. For her own peace of mind, going to the wedding with Flynn was the last thing she should be doing.
But she had little choice. They both had to go and clearly she couldn’t let him go alone. She leaned forward. ‘I totally understand how weddings aren’t your thing.’
He raised his brows. ‘So I’m off the hook for today?’
She took a steadying breath. ‘No.’
‘No.’ The small word oozed resignation.
She put her hand over his, in a gesture of support. ‘We’re going to this wedding together. We’ll go to the church service, congratulate the bride and groom, congratulate Susie and then leave. It’s our job.’
He stared at her for a long time, his eyes filled with a jumble of emotions. His free hand came to rest over hers, his heat burning through her, racing deep down inside her, igniting longing and fuelling need.