Kitabı oku: «He Calls Her Doc»
“What’s happening?”
Guy’s grip on Maude’s arm stopped her and brought her back under the rain-battered awning.
“I’ve got a patient coming in.”
He pulled her closer and held her by both arms. Reflexively she raised her hands, then balled them into fists instead of putting them on his chest as she wanted to do. She tried to concentrate on a raindrop trickling down her face, but all she could see was the darkness of his eyes and all she could hear was the pounding of her heart. She needed to kiss this man.
Slowly, as if time had no meaning, he lowered his mouth to hers and the fire burst inside her. Flames raged through her senses and threatened to consume everything except her desire for him—until the doctor took over.
She pushed back. “I’ve got to go.”
Dear Reader,
Rugged western Montana urged me to tell a story amid its soaring mountains and sweeping pine forests. To do so, I needed characters who would stand out against a backdrop of magnificent scenery. Maude and Guy, two doctors so wounded they could not heal themselves, fit the roles well.
Enemies in the past and now touched by the same tragedy, they must forgive each other—then forgive themselves. When they do, the passion between them becomes love. With love as big as all Montana, they make a family for a little girl orphaned by the same tragic loss.
Sometimes life hurts. I believe it is the pain that shows us how brightly the joy can shine.
I loved taking these three “injured by life” people and, in my first book for Harlequin, molding a fiercely loving family who couldn’t imagine living without one another. I hope you love them, too.
I’d love to hear from you. Visit my Web site at www.marybrady.net or write to me at MaryBrady@ marybrady.net.
Regards and happy reading,
Mary Brady
HE CALLS HER DOC
Mary Brady
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mary Brady lives in the Midwest and considers road trips into the rest of the continent to be a necessary part of life. When she’s not out exploring, she helps run a manufacturing company and has a great time living with her handsome husband, her super son and one cheeky little bird.
For my husband and son, with whom I make my own
fiercely loving—and laughing—family of three.
Acknowledgments
My thanks to the people of Montana, who have never been anything but welcoming to me and who won’t know where to find the town of St. Adelbert, because it exists only in my mind.
And to Dr. Gillian Rickmeier, who selflessly answered my questions about the medical field. That said, any errors in this book—especially errors concerning medical issues—are mine and mine alone.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER ONE
MAUDE DEVANE, M.D., bypassed her crisp white lab coat and slipped on the one with a couple of badges of courage stained faintly into the fabric. Collar turned to the chill of the sunny June morning, she stepped out onto the ramp of the Wm. Avery Clinic’s emergency entrance. Somewhere under the biggest, bluest of Montana skies a man had fallen from a horse.
And she was ready, make that eager, to help her first patient in her brand-new solo practice.
On cue, the Squat-D Ranch’s red pickup truck careened around a corner and raced up Main Street. Traffic in the tiny mountain town of St. Adelbert made way as if they knew the passenger was unconscious.
Some of them probably did.
The truck lurched up the ramp and fishtailed to a halt, engulfing Maude in the smell of oily exhaust.
Curly Martin’s great-grandson Jimmy burst out the driver’s side door. “He still ain’t talking to me, Dr. DeVane!”
The bear-size seventeen-year-old barreled around toward the passenger side. As Maude reached the dusty truck, she leaned in to see the ninety-two-year-old rancher slumped against the door.
“Jimmy, get back in the truck.” Maude conveyed calm in her command. “And hold him in position. Don’t move him at all, especially his head.” And if they were all very lucky, the old man was not already paralyzed.
Jimmy dashed back around and scrambled into the cab. As he cradled his great-grandfather in his giant hands, Maude opened the door and reached in to feel for a pulse.
“Is he dead?” Jimmy peered at her from under the bill of his faded green cap.
She gave him a quick smile. “He’s alive, Jimmy.” Curly Martin, icon, epitome of cowboy in these parts, was not going down to a spill from a horse, not if she had any say.
She patted Curly’s chest. “Mr. Martin.” No response. “Curly, open your eyes.” She rubbed her knuckles into the man’s breastbone hard enough to awaken a sleeping person. The man remained still, his lips a pale slash in his tanned face.
“Keep holding him just like that, Jimmy. I need to put a protective collar on his neck.”
“I’m here, Dr. DeVane,” a woman’s quiet voice said from behind her.
Maude turned to the dark-haired, scrubs-clad, on-call nurse holding the stiff cervical collar in her hand. Maude smiled. “Thanks for getting here so quickly, Abby.”
“Carolyn will be here soon,” Abby said of the tech on call.
Maude nodded and then bent down to speak into Curly’s “good” ear. “Mr. Martin, I’m going to put a safety collar around your neck,” she said in the event he could actually hear her. After stabilizing his neck, the three of them lifted the unconscious man onto the waiting gurney and wheeled him inside the glass and aluminum entrance doors of the red-brick clinic.
“I’ll have vitals for you in a sec,” Abby said when they had moved Curly into the trauma room, a large, well-stocked room reserved for critical cases.
The serious knot on the side of his gray old head indicated the likely cause of his unconsciousness. But Maude wondered if he had fallen because he was unconscious or if he was unconscious because he had fallen. One of the slippery slopes of emergency medicine.
“Jimmy.” Maude turned to the wide-eyed kid standing at the foot of the cart. “Did you see what happened?”
“No, ma’am, Dr. DeVane. Black Jaxx came around the barn lookin’ proud like he a’ways does when he’s thrown a rider. When I got to Granddad, he was on the ground.”
“You should have let the rescue squad bring him in the ambulance.”
“He’d’a killed me dead if I’d done that. Heck, he’ll yell at me anyway.” The boy rubbed the back of his thick neck.
“I know.” Maude put a hand on Jimmy’s arm. “He told Doc Avery he was too old to have a fuss made over him.”
Jimmy grinned, then his face got serious again. “Will he wake up? Do you think you can save him, Dr. DeVane?”
“I’ll know more after I examine him. If he wakes up soon, it’ll be best.”
Maude patted the old man’s bony thigh through his worn jeans and started a more thorough exam. She gently prodded and searched for signs of injury, and just as she was satisfied there was no other neurological deficit, Curly began to mumble and tried to reach across his body with his left hand. Maude gently put his arm back at his side and let a little of her concern lift. Purposeful movement meant a decent level of brain function.
When Abby pulled off one boot, he murmured a few words.
Another moment later, “Danged horse,” came out loud and clear, followed by something they probably didn’t want to understand, period.
As Maude reached for Curly’s right arm, he sat straight up. “What the hell’s going on here?”
“Granddad!” Jimmy cried.
Curly looked around, blinked a few times and then swatted at Abby, who was tugging on his other low-heeled boot.
“And you can leave that right where it is, missy.”
Abby easily evaded the swat and grinned at the old man. “Hullo, Curly Martin.”
He let Abby ease him back against the pillow.
“Nurse Abby. Didn’t expect to be back here so soon.” With that, he gave Jimmy a look that made the boy squirm.
“I’m glad he brought you in, Mr. Martin.” Maude put a hand on his shoulder to encourage him to stay put while she finished her exam.
Curly smirked his Montana charm and relaxed. “You’re lookin’ perty as a picture today, Maudie. But I guess it’s Dr. DeVane nowadays.”
“Well, Mr. Martin.” Maude let the diminutive given to her in this valley when she was a child slide off her. “Now that you’re smiling, you don’t look so bad yourself. Does anything hurt?”
He grinned. “Just this.” He held up the arm she had been about to examine. The bone under the brown weatherworn skin of his forearm jutted off in a slightly unnatural direction.
“Let me take a closer look at that,” Maude said as she cradled his deformed wrist in the palm of her hand.
Curly’s thick, frosty eyebrows drew together. “Nothin’ a little time won’t fix,” he said as he tried to pull away.
“Curly Martin, are you in here giving people trouble again?”
All heads turned as the sound of the deep male voice thundered from the doorway. Maude smiled at her predecessor.
“Doc, I thought you left for civilization already.” Curly grinned gap-toothed at Dr. William Avery, founder of the only clinic in her hometown, the place where Maude hoped to practice medicine as long as he had—hoped the town would let her.
“Don’t you have a great-grandbaby back East to help birth?” Curly continued.
“Doc” pulled off distinguished-looking even in his travel clothes. “I heard you came all the way in from the ranch to say goodbye, so I stopped by for a minute.” He gave Curly a cursory once-over, touching the bruise on Curly’s head.
“Guess I wasn’t glued on to that danged horse well enough.”
“Good thing you landed on your hard head.” Doc chuckled as he gently brushed a thumb over the wrist fracture.
“Dr. DeVane,” he said as he turned to Maude, “I know you have everything under control here. If you have any questions, call me anytime.”
“Thank you, I will. I hope you make it in time for the baby’s birth, Dr. Avery.” Maude smiled and kept her tone light. Doc Avery trusted her, but this visit would play differently through the gossip network. “Have a safe drive and a great retirement.”
He smiled at her, patted Curly on the shoulder, nodded at Abby and Jimmy and walked out the door to his new life, no doubt leaving a trail of wagging tongues. Old Doc Avery couldn’t even get out of town without checking up on Dr. DeVane one last time. Lordy, what’s going to happen to us when he’s gone?
Earlier at the grocery store she had overheard, “What if little Maudie messes up?” Did it not matter to anyone in this tiny throwback town that she had earned the M.D. after her name? She gave X-ray orders to Abby and left the room.
Well, she’d earn their trust. In the two years they had advertised for a doctor to take over the clinic, she was the only one to apply, and because she was their only choice of doctors in this valley, they’d have to give her what she needed to win them over—time.
TWELVE MOUNTAIN MILES northwest of St. Adelbert, on the Whispering Winds Ranch, where pine trees towered and snowcapped mountains etched the sky—the doorbell rang shrilly and repeatedly.
Guy Daley pushed away from the desk. Cynthia Stone, one of the participants in the executive development program, was at his door for the third day in a row with an excuse to chicken out of an activity. He had coerced her into the hike and the overnight, but this canyon crossing was going to be tricky.
The shrill bell rang again and he yanked the door open.
“Why’s the door locked?” demanded the child on the stoop. She looked twenty, but he knew she was not quite thirteen. Mascara smeared under her eyes. Jeans shredded on the bottoms. Tail of her smudged pink T-shirt almost covering her belly and a riot of red curls mashed in on one side. She wore a deep scowl, just like her father had all those years ago when he’d run away from home and shown up at Guy’s college apartment.
A fist of grief punched Guy in the gut. He took it and smiled at his niece.
“Lexie.” He should be shocked or horrified she’d found her way, probably by herself, from Chicago to Montana, but he was oddly glad to see her.
“Uncle Guy.” She glared at him, large blue eyes narrowed in challenge.
He reached for her bag, but she pulled away, so he stepped back to let her drag the purple duffle into the timbered living room. The last time he had tried to hug her, she’d slugged him.
“Does your mom know where you are?”
She shrugged one shoulder. “Kelly’s too busy with the baby.” She hefted the huge bag and hugged it to her. “Maybe she knows by now. I’m supposed to be at my friend’s house until tomorrow.”
Red streaks scored the whites of her eyes. “When was the last time you ate?”
She lifted the shoulder again.
Dirty, tired and hungry.
“Leave the bag. Go wash your hands.”
She dropped the bag with a thud on the hardwood floor and headed down the hallway toward the bathroom.
“Eggs or cakers?” he called after her.
“Cakers.” She turned for a moment and smiled sadly at him. Her father, his brother, had called pancakes “cakers,” after a character in a kids’ book. “And coffee.”
“And orange juice,” he muttered.
As she closed the bathroom door behind her, he took a second to feel the renewed ache spiraling through him. Maybe coming to his brother’s ranch hadn’t been such a good idea. Maybe he should have stayed in Chicago?
Twenty minutes later, Guy sat across the table and watched red curls bob up and down in rhythm to the forkfuls of pancakes being shoveled into the child’s mouth.
“I called Kelly,” Guy said of Lexie’s stepmother. “She told me to tell you she’s sorry you were unhappy.”
She nodded and continued to fork in the fuel.
Her stepmother’s exact words had been, “With the baby here I can’t do this anymore. Keep her with you. Even I’m not uncaring enough to send her to your parents.” Poor kid, if he was her last hope.
The whistle and choo-choo chugging of the ludicrous clock above the stove told him he was late for the startup of this morning’s executive training program. “Leap of Faith,” Henry had named crossing a small canyon on a zip wire.
“I’ve got people to see. Will you be all right by yourself for a while?”
“I’m a kid, not an idiot.” She forked in the last bite.
He smiled. So like her father.
She sat in front of the plate pooled with syrup, empty orange juice glass in her hand, and stared out the window at the sun-sprayed shadows in the pine trees behind the house.
“I wish I had more than a couple of years with him.”
“I wish you did, too. Sleep might be a good idea right now. Your room is still there.”
“I guess I could sleep a little.” Her voice trembled as she spoke. She turned her big blue eyes, pooled with unshed tears, on him. “Kelly said you restarted Dad’s business.”
He gave her a grim nod. “Bessie and her daughter’ll be back from shopping soon, so you won’t be alone long.”
She swiped the back of her hand at the tears and smiled. “I hope she got Twinkies.”
He frowned.
“What? I already had two apples today. No, wait, that was yesterday, sometime.” She did her shoulder thing. “I’ll go up and sleep for a little while, and then you can tell me whether or not you’re going to keep me.”
“Lexie, this is your home anytime you want it to be.”
“Yeah.” She turned away.
Guy watched her bounce off as if she didn’t have a care in the world. Her home. She’d had many in her short life.
“I’ll be back by noon,” he called after her.
UP ON A RIDGE a half mile away from the ranch house at the edge of a small canyon, Guy snugged the strap of the aerial-runway seat across Cynthia Stone’s flabby abdomen.
“I don’t want to be hurled across that damn canyon in this—this thing.” Her voice scratched at his eardrums.
He crouched down beside her. “It’ll be over soon.”
“Let me out!” Little fat bulges stuck out here and there as she squirmed in her pale aqua warm-up suit.
“You won’t go across unless you want to.” He wasn’t sure how his brother did this job, but right now it beat trying to practice medicine.
“Come on, Cynthia. Don’t be a chicken. The fox won’t bite,” one of the executives called from the other side of the canyon.
“Fox? What fox? I wasn’t told about any foxes.” She jerked around to glare at Guy.
He checked a reply. He knew her well enough to know the “fox” distress was a delay tactic.
“An aerial-conveyance system like this is sometimes called a flying fox.” Or death slide. “Aerial runway works for the purposes of Mountain High Executive Services. It’s a kind of pathway from your old self to your new leader-conqueror self.”
“My old self is just fine.” She yanked on the harness. “How do I know this is safe?”
“Aircraft-grade wire.” He pointed up to the wire above her head spanning the canyon. “Safety harness and a hand-activated braking system. You can’t fall unless you try really hard, and you don’t have to go fast.” She’d be a piece of work on the high ropes tomorrow.
“What if it doesn’t have one more crossing left in it?”
“Ms. Stone—”
She gave him a tired look, so he leaned in. “Cynthia—” He lowered his voice to just above a whisper.
She studied him as if seeing him for the first time.
“There are times when we have to take a leap, or we’ll never know how far we can go.” Guy tried to make the words sound sincere. He knew Henry would have.
“I didn’t want to come here.” Her tone was almost timid now. Apologizing. “My father made me.”
“Where do you want to go in your company?”
“I’ll be president and CEO one day.”
“Because you’re the owner’s daughter.”
She nodded.
“Is it enough for you to have the job because your blood type is Stone, or do you want to be able to wield the authority you’ll be given?”
When she didn’t answer, Guy tugged hard on her harness to show her it was safe. “The others crossed. And some of them may deserve to be president or CEO one day. You only need to recognize that in yourself.”
She grabbed the harness and held on for a ten-mile ride. Too bad she was only going a few hundred feet.
But, he might be getting through to her…
“Just shove me across the damn thing and get it over with. And that man at the other end had better catch me because I don’t trust that flimsy-looking net, either.”
Maybe not…
“Use the hand brake if you have to, but it’s a gutsier experience if you let the net catch you.”
“Just do it.” She kicked up a puff of light brown dust.
Guy took hold of the harness and signaled Jake Hancock, the man who had been Henry’s friend and right-hand man, and who now stood waiting at the other end of the runway.
“Are you sure?” he asked the woman in the harness.
She lifted her feet from the ground and glared at him.
He smiled and gave her a small push.
After a few seconds, she glided out over the rim of the canyon filled with jagged rocks and a few hardy plants. When she scanned the distance to the bottom, she let out a shriek so piercing Guy expected birds to fall from the sky.
“I got you, Ms. Stone,” Jake shouted as he gestured to show her he was waiting on the far side to help her.
Hang in there a few more seconds, Guy thought as she picked up speed and hurtled toward the other side.
“Stop me! Stop—ME!” The closer she got to the end, the harder she kicked and squirmed.
“Use the hand brake, Ms. Stone,” Guy called.
“Nooooo, I can’t!” She began to flail her legs wildly.
As Jake reached out for her, she jerked backward and snapped her legs straight out; a blink later she landed with the thud of both feet in the middle of Jake’s chest.
Guy watched in horror as Jake flew backward, landed, bounced and lay still in the dust. Guy grabbed a spare harness and attached it to the aerial runway.
“Get her off.” He waved at the others as Cynthia sat sagging in the rig, her head resting against the safety netting.
Instead of assisting Cynthia, the other five executives rushed up to Jake’s unmoving form.
“Cynthia, get out of the harness,” Guy shouted.
After a few more moments of helpless watching, he broke one of Henry’s cardinal safety rules and crossed the gap while Cynthia still hung in her harness.
When he reached the other side, he dug his boots in to stop near where Jake lay on the ground. “I’ll be right back, Cynthia.” He signaled to the still-dangling woman.
“He’s breathing,” a lithe forty-something executive said as she lifted her ear from Jake’s chest. Guy was sure the woman had wanted to put her head on the rugged cowboy’s chest since the first day.
Guy knelt beside the man on the ground and shook him gently. “Jake, open your eyes.”
Jake blinked. “What?” He started to sit up.
A sharp scream came from over his shoulder. Guy turned to see Ms. Stone on the ground curled up in a ball.
He turned back to Jake. “Don’t move until I can check you.” He gave Jake a reassuring pat and addressed the woman who had had her ear on Jake’s chest. “Stay with him.” To which she nodded agreeably.
Guy ran to where Ms. Stone lay sprawled on the ground. What a sight, all that aqua covered with dust.
“My ankle. My ankle,” she cried when she saw him, and then moaned loudly.
“Ms. Stone, it’s all right. I’ll help you.”
“It’s broken. I knew I shouldn’t have done it. I knew it was wrong to come here.” She waved a hand as if she were referring to all of Montana.
She probably was.
“Relax and let me have a look at your ankle.”
“Don’t touch me. I want a doctor, not a seminar leader.”
It was the last thing he wanted to do, but he nodded. “I’ll take you to the doctor.”
He thought of the doctor in St. Adelbert, Dr. Maude DeVane. He should have let her take advantage of his younger brother’s good nature and generous heart all those years ago.
He could have saved Henry from a gold digger.
IN TOWN, Curly Martin held up his hot-pink cast. “Thank you so much, Dr. DeVane. This ought to set their tongues a waggin’.” He guffawed and stepped down from the table in the ortho room where he had acquiesced to sit so Maude could cast his arm properly.
“I’ll walk you out, Curly,” Maude said. Her suggestion of keeping Curly for observation had been met with true mirth by the nonagenarian. “What’ll happen, Dr. DeVane?” he’d said. “I might die before my time?”
The phone on the main desk rang as Maude and Curly passed. Abby snatched it up and began to write on a notepad.
“Remember.” Maude walked beside the old man. “If there’s a problem, I want to see you within the hour, not the next day because you decided to wait and see what happened.”
“Told ya, did he.”
“Jimmy did the right thing to bring you here. And I want to check your arm in two weeks.”
“I’ll be good, Dr. DeVane.”
Curly’s great-grandson, who had been banished to the truck for “showing a bit too much concern for such a young fella,” jumped out and took his great-grandfather by his uninjured arm.
Curly turned back toward Maude and rolled his eyes, but he let the boy help him as if he needed it.
“Thanks a million, Doctor,” Jimmy called over his shoulder as he stuffed Curly into the cab of the truck.
“Curly, either stay on the horse, or stay off it.” Maude smiled at the old man.
He grinned and waved with the cast she had applied because she didn’t think he’d keep a splint on for any longer than he was in her direct sight. The pink had been his idea.
As they drove off, an eddy of dust from their wake made its way across the town’s wide main thoroughfare and dissipated against the white-and-blue facade of Alice’s Diner. There had been many an “Alice” over the years. In the distance, a flock of birds flew above the trees with the sun glistening off the white of their feathers.
“Home.” Contentment like she hadn’t known in years swept through her. Soon, it wouldn’t matter that she had once been the little girl everyone called Maudie.
As she reentered the building, Abby came toward her with a paper in her hand. “There’s two more coming in, Dr. DeVane. An ankle. Not too serious, by the sound of it. The other was kicked in the chest.”
“Any details on the second one?” Kicked in the chest by a horse or a steer was often life threatening. Broken ribs. Punctured lungs. Bruised heart muscle. “Kicked by what?”
“They say he seems fine, but he was apparently kicked by the other one.”
“Hard enough to hurt an ankle?” Maude gave a small shudder as she thought of how that might have come about. “How soon?”
“A few minutes. And there’s one more thing.”
“Yes?”
“They’re coming from Mountain High.”
“But—” Maude stopped as pain rushed in and nearly took her breath away.
“I’m sorry, Dr. DeVane. I know Henry was your friend.”
“It’s okay.” Maude waved off the nurse’s concern and turned into the office. Someone had restarted Henry Daley’s business. When the young entrepreneur had died last summer, she had thought Mountain High Executive Services had died with him.
She sat down to enter notes in Curly’s medical record, but tapped a pen tip on the clipboard instead. The first time she met Henry, he had tried to die on her. Before she got the chance to make a diagnosis, his arrogant, older, M.D. brother whisked the younger man away to another hospital.
Henry…
“Dr. DeVane?”
Maude cleared the tightness from her throat and faced Abby. “Are they here?”
“The van’s coming up the street. Carolyn’s still here and we’ll call if there’s something you need to see right away.”
“Thanks, Abby,” Maude said as Abby hurried away.
Maude repositioned the squeezy clip in the back of her wavy, shoulder-length brown hair. The clinic was old-fashioned in some respects, but the nurses, like Abby, and techs, like Carolyn, were as good as those at big-city clinics.
They had to be; they cared for their neighbors every day.
After a few minutes, the automatic doors opened, and a loud wail filled the clinic. Maude leaped from her chair and stepped out into the hallway to see Carolyn pushing a wheelchair filled with a mildly obese, fifty-something woman.
“Is that the doctor? Help me, Doctor.” The woman reached toward Maude with outstretched hands.
Carolyn, a small woman with big red glasses, an X-ray technician by training and one of Doc Avery’s long-standing assistants, patted the woman’s shoulder. “Dr. DeVane will be in as soon as I get you more comfortable, ma’am.”
The woman wailed again, and the tech hurried her off to a treatment room.
The outside doors whooshed open and Abby entered, pushing an empty wheelchair. The second patient walked beside her. When he saw Maude, the man touched a finger to the brim of an imaginary hat. “Hello, Dr. DeVane.” Grief touched his look.
She led him toward the treatment room. “Mr. Hancock, I’ll be in to see you after the nurse gets you settled.” Jake had been the one who’d called her in Chicago about Henry’s fatal accident, but true to his tacit nature, she got few details. Jake must have somehow restarted Mountain High.
Maude turned away and as she did, she noticed a man in the clinic doorway standing with his back to her. The glare of the bright sun pouring in the doorway outlined his tall form, his broad shoulders and trim waist, a man of her fantasies, if she ever had time for those anymore. The man lifted a folded piece of paper and tilted his head like—
“Guy Daley.”
The name escaped as her heart began to pound. She forced a breath in and out…remembering.
In spite of the cold, his kiss had made her feel as if she were riding a wind on fire. Dangerous and exciting, it had left her soul scorched. But whatever she had thought she felt for this man, he had killed on that rainy Chicago night.
He stepped forward out of the halo of sunlight into the artificially lit hallway, dressed in ranch-work clothes, his challenging gaze fixed on her. She found herself staring into dark eyes. Eyes she once gazed into wondering if there were feelings for her buried somewhere in the deep shadows.
A primal urge arose in her, a craving she had wanted never again to have for this man. She crushed it.
Fool me once…
“Hello, Dr. Daley,” she said, glad her voice came out strong and firm. So much for being the only doctor in the valley.
“Dr. DeVane.”
“I’m sorry about your brother.” She squared her shoulders as if he might fight her on her right to feel anything for Henry. He had in the past.
“Thank you,” was all he said, but his expression slid to one with a chilling lack of emotion as he tucked the paper he had been reading into his shirt pocket.
“Are you here about the people from Mountain High?” She gestured down the hallway toward the treatment rooms.
“I am.”
“Did Mr. Hancock restart the program?”
“No.” The clipped response demanded no further questions.
But she ignored it. “Then who—”
“I would have thought you’d know I was on the ranch,” he said before she had a chance to finish what she was about to ask.
The sharp tone of his words almost made her laugh. He had disliked her for so long it didn’t bother her much anymore. And now that Henry was gone, she realized, it didn’t have to bother her at all. “I’m the last stop on the gossip network.”
A loud wail filled the hallway.
“Does this clinic have the facilities to see these patients or should I take them to a bigger town?”
She thought of her first week of emergency medicine rotation when the great Dr. Daley had yanked his younger brother from her care and taken him to another hospital.
“I’ll see them and if you don’t like what I have to say, Kalispell is about two hours away—each way—from the ranch.”
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