Annie O'Neil

Her Hot Highland Doc


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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.

       CHAPTER THREE

      “ALEXANDER LOGAN?” Kali swung open the door leading into the waiting room.

      “Aye, that’s me.” A gentleman with a thick shock of gray hair tried to press himself up from the bench seat, flat cap in one hand, cane in the other. “And you are...?”

      “Dr. O’Shea. I’m the new—the locum doctor.”

      “With a name like O’Shea and those green eyes of yours I’m guessing you must be Irish.” He grinned at her, eyes shining.

      Kali hoped he didn’t see the wince of pain his question had elicited. He wasn’t to know that her mother—her ballast—with her distant Irish connection was the only reason she was alive.

      “My wife was Irish. Feisty.”

      Just like her mother.

      “She sounds like a great woman,” she replied with a smile, grateful to dodge the question about herself. “You all right there, Mr. Logan? Would you like a hand standing up?”

      “Oh, no—well, a bit.” He looked up at her with a widening smile. “Yes, those eyes of yours remind me of Tilly, all right.”

      Kali hooked her arm through his, relieved to feel him put a bit of his body weight on her arm. “Shall we try and work our way to the exam room?”

      “Oh, sure. Not as quick on my—” He lifted his hand to his mouth, as if he were waiting for a sneeze