Joanna Neil

Her Boss and Protector


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one,’ she said. ‘I bet you’ve had plenty of practice charming the girls.’ He was a good-looking young man, with dark hair that fell softly over his forehead and grey eyes that were full of dancing lights.

      ‘Not nearly as much as you’d think.’ He moved a little closer to her. ‘I’d really like to get to know you better. How about we take off from here when you finish work and go and get ourselves something to eat? I know a good place not too far from here.’

      ‘Sorry, but I can’t,’ she said. Even if she had wanted to, there were two small reasons why assignations of any kind were out of the question right now. Rebeccah and Connor would be taking up most of her free time for the foreseeable future.

      Sam frowned, but just as she thought of trying to soften the blow, a shadow came between them.

      ‘Perhaps you two should continue your cosy little chat later,’ Callum said. ‘There are patients waiting to be seen.’ He looked at Jade, his jaw set in a firm line. ‘I think it would be a good idea if you were to go and attend to them.’ Then he turned a fraction, his gaze shooting warning sparks in Sam’s direction.

      Sam took the warning on board and began to make a strategic exit, but he managed to mouth, ‘Be seeing you,’ to Jade as he went.

      Jade sent Callum a guarded look. ‘I was on my way back from a break,’ she said. ‘I don’t think I was being remiss in any way. I was just about to head for the treatment room.’

      ‘I hope you were,’ he said. ‘Break’s over.’ He moved off in the direction of the reception desk, and Jade stared after him.

      She sighed inwardly. It wasn’t going to be easy working with Callum Beresford, that was for sure, and the fact that he was her neighbour and landlord only served to make things doubly difficult.

      Was she going to be able to find a way to get along with him? At the moment, that seemed highly unlikely.

      CHAPTER THREE

      ‘HOW long have you been having these headaches, Stephen?’ Jade needed some clues as to what was causing her patient’s problems, but so far she had little to go on. There was scant previous medical history where this man was concerned.

      ‘They started a couple of weeks ago, but they’re getting much worse. This one today is really bad. I didn’t think I would make it to my GP’s surgery, so I came here instead. I’ve been vomiting, and I still feel very nauseous.’

      Jade debated with herself about what to do. She was already feeling under pressure because Callum had made it clear that he wanted a swift throughput of patients and she knew that he was still monitoring her progress from a distance, as he had the previous day. Even now, she could feel his gaze fixed on her from across the room.

      She wasn’t quite sure what to make of this patient, though. On the face of it, his problems could possibly be put down to migraine, but she was wary of making such a quick diagnosis and sending him on his way. Looking at him, she could see that although he looked unwell right now, he was a generally fit man in his late thirties.

      ‘Is there anything you’ve noticed that starts them off?’

      ‘No. Nothing that I can think of.’

      She examined him, checking his neurological responses and his sensitivity to light. Perhaps the fact that he was in such good shape was making her extra-cautious—after all, he wasn’t in the habit of seeking medical help, and that in itself gave her reason to think that there might be something more to his case than met the eye.

      ‘I think, Stephen, to be on the safe side, I’m going to send you for a CT scan. That might give me a more of an idea about what’s going on. In the meantime, I’ll give you an analgesic for the pain and something to stop you from vomiting.’

      ‘Am I going to have the scan today? I don’t want to have to keep coming back here. I really want to get this sorted out now. I have a business to run, and I can’t think straight with this terrible headache. I can’t afford to take time off, but I’m useless like this—I feel as though I just want to go and lie down somewhere until the pain goes away.’

      ‘I’ll send you to get it done right away, and I think it might be as well for me to get someone to go with you, just in case you feel sick again. I’ll see if I can get hold of a nurse and a wheelchair.’ She didn’t want him to suffer from an attack of dizziness and perhaps fall, especially while he was under her care.

      Jade set things in motion, and when he was on his way she went to see to her other patients, aware that Callum was still following her progress from afar, even though he was attending to a patient of his own.

      Katie passed her a chart. ‘A little boy, five years old, with breathing difficulties.’

      ‘Thanks.’ Jade went to find him, and introduced herself to his mother, who was holding him on her lap.

      ‘Let’s see if we can find out what the problem is, shall we?’ Jade murmured, smiling at the little boy. ‘Can I listen to your chest with my stethoscope? Do you want to try it first?’

      The child nodded, and listened through the earpieces, his eyes widening and a hint of a smile touching his lips. He was suffering from a chest infection, Jade discovered, and she was concerned that he might be having a problem with his ears as well. In order to check that out, she needed to take a close look at his eardrums, but when she searched in the pockets of her white jacket for her auriscope, she couldn’t find it.

      She grimaced, remembering that she had mislaid it earlier. Rebeccah and Connor had been helping her to tidy up her medical case last night at the cottage, and perhaps they had moved it.

      She glanced at the child’s mother and said, ‘Will you excuse me for just a moment? Perhaps, while I’m gone, you could tell the nurse about the nature of the chest infections Taylor has suffered from before this. I think we may need to do some further investigations. I’ll be back very shortly.’

      She left them with Katie, instructing her to give the boy oxygen to help his breathing, and hurried over to the doctors’ lounge, where she took her handbag out of her locker. There was just the faintest possibility that the children might have put the instrument in there. Just as she was rummaging through the contents of her bag, though, Callum walked into the room.

      Jade turned, giving him a look of startled apprehension and he said, frowning, ‘What’s the matter? Have you lost something? I thought I saw you going through your medical case earlier. Didn’t you find what you were looking for?’

      She stared up at him distractedly. ‘No, I didn’t…I thought perhaps I could manage without it for a while, but things didn’t turn out that way, and now I need to check in my handbag.’

      He sent her a quizzical look, and she realised that she wasn’t explaining herself very well. ‘I thought I’d put my auriscope alongside all my other equipment,’ she added, ‘but it wasn’t so. I seem to have mislaid it. It’s very strange, because I know that I had it with me last night at home.’

      He sent her a pitying look. ‘Organisation isn’t your strong point, is it?’

      She made a face. What had she expected from him? His opinion of her hadn’t been good from the outset, had it? ‘Believe it or not,’ she said, ‘I’m usually quite good at sorting things out and knowing where to find things. I can usually put my hands on whatever I need within a moment or two.’

      ‘Really? You amaze me,’ he said, going over to the coffee-machine and filling up a mug with the hot liquid. ‘Does this ability not quite stretch to things like medical equipment and breakfast times?’

      She disregarded his comments while she continued to search in her bag, and after a minute or two she exclaimed in triumph, ‘Found it.’ She brought out the auriscope from the depths of her handbag. ‘How on earth did it get in there?’

      It seemed fairly clear cut that the children had had something to do with it. They had been curious