Kate Hardy

A Date with the Ice Princess


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would it be like to be with someone who loved her that much?

      Marina rolled her eyes. ‘Ignore him, Abigail. You honestly don’t have to do anything.’

      Which left her on the outside, Abigail thought. Where she’d always been. Would it be so hard to be part of the team for once? ‘No, I’d really like to help,’ she said. ‘What sort of thing do you suggest?’

      ‘Really?’ Marina looked faintly surprised, then delighted. ‘Well, other people have offered things like dinner out, or cleaning for a day, or a basket of stuff.’ She paused. ‘Maybe you could offer some cinema tickets with popcorn and a drink thrown in, or something like that.’

      ‘Or a date. That’d be a good one,’ Max chipped in.

      ‘Shut up, Max. You’re not meant to be pressuring her. A date’s not a good idea. You know what—’ Marina stopped abruptly and put a hand to her mouth, looking horrified.

      Abigail could guess why. And what Marina had been going to say. ‘It’s OK. I know people call me the ice princess,’ she said dryly. ‘It was the same at my last hospital.’

      ‘People don’t mean to be unkind.’ Marina looked awkward. ‘It’s just that… well, you keep yourself to yourself. It’s quite hard to get to know you.’

      ‘Yes.’ There wasn’t much else Abigail could say. It was true. She did keep herself to herself. For a very good reason. Once people worked out who she was, they tried to get close to her so they could get to meet her father—not because they wanted to get to know her better. Been there, done that, worn the T-shirt to shreds. She blew out a breath. ‘OK, then. I’ll offer a date.’

      ‘Please don’t feel that we’ve pushed you into this,’ Marina said. ‘If you’d rather offer a basket of girly stuff or some cinema tickets, that’d be just as good.’

      It was a let-out. But Abigail was convinced, whatever Marina said, that her colleagues would think even less of her if she took it. ‘The date’s fine,’ she said.

      Relief flooded Marina’s expression. ‘Thank you, Abigail. That’s fabulous. I really appreciate it.’

      And maybe, Abigail thought, this would be a new start for her. A way of making friends. Real friends for once. Something she’d always found so difficult in the past.

      The alternative—that she’d just made a huge, huge mistake—was something she didn’t want to think about.

      Friday the following week was the night of the auction. The room was absolutely packed; all the emergency department staff who weren’t on duty were there, along with people Abigail half recognised from other departments that she’d met briefly while discussing the handover of patients.

      Max Fenton and Marco Ranieri, two of the department’s consultants, had a double act going on as the auctioneers. And they hadn’t spared themselves from the promise auction: they’d both put themselves up as household slaves for a day, and driven each other’s price up accordingly.

      Abigail bid successfully on a pair of tickets to a classical concert, and then it was her own promise up for auction.

      A date.

      Adrenalin prickled at the back of her neck. Why on earth hadn’t she thought to ask someone to bid for her at the auction? She would’ve funded the cost herself, and it would’ve gotten her out of an awkward situation.

      Still, she was the ice princess. Hardly anyone would be interested in a date with her, would they?

      Except that Marco and Max seemed to be on a roll, really talking her up.

      Abigail could barely breathe when the bidding reached three figures.

      And then a male voice drawled, ‘Five hundred pounds.’

      Oh, for goodness’ sake. That was a ridiculous sum. And the only reason she could think of that the man would pay that sort of money for a date with her was because he’d found out who she was.

      Please, please, let her be wrong.

      She held her breath, not quite daring to turn round and look at whoever was bidding. Not wanting to make eye contact.

      Everyone else in the room seemed to be holding their breath, too.

      And then Max said easily, ‘Do we have an increase on five hundred pounds?’

      Silence.

      ‘OK, then, that’s a wrap. Thank you. One date with Dr Abigail Smith, sold to Dr Lewis Gallagher.’

       Lewis Gallagher?

      Abigail’s brain couldn’t quite process it. Lewis Gallagher, special registrar in the emergency department, was the one man in the hospital who really didn’t have to buy a date. Women queued up to date him because he was a challenge. Every single one of them seemed to believe that she’d be the one to make him review his ‘three dates and you’re out’ policy. And, from what Abigail had heard, every single one of them failed.

      Except her. Because when Lewis had asked her out last week, she’d said no.

      And now he’d bought a date with her.

      Oh, help. She needed some air. Time to think about how she was going to get out of this.

      Except it was too late, because Lewis was standing beside her.

      ‘Move to me, I think, Dr Smith,’ he said softly, brandishing the certificate Marina had got her to sign for the auction—the promise of a date.

      ‘Five hundred pounds is a lot of money. Thank you for supporting the auction.’ She lifted her chin. ‘You get a date, but don’t expect me to end up in your bed.’

      He laughed. ‘What makes you think that’s what I had in mind?’

      His reputation. Colour rushed into her face. ‘So why did you buy a date with me, Dr Gallagher?’ Because he knew who she was?

      He shrugged. ‘Because you said no when I asked you.’

      Ah. Because she’d challenged his ego. She relaxed. Just a little bit.

      He held her gaze. ‘And now you don’t have an excuse to say no.’

      ‘Maybe I just don’t want to go out with a party boy.’ She’d recognised his type the first time she’d met him. Handsome, wonderful social skills—and shallow as a puddle.

      Not her type.

      At all.

      Lewis gave her the most charming, heart-melting smile she’d ever seen in her life. She’d just bet he practised it in front of a mirror.

      ‘Maybe I’m not the party boy you think I am,’ he said. ‘Want to know where we’re going?’

      ‘I haven’t decided yet,’ she said. And she almost winced at how haughty and snooty she sounded. This was ridiculous. She didn’t behave like a spoiled diva. That wasn’t who she was. Abigail Smith was a quiet and hard-working doctor who just got on with whatever needed to be done.

      Yet Lewis Gallagher made her feel like a brat, wanting to throw a tantrum and stamp her feet when she didn’t get her own way. And she couldn’t understand why on earth he was affecting her like this.

      ‘Newsflash for you, princess. I bought a date with you. So you don’t get to decide where we’re going.’

      Shut up, Abigail. Don’t answer him. Don’t let him provoke you. Except her mouth wasn’t listening. ‘Correction. You bought a date with me. Which means I organise it and I pick up the bill.’

      ‘Nope. It means you get to go out with me on Sunday morning.’

      She was about to protest that she couldn’t, because she was working, when he added, ‘And you’re off duty on Sunday morning. I checked.’

      She was trapped.

      And