‘Ben?’
‘Not now.’
He was dressed only in a towel, his skin reddened from the shower. She guessed he’d been scrubbing it, scrubbing off the blood—and the memories?
She followed him into the bedroom and wrapped her arms around him from behind. ‘Talk to me.’
‘I can’t.’
‘Please—’
‘Meg—’
His voice broke, and he turned in her arms and anchored her head in his trembling hands and locked his mouth to hers in a kiss so filled with pain and desperation that she had no help but to hold him, to press him against her body, to kiss him back…
Caroline Anderson has the mind of a butterfly. She’s been a nurse, a secretary, a teacher, run her own soft-furnishing business and now she’s settled on writing. She says, ‘I was looking for that elusive something. I finally realised it was variety, and now I have it in abundance. Every book brings new horizons and new friends, and in between books I have learned to be a juggler. My teacher husband John and I have two beautiful and talented daughters, Sarah and Hannah, umpteen pets and several acres of Suffolk that nature tries to reclaim every time we turn our backs!’ Caroline also writes for the Mills & Boon® Tender Romance™ series.
Recent titles by the same author:
THE BABY FROM NOWHERE
(Medical Romance™)
ASSIGNMENT: CHRISTMAS
(Medical Romance™)
THE PREGNANT TYCOON
(Tender Romance™)
HOLDING OUT FOR A HERO
BY
CAROLINE ANDERSON
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ONE
‘NO WAY!’
‘No way?’ Pete Harrison leaned back in his chair, locked his hands behind his head and levelled a thoughtful look at Ben. ‘Are you turning into a diva, Maguire?’
His voice was casual, but Ben wasn’t fooled for a moment. Casual, nothing. The programme’s producer never missed a trick—and every twitching eyelash would be taken down and used in evidence.
Well, he could do casual, too. He crossed one ankle over the opposite knee and picked at a thread on his clean but frankly knackered jeans. He really ought to get some new ones but, dammit, he liked these jeans and, anyway, they annoyed Pete, and that in itself made them worth wearing.
He lifted his head and met Pete’s eyes head on. ‘A diva? After what I’ve been through for you and your blasted programme? I think that’s a tad unjustified,’ he said mildly. ‘I’ve been shot at, nearly drowned, I’ve risked the bends, I’ve dragged a fireman out of a burning building in the nick of time—I’ve done everything you’ve asked of me. I didn’t mind, I even enjoyed some of it. But I don’t do hospitals—not for you, not for anyone.’
Pete’s reply was rude and to the point. ‘You’re a doctor, for God’s sake. Of course you do hospitals.’
‘Not any more.’
Pete twiddled his pen with apparent idleness. ‘You never did tell me why you gave up medicine,’ he said, and Ben felt his muscles tighten.
‘No, I didn’t,’ he said flatly. He wasn’t opening that particular can of worms—either now or any time soon—and he had no intention of spending the next week in an A and E department either, good television or not.
As if he realised that line would get him nowhere, Pete put the pen down and leant forwards, changing tack. ‘It’s the last one of the series,’ he said encouragingly. ‘We want to end on a high note with a bit of touchy-feely. It’s nothing too cutting edge—it’s in a nice quiet rural town in the depths of Suffolk, a sleepy little country hospital. Look on it as a holiday.’
Ben snorted rudely. ‘Hardly.’
‘Ah, come on, Ben. Compared to the lifeboats and the fire service and the deep-sea diving off the oil rigs, it’ll be a walk in the park—and light years from a war correspondent. This is a little nurse you’re shadowing, that’s all. Watching her do her job. Nothing dangerous, nothing threatening.’
That’s all you know, Ben thought, but he said nothing, and not by a flicker of those carefully watched eyelashes did he give away the emotion that was roiling inside.
‘No.’
Pete’s voice was as smooth as polished steel, and with about as much give in it. ‘Fly-on-the-wall hospital stuff is hot news at the moment. Blood and guts, heart-wrenching drama, the buzz of lives saved—it’s what your adoring public want, and let’s be clear here, Ben. You give them what they want. It’s in your contract.’
The bottom line.
He’d known it was coming. He opened his mouth to say stuff the contract, but then shut it. He couldn’t just walk away midseries, they’d seen to that. Unsung Heroes was hugely popular, and he didn’t suffer from false modesty. A brilliant idea, it nevertheless owed its success almost entirely to the way he’d flung himself headlong—literally—into the making of every programme, and they weren’t going to let the gravy train hit the buffers because he had a hissy fit.
And anyway, a legal battle to break the contract would be much messier, much harder—much more intrusive—than just taking a huge deep breath and getting through it.
Somehow.
You can handle it, he told himself. It was years ago—finished. Time to move on, time to let go.
He took that huge deep breath. ‘So—who’s this little nurse I’m supposed to be shadowing in this sleepy little country hospital?’ he asked, and Pete dropped the pen and smiled at him like a friendly barracuda.
‘That’s my boy,’ he said softly. ‘I knew you’d see sense.’
‘Me? No way!’
‘Meg, don’t be daft! You’ll be wonderful! Everyone loves you—all that bounce and empathy and good-natured teasing, not to mention the high cheekbones and twinkly eyes! You’ll be a natural.’
‘Angie, I can’t!’ she wailed at her boss. ‘Dream on! This is me—Meg Fraser. I’m not an unsung hero! I’m not any kind of a hero, I’m just a nurse! Who on earth will want to know how I spend my life? I’m a nobody! He does fire-fighters and war correspondents, not boring nurses! Who suggested me, anyway, of all people?’
‘I did.’
She spun round and rolled her eyes—her twinkly eyes, no less!—at Tom Whittaker, A and E consultant and her best friend’s husband. ‘I might have known,’ she groaned. ‘And did Fliss have anything to do with it?’
‘She might have done,’ he agreed with a lazy smile. ‘And don’t let her hear you describing nurses as boring. She’ll have your guts for garters.’
‘If I don’t have hers first,’ Meg muttered. ‘I can’t believe you’ve done this to me! And he’ll probably faint at the first sign of blood.’
‘Hardly. Ben’s a doctor—a good one. He trained with me—we were friends.’
That intrigued her. ‘Ben Maguire’s a doctor? I thought he was just a pretty face with a death wish. Why did he give up medicine?’
‘I have no idea. I’ll ask him on Sunday.’
‘Sunday?’
‘When the team arrives,’ Angie chipped in.
‘Team?’
‘You’re beginning to sound like a parrot,’ Tom teased. ‘The film crew. You know—the cameramen, the sound men, the lighting…’
‘Sunday?’ Meg shrieked. ‘They can’t start on Sunday!’
‘They’re starting on Monday,’ Angie told her. ‘I would have told you all about it, but you were on holiday.’
‘You could have sent me a text.’
‘What, an
d risk you not coming back? Where was it? Corfu? Cyprus?’
‘Crete,’ Meg said mechanically. ‘You’re right. I might have been forced to miss the plane. Oh, damn, I can’t believe you’ve all done this to me!’
‘Don’t be daft,’ Angie said bracingly. ‘You’ll be great. And you get tomorrow off to sort yourself out—get your uniform sorted, have your hair cut and all that sort of thing, ready for the camera. Still, don’t get star-struck just yet. I need someone on Triage right now.’
‘No, you need your bumps felt,’ Meg said sourly, and with a shake of her head she walked briskly off, muttering ‘Sunday. Sunday!’ under her breath.
Behind her, Angie and Tom shared a sigh of relief. She didn’t hear it, but she heard the chuckles that followed, and she could have screamed.
Damn. Damn! If she had a grain of sense she’d walk out right this minute.
‘Look on the bright side,’ Fliss said later when she rang her. ‘You won’t have to worry about what to wear.’
‘No, I’ll just look hideous in my uniform!’
‘You don’t look hideous in anything. Don’t be silly. You’re gorgeous—all lush curves like Kate Winslet.’
‘I’d rather look like Cameron Diaz—all eyes and no lush at all.’
‘How about looking like Meg Fraser? At least you’ve got a waist, unlike some of us.’
‘Do I get a choice?’ Meg said drily, then sighed. ‘Oh, well, I know one person who’ll be pleased. My mother will die of excitement. She loves the programme and she thinks Ben Maguire’s gorgeous.’
‘And you don’t?’ Fliss teased. ‘Come on—six feet of solid testosterone with those wicked, amazing eyes and that sexy grin—lord, girl, if I wasn’t married…’
‘Well, you are, and Tom’s no slouch and he loves you to bits, not that you deserve it. Just thank your lucky stars.’
‘I do. Every day,’ Fliss said gently. ‘He’s wonderful and I love him to bits, too. And I won’t be distracted. We were talking about you.’
‘And you should be talking about whether or not I’ll forgive you for setting me up,’ Meg pointed out, not at all sure that she would.
‘Of course you will. You’ll have a great time, and it’s only for a few days, anyway.’
A few days? Well, it probably was, but it seemed huge to her then, just three days away from the start of it all. And her hair was a mess, trashed by a week on the beach in Crete, and her nose was peeling, and she’d be on television.
Television, for heaven’s sake! Never mind the hair and the nose, she could get them sorted tomorrow, but what about her mouth? Given the slightest provocation she’d say something stupid for sure, and it would come back to haunt her, in the way of these things, for years to come.
‘I don’t think I will forgive you,’ she said to Fliss. ‘With my ability to run off at the mouth I could ruin my career and probably his, too, with a few carefully un-chosen words!’
Fliss laughed. ‘Rubbish. You’re lovely, they’ll adore you and it would take dynamite to ruin Ben Maguire’s career. Anyway, it’s not live so they’ll edit out the bad bits.’
‘You reckon? I hope you’re right. And, of course, word will get out and the department will be flooded with drama queens who want to be on the telly. It’s OK for you, tucked up safely at home with the children, you don’t have to be here to deal with it.’ She thought of Fliss’s life now, filled with the love and laughter and chaos of a big extended family, and for the briefest moment she felt a little twinge of envy.
Not that she wanted it for herself—heavens, no! But sometimes… ‘How’s Charlotte?’ she asked.
‘Gorgeous. I can’t believe that at only seven months she’s into everything. I can’t take my eyes off her for a second. You need to exert a little influence over your god-daughter, teach her how to behave. How about supper on Sunday?’
‘What, to bolster me up before the big day?’ she said wryly. ‘What time?’
‘Six? I’ll feed the kids early, then you can help me put them to bed and we can settle down with a glass of wine while we knock ourselves up something a bit more sophisticated than fish fingers to eat. How about a barbeque if the weather’s nice? With steak and hot chilli chicken and not a burger in sight?’
‘Sounds good,’ she said, and then remembered she would, by then, have met the great man himself. Oh, rats. How could they all have done this to her?
Ben turned off the car engine and sat for a moment, staring at the hospital as if by some sheer effort of will he might make it go away, but it stayed stubbornly there, right in front of him.
ACCIDENT AND EMERGENCY, it said in huge letters across the front of the ambulance canopy. His worst nightmare come home to roost.
Damn.
And as for it being a sleepy little country hospital—hah! It was a big, sprawling district-general hospital with a real-life full-on A and E department, and any illusions he’d been cherishing about it being otherwise went right out of the window. He pressed his lips together, took a deep breath to waste another second or so and opened the door.
The hospital wasn’t going to go away, so he might just as well get on with it. It was an hour before the rest of the team were due to arrive, and he just wanted to do this bit alone, to get inside, to get his reaction over with, to learn in private just how hard it was going to be to go back.
Not that it was the same hospital, but it might as well have been for all the difference it would make.
‘You’re a fool, forget it,’ he told himself, impatient with the dread that lay in a cold lump at the bottom of his stomach. Shrugging it off, he straightened his shoulders, locked the car and strode towards the entrance.
The doors hissed open to let him in, and instantly the smells, the sounds—beeps and groans and fast footfalls, the television in the waiting area, the hushed voices of the patients—assailed his senses and dragged him right back to square one. A child was crying, and in the distance he could hear the rhythmic hiss of a ventilator. He felt his pulse pick up and rammed his hands into his pockets to stop them shaking.
Hell, how could it be so hard?
He stood there, letting it all sink in, his eyes scanning the waiting area and finding familiarities amongst the differences, concentrating on the mundane to distract him from dwelling on the past. The same kinds of posters, the same flickering LED on the electronic message banner announcing the horrendous waiting time—that was something that didn’t change, no matter which hospital you were in. They were all the same under the skin.
Unfortunately. He’d hoped it would feel different, but he didn’t get that lucky.
He switched his attention to the reception desk just as the receptionist glanced up, did a mild double-take and went pink and girly on him. Dammit, she must have been fifty-five if she was a day, but just the sight of him flustered her, and for once his legendary charm and charisma deserted him.
She leapt up. ‘Mr Maguire—I’ll call Mr Whittaker for you.’
‘No need.’ A firm hand landed on his shoulder, and he turned and stared straight into a pair of strangely familiar, smiling eyes.
‘Tom?’
Before Ben could react further, he found himself enveloped in a hard, brief hug. Then he was thrust away and scrutinised briefly, then wrapped in another bone-cracking bear hug that brought a lump to his throat. He couldn’t remember when anyone had last hugged him with genuine affection, and he found his arms coming up and hugging back, just briefly—just enough. Then he made himself let go, before he blubbed like a baby.
‘Damn, I’ve missed you, you old reprobate,’ Tom said gruffly, giving him a hearty slap on the back. He slung an arm around his shoulders and steered him away from Reception. ‘Come on, let’s get out of here and go somewhere less public. I’ve nicked Matt Jordan’s office, we’ll go in there.’
‘What on earth are you doing here?’ Ben asked, totally confused now. ‘How did you know I’d be here?’
‘Because I work here—in the department. Been her
e a year.’
And just like that, any hope of pretending ignorance of medical matters and keeping firmly in the background, pleading squeamishness, went straight down the pan, taking with it any chance of keeping himself to himself.
Tom had been a good friend—a really good friend. They’d lost touch when their careers had taken them to opposite ends of the country, but no doubt Tom would make it his responsibility to ensure that everything for this shoot ran smoothly, and that was bound to throw them together.
And that, of course, would mean all the inevitable questions about what he’d done since they’d last met, and why he’d given up medicine—and Tom wouldn’t be put off with feeble excuses. He’d demand the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, and their friendship deserved honest answers. But he couldn’t tell him, couldn’t go there, not even for Tom.
Maybe especially for Tom.
And so he’d have to lie, to someone who deserved better and who, of all people, would understand and sympathise, and that, of course, was the trouble. For two pins he’d turn on his heel and run like hell, but he was stuck, because of Pete Harrison and his blasted contract, and there was no way out.
A bad day suddenly got a whole lot worse.
‘He’s here,’ Angie told her, and Meg felt her pulse rate rocket. Damn. She wiped her free hand on her tunic and closed her eyes, tipping her head back and counting to ten. Then fifteen. Then—
‘Just go and get it over with. He’s in Matt’s office with Tom Whittaker. Go on, he won’t bite.’
‘No, but I might,’ Meg said drily. ‘Can you manage here?’
‘Oh, I think an experienced plaster technician like Max and a senior nursing sister might be just about able to get a cast on a three-year-old,’ her superior said with a wry grin, and took the unhappy toddler from her arms. ‘Come on, my lovely, you come with Aunty Angie and we’ll sort your arm out.’
‘Want Meg!’ he wailed, and reached for her, but Angie shooed her out, ignoring her reluctance and Adam’s tragic wails. Meg blew the little one a kiss for courage and went, via the ladies’ loo for a flick of lippie and a quick spritz with the cold tap on her suddenly warm cheeks.
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