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My Forbidden Doctor: A Secret Baby Medical Romance

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by Stephanie Brother




  My Forbidden Doctor

  A Secret Baby Medical Romance

  Stephanie Brother

  Illustrated by

  Cosmic Letterz

  Edited by

  Elizabeth Lance

  Copyright © 2020 by Stephanie Brother

  All rights reserved.

  Cover design by Cosmic Letters

  Editing by Elizabeth A. Lance

  All Rights Reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locations is purely coincidental. The characters are all productions of the author's imagination.

  Please note that this work is intended only for adults over the age of 18 and all characters represented as 18 or over.

  Kindle Edition

  Contents

  Mailing List

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Epilogue

  Thank You

  Rest of Forbidden Prescription Series

  Blurb

  He should be taking my temperature, not stealing my heart...

  Melissa is a small town girl who doesn't think she needs a man. But when she bumps into a gorgeous man who desperately needs her help, she just has to play along.

  Dr. Carl, the stunning pulmonologist with those to-die-for eyes, needs a stand-in girlfriend to drive away his annoying co-worker. He happens to bring it up to his patient Melissa who makes him forget about his boundaries.

  Doctor-patient relationships are strictly forbidden. He knows it’s wrong but it feels so right.

  He shouldn’t be risking his career, but he is for someone as sweet as her. She shouldn’t be risking her heart, but she can’t stop herself.

  When their widowed parents announce that they are getting engaged to each other, disaster follows.

  The hot doctor she wasn’t supposed to date is going to be a new family member she wasn’t supposed to have.

  But another issue adds to the chaos: a baby she wasn’t supposed to make.

  What are they going to do?

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  Chapter 1

  Melissa

  "I can't tell if this is the place..." Mumbling to myself, I reached to rub my head as I rocked back on my heels. There was just something maze-like about professional buildings. Just looking at the sign listing all the rooms and practices was disorientating, and the headache that'd plagued me for the better part of two days intensified.

  Beige walls seemed to stretch on forever when I poked my head around the corner. I grimaced lightly, turning my bleary gaze back to the board mounted on the wall. The elevator pinged shrilly, and my frustration tinged with embarrassment that anyone would see me struggling to read a sign.

  My allergies were so bad today, and why wouldn't they be? Allergy season was just picking up, and I hadn't left my house all winter. Rhode Island winters were great, long, and cold, but Spring always came too fast and hit me square in the sinuses.

  "Do you need help?"

  The deep baritone wrapped around my brain smoothly, and I swung my achy eyes to the left. Glimmering, brown eyes met mine even as I blinked dumbly until my clogged brainwaves caught up to his words.

  "Oh, yeah. I'm looking for..." Trailing off to dig in my purse, I pulled out my wallet and the card inside to squint at it. I couldn't have felt more stupid, but the man that'd gotten off the elevator didn't seem at all in a hurry. Pushing my glasses up didn't help any, and I gnawed on my inner cheek. "I'm so sorry. My allergies are really bad today."

  "No problem. Take your time. I'm in no rush to go upstairs. What are you allergic to? If you don't mind my asking?"

  His voice is really deep. The thought zipped through my mind like lightning, and I glanced up through my glasses. Actually, he looks a little anxious.

  "Um— pretty much all tree pollen. I didn't have allergies growing up, but I went to New York City once and just... spontaneously developed it. They say it's not that uncommon. Spring is the worst. I've lived a couple places, and this is the best overall for my allergies and asthma."

  Surprise was clear on his face as he raised his brows, and leaned a shoulder on the wall to draw my eyes down. Wrapped in a nice, black jacket over a dark blue button down, he crossed his ankles at the bottom of starched, creaseless work pants. Flames licked up my neck when he smiled knowingly, and some of the anxiety dulled in his eyes.

  "Does that mean you're looking for the third floor?"

  Nodding hastily, I stuck my card back in my wallet, and my wallet disappeared into my purse. He punched the elevator button, and the reflective doors slid open almost immediately.

  "Allow me."

  "Oh— thank you." I slipped past him and into the elevator, and a belated realization hit me only when the doors slid shut. "I'm Mel. Thank you for helping me..."

  "Carl." Holding out his hand for me, Carl smiled warmly.

  Goosebumps swept up my arm under my light sweater. His palm was warm, dry, muscular, but his grip wasn't overly tight or overbearing. He had a handshake my high school career advisor would gush about.

  "You've lived here a while? I only just moved here two months ago for a new job."

  "Yeah, a few years."

  Suddenly, Carl's expression tightened when the elevator jostled to a stop. We were so close that I could tell he was holding his breath, and curiosity got the better of me.

  "Are you afraid of the doctors or something?"

  "Ah— just this particular one, actually." He had to audacity to blush at his own confession.

  Arching a brow quizzically, I rolled my lips between my teeth to hide my small smile.

  "For some reason, she's directing her crazy at me."

  "I can see why—" Blurting out the observation before I could stop myself, I clenched my teeth hard.

  Carl barked a small laugh, less uncomfortable but still wavering while he reached to run his fingers through his mahogany curls. Craning his neck as the elevator doors opened, he gestured me out first, and tingles raced up and down my legs.

  "Yeah, well... I'd rather not be the pretty face on Netflix's next episode of Murder Files."

  My own nervous laugh escaped me, but Carl shook his head a little before casting me a slight frown.

  "I've turned her down, but she's very persistent..."

  "Well, she's your coworker, right? Isn't there rules or something against dating a coworker?" Granted, I'd never held a traditional job, but there were plenty of stories on the internet about this kind of thing. "Like, one of you gets fired or transferred or something?"

  "I wouldn't date her if she paid me." The bland reply came quick, and my eyes widened in surpr
ise at the sharpness in Carl's tone. His eyes narrowed, jaw ticking slightly as he inhaled deeply through flared nostrils. "Regardless, she's not my type. She just won't take 'no' for an answer."

  "I know a guy like that. My dad is constantly trying to set me up with rich guys, but because I can't offer an alternative, me saying 'I'm not interested' is useless." Crossing my arms indignantly, I frowned myself as we stood, lamenting, outside the elevator. "After my mom died, my dad started getting all up in my business and trying to dictate my life. It's only because of my mom's inheritance, too. I know my dad loves me, but he's gotten greener in the face these past few years."

  "Yeah, my mom's the same. My dad left her after my little sister turned eighteen for someone younger and richer. I don't know. That's life, I guess. My mom has a horrible track record with men even when they were married."

  Somewhere down the quiet, empty hallway, a door shut, and the sound echoed ominously. I held my breath when Carl pulled a face of discomfort, licking his lips as he adjusted his tie. Slowly, he glanced around the sharp corner, and the faint fall of heels on carpet started to drum underneath us.

  "Crap. Here she comes. Would it be creepy if I asked you to agree to date me for the next... two minutes?"

  Surprise widened my eyes and raised my brows, and I opened my mouth only to immediately run out of time. A flash of blonde caught the corner of my eye, and my throat tightened as I nodded mutely.

  Relief flooded Carl's expression, which was tinged with a quiet apology. Mouthing a 'thank you' even as my own dried, his eyes blazed with hope, and my heart ached for him.

  Everyone always thought that guys couldn't be uncomfortable with female advances, or that women couldn't be creepy. The double standards of society were on full display right in front of me, and it was heartbreaking. Before my brain could catch up with my mouth, I suddenly found words, and the awkwardness of the situation snuck up on me.

  "I don't know what I'm going to do about my dad. I've been slowly trying to ease contact, but he always finds new reasons to call me." My head was in tatters, and Carl frowned under furrowed brows as I shrugged. Now that I'd been inside the building so long, my allergies had calmed down, and the nasally tone in my voice disappeared. "I don't have many friends, right— so it's like he thinks I'm lazy."

  "I'm not too excited about dinner with my mom next week, either. It usually ends in an argument over something trivial. Our last get-together, she introduced me to this man she's dating. Any time I try to bring up how smarmy he seems, she gets all teary-eyed and upset."

  "Smarmy?" I couldn't help but laugh at that word, and I automatically reached to cover my mouth.

  Carl smiled a genuine, soft smile that showed off his shallow dimples.

  I waved my free hand. "I've never heard anyone say someone else is 'smarmy'."

  "Well, it's true. I'm not going to get too into it with her. I have my own love life to worry about." Carl sort of tensed at that last part, and flames engulfed my face. My heart did a little flip when he stepped closer to me, his eyes capturing mine as he very carefully took my hand and lifted the backs of my fingers to his lips. "Speaking of, we're still on for tonight, right?"

  "... I'll make sure to wear my nicest lingerie." Oh, my God! Interest pointed his pupils as I licked my lips nervously. Carl was very careful not to crowd me, but I could see my own feelings swirling in his dark brown eyes. That's a little too convincing. "Six-thirty, right?"

  "Yeah. It's an important night, after all."

  My cheeks were so hot they threatened to melt off my skull, and my breath hitched loudly when Carl squeezed my hands. Down the deathly quiet hallway, the disgusting sound of someone sucking their teeth boxed my ears. Tensing when Carl whirled around, he cleared his throat of its considerably huskiness. "Eva— what do you want? I'm on my lunch break."

  "I'd appreciate it if you didn't have your lunch break right in front of the elevator, Carl." She sounded so incredibly bitter and upset that her voice actually cracked.

  I poked my head out from behind Carl's shoulder. Eva was long-legged and gangly almost, with wavy blonde hair and a thin, wiry frame. She was shooting Carl the most venomous, awful glare humanly possible, Eva's blue eyes flashed icily as she strutted past. Swaying her hips on her heels, she chuffed a scoff at me, and alarms rang in my head.

  She directed her glare at me. "You're not good enough for him."

  My jaw almost fell on the floor in shock, from Eva's declaration and the sheer contempt in it. She flipped her hair with a flick of her sharply angled arm, leaving my speechless as she jabbed the elevator button. Thankfully, the doors opened immediately, and an unbelievable, breathless laugh escaped the dense lump in my throat.

  "At least there's enough of me for him to decide." The snarky comeback that burst from my dry mouth earned me an audible growl as Eva stomped into the elevator. I was horrified. How could she just say that! Clenching my jaw hard, I clutched my purse straps with white-knuckle tightness. "You're just a badly drawn stick figure."

  I just had to get the last word in, and I was shocked by my own nastiness the second before the doors slid shut. Huffing in affront, I turned to Carl to find him watching me with shock dragging down his handsome features. Before me, he managed to speak up, and he held up his palms swiftly.

  "I am so sorry, Mel. I never thought she'd say something like that."

  "She's a horrible person, and if you ever need me to help you, I will gladly."

  His smile strained with a mix of emotions, and I nodded firmly– more to myself than him. Glancing at my watch, I pulled my glasses up to my eyes, and the cord holding them around my neck tickled to ease some of the tension thrumming between my shoulder blades. "I have to go, or I'll be late."

  "Can I have your number, Mel?"

  The request surprised me even though it shouldn't have, and I glanced up as Carl pulled his phone out of his pocket.

  "Please... if you don't mind?"

  Chapter 2

  Carl

  "Well... this is awkward." Shutting the door to the patient room, I frowned when Mel stiffened, her green eyes nearly boggling out of their sockets. "I apologize for earlier, again, Mel."

  "You're the specialist for my allergies?"

  Sitting on the stool, I held her file in my lap as I nodded grimly. This whole building was filled with medical offices, but I was the only pulmonologist of the several GPs available to treat for allergies.

  "Are you going to get in trouble? Does that mean that woman is a doctor here? Am I gonna have to deal with her taking my blood or something?"

  "No— no, she's a pediatrician."

  Mel seemed horrified at the thought of Eva dealing with kids.

  I waved a hand in dismissal. "You won't have to deal with her. I'm probably not going to get in trouble, either. Nothing unethical happened. Before lunch, I wasn't your doctor."

  "Do I need to get a new doctor? The last guy I saw didn't believe my allergies were as bad as they are because it was winter." Her freckled nose scrunched up as panic blazed in her eyes.

  I shook my head firmly. Trying to keep up with this situation as it developed was almost too much, but I'd learned to handle stress over the last fifteen years.

  "You should be fine, Mel. So, your allergies have been aggravating your asthma, right? That's why you're here today?" Throughout our entire conversation outside the office, Melissa hadn't mentioned her asthma. Flipping open her chart, I knew why her allergies would be the more worrying thing on her mind.

  Out of the corner of my eye, she nodded, her wild, auburn hair shining under the lights of the examination room.

  "Yeah. I have an inhaler, but when Spring comes, my allergies get so bad that I can't sleep or breathe or anything. I've tried almost everything. The specialist I saw a couple months ago gave me a medicated nebulizer, but it gave me an asthma attack the only time I used it."

  The crease between my brows deepened as I scanned her file,

  Melissa sucked in a sharp breath. "I told h
im I wanted a CPAP machine, but he said I was fine, and my asthma wasn't bad enough for it."

  "CPAP machines aren't generally used for asthma control. Did you get the idea from the internet?"

  Mel nodded, unabashed, and I leaned back to set her file on the counter. Standing up, I unhooked my stethoscope from my neck to check her breaths. Pursing my lips in concentration, I closed my eyes as she took a few deep breaths. Obviously, she wasn't a stranger to the procedure, and I could clearly hear her slight wheezing at the end.

  "When was the last time you slept without an attack?"

  "Um... probably the last time it snowed. Maybe three weeks ago? They haven't been bad, exactly, but I always wake up and have to use my inhaler."

  My mind whirred as Melissa talked of her troubles, and I pressed my palm against her back.

  "I didn't try to use the nebulizer again, but I still have it. Maybe a different medication would work?"

  "Asthma is a restriction of the airways and the bronchioles, so it's not surprising that your allergies agitate it. There's no point in prescribing a different medication for the nebulizer if you can't get it in your system. I actually don't think a CPAP machine is a bad idea. It'll take some of the strain off from your respiratory system, and considering your reaction to the last medication, I'm hesitant to prescribe another. I think we should just try non-medicated and see how you do for a few weeks."

 

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