The Surgeon's Doorstep Baby. Marion Lennox

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they were, they’d gone.

      On Maggie’s side of the house he’d heard the dogs go crazy. He imagined her settling them. Part of him expected her to come across to check what had just happened.

      She didn’t.

      Forget it, he told himself. Go back to bed.

      Or open the door and make sure nothing had been left?

      The knock still resonated. It had been loud, urgent, demanding attention.

      Okay, check.

      He headed for the front door, stepped outside and came close to falling over a bundle. Pink, soft …

      He stooped and tugged back a fold of pink blanket.

      A thick thatch of black hair. A tiny, rosebud mouth. Snub nose. Huge dark eyes that stared upwards, struggling to focus.

      A tiny baby. Three weeks at most, he thought, stunned.

      Lying on his doorstep.

      He scooped the infant up without thinking, staring out into the night rather than down at the baby, willing the car to be still there, willing there to be some sort of answer.

      The bundle was warm—and moist. And alive.

      A baby …

      He had nothing to do with babies. Yeah, okay, he’d treated babies during medical training. He’d done the basic paediatric stuff, but he’d been an orthopaedic surgeon for years now, and babies hardly came into his orbit.

      A baby was in his orbit now. In his arms.

      He stared down at the baby, and wide eyes stared back.

      A memory stabbed back. A long time ago. Thirty or more years? Here, in this hall.

      A woman with a baby, placing the baby by the door in its carry basket, pointing at Blake and saying, ‘I’ve brought the kid his baby sister.’

      After that, his memory blurred. He remembered his father yelling, and his mother screaming invective at his father and at the woman. He remembered the strange woman being almost hysterical.

      He’d been six years old. While the grown-ups had yelled, he’d sidled over and looked at the baby it seemed everyone was yelling about. She’d been crying, but none of the grown-ups had noticed.

      A baby sister?

      He shook himself. That had been the night his mother had found out about his father’s lover. He’d never seen either the woman or her baby again.

      This baby was nothing to do with his history. Why was he thinking of it now?

      He should call the police. He should report an abandoned baby.

      Who looked like a baby he’d seen a long time ago?

      And then he thought of Maggie, his tenant, and he remembered the references she’d given him.

      She was the district nurse and she was also a midwife.

      The relief that surged over him was almost overwhelming. This was nothing to do with him. Of course it wasn’t. The whole valley knew Maggie’s job. If a woman wanted to abandon an unwanted child, what better way than dump it on a woman you knew could look after it? Maybe Maggie had even cared for the mother during her pregnancy.

      ‘Hey,’ he said, relaxing, even holding the baby a little tighter now he knew what he was dealing with. The child seemed to be staring straight up at him now, dark eyes wondering. ‘You’ve come to the wrong door. Okay, I know you’re in trouble but you have come to the right place—just one door down. Hold on a minute and we’ll take you to someone who knows babies. To someone who hopefully will take responsibility for getting you out of this mess.’

      Maggie was snuggling back down under the duvet when someone knocked on her door and the dogs went nuts again.

      What? What now?

      She’d worked hard today. She’d set up the entire clinic, moving emergency gear from the hospital over the river, trying to get everything organised before the bridge closed. As well as that, she’d made prenatal checks of women on farms that were so wet right now that every able body was moving stock and if Maggie wanted her pregnant ladies to be checked then she went to them.

      She was really tired.

      Was this another evacuation warning? Leave now before the bridge is cut?

      She’d gone to the community meeting. This house was high above the river. Short of a tsunami travelling two hundred miles inland, nothing worse was going to happen than the bridge would give way, the power would go and she’d have to rely on the old kerosene fridge for a few days.

       What?

      Another knock—and suddenly her irritation turned to fear. She had eight brothers and sisters. A couple of the boys were still young enough to be stupid. Pete … What if …?

      What if the car had come with news?

      Just open the door and get it over with.

      Take a deep breath first.

      She tucked her feet into fluffy slippers, wrapped her ancient bathrobe around her favourite pyjamas and padded out to the back porch.

      She swung open the door—and Blake Samford was standing in the doorway, holding a baby.

      ‘I think this one’s for you,’ he said, and handed it over.

      She didn’t drop it.

      To her eternal credit—and thinking back later she was very, very proud of herself—she took the baby, just like the professional she was. Nurse receiving a baby at handover. She gathered the baby as she’d gather any infant she didn’t know; any child when she didn’t know its history. Taking care to handle it lightly with no pressure, anywhere that might hurt. Cradling it and holding it instinctively against her body, giving warmth as she’d give warmth to any tiny creature.

      But for the moment her eyes were on Blake.

      He looked almost forbidding. He was looming in her doorway, six feet two or three, wide shoulders, dark, dark eyes made even darker by the faint glow of moonlight, deep black hair, a shadowy figure.

      Tall, dark and dangerous.

      Heathcliff, she thought, suddenly feeling vaguely hysterical. Very hysterical. Here she was presented with a baby at midnight and she was thinking romance novels?

      The dogs were growling behind her. They’d met this guy—he’d been here for three days and she’d seen him outside, talking to them—but he was still a stranger, it was midnight and they didn’t know what to make of this bundle in their mistress’s arms.

      Neither did she, but a baby was more important than the dark, looming stranger on her doorstep.

      ‘What do you mean, you think it’s for me?’ she managed, trying

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