A Man of Honour. Caroline Anderson

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      She handed the phone over, waited while Ross talked to Tom and then looked at him expectantly. ‘Well?’

      ‘I’ll go in with him but I think Tom can handle it—he’s very good, if his performance this morning is anything to go by.’

      ‘So why go in?’

      Ross shrugged. ‘If it’s a real mess it might take two of us to clean her up—and anyway, I’d like to see him in action.’

      They were in Theatre for nearly two hours with her, and when they came back to the ward Helen heard all about it.

      ‘Ghastly mess,’ Ross told her, reaching for the coffee. ‘Must have been festering for months. Abcesses all over the place, all sorts of gynae implications—she’s obviously had roaring pelvic inflammation for ages, poor kid.’

      ‘What did you do?’

      Tom pulled a face. ‘What could we do? We cleaned her up as well as we could, repaired the damage and sewed her up again, but goodness knows how well she’ll recover. She’ll probably get an infective ileus, so don’t assume that just because she’s got bowel sounds she’s ready for food, OK? It would just be the healthy bowel above the paralysed section trying to overcome the obstruction in the paralysed loops.’

      Helen smiled slightly. ‘Don’t worry, Dr Russell—I’m well trained. I’ll do nothing and give her nothing without instruction.’

      Tom evidently picked up a slight reprimand because his face relaxed and he gave a rueful grin. ‘Sorry—just making sure I didn’t leave anything to chance. Oh, and one of the gynae chaps is coming down to look at her later. We took a vaginal swab and a smear test in Theatre just to be on the safe side before we started her on the IV antibiotics.’

      ‘OK, I’ll look out for him. Is she still in Recovery?’

      Ross nodded. ‘Yes, she’ll be there for some time, I think.’ He yawned hugely, and laughingly apologised. ‘Sorry, Sarah was up in the night and Lizzi’s feeling a bit rough at the moment so I ended up changing nappies and singing nursery rhymes at three o’clock.’

      Helen chuckled. ‘Do you good.’

      He gave a non-commital grunt and helped himself to more coffee, waving the pot at Helen and Tom, who both declined.

      ‘You’ll OD on that stuff if you aren’t careful,’ Helen remarked casually, and got a snort for her pains.

      ‘Et tu, Brute?’

      Helen grinned. ‘Lizzi been nagging you?’

      ‘Constantly. And I don’t care if she is right.’

      Tom looked at him thoughtfully. ‘You look tired.’

      ‘I am tired. I think I’m too old to be a father.’

      Helen patted his prematurely grey hair teasingly. ‘Poor old man—what a shame.’

      He glared at her. ‘Less of the old!’

      ‘You started it!’

      ‘Humph. Right, what’s next?’

      ‘Lunch?’ she suggested.

      He glanced at his watch and blinked. ‘Lord, I suppose so—oh, well, we might as well grab something while we can. Coming, Tom?’

      They left, and Helen went back out into the ward. Ruth Warnes, the staff nurse on duty, was standing at the nursing station staring after them.

      ‘Wow,’ she said, clearly awestruck. ‘There aren’t many like that around.’

      Helen gave a non-commital shrug. ‘Seems quite ordinary to me,’ she lied.

      Ruth eyed her suspiciously. ‘Do you need your bumps felt? He’s a dish!’

      ‘Like tripe and onions,’ Helen muttered.

      Ruth chuckled. ‘Philistine! I was thinking more of some exotic Eastern number full of fascinating spices and unusual combinations of flavours—

      ‘Now who needs their bumps felt?’ Helen asked drily, and Ruth laughed.

      ‘Never mind—no doubt he’s on the menu for some totally undeserving ingrate who doesn’t appreciate the full subtlety of those wonderful blue eyes…’ She sighed, and Helen felt an irrational urge to hit her. Instead she unlocked the drugs trolley from the wall and snapped her fingers under Ruth’s nose.

      ‘If I could drag you away from your reverie, Staff, perhaps you could spare the time to help me with the drugs?’

      Helen went into the staff cloakroom, unpinned her frilly cap and tucked a wisp of hair back into her bun. She was feeling harrowed—harrowed and emotionally drained.

      Ross had spoken to Mrs Church and explained the full implications of her husband’s condition, and then left Helen to pick up the mess he left behind when he was called urgently to Theatre.

      Tom stayed and talked to the Churches together once Mrs Church had settled down a little, and then Helen had given them a cup of tea and gone to see Judy Fulcher, the girl with the burst appendix who was down from Recovery.

      She was doing reasonably well, nicely stable and not too nauseated, and Helen was happy that she was being nursed to her satisfaction. She had put Ruth on to special her as she had plenty of experience and was well aware of the implications of any possible change in her vital signs, but even so she had checked the chart herself, discussed her progress with Ruth and checked the flow of the drip and the suction drains from the stomach and the abdomen before she was happy to go off duty.

      She was just coming out of the cloakroom when Tom walked through the double doors from the ward, his suit jacket slung over one shoulder, his car keys dangling from his hand.

      ‘Hi—off now?’ she asked him, and he nodded.

      ‘Ross implied that I should get some sleep while the going’s good—I think once I know where everything is and how it all works he’ll chuck all the notes at me and run!’

      Helen laughed softly., ‘I doubt it, he’s very conscientious. How are the Churches?’

      Tom’s face sobered. ‘Pretty grim. Mrs is certainly taking it hard. I think actually he’s known for ages that there was something pretty damn drastic wrong with him, so he isn’t really surprised, but she is.’

      ‘Yes, she seemed to be quite stunned. Is he going to have the op?’

      Tom nodded. ‘Yes, I think so. He’s gone home for the night as planned, but I think he’ll be back tomorrow for surgery.’

      ‘Difficult start for you—I’m sorry.’

      He threw her a quick grin. ‘Doesn’t matter when you start, Helen. It’s always difficult for someone. I suppose that’s why I’m here—to make it easier if I can’t take it away. That’s all any of us can do.’ He glanced at his watch, then back at her. ‘Got time for a cup of tea?’

      ‘In

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