The Doctors' Baby. Marion Lennox

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doctors’ quarters where I can stay?’

      ‘Nowhere big enough for you,’ she said without thinking, and his ready laughter sprang back.

      ‘Hey, I’m not that big.’

      Maybe not in size, but in presence, Em thought a little desperately, and she tried hard to get her scattered wits in order. OK. He needed accommodation. He’d help out for a month or so, but he needed somewhere to stay.

      The thought of his help was tantalising. Even if he just did a couple of nights’ call a week he’d be a blessing, she thought wistfully. Two nights’ guaranteed sleep a week…

      ‘I can willingly share your load,’ he said softly, and she blinked. Heck, was she so transparent?

      ‘I can manage on my own.’

      ‘Just like Anna.’

      ‘We don’t have a choice,’ she snapped, and with that the laughter died completely.

      ‘Yes,’ he told her, and a trace of sternness sounded in his tone. ‘You do have a choice. I’m here for both of you—if you let me.’

      Jonas meant it.

      He was absolutely positive, he’d brook no argument, and an hour later Em watched him drive away in his exotic little Alfa Romeo while she blinked back her disbelief.

      She had a partner—for a month.

      ‘Maybe for more if I need to be here for longer,’ he’d growled, and then had added, ‘And, please, God, I don’t need it.’

      She could only agree with him. Please, let Anna not have cancer. But if she did then Em would welcome Jonas with open arms while they waited for Anna to heal, she decided. To share her workload would be bliss. Her surgery was big enough for both of them.

      But…her home?

      That was the only part of the arrangement which left her less than satisfied. The doctors’ house at the back of the hospital had been optimistically built to accommodate up to four doctors. It therefore had four bedrooms and four bathrooms. Em, and her ancient dog, Bernard, rattled around in it.

      But it still only had one living room and one kitchen!

      So Jonas was heading back to his hotel tonight, but as of tomorrow she’d have him permanently under her feet.

      A partner and a housemate—for a month!

      But not until tomorrow, she told herself desperately. By then she should have time to get her wayward emotions under control!

      Em met Jonas again sooner than the next day. She met him that night.

      Two hours later, Em parked outside Home Two, one of the homes making up Bay Beach Orphanage, and recognised the car parked out front straight away.

      How many people in town drove silver Alfa Romeos? None that she knew of, she thought. Except Jonas.

      What on earth was he doing here?

      Drat her stupid emotions, she thought. Why did the sight of his car make her heart jolt?

      As her friend opened the front door, Em had to school her expression to hide her surprise, and she had to force her voice to sound normal. It was no mean feat, but somehow she did it.

      ‘Hi, Lori.’ She smiled at her friend but gave a sideways, cautious glance at the Alfa. ‘Am I intruding?’

      ‘Of course you’re not.’ Lori pulled the door wide, allowing her to see Jonas sitting at the kitchen table. He looked up at her and smiled, and Em’s heart did that lurching thing she was becoming familiar with and didn’t understand in the least. ‘Jonas and I are having a cup of tea. Do you have time to join us?’

      ‘I might have,’ Em said, wary. ‘Thanks to Jonas.’

      ‘He told me about taking over your surgery.’ Lori pressed her friend’s hand. ‘And about Charlie. Em, I’m so sorry.’

      ‘It’s OK.’

      But it wasn’t. She’d hardly had time to think of Charlie, but now she blinked back unexpected tears. Damn, she had to give herself time to mourn.

      When would she fit that in? Tuesday week, eleven to twelve?

      ‘I… Maybe I won’t have that tea. I’ll just see Robby and then I’ll go,’ she told Lori. Robby was the reason she’d come. Whatever Jonas was here for, she had to concentrate on her work.

      Which was Robby.

      And he needed concentration. Robby was eight months old. He’d been orphaned in a car crash two months ago. Badly burned, he’d only recently been transferred from hospital to the Bay Beach Home.

      Robby still really needed city medical facilities—physiotherapy, occupational therapy and the associated bevy of health-care services—but his aunt lived in Bay Beach and she wouldn’t hear of him going anywhere else.

      Neither would she take him in herself—or allow the thought of someone else adopting him. So Robby was being cared for by Lori at the home, with Em providing daily medical care.

      There were worse fates, Em thought. Lori offered no long-term solution for the little boy, but she loved him to bits.

      As did Em. Robby had spent two weeks in hospital in Sydney and then, at his aunt’s insistence, had spent six weeks at Bay Beach General Hospital. In that time he’d twisted himself around Em’s heart like a hairy worm, so much so that when she entered his bedroom now and the little boy reached up his arms, she pulled him to her and hugged as hard as his burned little body would allow.

      He was tiny, underweight for his age, with scarring, healing wounds and skin grafts still covering his left side. He’d been burned right up to his chin. The only parts of him that seemed unhurt were his bright little brown eyes, his snub nose and his mop of silver blond curls.

      Yes, Em loved him. She’d unashamedly lost her professional detachment, and she’d lost her heart completely.

      ‘Have you been waiting for me?’ she whispered. ‘I thought you’d be asleep, you ragamuffin!’

      ‘He’s supposed to be.’ Lori had followed her friend into the room. ‘He’s been down for half an hour. But he’s so accustomed to seeing you in the evenings that I can’t get him to sleep until you come.’

      ‘What’s the problem?’ Em started at the sound of the deep tones. Jonas also had followed them in and was leaning against the door, watching them.

      Em and baby were quite a pair, he thought, and if Em could have known what he was thinking she would have blushed to her socks.

      She was a strikingly good-looking woman, tall and dark and beautiful, and now, with the child pressed against her breast, she looked stunningly maternal. Robby was still heavily bandaged. He wore a smooth elastic skin to stop his grafts from scarring, and his white dressings were in stark contrast to Em’s smooth and darker skin.

      The sight set Jonas back more than

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