Love Without Measure. Caroline Anderson

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Love Without Measure - Caroline Anderson Mills & Boon Medical

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flirt, she prayed. Please, God, not a flirt. Sexual harassment was the one thing Anna hated above all else, particularly when it came in the form of a flirting playboy, and most especially when he was married. She found herself feeling suddenly sorry for the wife she had dreamed up for him.

      How must it feel to catch a man like that just to discover he was a will-o-the-wisp? She dismissed the memory of those eyes, far from flirting, just gently assessing, and seeing far too much for her peace of mind. She would think of him as a flirt. That way he would be easily dismissed, pushed to the back of her mind, not worth the time of day.

      Kathleen looked up from the trousers she was easing off and smiled. ‘Good morning, Staff.’

      ‘Morning, Sister. Do you need a hand?’

      ‘Oh, yes, please. This is Mr James. He fell off the kerb, didn’t you?’

      The man nodded and winced. ‘Right down a pothole. Teach me to look where I’m going, won’t it? Are you sure you shouldn’t cut those trousers?’

      Kathleen laughed. ‘And have you sueing me for a new pair? Don’t worry, I’ll be careful.’

      ‘You’d better be,’ he muttered, grim-lipped, and subsided on to the pillow with a groan. Together Anna and Kathleen eased the trousers down, slipped his good foot out, and carefully removed them from the damaged one without even making him wince.

      Perversely he looked disappointed, and Anna almost laughed.

      The skin was very scraped, and Anna could see his foot was lying at a strange angle. Kathleen straightened up and smiled.

      ‘I’ll get a doctor to come and have a look at you, Mr James, while Staff Nurse Jarvis cleans you up a bit more.’

      ‘They’re in the corridor. Jack’s just coming,’ Anna told her, and Kathleen nodded and went out quietly through the curtain.

      ‘This looks very sore,’ Anna said as she pulled on gloves and cleaned the skin a little. ‘Am I hurting you?’

      ‘It is rather tender,’ he said a bit stiffly, and Anna stopped as soon as she had wiped away the worst of the blood and dirt from around his graze. It was obvious that the fibula was broken, so he would probably need an anaesthetic to set the bone and there was no point in torturing him for the hell of it. Whoever examined him could see enough now.

      The curtain swished beside her, and she felt a shiver run over her skin. She didn’t need to look to know it wasn’t Jack Lawrence. Gorgeous though he was, his magnetism was strictly limited to Kathleen. This man, though …

      ‘Mr James? I’m Dr Haddon. I gather you’ve hurt you leg—mind if I have a look?’

      ‘Be my guest.’

      He bent his head over the leg, checked the foot for warmth and sensation, and then tutted quietly. ‘It looks a bit nasty, doesn’t it? I think we need an X-ray first, to assess the extent of the damage, but I’m pretty sure you’ve just broken the bone at the side of your leg—the fibula. You may have damaged some of the bones in your foot as well, but the X-ray will pick that up. Whatever, you’ll need an operation to fix that bone properly, I’m afraid.’

      The man sighed heavily. ‘Can’t you just put a plaster on it?’

      Patrick shook his head. ‘Sorry. It won’t heal unless we can pull the bone-ends into alignment, and that will need surgery, I’m almost sure.’

      ‘Damn. I’m supposed to be flying to America tomorrow.’

      ‘Well, I’m sorry, you won’t be going—not for a good while.’

      He swore, softly but fluently. ‘I have to go,’ he repeated.

      ‘Sorry, old chap, that’s the way it goes,’ Patrick told him calmly.

      It didn’t calm him noticeably. ‘I’ve got my mobile phone here—do you mind if I make some calls while I wait?’ he asked, already flicking up the aerial.

      ‘Be our guest,’ Patrick told him, and, making sure the sides were up on the examination couch, Anna followed him out to fill in the X-ray request forms and get Patrick to authorise them.

      Behind them they could hear Mr James’s voice on the phone.

      Tallen off the pavement and broken my goddamn leg—what? I said I fell off the bloody pavement!’ he yelled.

      Patrick grinned at Anna. Oops. I think our business executive’s heading for a mid-life crisis,’ he said softly, and she chuckled despite her intentions to have nothing to do with him.

      He followed her into the office, perched on the edge of the desk so that his lean, well-muscled thigh was just inches from her hand, and watched as she made a total foul up of the first form.

      ‘Damn,’ she muttered, and, screwing it up, she lobbed it towards the bin and missed.

      ‘Calm down. You’re getting like Alan James.’

      She snorted, but tackled the next form slowly. ‘There—could you sign, please?’

      His hands were fascinating—tanned, the backs lightly scattered with dark hair, the fingers strong and straight. She forced herself to look at the ring on his left hand, to remind herself that he was married.

      That was when she saw the scar, a jagged white line that ran from thumb to wrist. She found herself touching it before she knew what she was doing.

      ‘What happened?’ she asked.

      He glanced at it dismissively. ‘I don’t know. I was helping at an earthquake, pulling rubble off the remains of a school.’

      ‘An earthquake?’

      ‘Mmm. Here, he can go through now.’

      She took the form, clearly dismissed, and went and wheeled Mr James through to X-ray, trying not to let idle curiosity distract her from her job. Except that earthquakes in this country were rarer than hen’s teeth …

      Mr James was still on the phone. Grudgingly he put it down and subsided to a steady grumble for the X-ray. Sure enough, it was a clean fracture of the fibula with no other damage to the foot, but it would need plating to draw it back into alignment.

      As she wheeled him back to the cubicle Nick Davidson, the orthopaedic SR on take, appeared and walked towards them with a grin.

      ‘Is this my patient?’

      ‘Yup—here are the plates, and this is Mr James.’

      Nick introduced himself and shook the man’s hand. ‘My name’s Davidson. I’m the orthopaedic surgeon who’s going to be fixing this. Shall we have a look?’

      He thrust the plates up into the light-box and grunted, then pointed to the broken ends of the bone, explaining to Mr James what he was going to do. ‘When did you last eat?’

      ‘Last night.’

      ‘No breakfast?’

      ‘I never have time.’

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