Earthquake Baby. Amy Andrews
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‘H…hello, Jack,’ stumbled Laura.
‘Laura. I’ve been worried about you.’ Standing before her, he felt his heart lurch. He wanted her. So much. Too much.
‘Can I come in?’
As he stared intently into her eyes, some part of him, somewhere deep in his psyche, knew why she had come. Knew that if he stood aside a chain of events would be started that he mightn’t be able to control. The first domino would fall.
There was silence as he watched her warily. She was looking at him with an openness she hadn’t used since that night ten years ago. Time failed to progress. Clocks didn’t exist in the world they now found themselves in.
He couldn’t bear it any longer. ‘What now, Laura?’
‘Make love to me, Jack.’
As a twelve-year-old, Amy Andrews used to sneak off with her mother’s romance novels and devour every page. She was the type of kid who daydreamed a lot and carried a cast of thousands around in her head, and from quite an early age she knew that it was her destiny to write. So, in between her duties as wife and mother, her paid job as a paediatric intensive care nurse and her compulsive habit to volunteer, she did just that! Amy Andrews lives in Brisbane’s beautiful Samford Valley with her very wonderful and patient husband, two gorgeous kids, a couple of black Labradors and six chooks.
Recent titles by the same author:
THE MIDWIFE’S MIRACLE BABY
Earthquake Baby
Amy Andrews
www.millsandboon.co.uk
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO ALL THOSE
AT THE COAL FACE OF RESCUE WORK. WHAT YOU DO IS TRULY HEROIC.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
LAURA’S legs struggled to keep pace with the bed as it was wheeled quickly down the corridor that led from Intensive Care to the operating theatres. The monitor alarms shrilled continuously as the patient’s heart rate climbed higher.
Laura squeezed the black bag attached to the patient’s breathing tube, administering lungfuls of air to the unconscious, critically ill patient. If he didn’t get to Theatre soon, he would die.
She handed over the bag in one smooth movement to the anaesthetic nurse and the surgical team whisked him through the swing doors. They shut firmly, blocking Laura’s view. She crossed her fingers as she walked back down the corridor with the other members of the team who had helped her prepare Mr Reid for his operation. Their thoughts were with him.
‘How’s it looking?’ asked Marie Prior, the unit’s clinical nurse consultant, as she approached.
‘Not good,’ admitted Laura.
‘Mr Reid’s deterioration wasn’t totally out of left field. He’s lucky you picked up the signs early.’
‘It was a close call, Marie. Too close,’ said Laura, feeling depleted now the adrenaline rush had ebbed.
‘Let’s go have a coffee. Come and meet the new psychiatrist. He’s doing today’s debriefing session.’
Great, Laura thought. Just what she needed!
‘He’s cute,’ Marie cajoled. Laura’s reluctance to participate in such activities was legendary.
‘Bunny rabbits are cute,’ Laura said, completely disinterested in checking out the new kid on the block. ‘But I do need a coffee, so I’ll go. But I’m not talking about my feelings or how I was a deprived child.’
The psychobabble she could do without. Laura’s privacy was too important and, while she recognised that debriefing was essential in her working environment, she preferred to do so casually among the other staff. She dreaded these monthly sessions and avoided them where possible.
‘What’s his name anyway?’
‘John Riley. Dr John Riley.’
An errant, traitorous brain cell kicked into life. Her heart quickened for a few beats before she consciously quelled the disturbing activity taking over her body. John. Not Jack. Goodness, it had been ten years and still just the mention of a similar name was enough to stir parts of her anatomy only he had stirred. Anyway, her Jack Riley was a surgeon, not a shrink.
Her thoughts wandered to Isaac. He was the only man in her life now. She felt the warmth of her love for him flow through her. She wouldn’t have it any other way.
Ten minutes later Laura was relaxed, enjoying the playful banter in the staffroom. She had almost forgotten about the sudden turn of events that had sent her relatively stable patient to Theatre. Almost forgotten about the highly stressful period they had all just endured. Not a bed to spare. One patient left and there was barely enough time to clean the bed area before another took their place.
Marie entered the room carrying a steaming mug, chatting amicably with a man following close