Read The Doctor's Proposal Online
Authors: Marion Lennox
âPraise be,' he said softly. âAndâ¦you said Susie's a landscape gardener?'
âThat's right.'
âSo Angus has a niece by marriage, pregnant with Rory's child, who shares his passion for gardening. A niece who needs accommodation for a few weeks.'
âYou're going too fast,' she told him, and he raised his brows.
âAm I? Tell me you're not looking out at your sister and thinking this might work.'
âIt's too soon to tell.'
âYesterday you had a sister who was non-responsive and I had a patient who wanted to die. I don't see him refusing oxygen now.'
âHe needs the tank for a garden seat,' she said, but grinned. âOK, Dr Cameron, I concede you've done very well so far.'
âMost Australian doctors know enough to prescribe pumpkins for advanced pulmonary failure and severe depression,' he said, smiling in return. âHasn't that reached the States as standard practice yet?'
She choked on a bubble of laughter, and then looked out at Susie balancing precariously over the pumpkin but not even thinking about how wobbly her legs were, and thought, This is great. This could just work.
âHey, Angus, I'd arranged to take you to the nursing home this morning,' Jake called, and the two pumpkin inspectors turned with identical expressions of confusion.
âNursing home?' Angus saidâand then he remembered and his face fell. âOh, aye. That's right.' He turned to Susie as if explaining. âI agreed to go.'
âWhy are you going to a nursing home?' Susie asked in astonishment, and he shook his head, defeat written all over him.
âIt's time, lass. I can't keep on here. The doc is calling on me twice a day as it is, and he can't keep doing that indefinitely.'
âAngus has advanced pulmonary fibrosis,' Jake said gravely. âHe can't manage here alone any more.'
There was a moment's silence. âPulmonary fibrosisâ¦does that mean you're dying?' Susie demanded, her already pale face blanching still further.
âIt doesn't matter,' Angus said uneasily. âWe all go some time.'
âNot quite so soon as you're preparing to shuffle off,' Jake said bluntly. âI've told you. With physiotherapy and with
oxygen and pain relief you could still have years. Especially if you agree to bypass surgery.'
âI'll not be wanting years. What would I do with years?'
âYou could grow bigger pumpkins,' Susie said wildly. âAngus, I've only just met you. And you sound like my Rory. You're his uncle. If you die then I've got nobody.'
Gee, thanks very much, Kirsty thought, but she had enough sense to stay silent. And if she hadn't had enough sense, Jake's hand was suddenly on her arm, his pressure a warning.
I know
, she thought, annoyed, but then she glanced at his face and saw the tension and thought, This guy really cares.
Did he care about her sister? Maybe not, but he certainly cared for the old man. He was a country doctor in the old-fashioned sense, she thought, a man who knew every aspect of his patients' lives and who treated them holistically. Sure, he could set up an oxygen supply. He'd also plaster a broken leg or administer an antibiotic for an infection. But he looked at the whole picture, and he was looking at it now. Angus didn't need medicine as much as he needed family, and Jake was fighting with everything he had to give him one.
âWould you like us to stay?' Susie was asking Angus, and Kirsty held her breath. For Susie to make such a decision seemed amazing. Her twin had made no decisions since Rory had died. Even the decision of what to put on in the morning was beyond her. A crippling side-effect of depression was indecision, and Susie had it in spades, yet here she was making an instantaneous decision all by herself.
Which might have to be revoked.
âWe could only do that if Dr Cameron could deliver your baby,' she said tentatively, and Dr Cameron grimaced.
âI usually send my expectant mothers to Sydney two weeks before the birth.'
âWhy?' Susie asked.
âA lone medical practitioner doesn't make for an ideal
birthing situation,' he told her. âIf you needed a Caesarean, I'd need an anaesthetist.'
Susie's face cleared. âThat's easy. Kirsty can give an anaesthetic. Not that I'll need it, mind. I intend to deliver this baby normally. Is that the only problem?' She turned again to Angus. âIs it OK if we stay? We're stuck, you see. I came out to Australia to find you, but I was too close to my due date and now no airline will take me home. So if you need someone to stay here and I need somewhere to stayâ¦we could really work on this pumpkin.'
Jake's hand was still on her arm, Kirsty realised. And he was looking at her. Angus and Susie had turned back to Spike the Pumpkin, and there was time to think things through before they took this plan any further.
How could she think when Jake's hand was on her arm?
She shook it off and he drew back, as if he hadn't meant to get so familiar.
Good. Or was it good?
âWhat's going on here?' Jake asked cautiously, glancing at her arm and then turning deliberately to look at Susie and Angus. âThis is happening so fast.'
âSusie's desperate for this.'
âI don't understand.'
âThere was nothing,' Kirsty told him. He needed to see, she thought. She needed to make him understand the mess her sister was in. âRory was always really ambivalent about his background. He said he'd never got on with his parents and we knew his brother hated him. He arrived in America wanting to make a clean break and he did that by not talking about his background. The only person he ever mentioned was his Uncle Angus and that was only in passingâhe'd never talk at length about him, and when Susie suggested maybe they come out here he was horrified. It was as if he'd decided that Susie was his family from now on, and that was that. Only then he died, and there was nothing. Just a blank nothing. Because there was no one else to grieve over him, it was almost as if Rory hadn't
existed. And now Susie's found Rory's Uncle Angus, and he's lovely and he needs her and I'll bet right now she'll be thinking that Rory would want her to stay, and you can't imagine how much of a blessing that must be.' She broke off, tears threatening to spill. She wiped them away with an angry backhand swipe. âAnyway, you've done very well.'
âFor an Australian doctor,' he said with a hint of teasing, and she flushed and swiped again.
âI'm not crying,' she said. âI don't cry. It's justâ¦'
âHayfever,' he said promptly. âCaused by pumpkins. Can I prescribe an antihistamine?'
âI'm fine,' she said, and gazed at Susie some more. Susie had abandoned the crutches and was seated on the rock wall abutting the vegetable garden. She was talking animatedly about manure. Angus was listening and nodding and asking questions.
There were a few things to be considered. Medical things. It was up to her to consider them.
âCan we deliver Susie's baby here?'
âIt's not perfect,' he told her. âNormally I'd say no. But if we're weighting up the pros and cons, I'd say the pros definitely outweigh the added cons. Wouldn't you say so, Dr McMahon?'
âMaybe.'
âWhat sort of a doctor are you?'
âAn American one,' she snapped, and he grinned.
âYeah, and a cute one. But don't you guys all have specialties?'
âI guess.' She looked at him speculatively. âYou're a family doctor.'
âA generalist,' he agreed. âBut with surgical training.'
âDo you have an anaesthetist?'
âNot now. Old Joe Gordon was an anaesthetistâa fine oneâbut he died on me six months ago.'
âWhich explains the overwork.'
âWhich explains the overwork. So how about you?'
âI work in a hospice. A big one.'
âYou're a palliative-care physician.'
âUmâ¦no.'
âNo?'
âMy basic training's in anaesthesia,' she confessed. âI specialise in pain management, hence the hospice work. You want a spinal block, I'm your man.'
His face stilled. His eyes turned blank. She could see cogs start to whirr.
âLet's not get any ideas,' she said hastily. âI'm here to look after my sister.'
âHow interested are you in pumpkins?'
She glanced across at the bent heads and managed a smile.
âNot very,' she confessed. âThey lack a little in the patient backchat department.'
âThen maybe you'd help me out?'
âHow can I do that?' She was still watching her sister. Susie was sitting on the wall with Angus. The sun was on her face and she and Angus were examining each pumpkin leaf in turn. âI need to be here with Susie. And with Angus. You said yourself that Angus couldn't be left alone. Ditto Susie. So that leaves meâ¦'
âStuck in a castle,' he said, still smiling, and she wished suddenly that he wouldn't.
âI guess that's terrific,' she said, with what she hoped was cheerfulness. It didn't quite come out that way. She looked dubiously across at her sister and realised that Susie and Angus were soul mates. They'd spend what remained of Susie's pregnancy happily saving pumpkins.
Maybe she couldâ¦umâ¦read some books.
âMaybe you could help me,' Jake said again, and she turned from watching Susie and made herself concentrate.
âHow could I do that?'
âI'm desperate.'
âYou don't look desperate.'
He smiled. âI have a way of hiding my desperation with insouciance.'
âInsouciance, hey? Like ketchup but thicker.'
His smile deepened. She loved it when he smiled like that. It made his eyes light up in a way that had her fascinated.
Remember Robert, she told herself fiercely. Remember her parents, Rory, a life committed to medicine.
Plus remember that this man was married. With kids. His girlsâ¦
âSo exactly how desperate are you?' she tried cautiously, and his smile faded a little, as if he was weighing what he ought to tell her.
âPretty desperate.'
âI can look after Angus.'
âHe needs a nurse here,' Jake said slowly. âBut I was thinkingâ¦'
âWow. Can I watch?'
The smile appeared again. A truly excellent smile. Well worth working for.
âEnough impertinence. I have an idea.'
âAnother!'
âShut up, you.' He was grinning. There'd been lines of strain around his eyes since the first time she'd met him, and suddenly they were lightening. It made her feel good. Great even. She found she was grinning back, and she had to force herself to get back to the issue at hand.
âTell me your idea.'
âMy girlsâ¦' he said cautiously, and she stopped feeling like smiling. Which was dopey. How could she be jealous of the family of someone she'd known for less than twenty-four hours?
âTell me about your girls,' she managed.
âI have a housekeeper.'
âThat's nice,' she said cautiously, and once again got that flash of laughter.
âIt is nice,' he told her. âBut it gets nicer. Margie Boyce is a trained nurse. She's in her sixties but she's very competent. She could come out here during the day and stay with Angus and Susie.'
There were things here she wasn't quite understanding. âYou can manage without her?'
âNo, butâ'
âWhat about your girls?'
âThat's just it,' he said patiently. âThey could come, too.'
âYour girls could come here?'
âThat's right.'
âWhat about your wife?'
He sighed. âI don't have a wife.'
There was a moment's silence. âNo wife.'
âNo.'
âBut girls.'
âYou really are nosy.'
âI am,' she agreed, and beamed.
Her smile seemed to take him aback. He dug his hands in his pockets and stared at her like he wasn't quite sure what to make of her.
She continued to smile, waiting.
Hospice work was a hard training ground, Kirsty thought reflectively. She'd spent the last few years working with terminally ill patients, and one thing she'd learned fast was not to mess around trying to find the right way to frame a question. The people she worked with had little energy and less time. She worked to get things as right for them as she could in the little time she had available, and she didn't do it by pussyfooting around hard questions.
So maybe it made her nosy. What did she have to lose?
âI'm divorced,' Jake said grudgingly.
She gave a grunt of what might be sympathy and went back to looking out at the garden. That was another trick she'd learned. Give people space.
âSo the girls are your daughters?' she asked at last.
âThat's right.'
âHow old?'
âFour.'
âBoth?'
âThey're twins.'
âTwins are great,' she said, and smiled.
He gave her a sideways look. Hmm. She stopped smiling, looking away, and he dug his hands deeper into his pockets. She thought that was the end of information but instead he started speaking again, carefully, as if explaining something distasteful.
âLaurel and I met at med school,' he said flatly, as if he wasn't sure whether he should be saying it, but now he'd started he wanted to get it over with fast. âI became a surgeon, she was a radiologist, and I'm not even sure why we married now. I'm guessing we were too busy with our careers to look at anyone else. We were both hugely ambitiousâfast movers in the career stakesâand our eventual marriage seemed more an excuse for a party than anything else. A party where we asked the right people. But suddenly Laurel was pregnant.'
âNot planned?' she queried gently, and he winced.
âOf course not planned. As far as Laurel was concerned, it was a disaster. She only agreed to continue the pregnancy on the understanding that we'd use childcare from day one.' He hesitated. âAnd maybe I agreed with her. I was an only child with no concept of babies. But thenâ¦then Alice and Penelope were born.'