Dating the Millionaire Doctor (2 page)

BOOK: Dating the Millionaire Doctor
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But when tentatively he'd confessed to the elderly lady beside him who he was, to his astonishment she'd known all about him.

‘I'm one of Old Doc's patients—and you must be Jake,' she'd said, sniffing and beaming a watery smile at him. ‘His American son. Doc had a baby picture of you up on his clinic wall. I used to say to him it was a shame your mother took you away, but he'd say, “Just because he's in the States doesn't make him any less my son. I love him wherever he is.”'

He'd loved him? That was the first he'd heard of it. The woman had wanted to introduce him around, but he was so shocked he'd simply walked away.

Maybe he should have sold the properties then, but it had seemed wrong. Troubled by the conflicting messages he was getting—had his father indeed cared?—and by the morality of accepting such an inheritance, he'd employed Rob to manage the properties and he'd retreated to the States. To his all-consuming career as chief anaesthetist at Manhattan Central.

But now, finally, he'd returned.

The lodge, once owned by his stepmother and run as a winery and genteel place of retreat, had been needed as emer
gency accommodation in the first weeks after the fire. Rob had it running again now, but there were few guests.

Rob had worked in hospitality for years. Five years back he'd followed a lady to Australia—of course—and jumped at the opportunity to run the lodge, but getting it viable again could take more than Rob's enthusiasm. And up on the ridge, Jake's second property—the one used by Tori and her friends—was smoke damaged and had been used for six months as an animal hospital.

So maybe he should sell both. Maybe he should abandon any last trace of a father he didn't know, abandon any last connection. Rob would find alternative employment. His friend was born hopeful. The blonde's car was in front of them, and Rob was speeding up and slowing down, doing a bit of automotive courting. Jake shook his head in disbelief.

‘Hey, stop it with the disapproval.' Rob grinned, sensing his thoughts. ‘Worry about your own love life.'

‘I don't have a love life.'

‘Exactly. My life's work, wine and women. Your life's medicine, medicine and medicine—and worry. You know you don't need to. The resort will turn around.'

‘Maybe it will,' Jake agreed and then thought, Why
was
he worrying? The winery supported the lodge, he had no money problems, so why was he even here? And the farmhouse up on the ridge—Old Doc's Place, the locals called it—well, why was he quibbling about price? ‘I'll go check out the ridge tomorrow, put it on the market and then go home.'

‘Back to your medicine.'

‘It's what I do.'

‘It's what you are,' Rob said. ‘Why do you think I conned you into coming tonight? You need a life.'

‘I have a life.'

‘Right,' Rob drawled in a voice that said he didn't believe it at all. ‘Sure thing.'

CHAPTER TWO

S
HE
was losing the fight—and someone was banging on the front door. Her nurse's gaze shifted towards the entrance, her brows raised in enquiry.

‘Leave it,' Tori said tightly. ‘She's slipping.'

Up until now the koala under her hands had been responding well. Like so many animals, she'd been caught up in the wildfire, but she was one of the lucky ones, found by firefighters the day after the fire, brought into Tori's care and gradually rehabilitated.

Tori had worked hard with her, and up until now she'd thought she'd survive. But then a few days ago she'd found a tiny abscess in the scar tissue on her leg. Despite antibiotics and the best of care, it was spreading. It needed careful debridement under anaesthetic. That left a problem. With this shelter winding down, she no longer had full veterinary support.

If she took her down the mountain she could get another veterinarian to assist, but travel often took more of a toll on injured animals than the procedure itself. Thus she was working with Becky, a competent veterinary nurse who worked under instruction. It wasn't enough. She needed an expert, right here, right now, who could respond to minute-by-minute changes in the koala's condition.

She was working as fast as she could to get the edges of the abscess clean but she couldn't work fast enough. The little animal was slipping. To lose her after all this time… She was starting to feel sick.

‘Anyone there?' It was a deep masculine voice, calling from the hallway. Whoever had knocked had come right in.

The door to their improvised operating theatre opened. Tori glanced up, ready to yell at whoever it was to get out—and it was Jake. Her one-and-a-half-minute date.

Whatever. It could be the king himself and there was only one reaction. ‘Out,' she snapped, and Becky said, ‘I think she's stopped breathing.'

Her attention switched back to her koala. She could have wept. To lose her now…

‘Can I help?' Jake demanded.

She shook her head, hardly conscious that she was responding. She had to intubate. But if she left the wound… She couldn't do both jobs herself.

‘Unless you can intubate…' she whispered, hopeless. She shouldn't have tried. The oral conformation of koalas—small mouth, narrow dental arcade, a long, soft palate and a caudally placed glottal opening, all of these combined with a propensity to low blood oxygen saturation—made koala anaesthetics risky at the best of times. And without another vet…

‘I can intubate,' he snapped. ‘Keep working.'

‘You can?'

Jake was already at the side bench, staring down at equipment. ‘What size tube?'

‘Four millimetre,' she said automatically.

Another vet? Maybe he was, she thought, as he grabbed equipment and headed to the table. Whoever he was, he knew what he was doing.

The soft palate of the koalas obscures the epiglottis from
direct view, but Jake didn't hesitate. He'd found and was using silicone spray, snapping instructions at Becky to hand him equipment.

Tori was concentrating on applying pressure to the wound to prevent more blood loss. She was therefore able to watch in awed amazement as Jake manoeuvered the little animal into a sternal recumbency position, as he applied more spray—and as he slid the tube home.

It was like the Angel Gabriel had suddenly appeared from the heavens. Ask and ye shall receive. She'd barely been aware that she'd prayed.

No matter where he'd come from, no matter that she couldn't see his wings and he sounded autocratic and fierce rather than soft and halo-like, her one-and-a-half-minute date was definitely assuming angel-like status. He had oxygen flowing in what seemed seconds. The monitor by Tori's side showed a slight shift in the thin blue line—and then a major one.

She had life.

‘Heart rate's seventy beats a minute,' Jake snapped, adjusting the flow. ‘How does that compare to normal?'

Not a vet, then? Or not a vet who cared for koalas. Of course not.

‘Low, but a whole lot better than before you arrived,' she told him, but there was no time for questions. Stunned, she went back to what she was doing. She was incredibly grateful but now wasn't the time to show it. She had to get this wound debrided, then get it dressed so the anaesthetic could be reversed.

Koalas died under anaesthetic. This one wouldn't. Please…

As if in echo of her thoughts, Jake said, ‘She seems knocked around. Wouldn't euthanasia be the kindest option?' He'd had time now to take in the scar tissue, the signs of major trauma.

‘Says the man who just saved her,' Tori muttered. ‘Let's try to keep her alive until I finish. We can do the moral debate later.'

‘Right.'

There was silence while she worked on. Becky had faded into the background, assisting both of them, deeply relieved, Tori guessed, to be freed from a task she hated. There was so much they'd done in the past six months they'd all hated—including putting down more animals than she wanted to think about.

How to explain that after so much death, one life became disproportionately important. This little one she was working on didn't have a name. Or…she shouldn't give her one. She should not be emotionally involved.

Only, of course, she
was
emotionally involved. Koala Number Thirty-seven—the thirty-seventh koala she'd treated since the fire—belonged in the wild, and Tori was determined to get her back there. She would win this last battle. She must.

Thanks to this man, she just might.

Who was he?

She was finishing now, applying dressings, having enough time again to pay attention to the man at the head of the table. He was watching the monitors like a hawk, his face fierce, absorbed, totally committed to what he was doing.

Inserting an endotracheal tube in a koala was always dangerous territory. If you went too deep there was a major risk of traumatising the trachea and extending the tube into bronchus. She hadn't told him that. There hadn't been time, but he'd seemed to know it instinctively. How?

Maybe he was a vet, or maybe he did paediatric anaesthesia. Sometimes she thought paediatrics and veterinary science were inexplicably linked. Varying weights and sizes. The inability of the patient to explain where the pain was.

Who was he?

She was finished. Another check of the monitors. Pulse rate eighty. Blood oxygen saturation ninety percent.

Koala Thirty-seven just might live.

She couldn't help herself; she put her hand on the soft fur of the little koala's face and bestowed a silent blessing.

‘You keep on living,' she whispered. ‘You've come so far. You will make it.'

‘She might well,' Jake said. He was working surely and confidently, removing the endotracheal tube with care and watching with satisfaction as the little animal settled back into normal breathing pattern. ‘So who's going to pay her bill?'

‘Now there's a question,' she murmured. She was carrying the little animal carefully back to her cage in the corner. She wasn't out of the woods yet—she knew that. Any procedure took it out of these wild animals, but at least there was hope.

She'd done all she could, she thought, arranging the IV line the little animal needed to provide fluids until she started eating again. Then she was finished.

Really finished, she thought suddenly. There was now nothing left to do.

The sensation was strange. For the six months since the fires Tori had worked nonstop. This place had been a refuge for injured wildlife from all over the mountain. They'd had up to fifty volunteers at one time, with Tori supervising the care of as many as three hundred animals. Kangaroos, wallabies, possums, cockatoos, koalas—so many koalas. So many battles. So much loss.

It was over. Those who could be saved had been saved, and were being re-introduced in the wild. The spring rains had come, the bush was regenerating; there was food and water out there for animals to re-establish territories.

This little koala was the last of her responsibilities. She glanced down at her and, as she did, she felt a wave of the deep grief that was always with her. All those she'd failed…

‘Is it okay if I go now?' Becky said, glancing uncertainly at Jake. ‘It's just…Ben's picking me up. He'll be waiting.'

‘Sure, Becky. Thanks for your help.'

‘You won't need me again, will you?'

‘No.' She glanced back at the koala. If there was a need for more surgery, she knew what her decision would have to be, and for that she wouldn't need Becky.

‘See you, then,' Becky said. ‘I'm out of here. Hooray for the city—I'm so over this place.' And with another curious glance at Jake she disappeared, closing the door behind her.

Leaving Tori with Jake.

‘I… Thank you,' she managed. He looked pretty much like he had the night before. Slightly more casual. Faded jeans and a white, open-necked shirt. Elastic-sided boots. He looked like a local, she thought, which was at odds with his American accent.

‘My pleasure,' he said, and sounded like he meant it. ‘I didn't realise last night that you were a vet.'

‘I didn't know you were.'

‘I'm not.'

‘So inserting endotracheal tubes in koalas is just a splinter skill for, say, a television repairman?'

‘I'm an anaesthetist. Jake Hunter.'

‘An anaesthetist,' Tori said blankly. ‘In Combadeen? You have to be kidding.'

‘I'm not kidding. I'm staying at Manwillinbah Lodge.'

‘Rob Winston's place?' She was struggling now with the connection. What had Jake said last night? ‘I own properties here, in the valley and up on the ridge.' And Rob. Distracted, she thought of the pleasant young man who'd flirted outrageously last night. She remembered him arriving with this man. With Jake. ‘Was Rob Winston the ninth date last night?' she demanded.

‘That was Rob.'

‘He was nice. Fun.'

‘Meaning, I wasn't?'

‘I didn't say that. But I wish I'd known who he was,' she said ruefully. ‘He should have told me. I need to thank him, and not only for letting us use this place. I had a friend who went to Manwillinbah Lodge when she was released from hospital two months ago. It wasn't right for her. She needed ongoing medical treatment, but that wasn't Rob's fault, and she said he tried so hard to give her time out. So many people around here need that.' She frowned, figuring more things out. ‘So is this…is this your farm?'

‘It is.'

‘Oh, my…'

Uh-oh.

Last night she'd walked out on her landlord. On the guy who'd made this whole hospital possible. ‘You've been giving this place to us rent free and I didn't even know who you were.' It was practically a wail and he grinned.

‘This is a whole new conversation topic. If we'd known last night we could have used our whole five minutes.'

She managed a smile—just. How embarrassing. And how to retrieve the situation?

She should shake his hand. Or, um, not. She glanced down at her gloves and decided gratitude needed to wait. Plus she needed to catch her breath. Breath seemed in remarkably short supply.

‘Could you excuse me for a moment?' she muttered. ‘I need to wash.' And she disappeared—she almost ran—leaving him alone with Koala Number Thirty-seven.

 

He was in the front room of what seemed to have been a grand old farmhouse. It still was, somewhere under the litter of what looked to be an animal hospital.

When the fires had ripped through here, almost fifty
percent of properties on the ridge had been destroyed. The loss of life and property had been so massive there'd been international television coverage. Horrified, he'd contacted Rob to see how he could help.

‘The lodge and the winery are okay,' Rob told him. ‘We're almost ten miles from where the fire front turned back on itself, so apart from smoke on the grapes there's little damage. I've been asked if we can provide emergency accommodation, if it's okay with you. And the farmhouse on the ridge… There's an animal-welfare place wanting headquarters. When the wind shifted, pushing the fire back on itself, your place was spared. Just. There's still feed around it, and the house itself is basically okay, but your tenants are moving off the mountain. They can't cope with the mess and the smell, and they're going to her mother's. Can the animal-welfare people use it for six months or so?'

‘Of course,' he'd said, so it was now a hospital—of sorts.

But as he looked around he thought he wouldn't have minded seeing it as it once was—a gracious family home. And he wouldn't have minded seeing the bushland around here as it was either. The fire had burned to within fifty yards of the house and then turned. Beyond that demarcation, the bush was black and skeletal. Green tinges were showing through the ash now, alleviating the blackness, but six months ago it must have been a nightmare.

He stared out the window until Tori bustled back into the room, carrying a bucket of steaming, soapy water. She looked like a woman who didn't stay still for long, he thought. Busy. Clinically efficient. Cute?

Definitely still cute. She was in ancient jeans, an even more ancient T-shirt and a white clinical coat with a torn pocket. Her curls were again scraped back into a ponytail. Last night she'd pulled them back with a ribbon. Today they were tied with an elastic band. She looked…workmanlike.

But workmanlike or not, he thought, nothing could hide her inherent sexiness. Why had he wasted time last night thinking she was dowdy?

When she left the room she'd looked confused. Now, however, she looked relieved, as if she'd spent her bucket-filling time figuring things out as well.

‘I know now why you're here,' she told him. ‘You're Old Doc's son. Jake. I loved your father.' She hesitated as if she wanted to say something else, but then thought better of it.

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