Read The Doctor's Proposal Online
Authors: Marion Lennox
Â
What followed was a nightmare.
The castle was built high above the road. Across the road was the cliff, and a worn track leading down to the beach. Kirsty could scramble down the cliff easily, but for Susie, who'd only just learned to balance herself on her crutches, it was almost impossible.
Almost. If there hadn't been a gun pointing at them it would indeed have been impossible, but he'd given them no choice. Get down to the beach under your own steam or die first.
He was mad enough to do it, Kirsty thought. He had some
slivers of rational thoughtâone being that it would be better if bodies were found without bullet-holesâbut little else. He was having trouble differentiating between Susie and Kirsty. Once he'd met Susie and she'd been like Kirsty. Now Kirsty was like Susie and Susie was differentâscarred and pregnant. His muddled mind wasn't too sure, but his crazed logic told him to kill them both.
So the gun pointed at them both. Kirsty struggled to hold her twin upright as they staggered slowly down the path, and she couldn't find a way out.
âHurry!' Kenneth screamed, but they could go no faster than a snail's pace and even Kenneth had to concede that hurrying was impossible.
Boris loped along beside them, ready for adventure. Kenneth ignored him. The dog was racing back up, over and over again, as if saying, Hurry, hurry, there's a great wet world down hereâbut Kirsty knew there was no such thing.
Would he kill them on the beach? He had some sort of plan.
How long would Jake take to get home? How long would it take him to know their absence wasn't innocent? He'd know after that barked command to stay inside and lock the doors that she and Susie wouldn't leave, and the cars were testament to that.
But he wouldn't think of the beach. He'd never believe Susie would get that far, and he'd waste valuable time searching the castle, the grounds, the bushland to the rearâ¦
âI can't,' Susie whimpered, and Kirsty's arm came round her, rock solid.
âYes, you can.'
âShut up,' Kenneth snapped.
âKenneth, you're ruining your life, doing this,' she murmured, trying to keep her voice measured, fighting to make him see logic. âYou'll never get away with killing us. Let us go and we'll forget this ever happened.'
âI killed Rory,' he told them, shoving Susie hard with the gun
so she fell against Kirsty and Kirsty had to fight to keep her upright. âYou think I'm going to kill my brother and then let some stupid kid take what belongs to me?'
âIt belongs to Angus,' she said. One of Susie's crutches had fallen aside. Kirsty was acting as her support on one side and Susie's sole attention was keeping her remaining crutch in place so she wouldn't crumple where she stood. Kirsty was aware that Susie was weeping, but she was weeping silently.
She wasn't fighting, Kirsty thought in despair. It was as if Susie had always known that something like this would happen. Once Rory had died, why go on herself?
She had to fight for them both.
Kenneth's gun jabbed Susie again. âFaster.'
How could she fight this? Should she drop Susie and launch herself at the gun?
What would James Bond do in a situation like this? she asked herself desperately, and then thought that James Bond didn't have a pregnant, crippled sister to protect as he coped with the bad guy.
If it had just been herâ¦
Even if it had just been her, she had no idea how to escape. How accurate was a gun like that? How fast would she have to run?
James Bond might have all the answers. She had none. All she could do was struggle to hold Susie up and pray.
Jake. Please, Jake.
Finally they reached the beach. They rounded the last rocky outcrop and Kirsty saw that Kenneth had been here before. This must have been what he'd done this morning. He'd come, he'd checked the castle, he'd hauled up his uncle's pumpkin in fury. Then he'd gone away and coldly found what he'd needed.
There were two boats in the cove. A motorboat was anchored a few feet from shore and a dilapidated wooden dinghy was hauled up on the sand. A towrope connected the two.
âGet into the dinghy,' Kenneth snapped. âNow.'
âWhat are you going to do?' If it was just her, she could run, she thought desperately. She could take her chances. Dodge or something. Not calmly do as he demanded.
But Susie was immobile, a target who could no more dodge bullets than fly.
âJust shut up and get in.'
They made it to the boat, with Kirsty half pulling Susie, half carrying her. The crutch was useless on the soft sand. Susie was clutching her sister, and Kirsty could feel her shaking.
And suddenly there was a part of Kirsty that stopped being terrified. Suddenly she was just plain angry. Coldly, calculatingly angry.
Would he take them out to sea and shoot them?
âYou know, bodies get washed up to shore,' she told him, making her voice flat and emotionless. âIf we're washed up with bullet-holes you'll still be in the frame for murder.'
âYou'll not get bullet-holes unless you ask for them,' he snarled. He was standing in the shallows, close to where the motorboat was moored. âGet into the dinghy.'
Kirsty looked at the scenario and knew what was happening. They'd get in the ancient dinghy, he'd get into the motor boat and he'd tow them out to sea. To what?
Where was Jake? Jake, hurry!
Susie was clutching the side of the dinghy. She fell to her knees and Kirsty dropped onto the sand beside her.
âWe have to get in,' she told her. âCome on. We can both swim. We'll take our chances.'
âHe'll kill us.'
âGet in,' Kenneth yelled, and Kirsty started to rise.
âWe're working on it.'
Boris was suddenly with them again. He'd been chasing a gull further down the beach but now he came flying along the sand, quivering his delight.
âGet the dog out of it,' Kenneth screamed, and levelled the gun at Boris.
âIf you kill the dog it'll still be evidence that you've hurt us,' Kirsty yelled, and the gun lowered.
âShove him away, then. I don't want him in the boat.'
âGo find Jake, Boris,' Kirsty saidâhopelessly. Stupid dog. She needed a Lassie. Lassie would have brought a whole army of rescue personnel by now, and she'd have had Kenneth handcuffed to her collar and helpless.
Lassie was away playing movie star. Boris was all she had.
Boris⦠Lassieâ¦
Her hand fell to the sand. There was a thin strand of dried seaweed lying beside her.
âGo home, Boris,' she said, and she pushed the dog away. Via her neck. Via her collar.
A seagull descended not twenty feet away and Boris was off again, barking wildly as he hared down the beach. The strand of seaweed was dangling from his collar. It stayed put as he ran.
It was all she could do, Kirsty thought bleakly. As a letter for help it lacked a certain
je ne sais quoi
but she had nothing else.
Please, don't let it fall out. Please, let Jake see it.
She could do no more. Two minutes later they were in the dinghy. Kenneth was in the motorboat. He'd towed the dinghy off the sand and they were heading for the open sea.
Â
âWhere are they?'
Jake reached the castle just as Margie and the twins returned, and they weren't out of the car before he barked the question. âKirsty and Susie. Where are they?'
âThey'll be out in the vegetable garden,' Margie said placidly. âPenelope, you carry the bag with the ice cream. Alice, you're in charge of the meat.'
âDaddy's frightened,' Alice said with perspicacity, but Jake wasn't listening. He was striding through the garden gate, wanting to see for himself.
They weren't in the vegetable garden.
They'd been here, though. He stared at Spike, with his high-
tech drip-stand and his IV drip. Despite his unease he felt his lips quirk with amusement. Kirsty was one amazing doctor, he thought. He looked at the neat bandage wrapping the needle to Spike's stem and thought, Wow.
She was no palliative-care physician. She brought patients back from the dead.
They'd be inside. They must be.
They weren't.
âNo one's home, Daddy,' Penelope told him as he burst through the kitchen door. âWe went to see if Susie wanted ice cream. Aren't they in the garden?'
âAre you worried about Kenneth?' Margie asked, her eyes clouding as she caught his fear. She was speaking lightly so as not to concern the girls, but Jake's daughters were bright.
âIs the nasty man here again?' Alice asked.
âI don't think so,' Jake said, but his hand was already reaching for his phone. He wanted the police. He wanted help. Now!
âHere's Boris,' Alice said as Boris raced through the open back door. âYuck. He's all wet.'
âAnd he's got stuff stuck in his collar,' Penelope said. âSeaweed.'
Â
Kenneth was crazy, but not stupid.
Once they were in the boat Kirsty had had a vague idea that they could jump out and swim. The day was hot and calm, and even if Susie couldn't swim far, she could float. If he simply dumped them at sea then they had a chance. But Kenneth had never intended that they simply be dumped. He was crazy but there still seemed logic in his plan.
He kept his gun trained on Susie. She was the one who couldn't move with speed, and he must have known instinctively that Kirsty would never leave her. He trained the gun on them until their boat was wrenched off the beach and the motorboat hit full throttle. Kirsty's small hope died. The water was
so still that even if they jumped, all he had to do was take pot shots at them until they were dead.
Maybe he knew where there were sharks, Kirsty thought, and the idea made her even colder, made her heart almost stop.
The old wooden boat was hardly seaworthy. It was taking in water but that was the least of her terrors. Susie was crouched in the bow and Kirsty had her arms around her, taking comfort as much as giving it.
âWhat'll he do?'
âI don't know,' Kirsty said.
And then she glanced ahead and suddenly she did know.
They were a mileâmaybe twoâoffshore. Here the smoothness of the sea was broken by a line of ragged rocks, seemingly emerging from the ocean floor. Eight or so rocks. A tiny reef. Like a row of vicious teeth, with a couple broken off.
Kenneth was heading straight towards it, faster and faster. He'd put his gun down, and in the full sunlight Kirsty saw the flash of a knife.
She knew what he intended.
He'd take them in so they were headed straight for the rocks and then he'd slice the towrope, Kirsty thought in horror. They'd continue so fast that their boat would splinter on the reef. And afterwardsâ¦
She never got to afterwards. She was hauling Susie away from the bow of the boat, screaming to her, hauling her to the side, to the lowest point.
âHe's going to smash us on the rocks,' she screamed. Dear Godâ¦
If they jumped now they'd still be in calm water, she thought. He'd still be able to get near them. Their only hope was in waiting.
And Susie knew. Her twin's hand held hers, steadying. When one twin was in danger, the other knew, and how much more so now when they were both in deadly peril.
Kenneth had turned away, watching the reef. He had to. He
needed to steer until he was almost on the rocks, waiting until the last possible moment so they had maximum velocityâ¦
Wait.
She didn't have to say it. They'd hauled themselves hard up on the side of the boat and for a sickening moment the boat lurched and Kirsty thought it might go over.
Too soon. Too soon.
Kenneth's boat was a hundred yards from the reef. Fifty. Thirty.
Now!
It happened so fast. The cable was sliced through, the boat lurched with their sideways motion, but kept going, kept goingâ¦and the women inside fell backwards out of the boat and slammed hard against the surface of the water.
T
HE
impact stunned Kirsty. There was a sharp, hot pain across her chest that threatened to overwhelm her as she sank. But Susie's hand was in hers. Susie was still with her and as she rose to the surface she felt Susie's grip tighten.
They'd waited almost too long. Almost. The boat's momentum had become their momentum, so they were in the wash of white water around the rocks. And there was a spray of wood around them. Splintering parts of the dinghy that had gone forward and smashed hard into the rocks. Without them.
They were safe?
Not yet.
Kenneth would still be concentrating on getting his boat clear, Kirsty thought in the vestige of brain she had left to think of things apart from breathing and staying afloat and ignoring the pain in her chest. He'd come so close that he'd have had to pull an almost one-eighty-degree turn to haul his boat away.
Susie was tugging her. Injured and pregnant as she was, Susie was rising to their need faster than Kirsty.
The waves were crashing against the rocks. This could be a maelstrom at times, but not today. Today the sea was kind. The waves weren't so great they couldn't fight them, and Susie's hand was hauling her further into the white water rather than away from it.
In the white water lay their only protection. Kenneth mustn't see them. Both of them knew that.
Their hope lay in him being too intent on hauling his boat away from the rocks to have seen what they'd done.
So they surfaced but they surfaced with fear. With their heads barely above the water, Susie made a tiny hand movement, a movement like that of a porpoise.
Maybe he'd picked the wrong twins for a watery death, Kirsty thought, fighting back pain, and for a moment she allowed herself a glimmer of hope. She and Susie had played water poloâhad lived for the game as youngsters. Susie's hand movement meant
Meet you under water in that direction.
A fast glance showed she was indicating the only gap in the line of rocks. The gap held a mass of white water but maybe it was possible. And if they could get throughâ¦
They couldn't do it with linked hands and both of them knew it. Susie's legs were so weak she'd be slow, but the pain in Kirsty's chest meant that she'd be limited as well. She'd cracked a rib, she thought, and gave herself a tiny test. Breathe in. Breathe out. It hurt but her breathing wasn't impeded.
Maybe she hadn't punctured a lung.
Susie's hand was squeezing hers and her eyes were questioning. She'd know Kirsty was in pain.
But they had no choice and both of them knew it.
Meet you through the rocks?
Go. Now.
And amazingly she did it. Kirsty used her feet, kicking hard under the surface of the water, duck-diving, ignoring the scream of protest in her chest.
Somehow she found the gap. The waves were crashing against her, pushing her sideways. She had to surface just for a moment to reorientate, to breathe, but the gap was right where she'd seen it and down she went againâand through.
Through.
She surfaced.
And then she had to wait. Only for seconds, but they stayed as some of the longest seconds in her life. Please, let Susie be safe. How could she get through? Her legs had no strength. She was eight months pregnant. Eight months pregnant! Pleaseâ¦
And then the water exploded beside her and her twin was with her, and she was even laughing!
This was the Susie who'd been at her side since childhood, a tomboy, a reckless, brave, laughing hothead who'd chosen landscape gardening as a profession because she'd loved playing in mud, and whose light had only been dimmed by Rory's death. Somehow in the past few days the old Susie had started to resurface, and now Kenneth's threats had lifted her right back to life.
âLet him get us now,' Susie said. She grabbed Kirsty's hands and they were treading water behind the rocks. Their heads were still barely above the water and there were waves breaking between them and the horizon. Even if Kenneth brought the boat round to their side of the rocks, he wouldn't be able see them. The only way he could was to bring his boat so far that he'd risk his own boat being smashed.
How long should they stay there?
How long would Kenneth wait? He'd see that their boat was a splintered mess. He would assume that they'd be injured at the very least, desperately injured and miles from the mainland.
He wouldn't wait long, Kirsty thought, and they could stay treading water.
âWhat's hurting?' Susie asked.
âI think I might have cracked a rib,' Kirsty told her. âNo drama. How about you?'
âI can tread water for hours.'
No, she couldn't, Kirsty thought. She wasn't as strong as she'd thought. The adrenalin was high now, but after an hour or so in the waterâ¦
Maybe they could get up onto one of the rocks. In a little while she'd check and see if it was possible.
But not yet. Not yet.
Jake, you have to find us.
Â
The beach was deserted, but there were signs that there'd been people there. There were footsteps in the sand. Three different ones. Two smallerâwomen's. One larger. And a dog's pawprints.
There was a deep indentation in the sand. A boat had been dragged up here and then dragged off again.
He had them in a boat, Jake thought, his heart almost stopping. Where�
âWe'll call in the chopper.' Fred Mackie, Dolphin Bay's only policeman, was looking as grim as Jake felt. âIf it's not being used, they can get here in less than half an hour.'
âHalf an hour.'
Fred's hand was on Jake's shoulder. âMeanwhile I'll have every boat out of harbour searching.'
âIf he kills them at seaâ¦'
âHe's mad but not that mad,' Fred said, uneasily, though, since Fred had known Kenneth as a boy. âI'll call in the psychiatric crisis assessment team.'
The phone sounded on Jake's belt. If he'd been sensible, Jake wouldn't have answered it, but he answered automatically.
âJake?'
It was Angus. What the hell?
âThey're saying he has the girls.' Angus sounded breathless and desperately worried.
âNow, don'tâ'
âDon't protect me,' Angus snapped. âThe nurses here have been doing that. I knew something was wrong. Word travels round this place faster than you'd believe, and the girl who came to take my obs looked sick. Wouldn't tell me why and that made me think it had to be Kenneth. So I rang Ben Boyce and he's with me now.'
âDon't worryâ'
âOf course I'm worrying,' he snarled. âI should have found the strength to say something this morning. I saw Spike and I knew it had to be him. The thing isâ¦I know where he might have taken them.'
âWhere?'
âHe's dead scared of guns,' Angus said. âFascinated by them but when they go off he turns to jelly. His father used to tease him with them, which helped a whole lot, I don't think. I'm telling you now that he might threaten them with a gun but I doubt he'd use it. But if he wanted to do mischiefâ¦'
âTell me.'
âThere's Rot-Tooth Rocks,' Angus said, and Jake thought he should stop him now because he could hear from Angus's whispered speech that the old man was pushing himself past the limit to impart what he felt he ought to. âA line of rocks about two miles out to sea. Nor-nor east. You look on a nautical mapâ¦'
âI'll find them,' Jake said quickly. âWhy do you think they're there?'
âKenneth killed a dog that way once,' Angus whispered. âRory's dog. That was why Rory left. Rory was staying with meâhim and his great black Lab that went everywhere with him. Kenneth came down and hated Rory being here. He took the Lab out to sea on a makeshift raft and dashed him against the rocks.'
âOh, God.'
âMove fast, Jake,' Angus whispered. âMove fast.'
Â
They had to get out of the water.
They'd crouched behind the rocks for fifteen minutes now, growing colder and more terrified by the minute. Kirsty's chest was hurting but that was the least of her worries. Susie was growing quieter. Finally she stopped talking altogether; she stopped responding to Kirsty's prompts. Kirsty thought,
Enough. It was a risk to leave their safe haven but a bigger risk to stay.
One of the rocks had a flattish surface, just clear of the water. If they could manageâ¦
âSusie, I'm climbing up. I'll tug you up after me.'
Susie didn't answer.
Kirsty hauled her round to face her. Susie's eyes were wide with pain, focused inward.
âWhat's wrong?'
âNothing.'
Yeah, right. But she had no choice.
At least the tide was going out. More of the rocks were being exposed, meaning once they got onto the rock they'd be out of the water for hours.
Long enough for Jake to find them?
As long as Kenneth had gone.
Pleaseâ¦
She grabbed Susie's hands and tugged her across the gap to the flat rock. If they had both been well, this would have been a cinch, but Susie's legs were so weak, and she was so bulky and Kirsty's chest hurtâ¦
She paused and did a bit more test breathing. If it hurt this much she surely must have punctured a lungâbut her breathing was OK.
âI'm being a wuss,' she whispered to Susie and Susie managed a reply.
âTwin wusses. Wusses who have to climb a rock.'
And somehow they did. Kirsty first, waiting for a wave to give her momentum, hauling herself up, trying not to cry out as her chest hit the flat, unforgiving surface. Trying not to stay flailing like a beached whale, trying to look up, searching the horizon, fearful that Kenneth would be justâ¦there.
The horizon was empty.
Problem number one despatched, she thought with a
twinge of triumph before the bigger twinge of her cracked rib washed back.
Ignore the rib. Now Susie.
And she did have to ignore the rib. The only way to get Susie onto the rock was to reach down with both hands and pull.
Where was her doctor's bag when she needed it? Her kingdom for morphine.
Morphine wasn't available. Forget morphine. She pulled and Susie tried to help and couldn't. Twice Kirsty hauled and she didn't think she could do it, but then a wave, bigger than the rest, washed in and lifted Susie's body momentarily. She slithered onto the rock so there were two beached whales now.
They lay, unmoving, not speaking, while Kirsty's pain subsided from agony to just plain awful.
But they'd done it. They were out of the water and Kenneth was gone.
Jake would come.
âWe're OK,' she whispered, and reached out to squeeze Susie's hand.
Susie squeezed back with such force that Kirsty yelped.
âWe now only have one problem,' Susie whispered at last.
âWhich is?' Kirsty wasn't so sure about not having punctured her lung now. She found she could scarcely breathe.
âI think I've just had my fourth contraction.'
Â
âHow fast can we make this thing go?'
Rod Hendry's fishing trawler was the only boat in harbour that was complete with skipper when Jake and Sgt Mackie arrived to commandeer anything that moved. The policeman was now barking orders into his radio while Jake stood by Rod at the tiller and pushed him to go faster.
âIf we go any faster, mate, the engine will go ahead without the boat,' Rod told him. âI'm doing faster'n safe as it is.' Then his eyes narrowed against the sun. âSpeaking of fastâ¦who the hell is that?'
Jake looked. He grabbed Rod's field glasses and focused. A speedboat. Powerful. A man crouched low in the back.
âThat'd be Scott Curry's speedboat,' Rod said. âI saw it go out earlier.' He frowned. âThat can't be right. Scott's in Queensland.'
âIt'll be Kenneth,' Jake said flatly. The speedboat was altering course now, moving away from the fishing boat rather than closer to it. âFred!' he yelled to the policeman, and Fred gazed through the glasses as Jake explained.
âYou want me to chase him?' Rod asked, semi-hopeful, but they all knew chasing a speedboat with a fishing trawler was impossible.
âI'll contact base,' Fred said grimly. âHe's alone in the boat now. I'll have someone else pick him up. Meanwhileâ¦'
âWe get to the rocks,' Jake demanded. âGo!'
âIf he was towing a dinghy with a boat that powerfulâ¦' Fred said thoughtfully, but Jake cut him off before he could finish. They all knew what could have happened. What had probably already happened.
âI said I wouldn't date her,' Jake whispered, and Fred looked at his family's doctor in surprise.
âThat'd be a first,' he said, gently teasing. âYou wanting to date someone.'
âI don't want to date her,' Jake said desperately. âI want to marry her.'
Â
âTwo-inch dilatation. Susie, you're moving like a train. You have to slow down.'
âHow can I slow down?' Susie whispered desperately. âCross my legs? I don't think so. Ow!'
âPant through contractions,' Kirsty told her. âWhatever you do, don't push.'
First labours were supposed to be long, she thought desperately. But, then, Susie had already gone into premature labour once and it had been suppressed.
There was nothing here to suppress labour. She needed alcohol drips, sedation, quiet.
And if the baby was bornâ¦
They were wet and cold already. They had nothing to warm a premature baby.
It would hardly be prem. Susie was only three weeks before full term.
It couldn't come.
She hauled her soaking windcheater over her head and folded it so Susie had something approaching a pillow. Their rock was all of five feet long by three feet wide. It sloped, two feet above the water at one end, one foot at the other.
As a delivery room, it made a great rock.