Grant Hardesty strode
into the clinic's waiting room. Empty, but a child's wail issued from
an exam room beyond the counter. He tossed his jacket onto a chair. Whether
he wanted it or not, his stint as a volunteer doctor at the isolated mountain
clinic was apparently starting right now.
The exam room door stood open. A kid of about nine or ten sat crying on
the table, while his mother stood next to him, wringing her hands. A woman
who must be the clinic's nurse struggled to pull the boy's hands away
from the cut on his face without knocking over the suture tray.
He gave a cursory knock on the door frame, barely breaking his stride.
"I'm Grant Hardesty. It looks as if you have a patient for me already."
He headed for the sink, folding back his sleeves with a nod to the nurse.
"I'll do the suturing. You settle him down."
The woman swung toward him, moving in front of the child protectively.
"What are you talking about? Who are you?"
Grant did a quick assessment. Jeans, boots, a flannel shirt over a white
tee. What had happened to lab coats and name badges? The woman had thick
glossy dark hair, short and straight, a pair of startled dark eyes, and
a stubborn chin. She did not look welcoming.
"I'm Dr. Hardesty," he repeated. He started to take her place
next to the patient, but she didn't move. "From Volunteer Doctors.
They must have informed you I was coming."
The surprise in her face told him the answer to that one. She hadn't expected
him. Some bureaucrat must have fouled up.
The woman's surprise was accompanied by something else. Before he could
analyze what, the kid wailed again, the mother echoing his cry.
"Look, we can do the welcome ceremony later." Unlikely. "Let's
get the patient taken care of first."
He didn't have to analyze her reaction to that suggestion. Anger and indignation
battled for supremacy.
"If you think I'll turn my patient over to you without knowing more
than that, you must be crazy." Western Maryland accents were softer,
lazier than Baltimorese, but hers had sharpened with anger.
The mother stifled a sob. "Maggie, if he's a doctor-"
"We don't know that." She darted an annoyed glance at the woman.
"Somebody walks in off the street and you want him to treat Tommy
without knowing a thing about him just because he claims to be a doctor?
I don't think so."
Maybe he should appreciate her caution, but he just wanted to cross off
one day from his sentence here. Grant yanked his hospital ID from his
pocket and tossed it to her. "Grant Hardesty, MD. Okay?"
She let go of the kid to catch it, and the boy made a determined lunge
to escape. Grant caught him, plopping him back on the table and getting
a kick in the stomach for his trouble.
He clenched his teeth to keep back a groan. "Satisfied? Let's get
this done. I repeat: you hold, I suture."
She frowned at his ID for another moment, then gave in with a reluctant
nod.
"Gloves are on the tray." She took the kid's hands. "Come
on, Tommy. The new doctor will take good care of you."
She probably didn't actually mean that reassurance, but at least she seemed
done arguing.
He snapped on the gloves and checked the tray. He'd dealt with antagonistic
medical personnel before. He could handle this one, even if she did dress
more like a female lumberjack than a nurse.
He sensed her gaze assessing his every move even as she talked to the
kid, distracting him while he cleaned up the boy's forehead. The cut was
nothing too drastic-no doubt she could have handled it herself, but that
was why he was here. Well, ostensibly, anyway.
He half-listened to her chiding the kid about crossing some creek on a
log. He'd committed himself to tending the medical needs of this western
Maryland mountain county for the next month. It wasn't what he'd intended
to do after completing his residency, but the eventual reward would be
worthwhile.
So here he was, lost in the wilderness until Christmas. He suppressed
the edge that always entered his mind at the thought of the holiday.
At least, this job would get him away from his mother's round of society
parties. That was something to appreciate, anyway.
The boy had stopped wiggling, listening intently as the nurse-what had
the mother called her? Maggie, that was it. As Maggie told him a story
about encountering a bear in the woods. Fanciful, but it kept him quiet.
"There you are." He stood back, pleased with the neat stitches.
He hadn't lost his touch. "The nurse will give you a sheet of follow-up
instructions."
He went to the sink to wash up. Before he treated any more patients, he'd
get a lab coat out of his bag. It didn't look as if he could count on
the free clinic to provide them.
He heard the soft murmur of the nurse's voice as she took them to the
outer office, explaining the instructions to the mother. Nurse Maggie
seemed to have all the kindness in the world for her patient. None, obviously,
for him.
Well, that was too bad. Presumably she was used to working with different
doctors, since they came in and out of this place through a revolving
door. She'd just have to adjust to his way of doing things.
If he stayed. The thought
that had recurred since he left Baltimore came again. He didn't have to
stay.
The outer door had closed. He went back to the reception area-pale green
walls that needed a new paint job, posters urging flu shots and well baby
checkups, a row of metal folding chairs. Maggie whatever-her-name-was
stood at the desk in the little cubbyhole behind the counter, frowning
down at an envelope in her hand.
"Let's start over again." He leaned against the doorjamb, giving
her what he hoped was a friendly smile. "I'm Grant Hardesty, volunteer
doctor of the month."
The woman's chocolate-colored eyes seemed made for smiling, but they held
a cool reserve when she looked at him. "I'm Maggie Davis. Permanent
nurse." She laid a faint stress on the word.
"Nice to meet you, Maggie." It hadn't been so far, but things
might improve. He slid his jacket back on.
She lifted the envelope she held. "Your paperwork arrived the same
day you did, Doctor. That's the way the mail usually functions up here
in the mountains. I didn't think they'd send us a new doctor until after
the holidays."
"You got lucky," he said lightly.
"Yes." She looked him over, seeming to estimate the cost of
his leather jacket and Italian loafers. "Now that you've seen what
Button Gap is like, do you still intend to stay?"
There was a challenge in the words that he didn't miss. For whatever reason,
Maggie Davis either didn't want him to stay or didn't think he would.
Or maybe both.
Well, she was wrong. With faint surprise, he realized that at some point
in the past half hour, he'd made a decision.
He lifted an eyebrow, smiling slightly. "Sorry to disappoint you,
Ms. Davis. I fully intend to stay."
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