Their Miracle Baby. Caroline Anderson

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Their Miracle Baby - Caroline  Anderson


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fall—and the cattle had been grazing down here around it. So he had to shift it now, before the end of the day, so he could let the cows back into the field in safety.

      He tried Joe again, but he wasn’t answering his mobile. Probably couldn’t hear it. Damn. And the dog was still begging for a game.

      ‘Brodie, give it up,’ he said crossly, and, picking up the chainsaw, he cut away a few more branches so he could roll the tree when it fell. But the dog was in the way, and he’d get her with the saw in a minute, so he put her in the cab and told her to stay, then went back to it.

      ‘Right, you stubborn bloody thing,’ he said, glaring at the tree, and touched the underside with the saw. It creaked, sagged a fraction.

      Better.

      He touched it again, but the tree was weaker than he’d thought, and the creaking was more ominous.

      Too ominous.

      He looked up, to where the fallen part of the tree was joined to the trunk on the other side of the river, and watched in horror as, almost in slow motion, the wood started to split away and flip up, freeing the hugely heavy upper section of the tree. It was going to fall, and he was right in its way.

      He didn’t have time to think. He didn’t have time to do anything but turn and run, throwing the saw aside, and as he turned, he heard a loud crack and a sound like thunder, then a branch whipped round and felled him at the same time as the trunk rolled down and came to rest across his legs.

      The pain was blinding, but the adrenalin was kicking in, his heart racing, and gradually the pain receded to a dull scream.

      He lay motionless, waiting, listening, but apart from Brodie’s frantic barking, there was silence. The tree had settled, and he could still feel his feet. And his legs. Hell, he could definitely feel his legs, especially the right one.

      Well, the ankle really. The left one was OK, and he could even move it a little. It was in a bit of a hollow, but the right—there was no way he could move that, and no way he was going to try. Just lying there was agony.

      So now what?

      He was lying there, contemplating his very limited options and trying not to retch with the pain, when he felt the vibration of his phone against his hip. Great. It might be Joe. He’d be able to get him out of this mess. He wriggled around a little, gasping at the pain in his ankle and his ribs, and the tree creaked again and shifted in a little gust of wind, sending pain stabbing through him.

      Hell! He’d thought it had settled! He tried again for the phone, and finally managed to get it out of his pocket. ‘One missed call,’ he read, and tapped the keys with a shaking thumb to bring up the number. Not Joe.

      Ben Carter.

      Well, it was a start. If that tree kept shifting, an emergency consultant might not be a bad man to have around. He called him back. ‘Ben? It’s Mike.’

      ‘Mike, hi. I was just calling to have that chat—is this a good time?’

      Mike gave a strangled laugh, his breath constricted by the branch over his back. ‘Um…I’ve had better. Bit…um… stuck at the moment.’

      ‘Oh, I’ll call you later—’

      ‘No! I mean—really stuck. I’m lying under a tree.’

      There was a pause. ‘As in lying under a tree on the grass, contemplating the meaning of life, or—?’

      ‘Lying under a fallen tree that I was cutting up,’ Mike finished for him. ‘Sort of literally stuck. And I think my leg might be broken, and the tree’s not stable.’

      Just to underline that fact, the tree groaned again, and he felt sweat break out all over him. ‘I’m down by the river—only a short way from you over the fields, but you’ll need help. I’m trying to get hold of Joe, but maybe we need the fire brigade—they’ve got a few strong lads who could help shift this thing.’

      ‘Tell me where to come, and I’ll get them on their way, too,’ Ben said, his voice all calm business, and Mike felt his confidence like a soothing hand.

      ‘Out of your drive, turn left, down the hill to the river, then there’s a track to the right. Follow it—shut the gates behind you—and you’ll find me there. You’ll see the pickup and hear the dog barking.’

      ‘Right. Are you bleeding?’

      He considered that for a second. ‘I don’t think so.’

      ‘OK. Stay still, don’t move and I’ll be with you.’

      ‘Like I can move,’ he said, but the line was dead, and he tried Joe again, getting him this time. Joe’s language was colourful, and he could hear the fear in his brother’s voice, but he’d know what to do and how to get him out, and he could use the chainsaw.

      They arrived simultaneously, Joe on the tractor, Ben in his BMW, grounding on the track, and Mike felt a stupid, stupid urge to cry with relief.

      ‘Nice one, guys,’ he said, cracking a grin, and Joe swore and knelt down beside him, reaching through the twigs covering him to squeeze his shoulder hard.

      ‘Stupid bastard. This tree’s huge, far too big to tackle alone—why didn’t you call me?’

      ‘I did. Several times. You weren’t answering.’

      Joe swore again. ‘Sorry, I was clearing the auger. Right, let’s have a look at this tree. If I could only get the tractor in here I could lift it off you with the forks, but there isn’t enough room. The other trees are too close.’

      ‘So what’s plan B?’

      Joe looked around. ‘I’m going to get this branch off you first, so you can breathe better. Then we can get a closer look.’

      ‘Great.’ Mike grunted. ‘Just make sure it’s not holding up the tree.’

      ‘It’s not. There’s a good-sized branch wedging it.’

      ‘Good. Cut this one off, then, because I really can’t breathe. The chainsaw’s about somewhere.’

      He got up, and Ben took his place, hands running confidently over Mike’s body. ‘Tell me what hurts.’

      ‘My leg? My pride?’

      ‘Idiot. Not your back? Only your legs?’

      ‘No, my back’s fine—well, in comparison to my legs. The right one, anyway—and, believe me, it’s enough,’ he said, fighting down bile and wondering how the hell Joe was going to get him out. The scream of the saw sounded, and the pressure on his back and ribs eased, but it didn’t take away the other pain.

      ‘What kind of pain is it?’ Ben was asking. ‘Sharp? Sickening? Dull? Raw? Tender?’

      ‘No. More—excruciatingly sharp. And sickening, yeah.’

      ‘Right. Sounds like a fracture.’

      ‘Feels like it, but I’m not an expert.’

      ‘Can you feel your foot?’

      He gave a choked laugh. ‘All too well.’

      ‘That’s good.’

      Good? Mike snorted and turned his face down, resting his head on the back of his hand and closing his eyes. He felt sick—sick and scared. If he’d died, what would have happened to Fran? Or the farm? Joe couldn’t cope alone, and his father was too old to want to start all over again. He’d just retired, handed over the reins to his sons and put his feet up.

      That damn tree had better not fall any further, he thought, and, craning his neck, he saw Joe shifting logs, making a pile under the trunk so it couldn’t roll any further and couldn’t sag any more.

      Or that was the theory, but it was so heavy it could probably shift the logs quite easily.

      Then he heard a fire


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