Reunited With Her Surgeon Prince. Marion Lennox

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Reunited With Her Surgeon Prince - Marion Lennox


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spleen. I’ll need to go in to check for sure but her blood pressure’s dropping fast and the symptoms fit.’

      She swore. ‘You can do it?’

      ‘I can.’ His gaze swept the room, seeing the mass of trouble she was facing. ‘You have enough on your hands.’ More than enough.

      ‘I can’t help,’ she said.

      ‘I know.’

      ‘Then do it. Chris, give him all the help he needs.’

      And Chris was already wheeling Lisa’s trolley through the doors marked Theatre.

      He had no choice but to follow.

      * * *

      The cavalry arrived two hours later. Helicopters with skilled paramedics. The doctor from the neighbouring town. Everyone and everything she needed was suddenly there, and Ellie was able to step back and catch her breath.

      The door to Theatre was still closed. There hadn’t been time to investigate. She’d had to trust that Marc knew what he was doing.

      Now, though, as paramedics fired questions at her, as each of these kids got the attention they needed, she was able to think of what—and who—was behind those doors.

      ‘I have a kid with a shattered elbow and possible ruptured spleen,’ she told the senior paramedic. ‘A visiting surgeon was on hand. He’s in Theatre now.’

      ‘Here?’ the guy said incredulously, and Ellie thought again of the mixed emotions his arrival meant for her.

      Marc was behind those doors. Her old life was a life of secrets. A life that now had to be faced.

      She took a deep breath and opened the door to Theatre.

      Chris was at the head of the table. She smiled and gave Ellie a swift thumbs-up, then went back to monitor-gazing.

      Chris was magnificent, Ellie thought, not for the first time. Ellie had needed to talk her charge nurse through an anaesthetic more times than she could count and she’d coped magnificently every time. She should be a doctor herself. She practically was.

      But her attention wasn’t on Chris.

      Masked and gowned, Marc could be any surgeon in any theatre anywhere in the world. He was totally focused on the job at hand.

      ‘Nearly closed,’ he growled and his voice was a shock all by itself.

      She’d never thought she’d hear it again.

      ‘What’s happening?’ she asked.

      ‘We’ve stabilised the elbow, removing bone fragments that could shift. The circulation should hold until she receives specialist orthopaedic attention. The worst risk was the spleen. It was a mess. There was no choice but removal. Sorry, Ellie, to leave you with everything else. I had Chris slip out and tell Joe to call if there was any priority you couldn’t cope with, but then we went for it.’

      ‘He’s done the whole thing,’ Chris breathed. ‘He’s removed the spleen but he’s done so much more. He’s stopped the internal bleeding completely. Blood pressure’s already rising. And the elbow! Look at the X-rays, Ellie. To get the circulation back. He’s saved her life and he’s saved her arm. Oh, Ellie, I can’t tell you...’

      ‘Thanks to Chris,’ Marc growled, still focused. ‘You have a gem of a nurse, Ellie.’

      ‘Don’t I know it,’ she said a trifle unsteadily.

      This was surgery way beyond her field of expertise. Maybe she could have diagnosed and removed the spleen but the pneumothorax had been just as urgent. She would have lost one of the two kids, and how appalling a choice would that have been? But the elbow... She glanced at the X-ray, saw the mess, and knew without a doubt that Lisa would be facing amputation if Marc hadn’t been here.

      Marc’s battlefield training had come to the fore. She never could have done this alone.

      A bullet had been dodged. Or multiple bullets. She wanted to sit down. Badly.

      It wasn’t going to happen.

      ‘I’m just applying an external fixator and then I’m done,’ Marc told her. ‘Ten minutes? I gather the air ambulance is here. I’d like Lisa transferred to Sydney as soon as possible. The elbow will need attention from a specialist. I’m not an orthopod.’

      ‘You could have fooled me,’ Chris muttered, and Ellie looked at Marc and thought, What good fairy brought you here today?

      And then she thought of the repercussions of him being here and she stopped thinking of good fairies.

      She didn’t have time to go there. She had to face the relatives.

      But there was no longer any urgency. She had room for thought.

      Marc was here.

      Good fairies? She didn’t think so.

      * * *

      The first chopper took the most seriously injured, including Lisa, but the boy with the pneumothorax left by road. Air travel wasn’t recommended when lungs were compromised. The road ambulance also took the driver of one of the cars and his girlfriend. The pair had suffered lacerations; the girl had a minor fracture. They could have stayed, but feelings were running high in the town and a driver with only minor injuries could well turn into a scapegoat.

      The second chopper, a big one, had places to spare and the battered train crew chose to leave on it. They, too, could have been cared for here, but their homes, their families, were in Sydney. Borrawong Hospital was suddenly almost deserted.

      But Marc was still inside and, as Ellie watched the second chopper disappear, that fact seemed more terrifying than a room full of casualties.

      ‘You can get through this.’ She said it to herself, but she was suddenly thinking of all the times she’d said it before. During the trauma of being the kid of a defiant, erratic single mum with cystic fibrosis. The roller coaster of a childhood living with her mother’s illness. The relief of her mother’s first lung transplant and then the despair when it had failed.

      And then the moment the doors had closed at Sydney Airport and Marc was gone for ever. The moment she’d looked at the lines on the pregnancy testing kit. The moment she’d seen her baby’s ultrasound.

      The day she’d made the decision to keep her baby, to stay here, to cope alone.

      But it was no use thinking of that now.

      The sun was sinking behind the town’s wheat silos, casting shadows that almost reached the hospital. Somewhere a dog was barking. This was Borrawong’s nightlife. Marc was about to see Borrawong at its best.

      Why was he here?

      ‘You can get through this,’ she said again but heaven only knew the effort it cost her to turn and re-enter the hospital.

      Felix was still in the waiting room. He’d pushed his wheelchair behind the reception desk and was engrossed in a computer game but he looked up as she entered and grinned.

      ‘Got rid of them all?’

      ‘We have. Felix, you were wonderful.’

      ‘I know,’ he said, his grin broadening. ‘I kept ’em all out. Except the doctor with the funny accent. He’s still in there now, helping clean up. Joe says if we have a doctor who cleans we should lock the doors and keep him. He said he’s your friend?’

      ‘I...yes. He’s someone I knew a long time ago. When I was at university.’

      And Felix’s face changed.

      Uh oh.

      Felix was smart. He was also right at the age where he was asking questions, and the questions had been getting harder.

      ‘So you met my dad when you were at uni. Why won’t you tell me his name? The kids at school reckon he must have been married


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