Ben rubbed long fingers over his roughened jaw and lifted an eyebrow. 'Am I that bad?'
Sean looked him over. 'Let's just-say I can tell you've been in the wilds for the last year. You're what Ally would call rugged.' He stood up and walked towards the door. 'Do me a favour and lose the designer stubble and some of your hair before you start or the hospital management will be complaining.'
Irritated by what he saw as a complete irrelevance, Ben's face darkened. 'I thought you took me on for my medical skills, not my appearance.'
Sean held the door open for him to pass. 'I did. But the way you look at the moment you'll scare the patients.' He gave a wicked smile and locked the door behind them. 'Unless they're female. You'll also distract my nurses and they're too busy for that. I want their minds on work, not sex.'
Ben shot him an exasperated look. 'Why did I ever agree to help you out?'
Sean slapped him on the shoulder as they walked into the corridor. 'Because I'm your best mate and you'd never let me down?'
Ben shook his head. 'Because I'm an idiot.' He stopped dead and stared at his friend. 'I can't promise you that this will workâyou know that, don't you?'
Sean hesitated and then nodded reluctantly. 'Just promise me you'll give it a few months at least.'
A few months?
Ben felt sick at the thought. At the moment he doubted his ability to get through the next few minutes, let alone a few months.
He should never have taken the job.
CHAPTER ONE
IT WAS a filthy night and the river was flooded.
Ellie stopped the car and stared in dismay at the murky dark water swirling directly in her path, illuminated by the beam of her headlights. In the summer months the river flowed obediently under the road, but in the winter, particularly after torrential rain, it swelled and burst its banks, flooding the road and forcing drivers to make a long detour through another valley.
But she didn't have time for any sort of detour.
Lindsay was in labour. On her own and terrified in a farmhouse that was in the middle of nowhere.
Ellie flicked her windscreen wipers onto, double speed and weighed up her options.
Turn around and approach Lindsay's farm from the other side of the valley?
No. She dismissed the thought instantly. It would take too much time and time was the one thing she didn't have.
Which left only one other option.
She narrowed her eyes and stared through the darkness at the swirling water.
'Oh, for goodness' sake, Lindsay!' She glared at the surging river as if sheer will-power could make the waters part like the Red Sea. 'Why did you have to buy a house in such a remote place? What was wrong with a nice stone cottage in the middle of Ambleside?'
Apparently the midwife had been very relaxed and reassuring on the phone, reminding her that the baby wasn't due for another four weeks and that the tightenings that Lindsay was feeling were probably normal.
Ellie peered at the swirling water and hoped the midwife knew what she was talking about. If she was wrong, Ellie would have to deliver the baby by herself, a challenge which she didn't relish. She was an A and E nurse, not a midwife.
In fact, if it hadn't been for Lindsay's cry for help, Ellie would have gone back to work because you didn't need to be a genius to know that the A and E department was going to be packed with injuries on a night like this.
Opening the car door, she flinched as a gust of wind tore it out of her hand and the rain flung itself in her face like water from a bucket.
'Ugh...' Gasping and scrubbing the water away from her eyes with her hand, she forced the car door shut and picked her' way down to the edge of the water. Within minutes she was soaked, the pelting rain turning her long dark hair as sleek as an otter's, her dark lashes clogging together as she tried to see through the darkness.
How deep could it be?
She'd driven this way only the day before and the road had been clear. It had been raining for twenty-four hours but surely the water level couldn't have risen that fast?
The secret was to drive quickly and not hesitate.