They shared a smile, and Beth felt herself falling further into what could only be a disastrous attraction. Damn, why did she have to find him so attractive? And it wasn’t just a physical thing, that was what was so dangerous. Sex appeal she could put in its proper place, but this was so much more complex, so much more insidious.
She suddenly began to wonder if sitting down at the table every evening with him and his children would actually be less harmful than starving!
Claire was on the hall floor when they went in, tangled in the phone flex as usual, lying on her back with her legs up the wall and giggling.
She looked the picture of health and fitness, and Gideon told her to get off the phone and take her feet off the wallpaper.
Beth followed him through to the kitchen, noting his scowl. ‘Um—I did a casserole—the children have all had theirs.’
He looked blankly at her, then sighed. ‘Sorry, I was miles away. That girl ——’
‘—is just like any other teenager. She’s fine.’
‘That,’ he growled, ‘is precisely my point. There’s nothing at all wrong with the little skiver. I’m starving.’
Beth stifled a grin. ‘Where do you want to eat?’
‘In here,’ he told her, and opening a cupboard, he retrieved a couple of wine glases. ‘Join me?’
Oh—thanks, yes, I will.’
While she took the casserole out of the oven and dished up, he opened a bottle and poured the wine, then handed her a glass. He raised his to her.
‘Here’s celebrating my cleverness for finding such a treasure.’
She flushed and laughed uncomfortably. ‘You haven’t tried the food yet.’
‘It smells wonderful.’ His eyes were still locked with hers, and her breath lodged in her throat. She looked quickly away.
‘Um—let’s eat.’
‘Good idea,’ he said easily, and she found he was holding the chair for her in a display of old-fashioned good manners she had forgotten existed.
As he moved away his hand brushed her shoulder, and fire shot down her arm and across her back, leaving a tingling in its wake.
This was going to be next to impossible.
Beth dropped with a sigh on to the sofa in her flat, eased off her shoes and tucked her feet under her bottom. Her first full, proper week both at the surgery and as Gideon’s housekeeper was over.
And she found, to her surprise, that far from being a trial it had been a pleasure. Everyone at the surgery, from Andrew Jones and Judith Wight, Gideon’s partners, Julie Rudd the other nurse, Molly the receptionist and Jean Rivers the practice manager, to Mrs Horrell, the cleaner, had all been universally welcoming and friendly, and as for her other job—well!
Sophie was an angel—mostly—and Claire and Will were helpful to a point. She found the intimacy of caring for Gideon’s house and family strange at first, but she soon got into the swing of it.
There was no cleaning to do, as such, because Mrs Horrell who did the surgery also did the house, and so all that Beth had to manage was the laundry, the cooking and Sophie after school.
Gideon wouldn’t let her clear up after the meal, so she made sure as much as possible was loaded into the dishwasher or dealt with before he got home.
That, of course, was when her problems really started, she thought now, snuggling deeper into the sofa.
Gideon.
Tall, strong, shouldering all his responsibilities without a murmur, so grateful for her help.
She wondered how grateful he would be if he could see into her mind as she ironed his shirts and folded his underwear.
It was just playing house, helping to pass the time, she told herself, but it was more insidious than that.
She was playing his wife, and she knew it. Every time she took Sophie in her arms for a hug, or hung a shirt up in the wardrobe in his bedroom, she allowed herself to imagine that any minute he would come home and sweep her into his arms and kiss her.
That was where the danger lay. Not in anything Gideon himself had done, but in what she had allowed herself to dream.
That evening he had finished surgery earlier than usual, and Beth was in his bedroom hanging shirts in the wardrobe when he arrived.
Well, she wasn’t really hanging shirts up, rather standing with them in her arms, gazing at the huge mahogany four-poster that dominated his bedroom and trying to imagine how it would feel to lie there in his arms.
When he walked in, her eyes turned to him and she froze. He had already wrenched off his tie and undone the buttons on his shirt, and she stood transfixed, mesmerised by the broad expanse of hair-strewn chest exposed to her startled gaze.
‘Sorry—I was putting away your washing,’ she said weakly, and then lifted her eyes to his.
Something deep and dark shifted in them, and then he reached out his hand. ‘Is that a clean shirt?’
Wordlessly she gave it to him and he laid it on the bed, stripping off the one he was wearing and tossing it at the laundry basket. He reached for his zip and she swallowed.
‘Give me five minutes in the shower, could you, and I’ll be down for supper.’
She mumbled something incoherent and left, picking up his shirt as she went.
Mistake. It was still warm from his body, the subtle scent of his skin lingering on the fine cotton, and she buried her nose in it and breathed deeply.
Desire, hot and sharp, darted through her leaving her weak and trembling.
Angry with herself for such foolishness, she ran downstairs, threw the shirt into the washing machine ready for the next load and got the plates out, banging them on the table.
Idiot. What did she think she was doing? He was oblivious to her—quite oblivious. She meant nothing to him except in her capacity as nurse and housekeeper.
Supper was the usual chaotic event, and Beth’s quietness went unremarked. In fact had she been able to get a word in edgeways it would have been more remarkable.
As she watched Gideon in action with his children, the ache round her heart intensified. If only, she thought, but she had given up hoping long ago. Happiness would never come her way. She had always been on the outside looking in, from her childhood onwards. She had never belonged, never been wanted for herself.
Once she had thought she was truly loved, but it had been a foolish dream, and she should know better now than to indulge those dreams.
Dreams, after all, like hope, were easily shattered.
She washed up her cup and made her way to bed, snuggling under the quilt and blocking out all thoughts of Gideon. She thought instead of her job, of the people she had met and the lovely town which had made her so welcome.
Gradually she relaxed into sleep, but the dreams came then, dreams of her and Gideon and a huge old bed, of murmured sighs and soft caresses, of lightning heat and tender cries of love…
Gideon lay staring at the ceiling. Nothing he did would banish her. Even his shirt when he had taken it from her earlier held the lingering trace of her scent where she had held it against those small, soft breasts.
His body tautened, desire stabbing him, and he rolled on to his front, burying his face in a pillow.
Damn her. No, damn himself. She had done nothing. She was sweet and innocent, her face transparent.
The hunger he had seen on it was echoed now in his body, stalking his loins, making him ache for the release only Beth could give him.
Except she couldn’t, because he wouldn’t let her. He couldn’t. Damn it, she was nearer to Will’s age than his. What would she want with him?
And besides, the whole idea was fruitless. Beth was a forever person, a happy-ever-after and roses-round-the-door sort of girl. There was neither time nor emotion left in his life for the sort of loving she deserved.
Try telling his body that.
With a ragged groan he thumped the pillow and turned on to his side and made an effort to relax.
Slowly sleep came, but with it dreams—dreams of Beth, her slender limbs entwined around him, her mouth soft and warm against his skin, her eyes luminous with love.
He woke abruptly, his heart pounding, his body screaming for release. Unable to sleep, unable to tolerate the frustration and unwilling to examine the wash of loneliness that had hit him as he realised he was alone, he threw off the bedclothes, dragged on his clothes and went down to the study.
If he was going to be awake, he might as well be doing something useful.
CHAPTER THREE
MABEL ROBINSON came back on Monday to have her ulcer dressing changed. She had been instructed to return for a new dressing when the old one became transparent, and had phoned in the morning to ask if she could come in.
She had asked for Beth by name, and the feeling of pride and satisfaction that gave Beth was out of all proportion to the scale of the request.
She went into the waiting-room and smiled at her patient.
‘Would you like to come through now, Mrs Robinson?’
The elderly lady eased herself to her feet and shuffled across the room to Beth, a smile flickering in her rheumy eyes.
‘Morning, dear. Lovely day today.’
‘Isn’t it. How’s the leg been?’
‘Oh, well, you know, I think maybe it’s a little better.’
Beth opened the door of her surgery and showed Mrs Robinson in, helping her into the chair.
‘There, now, let’s have a look, shall we?’
She peeled down the stocking and eased off the dressing, then washed her hands and opened the saline pack. After she had carefully cleaned the ulcer, she sat back on her heels and studied it.
Yes, it was definitely better. The necrotic edges had been debrided by the action of the paste, and the wound was considerably cleaner than before.
Oh, it looks quite red!’ Mrs Robinson said warily, peering at the ulcer.
‘That’s because all the dead tissue has been absorbed by the paste and it’s cleaned the skin up. It should heal much better now.’
She carefully dried the skin around the edges of the wound, filled the deeper pits with paste and firmly smoothed a new dressing over the top.
‘There, that should do you until the middle of next week, I think. Keep an eye on it, though, and come back sooner if you’re worried or it’s uncomfy. OK?’
Mrs Robinson nodded, fastened her suspenders and got unsteadily to her feet,
‘Thank you, dear, that feels lovely,’ she said, and headed out of the door.
Good grief, Beth thought, I got away without a grilling on my relationship with Gideon!
She followed Mrs Robinson down the hall and was just about to open the waiting-room door when the woman craned her neck and looked up at her.
‘I gather you’ve taken Kay Archer’s job.’
Beth frowned in puzzlement. She thought the nurse had been called Stephanie.
‘At Dr Pendragon’s house,’ Mrs Robinson continued. ‘Mind you don’t work too hard, my dear—that’s a great big place to keep, and those children aren’t the easiest, for all they’re such lovely mites.’
The thought of Will being described as a lovely mite made Beth want to laugh. However, she concentrated on answering Mrs Robinson sensibly.
‘Don’t you worry about me—it’s a pleasure working there. I love the house, and the children are fun.’
Mrs Robinson eyed her thoughtfully, and Beth had a horrible sinking feeling that the old lady was a lot more astute than she appeared.
She gave a non-committal grunt, and Beth opened the door and watched her go. Would it be all round the little town by lunchtime that Beth Turner was in love with Gideon Pendragon?
The thought hit her with a jolt.
In love? Where had that come from?
Surely not…
The Stop Smoking clinic that evening was the first time she had seen Gideon since after supper on Friday. As she prepared the waiting-room she wondered how she would manage to face him in the light of her new discovery.
Did it show in her eyes? She checked quickly in the mirror on the wall by the door, and noticed nothing out of the ordinary. Her blue eyes looked—well, blue, really. Nothing striking, no lightning zig-zagging across them, no neons flashing or LED lights running round her lashes!
No, it was all hidden carefully inside, and that was the way it was going to stay.
She got out the patients’ cards, the leaflets and tipsheets on diversionary tactics, and a whole host of little toys and gimmicks—stress-balls, squidgy rubbery balls that could be squeezed and squashed almost beyond recognition; chewing-gum—not nicotine gum but the ordinary sort that would help by giving the mouth a task without sustaining the need for nicotine, because some supposed ex-smokers had been reported to be still using the nicotine replacements a year later.
She also set out some nicotine patches which although they were also tobacco replacements at least gave a smaller, more sustained dose of nicotine and removed the mouth and hands from the habit, so that the level of the drug and the activities of the body became unrelated, helping to break the habit. They were easier to give up, too.
As she was setting out the last of the things Gideon appeared at her side.
Of course none of it will work without a bit of self-control and will-power,’ he said, and tossed one of the stress-balls in the air. ‘I read of a GP in Essex who advocates juggling among other things—as he said, it’s difficult to smoke and keep three balls in the air at the same time!’
Beth chuckled, and watched as he attempted to juggle with the balls.
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