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Unlocking The Ex-Army Doc's Heart
Unlocking The Ex-Army Doc's Heart
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Unlocking The Ex-Army Doc's Heart

It will take someone special…

…to thaw her frozen heart!

The Arctic Circle’s remote tranquility made it the perfect place for ex-army doc and former child star Annie Masters to open her clinic. But her cherished anonymity is ruined when celebrity surgeon Rafe Bradstone arrives in town! Seeing that she uses her work as a safe haven, dynamic Rafe seems determined to show her what she’s missing out on. And it’s working… She’s beginning to imagine a future—with him!

JULIETTE HYLAND began crafting heroes and heroines in high school. She lives in Ohio, USA, with her Prince Charming, who has patiently listened to many rants regarding characters failing to follow their outline. When not working on fun and flirty happily-ever-afters, Juliette can be found spending time with her beautiful daughters, giant dogs, or sewing uneven stitches with her sewing machine.

Unlocking the Ex-Army Doc’s Heart is Juliette Hyland’s debut title

Look out for more books from Juliette Hyland

Coming soon

Discover more at millsandboon.co.uk.

Unlocking the Ex-Army Doc’s Heart

Juliette Hyland


www.millsandboon.co.uk

ISBN: 978-0-008-90244-5

UNLOCKING THE EX-ARMY DOC’S HEART

© 2020 Juliette Hyland

Published in Great Britain 2020

by Mills & Boon, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF

All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, locations and incidents are purely fictional and bear no relationship to any real life individuals, living or dead, or to any actual places, business establishments, locations, events or incidents. Any resemblance is entirely coincidental.

By payment of the required fees, you are granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right and licence to download and install this e-book on your personal computer, tablet computer, smart phone or other electronic reading device only (each a “Licensed Device”) and to access, display and read the text of this e-book on-screen on your Licensed Device. Except to the extent any of these acts shall be permitted pursuant to any mandatory provision of applicable law but no further, no part of this e-book or its text or images may be reproduced, transmitted, distributed, translated, converted or adapted for use on another file format, communicated to the public, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of publisher.

® and ™ are trademarks owned and used by the trademark owner and/or its licensee. Trademarks marked with ® are registered with the United Kingdom Patent Office and/or the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market and in other countries.

www.millsandboon.co.uk

Note to Readers

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For my husband,

who always believed my stories

would land on readers’ bookshelves.

Contents

Cover

Back Cover Text

About the Author

Booklist

Title Page

Copyright

Note to Readers

Dedication

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

EPILOGUE

Extract

About the Publisher

CHAPTER ONE

DR. RAFE BRADSTONE shivered as he stepped to the door of the small plane. Pulling his scarf across his mouth, he bounced from foot to foot as he grabbed his duffel bag. The wind blasted his face as he stepped onto the Tarmac, and goose bumps rose across his body. The heavy jacket he’d acquired at the last minute in LA seemed pathetically inadequate. How did the residents of the Arctic get warm?

Stepping into the airport waiting area, Rafe sighed as warm air slid around him.

“Excuse me.” A woman with black curls pushed past him.

“Sorry, I didn’t mean to stop in front of the door.”

She didn’t hear him as she raced toward a pair of happy kids. The kids hopped around her, each trying to outshout the other as their father hugged her. The love pooling between the small family was evident—these children never had to fight for their mother’s attention.

Rafe’s stomach tightened and he forced his eyes away from the lovely scene. It had been over a year since he’d found his mother, and two hundred and sixty-one days since she’d ordered him off her porch. Rafe wanted to believe the pain of her abandonment would fade, but his heart was still raw.

The woman with dark curls placed one child on her hip and held the other’s hand as she walked out of the airport. That was the way it was supposed to be: a mother loved her children, wanted to be with them. Glaring at his hands, Rafe wondered why his mother didn’t react that way. What was wrong with him that his simple presence caused her pain rather than excitement?

His phone beeped. Burying the pain, he answered without looking at the caller ID. “Hello, Carrie.”

His agent didn’t waste words on a greeting. “Why are there social media posts of you in Alaska?”

Rafe started to roll his eyes but caught himself. Carrie was supposed to be interested in his professional life. It wasn’t her fault this opportunity for him to serve in Blue Ash, Alaska, conflicted with his television duties, or that witnessing a family hugging their mom had put him in such a bad mood.

Keeping his tone level, he leaned against the wall. “Because I ran into a few fans of The Dr. Dave Show. They wanted a selfie, and I couldn’t say no.”

That wasn’t true. He could have said no, but Rafe never wanted to. Whenever someone ran up to him, phone outstretched and excited, Rafe got to be a part of their life—to belong. It only lasted a moment, but he treasured each fan who wanted a memory with him. They never told him to go away.

Rafe had accepted the part-time host position on Dr. Dave, a medical talk show promoting healthy living techniques, hosted by a bevy of attractive practitioners, to help pay off his medical school debts. The legion of daytime television fans was just a great perk.

“You know that isn’t what I mean.” The sound of Carrie’s nails clicking on her desk echoed down the phone.

Chuckling, Rafe ignored her tone. “I told you I was volunteering at an outpost clinic in Northern Alaska for a few weeks.”

“I assumed you were joking.” Her screech tore through the speaker. “You’re Dave’s favorite substitute host, and you’re scheduled to be on during the live Thanksgiving special!”

“I know my schedule.”

His stomach hollowed, and a sigh escaped his lips. Volunteering for the Thanksgiving and Christmas episodes was supposed to make him forget there wasn’t a chair waiting for him at anyone’s table, though it never worked.

“Rafe! Are you even listening to me? This is serious.”

“You’re pretty hard to ignore.”

Taking a deep breath, he stared out the window, letting his eyes roam the frozen landscape. Trees coated with icicles hugged the side of the airport, dropping loose snow along the cars in the parking lot.

Rafe shivered; he didn’t belong in Alaska. In his experience winter meant a windbreaker or a light sweater, not parkas and boots. He might need to wear all his socks just to keep warm.

But his cold feet were tomorrow’s obstacle. Sliding down the wall, Rafe tried to get comfortable while he tackled his current problem. “I am a doctor first, Carrie. Besides, I owe Dr. Freson.”

Jenn had covered for him during his disastrous visit with his mom. She had never asked why he suddenly needed an extra two weeks of vacation, or why he’d come back with no fun stories or pictures. He owed her, and the possibility that Dave might need him wasn’t a good enough reason for Rafe to refuse to help a friend.

“Today is the thirtieth of September. I’ll be gone four weeks—six at the most. That puts me back in LA in plenty of time for Thanksgiving.”

“Dave is looking to fill Dr. Bloom’s spot at the end of the season, Rafe. That job should be yours. And rather than fighting for it you’ve disappeared.”

Drumming his fingers on his knee, Rafe rolled his neck. He wanted that position. It wasn’t the money or the fame. Rafe wanted Dave and the producers to choose him. For them to look at the other remarkable candidates and decide he was the best. Maybe that would quiet his mother’s voice telling him he wasn’t enough.

“There are other hosts; I need to do this.”

Rafe frowned as Carrie sucked in a breath on the other end of the call.

“Rafe…” Carrie’s voice shifted to the tone she used when letting her clients know they hadn’t got a part. “Do you want me to issue a statement to the press? It isn’t fair that the tabloids are accusing you of infidelity. Your reputation shouldn’t be tarnished since Vanessa was the cheater.”

He didn’t want to discuss this topic either, but it was safer than worrying about Dave’s penchant for firing hosts.

“Vanessa didn’t cheat on me.” The lie slid through Rafe’s lips.

He’d met the movie star on the set of Dr. Dave six months ago. The paparazzi had loved getting pictures of the starlet and “her” doctor. She’d hidden her affair with another man—not that it had been hard to do. Their hectic schedules had resulted in more canceled plans than dates, but he’d assumed they were fine. She’d ended it over the phone while she giggled with her co-star and lover.

He hadn’t thought they needed to issue a public statement announcing their breakup. Vanessa had insisted. It had come as a nasty surprise when the tabloids had run a picture of him walking a patient to her car along with Vanessa’s publicity statement saying that they had parted ways.

Seeing his name trending with “cheating” headlines had cut deeply. He’d bought every trashy magazine in the corner store by his apartment so he didn’t have to see it. Rafe had always been faithful—always.

Vanessa could have corrected the assumption that he had cheated on her, accepted responsibility. He’d reached out to her a few times—unsuccessfully. If she hadn’t corrected the story by now, she wasn’t going to.

“My agent likes to remind me there’s no such thing as bad press.” Rafe blew onto his fingers.

Carrie clicked her tongue… “It does keep your name in the papers. Dave will like that.”

Rafe pinched his nose. He wanted Dave to like his presence on set, his interview style, his high ratings—not his ability to land in the tabloids. Still, if that was what it took to land the gig, Rafe would accept the tabloid smear—even if he hated their falsehoods.

“I’ll see you in a month.”

Carrie’s sighed. “A month is a long time in this town.”

“And yet it’s still only thirty days.”

Static rose on the line, and Rafe shook his head. His agent wasn’t great at goodbyes.

He smiled as a plump middle-aged woman rushed toward him. She danced on her toes while she waited for him to stand.

“Dr. Bradstone! It is you! I love The Dr. Dave Show. You should be on all the time. Your interviews are always the best. Better than Dave’s! Can I get a picture with you?”

“Of course.”

His soul felt a touch lighter as she slid her arm around his waist and his loneliness disappeared as she raised her cellphone. He owed this brief window of happiness to The Dr. Dave Show. Rafe was determined to get that fulltime host position and all the acceptance that came with it.

Patches of pink highlighted her cheeks as the woman stepped back. “Thank you.” Pushing a strand of salt-and-pepper hair from her face, she scrunched her nose. “I’m Helen Henkle and this is my husband, Jack.” She nodded toward a reed-thin man striding toward them. “We’re your ride to Blue Ash.”

Jack barely glanced at Rafe as he huffed, “You’re going to need better shoes if you want to keep all of your appendages.”

Variations on this theme had peppered Rafe’s conversations since he’d crossed the Alaskan border yesterday. The tingle of cold in his toes made it seem more dire now that he was in the Arctic Circle.

Staring at his shoes, Rafe moved his digits. “We don’t have much need for cold weather gear in Los Angeles.”

“Well, up here it can mean the difference between ten toes or two. Don’t want to explain to your grandchildren that you sacrificed a few toes rather than wear sensible boots.”

Helen slapped her husband on the shoulder before offering Rafe a smile. “A man can get around on eight toes.” Ignoring her husband’s frown, Helen waved her hand toward Jack’s feet. “It’ll be a good way to ensure your children or grandchildren always wear their boots.”

A flash of pain echoed across his belly as Rafe grabbed his bag and followed them onto the Tarmac. It didn’t matter how many toes he kept, there were going to be no grandchildren to look at his feet. His family tree didn’t have a great track record as parents, and Rafe didn’t plan to extend that legacy.

Helen giggled as she slid into the seat next to him in Jack’s tiny plane. “A real celebrity in Blue Ash. Well, if you don’t count—” Helen coughed and smiled at her husband.

“Dr. A is expecting us. If you and the Playboy Doctor are ready, we’ll get going.”

Playboy Doctor… That tagline had been assigned to him because it sold magazines and received website clicks, not because it was true.

“That isn’t a word I’d use to describe myself.” The defense slid from Rafe’s lips before he could stop it. He didn’t owe these strangers, or anyone else, an explanation.

“Of course.” The words were even, but the man’s lip twitched before he let his eyes slide over Rafe.

Rafe shifted, hating the ball of tension pooling in his belly. He’d been weighed and found lacking. Again… It shouldn’t matter. Rafe didn’t know Jack or Helen. Still his tongue itched to defend himself, to make them understand that Rafe knew what playboys were and how much damage they could cause.

After all, he looked just like a particular one—though the tabloids didn’t know that. To them it was a flashy headline. To Rafe it was a curse.

Rafe was his father’s doppelganger. His mother had referred to him as his father’s mini-me—though it hadn’t been a term of endearment. Rafe’s father had been an attractive professional dancer, and he’d been on the road constantly. His mother’s stable job as an accounting assistant had kept a roof over their heads, but with each new trip away for his father, each new booking, each lonely night, she’d become more vindictive.

When his parents hadn’t been arguing about his father’s many infidelities, they’d been yelling about Rafe. His mother would scream that she never got a break from being a mom—no fancy dancing getaways for her. His father would yell that he hadn’t wanted a kid anyway.

Neither of them had paid any attention to the small child in the corner. Rafe might not have understood everything they were screaming about, but he’d always known that his father hadn’t wanted him.

Why had he believed his mother had?

Rubbing his hands on his pants, Rafe tried to focus on the frozen scenery below. His father had died in a car accident with another woman a few days after his seventh birthday. A date neither of his parents had remembered, let alone celebrated. His mother had always constantly reminded Rafe of how he looked like the stupid cheater she’d married. She’d given up even trying to pretend she cared after that.

Infidelity had destroyed his family, and he would never repeat that mistake.

A few days before his eighth birthday, Social Services had taken custody of him. Rafe had bounced around the system until he’d aged out on his eighteenth birthday. He’d lived with many families but had never earned acceptance—never got to permanently belong. Now, when he was on set, he was the successful Dr. Rafe Bradstone, and for a little while that wound in his heart that had never closed bled a bit less.

Rafe was grateful no one attempted to make small talk on the short hop to Blue Ash. He needed to close off the pain twisting through him.

Rafe squinted as a small runway began to take shape ahead. “Are we going to land there?” The strip didn’t look wide enough to handle the small Cessna.

Patting the plane’s yoke, Jack grinned. “Don’t worry, Doc. I’ve landed my baby in much worse conditions.”

The broad smile spilling across Jack’s craggy features did little to calm the nerves dancing in Rafe’s belly. And as the wheels touched the ground they slid. Rafe’s cry of alarm echoed through the tiny cockpit, but his fear was quickly replaced with embarrassment as Jack pulled the plane to a perfect stop.

“That runway has one patch of ice and you aimed for it. There was no need to demonstrate your skill on ice!” a husky voice yelled over the sound of the slowing propellers.

“Gotta toughen up the newbie. This region doesn’t usually get stars whose faces are splashed across the tabloids.” Jack tossed Rafe’s bag to him as he turned to greet the young woman on the Tarmac.

“Tabloids are designed to make money, Jack, not to tell the truth.”

The tiny welcome party was buried in an oversize parka, and her bright orange scarf hid everything but her stunning gray eyes. She met Rafe’s gaze. The roar of the engine, the pilot’s judgement, even the bite of the wind as it stole through his jacket—all vanished as her eyes searched his.

“I bet you’re cold!” She motioned for him to follow her into what he assumed must be the clinic.

Heat marched up Rafe’s neck. He hadn’t even introduced himself—just stared at her. Matching her step, Rafe tried to think of a way to salvage this introduction.

“Welcome to Blue Ash.”

Red hair tumbled from the hood of the parka as the woman hung her coat on a hook.

“Thanks.”

Freckles danced across her nose, and Rafe sucked in a breath. His fingers wanted to trace each one. It was a ridiculous notion. She was exquisite, but so were many of the women in and around LA.

Fire erupted across his skin as he tried to regain his composure. He was not going to make a fool of himself. Rafe flashed a bright smile as he hung up his own coat. He would swear he knew her, but it was a crazy thought. Rafe didn’t know anyone in this state. His brain itched, urging him to find her name.

His heart sped up as his mind put the puzzle pieces together. He barely resisted the urge to slap himself. This Arctic goddess was a woman he and much of the world had once welcomed into their living rooms weekly.

“You’re Charlotte Greene.”

“I played the character Charlotte Greene.” The phrase didn’t sound bitter as it escaped her lips, just resigned—and exceedingly well rehearsed. “My name is Annie…”

“Right…”

Everyone knew who Annie was; she’d graced every teen magazine and even landed a cover for Vogue before she turned seventeen. He hadn’t meant to refer to her as Charlotte Greene. It had just popped out.

“I didn’t realize you were hiding in Alaska.”

Regret pooled around him as her full lips turned down. He was saying all the wrong things.

Annie crossed her arms as she lifted her chin. “I’m not hiding.”

Rafe raised a brow but didn’t argue. Dr. Freson had told him the Blue Ash Clinic was growing, but it served a community of less than six hundred. It was an odd place for the famous Annie Masters to put down roots.

“Your mom—”

Annie flinched as she interrupted him. “Carrie and I are not in regular contact. I cannot get you a meeting with her—and I doubt she represents television doctors.”

Television doctors… Vanessa had made the same comment. Rafe might not win any awards for his work on The Dr. Dave Show, but the show helped people. He was more than a television doctor.

“I don’t need an introduction.”

Annie nodded, but Rafe doubted she believed him. She crossed her arms before offering him a tight smile.

But Rafe was not going to let the early stumble ruffle him. Smiling, he offered his hand. He always loved it when his fans talked to him about Dr. Dave. Annie probably didn’t see many fans of My Sister’s House in Blue Ash. Maybe if he flattered her work she’d relax a bit.

“I grew up watching My Sister’s House. I’ve dreamed of meeting you since I was a kid.”

Heat tore through him as she held his gaze again. Gold sparkled at the edge of her gray eyes as they traced his body. The camera had never caught that glimmer. Annie Masters… The intense connection Rafe had imagined on the runway bowled through him again.

“Nice to meet you, then, Dr. Bradstone.”

Her cool tone rippled up his back. He was imagining their connection—just as he’d imagined a strong connection with Vanessa and his mother. He was not going to make that mistake again.

Sucking in a deep breath, Rafe straightened his shoulders. He didn’t need to impress her. He didn’t… He looked past her at the closed door to the back of the clinic.

Where was the doctor? He was supposed to be helping—not fumbling with words in front of a former starlet apparently now working as a receptionist in this remote Alaskan clinic.

Tipping his head toward the door, Rafe shrugged. “Is Dr. A with a patient?” He hoped his use of the nickname Jack had used for the doctor might lighten the uncomfortable mood in the small reception area.

“It’s Dr. Masters. Only my patients call me Dr. A.”

Annie’s sharp response slapped him.

Dr. Annie Masters.”

She raised her chin, daring him to ask how a child star had landed in this position—here.

His stomach lurched as his brain searched for words. “Dr. Freson failed to mention…”

Annie let out a soft chuckle, before shifting back on her heels. “Well, Jenn does have a wicked sense of humor.”

“We need to get going.” The awkwardness in Helen Henkle’s statement carried across the room. She offered Rafe an uncertain smile as she continued. “If you need more supplies let us know, Annie. We probably only have a few more weeks of easy flights.”

Rafe hadn’t realized they’d followed them into the clinic. Rafe wondered if his star had faded a bit in Helen’s eyes now she’d witnessed this interaction. Then her final words registered against his cluttered brain. “Wait—what do you mean only a few more weeks?”