Part 11 (2/2)

Carrie's hand shook. Rehas.h.i.+ng that awful night didn't seem quite so easy now.

'It's OK,' he said, and reached out a hand to cover hers. 'You don't have to tell me.'

She saw the compa.s.sion in his eyes, the softening, his rea.s.suring smile. Suddenly she wanted to tell him more than anything. To talk to someone who knew how crazy it could be at the coalface. Who could relate. Empathise even. Family understood because they loved you. Colleagues understood because they'd lived it.

She stared into the murky depths of her coffee. 'I was an intern working in Accident and Emergency. It was one of those crazy Sat.u.r.day nights where half of Brisbane seemed to either have food poisoning or flu. And it was full of the usual bloodied drunks and we had a major car accident that had just come in, along with a fractured neck of femur from a nursing home. It was mad.' She looked up from her coffee. 'Bit like here, really.'

Charlie chuckled and it was such a lovely warm noise it gave her the courage to continue.

'A man bought in a friend's child who he was minding for a few hours, complaining that the child had bad breath and he'd rung the mother and she'd told him to bring the boy into us.'

Charlie cringed-halitosis in a busy emergency department. That must have gone down like a lead balloon. 'I gather the child wasn't a.s.sessed as a priority.'

Carrie gave a small smile and shook her head. 'So after an hour of waiting he starts to get annoyed and there was a bit of a lull amidst all the chaos so the nurses asked if I would see the little boy next.'

'And you did?'

Carrie nodded. 'Kind of. The chart was handed to me, I called the boy's name-his name was Harry, Harry Pengelly...' As long as she lived she would never, ever forget the boy's name or his face.

Charlie heard her voice go husky as she mentioned the patient's name. No wonder she hadn't been able to function properly at the accident scene. This obviously still affected her very badly.

'I didn't open the chart. I asked what the problem was. He said, ”The kid's mouth stinks like an animal's died back there.” And he was right, it did smell very offensive. I asked some basic questions-had he eaten anything unusual or different, had he choked on anything and about his medical history of which this guy knew nothing. At a quick glance the child seemed reasonably alert, a little pale but he was interactive and certainly didn't appear unwell. So I said to wait there, I was going to get some equipment to look down Harry's throat.

'I left to get a tongue depressor and a torch and planned on doing a more complete a.s.sessment once I'd established he didn't have a visible obstruction. I was stopped twice by nursing staff for different medical orders so it was probably ten minutes before I got back to the cubicle, but by then the man had gone and taken Harry with him.'

Charlie nodded. Too often people grew impatient at the wait and left emergency departments without being seen.

'The triage nurse said he'd stormed out, muttering about incompetence. I planned to flip through the boy's chart but a middle-aged man with a suspected heart attack came through the doors and the chart got left on the doctors' desk.'

'I'm getting a sense that there was some significant medical history with Harry.'

Carrie nodded, tears p.r.i.c.king her eyes. She blinked rapidly. She hadn't cried over this in a long time and she wasn't going to start again in front of Charlie.

'Two hours later a woman runs into the department, an unconscious Harry in her arms. It was his mother. She was crying hysterically. He was cold, shocked, shut down. Unresponsive. Whiter than a sheet. His abdo was distended. We rushed him into Resus. Mum was too emotional to put a sentence together and someone grabbed his chart and flipped it open and discovered that he was ten days post-adenoid and tonsillectomy.'

Charlie shut his eyes. 'He'd had a bleed?'

Carrie nodded. 'Ma.s.sive. No sooner had we discovered this than he vomited, and it was just all blood, some old, a lot fresh. There was so much of it and it was so red against these white, white sheets, and it covered his pale floppy body like a river.' Carrie shuddered. 'I had nightmares for a year about the blood.'

Charlie remembered the way she had looked at the blood pumping out of the road-accident victim and her behaviour suddenly made sense. He cringed, thinking how insistent he'd been.

'We cannulated him, filled him with fluid and rushed him to Theatre to locate the source of the bleed and have it cauterised, but it was too late. He arrested on the table. The coroner found that Harry's operative site had probably been trickling for days and he'd been swallowing it and had presented the second time in irreversible hypovolaemic shock.'

Charlie felt for Carrie. She'd been through an awful experience. No wonder her faith in herself as a pract.i.tioner was permanently dented. 'And because you were the doctor who saw him that night, you carried the can? That's rough.'

Carrie nodded. 'I was suspended immediately pending an internal hospital review. That's when I inherited my desk job. The medical director was delighted to have someone with a business degree around. The review found I had no case to answer but it was automatically referred to the Registration Board so I was kept on suspension from clinical duties pending that decision.

'And to be perfectly honest, I was mess. I was so upset about that poor little boy and stressed out by the enormity of it all, it played havoc with my body. I lost weight, I couldn't sleep and when I did I had nightmares.'

Charlie could tell by the haunted look in her eyes that she'd been through the mill. 'I hope you received counselling.'

'Yes, and it helped but then I discovered I was pregnant. And Rupert, Dana's father, who hadn't been very supportive during the whole process at all, dropped me like a hot cake.'

Charlie shook his head in amazement. 'Nice.'

'Oh, yeah, just what I needed. And as D-day approached the more panicky I became. I didn't want to be struck off or have any further disciplinary action taken against me, but the thought of going back to clinical practice scared me more. I felt like I was in limbo.'

Charlie nodded. That was a very apt description. Limbo. Waiting for the elevator ride up or down.

'So when my letter arrived I couldn't bring myself to open it, either. I mean, I'd put my whole life on hold waiting for the d.a.m.n thing but when it arrived I was too scared to open it.'

'But you did, right?'

Carrie shook her head. 'After looking at it for five hours, I got into my car and drove ' round to my sister's shop and got her to open it.'

Charlie stared at her, trying to fathom how truthful she was being. She looked embarra.s.sed, sitting there chewing her lip, and he laughed out loud. 'You really did, didn't you?'

'Yep.' She nodded. 'I really did.'

'And it was good news?'

'They agreed with the hospital review and my suspension was lifted immediately. But by then I knew I couldn't ever go back. Even now, I still see his face, have nightmares about the blood. Not as much as in the beginning, but it's still affecting me.'

Which was a travesty. The glimpses he'd seen of her clinical side screamed of her competence. Even that night on the road, her professional instincts had shown through despite the demons she'd battled in her head. The way she'd applied pressure to the pumping artery had been one hundred per cent professional.

They both stared into their coffee, lost in their own thoughts for a minute.

Charlie came to a decision. 'You open it for me.' He picked up the envelope and held it out to her.

Carrie looked at him and the envelope then back at him. The denial that rose inside her died on her lips. He was serious. His grey gaze was steady, unflinching.

'Come on.' He grinned. 'Pretend you're my sister.'

If only. At least this insane attraction she felt for him wouldn't be an issue. Her hand shook slightly as she accepted the envelope. Carrie removed the letter-opener from her laptop bag and slit the envelope open. She pulled the path form out and scanned it briefly.

'Negative.' She smiled, turning it around to show him.

Charlie didn't do anything for a few seconds as the news sank in. Negative. Negative. Negative. It echoed around his brain. 'Negative.' He smiled back at Carrie.

She nodded and then laughed as the smile on his face grew broader.

Charlie leapt to his feet and let out a loud whoop. 'Negative,' he shouted, and thumped the table. He strode over to his locker and wrenched the door open. 'Here, catch,' he said, lobbing a bottle of pills in her direction.

Carrie laughed as she caught the medication. She joined him at the rubbish bin near the sink. Charlie pushed down on the pedal, the lid opened and he emptied the contents of his containers into the bin. Carrie followed suit, watching the pills flow out like a waterfall. She threw the empty bottle in after them.

'Negative,' Charlie repeated. He looked down into her sparkling eyes and felt a swell of desire surge in his chest. She was smiling, her lips glistening with the gloss she wore. Her chest rose and fell, the soft navy blouse she was wearing beneath her jacket straining at the cleavage. He wanted to touch it to see what it was made out of. h.e.l.l, he just wanted to touch her.

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