The Surgeon's Convenient Fiancée (Medical Romance) (4 page)

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Authors: Rebecca Lang

Tags: #Contemporary, #Romance, #Fiction, #Marriage Of Convenience, #Family Life, #Two Children, #Theater Nurse, #England, #Britain, #Struggling, #Challenges, #Doctor, #Secure Future, #Security, #Proposal, #Surgeon, #Single Mother, #Bachelor, #Medical Romance

BOOK: The Surgeon's Convenient Fiancée (Medical Romance)
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He was of medium height, broad and swarthy, with dark hair and eyes, with a certain primal attractiveness that some women found very attractive. Deirdre did not, although it had been his obvious expectation when they first met that she would find him so.

‘We were invited out to eat,’ she said, forcing calmness. ‘Mungo left you a note, I think.’ She was trying hard not to sound defensive or show her apprehension. Over the two and a half years that she had been with the family, she had vacillated between a rather low-key apprehension where he was concerned and a more or less indifferent tolerance. Always she was wary. That in itself had added to the strain. Now she was coming round to the idea that she wanted nothing more to do with him, something that was difficult when she was the substitute mother to his former wife’s children.

‘I got the note,’ he said sharply, sarcastically. ‘That may have been convenient for you, but I had colleagues in for drinks and they wanted something to eat.’

‘I’ve decided,’ Deirdre said, standing up straight to the extent of her five-foot-four frame, ‘that I’m not going to cook for you any more, or your guests. It’s too much for me. I was hired to look after the children, to cook for them, and that’s what I’m going to do.’

‘Bloody hell,’ he said, his face suffusing
even more with colour, ‘you’re getting above yourself. I could just fire you for that.’

Afterwards, Deirdre did not know how she mustered the courage to stand up to him. Her courage was of the quiet kind, which was slow to come but steely when roused.

‘You do that, if it pleases you,’ she said. ‘I was hired by Mrs McGregor, so I don’t think you are actually in a position to fire me. I’ve also decided to seek work as a nurse in a hospital, which is what I’m trained for. I’ll still be a mother to the children, as I am now, but not with all the other work thrown in. It’s time for me to go back to my real profession.’

It was as though she were still split into two people and the protective half was speaking for her, sounding firm, as though her mind had really been made up. It was amazing how her spirits lifted then, bringing such a rush of relief that she could almost have laughed aloud at the comic expression of fury on Jerry’s face.

‘Come on, kids,’ she said to Mungo and Fleur. ‘Please, help me to put the groceries away.’ The three of them marched into the kitchen, with the children’s stepfather
coming after them. Quickly, they began to put things away.

Jerry moved close to Deirdre and with two fingers extended used them to push her shoulder, push her back against a wall.

‘You little bitch,’ he said. ‘You’ve got a good job here and a home, and you can’t do a bit of cooking for me.’

‘I have a home of my own,’ she said, referring to her parents’ modest bungalow, which was also her permanent home, that she was taking care of while they were out of the country. Not for the first time she was overwhelmingly grateful that she had it. ‘I also have a profession that I can return to. I’ve no intention of giving up the children. I’m sure that Mrs McGregor and I can come to some arrangement that is to our mutual benefit.’ It was as though her mind had made itself up, without any obvious conscious input. What a relief that all this was coming out, even though her heart was beating fast in the knowledge that she might have to take flight. ‘And don’t touch me, don’t threaten me.’

Mungo and Fleur moved closer to her, as though both to seek protection and to offer it.

‘Don’t talk to me like that,’ he shouted at her, ‘as though I don’t figure in the equation. I have a say about who comes into this house. I can get another nanny, maybe someone who would be only too happy to marry me, have this house as a home, be more grateful than you are.’

‘That was never part of the arrangement where I was concerned,’ Deirdre said calmly, through the familiar sick fear. It was possible that if he married, he could fight the grandmother for custody of the children. After all, she was elderly, did not have the energy to take on the children herself, to move them into her own home, which was why she had hired a nanny in the first place. Deirdre did not doubt that Fiona McGregor would do so if the threat became real. First thing in the morning she would call her and ask to talk with her about her desire to return to nursing.

Again, Jerry stabbed at her with his fingers, to emphasize each word. ‘Don’t think that you’re indispensable, Miss High-and-Mighty. People like you are two a penny.’

‘I think not,’ she said, with admirable dignity. ‘In fact, it’s the other way round. People
like me are rare. It’s not trendy to do what I’m doing, not cool, far from the limelight.’

‘No, they’re not!’ Fleur chipped in, her thin face pale. ‘She’s special. We want Dee with us.’

‘And don’t you threaten her,’ Mungo said, gaining courage from his sister. ‘I’ll talk to the social worker at school and tell her that you’ve been verbally abusive, that you pushed Dee. That won’t go down very well with the authorities. We’re old enough to have a say about who we live with, who our legal guardians are.’

‘You two get upstairs and get on with your homework!’ Jerry shouted at them, pointing out to the staircase in the hall.

‘We’re not going anywhere until we know that Dee’s all right,’ Mungo said, his voice quavering a little, and Deirdre felt a rush of love for both the children. Although she was close to tears, there was no way that she would give this man the satisfaction of seeing it.

‘That’s right. You leave her alone,’ Fleur said. She linked her hand through Deirdre’s.
‘Come upstairs with us, Dee. I need some help with something.’

The three of them went out of the kitchen and began to go up the staircase.

‘As far as I’m concerned, you’re fired,’ Jerry shouted after them.

‘No, she’s not,’ Mungo said. ‘We want her with us.’

In Fleur’s bedroom, with the door locked, they all sat on the bed. ‘What are we going to do?’ Fleur whispered, sounding close to tears. ‘I couldn’t bear it if you weren’t with us, Dee.’

‘I shall be with you,’ Deirdre said as firmly as she could manage. ‘I’m going to call your granny and talk to her about it, see if I can meet her tomorrow. You can discuss things better with people face to face. I’ll do it tonight, not wait until tomorrow. I’ll see her in the morning. It’s time to get very serious. If Jerry gets too much, you can live with her, or with me in my house. Granny has plenty of space. Also, I’m going to talk to a lawyer about the fact that Jerry pushed me—I know someone—so that it’s on record, in case I need that.’ At that moment she was
not sure exactly how she would need it, but an instinct told her that it was a good thing to have a record of what had happened between them. Her situation was odd. She really had no claim on the children, she was simply an employee, yet she knew that Jerry Parks was not good for them.

‘We’re going to talk to the social worker at school tomorrow,’ Fleur said, ‘so that’s on record there, too.’

‘Yes. Why did you suddenly think about going back to work as a nurse, Dee?’ Mungo asked. ‘I mean, why today? Has something happened?’

‘Not specifically,’ Deirdre said slowly, searching for words. ‘It’s something I’ve been thinking about for some time, because what has happened here is that I’ve taken on more and more of the job of housekeeper and hostess, when I don’t want to be that, instead of just taking care of you. I’ve stuck it out because I thought he might ask me to go…and I think you need me.’

There, it was out. The breakdown that she feared still threatened her, yet somehow it seemed less acute because she had
articulated her thoughts and needs, had had a showdown of sorts. Inside, she felt as though she were trembling. What she could not say to them at this time was that one day she hoped to have a husband and children of her own, and who would take her on if she were the mother of two children who were not her own? If she were to wait until Mungo and Fleur were old enough to go to university, and off her hands, she would be in her early thirties, which seemed impossibly in the future. At the moment she could only project herself forward for the next six months or so.

Fleur began to weep. ‘We do need you,’ she managed to get out, between sobs. ‘I couldn’t bear it if you went.’

‘Don’t go, Dee,’ Mungo said.

Deirdre’s own eyes pricked with tears and she swallowed, her throat tight with emotion. ‘I’m not going,’ she said. ‘We’re going to work it all out. Sometimes you come to a point in your life when you have to make changes, and there’s no sense in putting it off because it will just go on nagging and nagging you. I would prefer not to have anything
whatsoever to do with Jerry Parks, don’t want to see him even.’

They sat together, their arms around each other. They could hear Jerry down below, crashing about as though he were throwing cooking pots. Maybe he was, Deirdre speculated, and found that she didn’t care.

‘Look,’ she said at length, ‘you two get on with your homework. I’m going to phone Granny. I’ll come in a little while to help you, Fleur. Try not to worry. We are going to work something out, and I’m not going to accept a job in nursing until everything with us is working well…if I ever get offered anything, that is.’

‘Will you sleep here tonight, Dee?’ Fleur asked.

‘Yes,’ she said. Quite often she slept at her parents’ home, a modest place that was a relatively short distance away on the edge of a less affluent area.

In the bedroom that was hers in this house, she locked the door, a habit that she had acquired ever since the unwanted encounter with a semi-drunk Jerry when she had first come to the house, when he had entered her
room one night and tried to force himself on her. Then and there she had almost left, almost thrown her few belongings into her suitcase and rushed out. Only the images of the two young, unhappy faces had prevented her.

Using her mobile phone, she called Fiona McGregor, having decided not to wait until the morning. A sense of urgency made her edgy. ‘Hello, Mrs McGregor. This is Deirdre.’

‘Oh, hello, Deirdre, my dear. How are you? Now, you are supposed to call me Fiona.’ The good-natured voice came back. Granny McGregor could be tart when annoyed, but never mean or unfair.

‘I know,’ Deirdre said, smiling, not wanting to tell her employer that she always thought of her as ‘Granny McGregor’. ‘I’m calling to ask if I could possibly come to see you tomorrow, Fiona. I’ve been thinking of going back to nursing, and I want to work out with you how I might do that and continue to look after the children.’

‘Well, my dear, I’m not really surprised. I’ve seen this coming on for some time, but I didn’t want to say anything until you had worked it out in your own mind. It seems you
have done so now. I just hope that you won’t leave us, because the children love you so and would be lost without you. So would I.’

For the second time that evening, the relief of having unburdened herself to someone who could understand was overwhelming. It began to seem very odd to Deirdre now that she had not sought out this help before. Somehow she had got it into her head that she had to do it all herself. Fiona, she knew, was still mourning for her daughter. Meeting Shay had had something to do with this surge of courage as well.

‘Perhaps I shouldn’t have waited to say something,’ Fiona was going on. ‘I think you’re upset. Am I right?’

‘Yes,’ Deirdre said, her voice low.

‘I suspect that you’ve had just about as much of Jerry Parks as you can stand. Right?’

‘Right.’

‘Well, we’ll do something about it. Come tomorrow, at any time that’s convenient to you, dear,’ Fiona said. ‘There are one or two things I want to clear up with you as well, things that perhaps I should have told you before, but which I wanted to leave until
we had all tested you out, myself and the children, then they got put off indefinitely. You’ve been a wonderful mother to the children, you’ve brought some sanity and stability to their lives. If my daughter were alive, she’d be the first to say that, so I want to thank you, Deirdre.’

Deirdre wanted to cry. By a supreme effort she found her voice. ‘I’ll come at eleven o’clock, if that’s all right?’ she said.

‘That’s perfect. I’ll give you something to think about before you come. You’ll remember that I told you my daughter had won some money in a lottery, just before she got sick? The irony of it! Well, it’s much more than I gave you to believe. She got sixteen million dollars. That’s why friend Jerry is hanging around. He would have been up and out long ago, believe me. The last thing he wanted was to look after children that were not even his own, although I suspect that he would be the same with his own children.’

‘That makes it clearer,’ Deirdre said. ‘I understand more now.’ It had long been a mystery to her why Jerry, impatient and ill at ease
with the children, should make a pretence of being there for them.

‘There’s a court case on to prevent him getting his hands on the money, because Moira had filed for divorce from Jerry before she knew she had won the money, and he had signed the papers agreeing to the divorce,’ Fiona went on, somewhat wearily. ‘That’s crucial, you see. Otherwise she would automatically have had to share the money equally with her husband. She couldn’t stand to be with him any longer. He used to hit her, you know. I think he envied her because she was a successful artist, that she could do something good with her own talent.’

‘I…I didn’t know, of course,’ Deirdre said. ‘But I’m not surprised.’

‘That’s the only reason he’s hanging about,’ Fiona McGregor repeated bitterly, ‘pretending to be a father to the children.’

‘So the divorce was finalized?’ Deirdre asked hesitantly, not knowing the ins and out of divorce.

‘Yes…just. But she won the money before it was finalized, so Jerry is saying that he should have half of it. Then Moira became
too ill, and deteriorated very quickly, before actually getting around to selling the house and other assets or trying to fight him.’

‘I see,’ Deirdre said, although it all sounded very convoluted and complicated, and she was not sure that she wanted to know all that.

‘She didn’t have the energy to do anything else, but her intentions were certainly known to her lawyer,’ Fiona went on sadly. ‘She had a will, leaving most of her estate to the children and something to me. Jerry has been trying to get it ever since, and doesn’t want to let go of the children for that reason.’ She gave a derisive laugh. ‘Otherwise, with no money, he would have been out of there before you could say “knife”. Certainly he would have left before she died…he didn’t want to have anything to do with her illness. All these legal things pending are the only reasons that he hasn’t brought a woman into the home, someone to live with him, not just as a nanny to the children. He wants to present a good image.’

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