The Maverick Doctor and Miss Prim/About That Night - Page 17

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She was pushing aside her own fears and focusing on the details of the job. Just like a good doctor should.

They were close together again. Hiding away from the rest of the world. Her eyes were much bluer this close up. Last time they’d been like this had been in a darkened room and he hadn’t really had a chance to appreciate her finer features.

She was lucky. No lines marring her complexion, only some dark circles under her eyes. Her gaze met his and her brow wrinkled. “Can I do this, Matt?”

* * *

Matt. Hardly anyone called him that. Just the way she said the word took him by surprise. He was so used to being called by his surname that it actually made him stop for a moment. He reached out and took her hand. She didn’t flinch, didn’t pull away. She just inched a little closer.

He saw the glimmer of fear register in her eyes. Her tongue peeked out and ran along her dry lips, moistening them and leaving them glistening.

He was fixated. He couldn’t look away.

He bent down, his lips brushing the side of her cheek. “Of course you can do this, Callie. This is what you trained for.”

If he turned his head just slightly his lips would be on hers. It was the most inappropriate, most inopportune moment. But Sawyer didn’t care.

For the first time in a long time he was finally starting to feel again.

And everything else just paled in comparison.

He was getting another waft of that raspberry shampoo.

But then she moved, lowering her face beneath his and resting her hands on his shoulders. There was something else in her expression. It was almost as if she was taking a minute—as if she wanted to tell him something. And it was clear she had no idea about the thoughts currently circulating in his head.

He tried to focus. To take his gaze off her pink lips. She was close enough that he could smell the mints she’d been eating.

They couldn’t stay like this. Any minute now someone in the E.R. would notice they were closer than normal.

He had to get some perspective before he did something he might regret.

He jerked back. “How long until we find out the diagnosis?”

If she noticed him pulling away she didn’t react. “Evan wasn’t sure. Anything from between another twenty-four hours up to seven days. But at the moment we still need to tell everyone the quarantine will last for seventeen days.”

“Seven days is a long time to wait for a diagnosis.”

She nodded and turned away from him. Focusing on work, getting back to the job. Staring up at the whiteboard. “I guess we’d better start vaccinating again. Everyone going to the type C unit needs to be vaccinated beforehand.”

She was right. She was being professional. Her mind was focused on the job. Just where his should be.

He nodded and said the words he was supposed to. “Let’s get to work.”

How on earth was he going to manage in an enclosed space with her for the next seventeen days?

CHAPTER SEVEN

“WOW! HOW DID they manage this in such a short space of time?”

Callie peered out of the transport-vehicle window as they approached the containment facility. It was more than impressive. A bright white building sitting in the middle of an industrial site.

It was almost the regulations personified.

A single building located at least one hundred yards from any other occupied facility. Non-shared air-conditioning, heating and adequate ventilation systems. Single rooms with negative air pressure. Advanced medical and laboratory systems. Dependable communication systems and controllable access.

Then, more than the obligatory one hundred yards away, another type R facility to host everyone who’d been exposed, vaccinated and hadn’t developed any symptoms. All the patients who’d been exposed in the E.R. could now be safely housed and monitored for the next two weeks.

Sawyer pressed his face up against the window next to her. The slow-moving convoy had taken nearly forty minutes to get here. It had been a surreal experience. But, then again, it had been years since anything like this had happened. The fact that the ambulance transport crews were kitted out in masks, gloves, gowns and shoe covers probably hadn’t helped. Particularly with the amount of news crews that surrounded the hospital.

Callie found that incredible. Who, in their right mind, news crews or not, would want to be that close to a possible smallpox outbreak? If she’d been any other kind of doctor she would have headed to the city limits as quickly as she could.

Callie shuddered at the thought of the news headlines that evening. The pictures of the crew transporting the ‘infected’ patients could be terrifying to the general public. She could only hope that Evan Hunter would be in charge of damage control.

“I guess it must have been something else. A school? Some kind of lab? A warehouse?” Sawyer wrinkled his nose, as if he was aware that none of those things really fitted. “Did Callum leave you any notes?”

Callie rummaged through the pile of papers on her lap. “I’ve been so busy sorting out the problems—getting the electricity and water turned on, medical supplies delivered—that I didn’t really think about it. He just told me he’d identified ‘suitable premises.’ Ah, here it is.” She dragged a pale cream piece of paper from the bottom of the pile.

“What’s wrong?”

Her eyes were still scanning the page and what she was reading was obviously translating straight to her face. “It’s just a little odd.” She lifted her head and stared at the building again, “It was a research facility.”

“What’s odd about that?”

“It’s apparently been here for the last hundred years.” A strange sensation swept over her. “Do you think they used it for the last smallpox outbreak?”

“Now, there’s a creepy thought.”

They pulled up outside the buildings and both heads turned to look again. Sawyer opened the door and jumped down, holding out his hand to help Callie. She left her papers on her seat and jumped out with him.

They stood next to each other, hands on their hips, trying to work out what was going on. “It looks brand-new,” Callie muttered.

“It certainly does. Maybe it’s just had a coat of paint?”

He stepped forward and touched the exterior wall. “It’s certainly had new windows and doors.”

Callie nodded. “And a new ventilation system.” She gave a nod to the system that was clearly venting all its air outside through the designated HEPA filters. “They couldn’t possibly have had that last time round. It must have been used recently.”

She turned around as the rest of the transport started to pull up behind them. “Let’s take a look inside.”

Sawyer matched her step for step as they strode through the building. Everything about it was perfect. A laboratory, newly refurbished patient rooms and clinical treatment rooms. Then a whole separate building that fitted with type R requirements, with single bedrooms and bathrooms where all the people under the containment could be housed, with extra facilities available for them all. Kitchens, sitting rooms, children’s playrooms, even a cinema room, it was extraordinary.

All with the proper ventilation systems to prevent the spread of infection.

Callie ran her fingers along the wall in the one of the corridors. She didn’t feel uneasy. This place didn’t have a bad feeling attached to it, but there was a certain air of mystery. “If these walls could talk, what would they tell us?”

Sawyer turned to face her, “What do you mean?”

She pointed to the nearest room. “This almost seems too good to be true. This place has obviously been in use recently—though we did have to get the water and electricity switched back on. They haven’t managed to do all this in twenty-four hours. I wonder what kind of research they did here?”

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nbsp; Sawyer pushed open the nearest room—full of state-of-the-art monitoring and ventilation equipment. “Does it really matter? We’ve got good facilities here.” He nodded as Dan, the pediatrician, appeared at his back, entering the room to make sure it had everything he needed for the children.

A smile appeared across Dan’s face. “These are the latest ventilators. I’ve been trying to get Chicago General to buy some. They cost serious money. They’ll be perfect for the kids. But here’s hoping I only need one.” He gave a nod to Callie. “I don’t know how you managed it but this is perfect.”

That strange feeling spread again. “I don’t know how I managed it either,” she said quietly. Everything seemed to have miraculously fallen into place. Maybe her rant at Evan Hunter had worked. Someone in the DPA had excelled themselves here.

Sawyer placed a hand on Dan’s shoulder. “How do you want to set things up? Do you want to have Jack and Ben in separate rooms? We’ve got the negative air pressure facilities here, we can use them.”

He was obviously just trying to give Dan his place. As the only pediatrician, the care and responsibility of the two boys fell to him. It didn’t make sense to bring in any other doctors. And although he wasn’t a pediatrician Sawyer had already volunteered to assist with the care of Jack and Ben. Since he’d done the initial diagnosis he seemed reluctant to let them go. But he was quite happy to take instructions from Dan.

Dan shook his head. “Actually, no, I want to keep them together. They’ve been equally exposed anyway. Separating them at this time isn’t going to benefit either of them. Unless you can tell me something different?”

Callie shook her head.

Sawyer cut in. “I’m with you, Dan. In that case, for the sake of the two of them, it’s better they stay together. This place would be terrifying for a six-or seven-year-old on their own. There is no viable clinical or psychological reason to keep them apart. They’re brothers. They’re meant to be together. Let’s not add to the stress.”

Callie could feel her heart flutter in her chest. He couldn’t possibly know or understand what those words would mean to her. It was just the fact that somebody, somewhere had even the slightest inkling about the connection between siblings. The reassurance of being together, no matter how unscientific. And the possible benefits for the boys.

Tags: Scarlet Wilson Romance
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