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Authors: Anne Durham

Tags: #Harlequin Romance 1968

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BOOK: New Doctor at Northmoor
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He said shortly,

I am, but not in my official capacity. It happens that
Mrs.
Walker is no longer here. She has gone to stay with some friends, where she will be taken proper care of.


Then if you don

t mind, who are you, and what are you doing here?

Gwenny said faintly. Quite suddenly she was oddly afraid.

He was silent for a moment. She thought he wasn

t going to answer her. There was that queer haze coming up from the ground again, and her hands felt like cotton wool, yet she must hang on to the handlebars or the bike would fall over. It was no place to think of such a thing, but it occurred to her then that it would be rather uncomfortable if she suddenly felt this now familiar sensation, when she was riding the bike, especially in traffic.

She got a grip on herself and heard him saying

...
and I suppose as you might well be connected with some of my future neighbours, there is no harm in telling you that I have every right to be here, as in point of fact, I am intending to complete the purchase of Fairmead and I shall soon be moving in.


Moving in?

Gwenny whispered. She heard herself whisper that, then the roaring came in her ears and somehow the bike took off and plunged into some nearby bushes, and the ground came up and hit her smartly in the face.

 

CHAPTER II

When she opened her eyes again, she found she was on the purple velvet couch in the second-best sitting

room. The curtains—purple with gilt tassels—looked much more dusty than when she had last seen them, and one of the pictures was slightly askew.


Hadn

t you better straighten the Judge?

she asked weakly.

He

s
Mrs.
Walker

s great-uncle—or are you going to buy him too
?’


You

d better just lie quietly,

the dark young man suggested.


You didn

t tell me your name,

she reminded him.

I can

t say

Oy

or

You

, and it so happens I

ve several things I want to say to you.


Drink this, and be quiet,

he told her.


What is it? I

m not supposed to drink any old thing that someone else gives me. My father will skin me as it is, when he finds out
Mrs.
Yeedon made me drink a tisane she

d made.


Who is
Mrs.
Yeedon, and why should your father feel so strongly about what you do?

‘Mrs.
Yeedon lives in one of the cottages, and she makes herb teas and she used to cure people, and my father doesn

t like that, naturally.


Well, never mind your father

s likes and dislikes. Drink this up and tell me a few things about yourself

unless you

d rather I drove you to your own doctor. It must be one or the other, I

m afraid.


Why must it?

Gwenn asked in surprise.

Don

t be silly, I

m all right now. And I

m telling you, aren

t I? My father is looking after me.


Yes, I

m sure he is, but who is your doctor?

he asked her.


My father is,

Gwenny told him, with over-emphasized patience. And then she remembered to tell him who her father was.

He is Dr
.
Kinglake and he practises in Bittleby and we live in Queen

s Heath—that

s the nearest village. My, you
are
a stranger to these parts
!’


So it would seem,

he said rather grimly, but he was surprised, too, she noticed, and rather bothered.

After a lengthy pause, he said,

Do you often have these attacks?


It wasn

t an attack. I just felt a little woozy, and if I told my father that, he

d skin me and say I was pulling his leg. You leave me alone! I shall be all right. I cycled here and I can cycle back. Oh, what a shame

I

ve just remembered. If you

re going to buy this place, I shan

t be able to come here any more, unless you let me come and say hallo to all the old ladies.


Old ladies?

That really startled him.

What old ladies
?’


The ones who will come and live in the home, of course. Everyone says this is only fit for an old people

s
home. That

s why my

I say, you are going to turn
it into a home, aren

t you
?’
she finished rather anxiously.


Indeed I am not,

he said quite definitely.

I intend to have it redecorated and come and live here.

She swayed a little, at that. He took her by the arms and he said,

Look here, you

re not well. Do you understand? You simply must tell your father or go to the hospital. Northmoor isn

t all that far away, and it

s good enough.


Why don

t you tell my father how you feel about it, then?

She felt rather hysterical at the thought. She could just see her father looking impatiently over the top of his glasses at her, and demanding to know what tomfoolery she had been up to now. She could well imagine what her mother would have to say about it. Bad enough when Mummy heard about Fairmead being sold to someone who just wanted to live there, but what about Mummy

s old people

s home?

The doctor snorted at the idea of his telling
Dr.
Kinglake about his daughter.

I hardly think the information would come well from me,

he told Gwenny severely.

He was a very forceful young man. He had her in his car before she could blink. She had the feeling that if she hadn

t consented to walk out, he would have just swung her up into his arms and carried her. Such a thought made her feel quite peculiar. She watched him collect the bike and put it in the boot, then he carefully shut the front door of his domain and drove round to the back. So he knew that way in, did he? For some reason, she had been aching to see if he would try and go down the drive and what he would do when he got to the bits that were overgrown. With anyone else, she would have never entertained such a thought; she would have been quick to warn the stranger. But this man, now that she had time to consider it, aroused the most unfamiliar feeling of antagonism in her. All her first feelings about him had fled. She just wanted to fight him now.

He seemed to know the way to Queen

s Heath all right and he also seemed to know where Old Square was. He drove unerringly to it, but once there, he said curtly,

You

d better tell me which house the doctor

s is, for I don

t see the usual signs. Shouldn

t there be a plate outside, or a lamp with the word

surgery

on it?

That put her back up at once.

The plate came unstuck and fell off, and it didn

t seem worth putting it back because everyone knows where we live. And the lamp got smashed when Bobby Barker hit a six with his new cricket bat, and we

re too hard up to replace things that really aren

t necessary.

She didn

t catch what he said, but gathered from his rather grim expression that he considered it disgracefully irregular.


Well, which house is it and I

ll pull up outside and get the bike out for you, but I won

t come in.

She might have said it wasn

t worth his while to do so because no one was likely to be at home, but she restrained herself. Why tell him anything? she asked herself angrily.

He did everything with speed and precision, she thought resentfully, as she watched him prop the bike against the front hedge, which incidentally badly needed clipping. She supposed he was looking at that fact, too, and disapproving.

She got out, found she could stand without the ground behaving oddly, and she walked sedately towards him.


Thank you very much, and goodbye, Dr
.
?
Oh,
you didn

t tell me your name, did you?


You

ll know it soon enough,

he said grimly.

Meantime, concentrate on what really matters—getting yourself into good medical care at once. You do understand me, don

t you?

Gwenny went into the house and stood at the end of the silent hall and looked around her. In the quiet of the square she heard his car purr to life and depart. Like himself that car was rather splendid-looking and efficient but aroused antagonism in her. What right had this supercilious stranger to come in his splendid car and make their own look more shabby than before? What right had he to buy Fairmead from under her mother

s nose, to live in
—live in
! That great big house for one man! And goodness knows how much money it would take to put it right again!

Gwenny fretted about who he could
b
e. He was a doctor, yet she hadn

t heard about him, and they had a grapevine which they called a jungle telegraph in Queen

s Heath, which operated through the string of small shops, the cottages (carried by the children doing errands) and the adults (the postman and the travelling shop) and the patients in her father

s own surgery, to say nothing about her mother

s whist drives and women

s meetings. It put any hospital grapevine to shame, but still it hadn

t picked up this essential bit of information about this stranger who had such an unsettling effect on Gwenny.

She hated him. She hated him for discovering with such apparent ease that all was not well with Gwenny Kinglake, a thing she had successfully hidden from everyone so far except the perspicacious
Mrs.
Yeedon, who was, on her own admission, half a witch. She also hated the stranger for making everything seem different all of a sudden. Home seemed different, for a start, and it had seemed to begin with the fact that there was no plate outside and the hedge needed cutting.

Well, she could remedy that, she thought angrily. For a start, she could go and get a pair of shears from the tool shed and clip the worst bits off, even if she didn

t feel she could finish the job. (If only she didn

t get so beastly tired and terrifyingly hot, every time she tried to do a reasonable job lately!) But on investigating the tool shed, she found she couldn

t get the door open. One hinge had broken, and someone had tried to yank the door open, but it now hung drunkenly and had jammed. Gwenny couldn

t move it. Frustrated, she looked in the window, and in a space in the middle of the film of cobwebs she could see that the shears were broken, anyway.

The two halves lay where they had been flung, on a pile of sacks in a corner.

Well, that was that. She could do nothing about the hedge, she supposed, but she could do something about the house.
Mrs.
Otts would be out for two hours. Gwenny could do a lightning rip-through, tidying the place.
Mrs.
Otts often said that cook she could, and straight-clean she would, but more than that she would not bring herself to do, which meant, in clear uncluttered English, that
Mrs.
Otts didn

t consider it her duty to make beds and tidy the place when there were at least five
able-bodied
people in the family to do their individual share.

There was reason in that, Gwenny supposed. Her father didn

t pay
Mrs.
Otts as much as she would have got in a town, doing a similar job, but on the other hand, it suited
Mrs.
Otts, whose family was scattered about the village.
Mrs.
Otts, since her husband had died, now had no home of her own, and on her nights off she descended on her various relatives in turn, but the rest of her life was spent safely under the doctor

s roof.
Mrs.
Otts, they all considered, had very little to grumble about.

Gwenny went slowly upstairs. Mounting the stairs did peculiar things to her, too. Her head went tight and she could see flashing little lights. She rested half way, then went up the rest, rather cross with herself. Anyone would think she could cope with a bit of liver trouble, wouldn

t they, without going all to pieces like this? Daddy had already recommended a glass of hot water sipped slowly, but Gwenny never had the patience to try it out.

Upstairs, she was disheartened at once. Her mother, to be sure, made her own bed rather beautifully, but the doctor

s bed was merely covered.
Mrs.
Kinglake always said it wasn

t worth making it. He was in and out half the night bringing babies into the world at inconvenient times, and he lay down on it during the day whenever he got a chance, when other men were mowing the lawn or pruning the trees. So the doctor

s bed was permanently untidy.

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