Neurosurgeon...and Mum! (8 page)

When he’d dealt with the condom, he came to sit next to her on the bed. His expression was unreadable, but she had the feeling he was brooding.

‘OK?’ she asked softly.

‘Yes.’ He sighed. ‘No.’ He grimaced. ‘Sorry. boundaries. I’m not going to dump that on you.’

She smiled wryly. ‘And didn’t we say last week we were just going to be friends?’

‘Yes.’ He returned her smile. ‘I didn’t intend it to be a euphemism.’

‘Do you regret it?’ she asked.

He looked at her, his hazel eyes clear. ‘Do you want an honest answer or a tactful one?’

She flinched. ‘I think you’ve just given me your answer.’

He reached across and pulled her close. ‘I don’t regret making love with you, Amy, because I find you incredibly attractive and I’ve wanted you since the minute I first saw you.’

‘But?’ Even though he didn’t say the word, it was written all over his face.

He sighed and rested his forehead on her shoulder. ‘It’s complicated. There’s Perdy.’

Oh, yeah. Been there, done that, worn the T-shirt and broken my heart.
She really ought to know better than to get involved with a single father. ‘Perdy doesn’t have to know about this. It’s not going to change the way I behave towards her and it’s not going to change the way we behave to each other in front of her.’

‘Thank you. But I still feel guilty as hell.’

‘You said you were single,’ she reminded him.

‘I am.’ He lifted his head again and blew out a breath. ‘It doesn’t stop me feeling as if I’ve just betrayed my—’ He stopped abruptly.

She could guess the word he hadn’t said. ‘Was I the first since your…’ Since your wife died. She couldn’t bring herself to say it, either. ‘Since Perdy’s mother?’

He nodded.

She stroked his face. ‘If it helps, the first time afterwards, you do feel guilty as hell. As if you’re doing something wrong.’

His eyes widened. ‘You, too?’

She shook her head. ‘We weren’t married.’ She took a deep breath. ‘But we were going to be.’ Maybe if she explained about Colin, Tom would realise that he didn’t have to worry—that she wasn’t expecting anything from him. ‘I was in my pre-reg year as a paediatrician, and Colin was a surgeon. He was ten years older than I was, but the age difference didn’t bother either of us.’ She dragged in a breath. ‘He had a little girl, Millie—she was four when we started seeing each other. He’d split up with her mother a year before, and he had custody of Millie because his exwife wanted to pursue her career.’

She saw Tom flinch, and she had a feeling that she’d just hit a nerve. Given what she’d overheard Perdy saying, his wife had clearly been very work-oriented.

‘We started dating, and I adored Millie. We got on brilliantly together. He asked me to marry him, and I loved the idea of being part of their family—Millie was delighted, especially as she was going to be our bridesmaid.’ She bit her lip. ‘When Colin said he wanted to move to America so Millie could at least see some of her mother, I agreed to finish my training in the States. The plan was, he’d go out first, get Millie settled, and then I’d join them.’

Tom’s arms tightened round her. ‘But it didn’t happen?’

She shook her head. ‘He’d been out there two months, and I’d given my notice, sold my flat and all my furniture. All I had to do was pack the stuff I wanted to take with me to America.’ She swallowed. ‘But then he rang me. He said that Millie was so pleased to be with her mother again that he’d had a long talk with his ex and they’d decided to make another go of their marriage. He was sorry, but it was over.’

‘Just like that?’

‘Completely out of the blue.’

Tom blew out a breath. ‘That was seriously rough on you.’

‘It knocked me for six. I didn’t just lose my partner, I lost the little girl I’d started to think of as my daughter. Colin said he thought it was best if we made a clean break. And I wasn’t going to stand in the way of his little girl’s happiness.’ She shrugged. ‘I hope they’ve been happy. I have no idea, but I really hope they have, for Millie’s sake.’

‘I don’t know what to say,’ Tom said. ‘Just that I’m sorry he hurt you like that. And I think I understand now why you were wary of Perdy. And why you didn’t want to come to the beach with us last weekend.’

Amy nodded. ‘I like Perdy. Very much. But I’m…’ Not looking to get involved again. Though she couldn’t think of a way to put it without hurting Tom. She changed tack. ‘I’m trying to tell you I understand how it feels. That I know horrible it is when everyone pities you, and how the first time you even think about dating someone afterwards you feel as if you’re cheating on your partner.’

‘I’ve had enough pity to last a lifetime,’ Tom said. ‘It must’ve been worse for you, though, being the focus of the hospital grapevine.’

‘That’s one of the reasons I asked to change specialties as soon as my rotation was over,’ she admitted.

‘And neurology’s a tough discipline. You’d have been too busy studying to—well, even think about Colin and Millie.’

‘Exactly.’ Neurology was a challenge—something to fill her head and all the empty spaces inside. ‘I loved my work. And the fact it kept me too busy to have a serious relationship…Well.’ She shrugged. ‘I guess that was a bonus.’

‘And you’ve never met anyone you’ve wanted to…?’

‘I’ve had relationships, yes. But I kept them light. I don’t want to get hurt again, Tom. And, just so you know, I’m not looking at you and Perdy as a substitute for Colin and Millie.’

‘Thank you. And I’m not looking at you as a substitute for Eloise.’ He looked at her. ‘So where do we go from here?’

‘I don’t know.’ She bit her lip. ‘Tom, I find you really attractive, too. And what happened just now…I need you to know, I’m not in the habit of doing that.’

‘Neither am I,’ Tom assured her.

‘I guessed that.’ She took a deep breath. ‘I think we both needed it, so we shouldn’t beat ourselves up for it.’ And now for the big one. ‘But I don’t think we should repeat it.’ Not because she didn’t want to, but because she was scared what might happen if they did. It terrified her that she was going to fall in love with Tom and Perdy and her heart would end up broken all over again. ‘Neither of us is in a position to start anything. I don’t know how long I’m going to be here and you have Perdy to think about.’

‘So you regret it?’

‘Do you want the honest answer or the tactful one?’ she asked, bouncing his question back to him.

‘Ah. So that’s a yes.’

‘It’s a yes and a no,’ she said. ‘Nothing in life’s ever that black and white. There’s always a shade of grey in there. And neither of us can really deal with this right now.’ She pressed a kiss against his chest. ‘I need a shower.’

He groaned. ‘You’ve just put a picture in my head. A really inappropriate one.’

One that was now very firmly in hers. Of Tom soaping her all over, touching and tasting and kissing until she was breathless. Lifting her against the wall. Easing his body into hers before taking her back to the edge. ‘Tom. This really isn’t a good idea,’ she warned. ‘Those boundaries we agreed on—I think we’d better agree on some additional ones. Physical ones.’

‘This isn’t going to happen again. We’re going to be
sensible,’ he said. ‘I agree with you—right now, we both needed that. But there are too many complications for us to take this further.’

‘OK. So we’ll just pretend this didn’t happen, and everything will be fine. There won’t be any awkwardness between us, for Perdy’s sake.’

‘Agreed,’ he said.

It was the sensible thing to do. She knew that.

But when Tom had pulled on enough clothes to make himself decent, scooped up the rest and left her room without a backward glance, she curled back under the duvet, and wished that things could’ve been different.

Amy felt even more wistful the following evening, when Cassie called to tell her that Beth’s baby had arrived. ‘Amy, he’s gorgeous. And huge! He was almost four kilos.’

‘That’s big for a first baby,’ Amy agreed. ‘How’s Beth?’

‘She’s absolutely fine and completely in love with Sam—Samuel Joseph, that is,’ Cassie added. ‘He’s adorable, Amy. I’ve taken tons of photos and I’ll email you some later tonight. I just wanted to tell you the news myself.’

In a seriously expensive phone call. ‘I’d better let you go,’ Amy said, ‘but give everyone my love, and cuddle the baby for me, OK? Is Beth staying in hospital for long?’

‘She’s coming home tomorrow,’ Cassie said.

‘Great. I’ll send her something.’ It wasn’t a late or unplanned decision; Amy had spotted what she wanted to send, a while back, but she hadn’t wanted to tempt fate by ordering it before the baby arrived.

Part of her was tempted to fly out to Australia to see the baby for herself. But she knew that that would be running away from the situation with Tom, and she’d already done enough running, fleeing from London. She’d just have to wait it out. Besides, Cassie and Beth would take one look
at her and make her spill the whole story, and no way did Amy want to put a dampener on these first few precious days with the baby.

So instead she put a dent in her credit card, organising a bouquet of singing helium balloons to be delivered to Beth’s house the next morning, along with a bottle of champagne and a large box of chocolates for the parents and grandparents to enjoy, and a pile of educational toys and a lullaby light show featuring a teddy in a train for little Sam.

And this sudden, unexpected loneliness seeping through her—it would go.

It had to.

Chapter Seven

S
ENSIBLE
, Tom thought grimly, was overrated.

If he looked at things clearly, then of course he could see that it was sensible not to get involved with Amy. The little she’d said about her job—and the way he’d seen her throw herself into the task of transcribing Joseph’s casebook—made it obvious that her career had been the main focus of her life. Just as Eloise’s career had been her main focus of her life. At the end of her sabbatical, Amy would go back to London and sort things out and go back to her career—and a life that wouldn’t have space for him and Perdy.

His head knew it.

But could he get his body to accept it? No. It tortured him with memories. The softness of her skin. The warmth of her body. The curve of her mouth. Her soft, floral scent. The little noises of pleasure she’d made as he’d pushed deeper into her. The way he’d actually felt a kind of peace as he’d lost himself inside her.

It was driving him crazy.

Cold showers didn’t help. Neither did taking Buster for a run, even if he took his MP3 player and played classic rock at high volume through his headphones. It left him energised instead of exhausted. Worse still was sitting
down with her in the evenings, because he could barely take his eyes off Amy’s mouth. Every time she took a sip of wine, he found himself remembering the feel of her mouth against his and had to damp down the longing to put his glass down, take hers from her fingers and kiss her until they were both dizzy.

And he’d caught her staring at his mouth, too.

Was it the same for her? he wondered. Was she lying awake at in the middle of the night, thinking that there were only two closed doors and a landing between them? Remembering how good it had felt to be with each other, no barriers between them? Remembering the warmth of his skin against hers?

There was no respite at the weekend either, because even though Amy didn’t come on a trip out with them on the Saturday—she’d pleaded a headache that he was pretty sure was convenient rather than real—Perdy didn’t stop talking about her. And on Sunday Amy joined them for a walk on the beach, helping Perdy look for shells and interesting stones; seeing her walk barefoot on the sand stoked his desire higher still. She had beautiful feet, narrow and graceful. Her toenails were painted a silvery rose colour—nail polish that his daughter was also sporting on her toes, he noticed. And she wore a ring on the second toe of her right foot, in a complicated Celtic swirl design. It made him want to touch. Explore. Discover her sensitive spots, the places where she liked being touched and kissed, what made her eyes go unfocussed.

And if this went on for much longer, he’d go insane.

By Tuesday morning, tension was thrumming through him. And when he got back from the school run to discover a letter from Eloise’s parents—a letter that they’d sent to his house in London, despite the fact that he’d told them
where he and Perdy would be for the next few months—he started grinding his teeth.

The dictat that he should bring Perdy to visit them was the final straw. He banged his mug of coffee down on the table and swore. Loudly.

Buster came bounding into the kitchen and put his head on Tom’s knee, as if checking that he was all right.

And a few moments later Amy stood in the doorway, one eyebrow raised. ‘What’s happened?’

‘Eloise’s parents, that’s what!’ He dragged in a breath. ‘They’re so bloody high-handed, it’s untrue. They’re demanding I take Perdy to see them this weekend. As if it’s perfectly reasonable for them to expect me to drop everything, cancel any plans I’d made, and drag her off to Chester at a couple of days’ notice.’

‘Maybe they’d like to see their granddaughter,’ Amy suggested.

‘Yeah, right—which is why they never phone her, never write to her or send her a little card just to say hello and let her know they’re thinking about her. Do you know, they actually sent this to London instead of here?’ He shook his head in annoyance and frustration. ‘I gave them all our contact details well before we left London. And they have my mobile number. So why couldn’t they get in touch and talk to me like normal people, instead of issuing a bloody decree?’

Without comment, Amy took the cake tin out of the cupboard, cut a large slice of chocolate cake, put it on a plate and slid it in front of him.

‘What’s this?’

‘Anger management,’ she said. ‘Don’t say a word. Eat this and count to a hundred in your head. And then talk.’

‘I don’t need ang…’ He let the words trail away, and
sighed. ‘I’m sorry. You’re right. I’m ranting and raving, and

it’s not fair to dump this on you.’

‘It’s OK. Everyone has bad days.’

‘I’m just glad Perdy wasn’t here to see any of that. Or hear it. I’m not perfect, by any means, but I do try not to swear in front of her.’ He bit his lip. ‘Or anyone female, for that matter. It’s not how I was brought up. I owe you an apology for that.’

‘Maybe,’ Amy suggested, ‘talking about it might help.’

He was about to argue when she added, ‘How many patients do you tell not to bottle things up because it’s bad for their blood pressure?’

‘Point taken. I’m being a hypocrite.’

She smiled. ‘At least you know it. Eat your cake, count to a hundred, and I’ll make us both a coffee—seeing as half of yours ended up over the table.’

He shook his head. ‘It’s my mess. Give me a cloth and I’ll sort it.’

‘Just shut up and eat your cake,’ Amy said, and deftly removed all evidence of the spill before he could protest.

By the time he’d eaten the cake and counted silently to a hundred, she’d made coffee. She placed a fresh mug in front of him then sat opposite. ‘OK. Talk to me.’

He shook his head. ‘It’s not going to change anything.’

‘It won’t change the past,’ she said, ‘but it might help you see it differently so you can deal with it more easily.’

He was silent for so long that she thought he was going to refuse. Eventually, he nodded. ‘Just promise me you’re not going to pity me,’ he said. ‘I’ve had enough pity to last me for the rest of my life.’

‘I won’t pity you,’ Amy promised.

‘Thank you.’ Tom wrapped one of his hands round the mug of coffee. ‘Eloise’s parents were high flyers, so she
always felt she had to live up to them and do better than anyone else.’

Amy nodded. She knew exactly how Tom’s late wife had felt—that was one of the things that had driven her choice of career, too. Wanting to do what every generation of her family had done for nearly two hundred years. Wanting to be as good as her parents were.

‘I met her at university. She was top of our year.’ He smiled wryly. ‘I admit, she was vying with me for the top spot. That’s how we got together in the first place—I don’t think she would have noticed me otherwise. But when you want to be the best, you notice anyone who’s a potential rival.’

‘Women tend to notice men for other reasons, Tom. Trust me on that,’ she said. She’d definitely noticed him for other reasons than his mind—though that attracted her, too.

‘I wasn’t fishing.’ Colour stained his cheeks. ‘I suppose what I was trying to say is Eloise wanted to tell her parents that she’d graduated top of her year and was on a fast track to becoming a consultant. Perdy wasn’t planned; we’d only just both qualified when Eloise realised that she was pregnant.’ He bit his lip. ‘I was thrilled—I’d always expected that we’d have children, and as far as I was concerned it simply meant that we’d started our family a bit earlier than we’d planned. But Eloise was terrified that it meant the end of her career. I suppose it was hard for her: telling her parents that she was pregnant and getting married seemed like being a failure, in her eyes.’

Amy frowned. ‘Why? Why couldn’t she have a career and you and Perdy?’

‘That’s how I saw it,’ Tom said grimly. ‘But Eloise felt she’d failed. That was why I switched from paediatrics to training as a GP: it meant my hours would be more regular than if I worked on a ward, and I could take care of Perdy
while Eloise worked the hours she needed to get on in her career.’ He shrugged. ‘I suppose you could say we switched roles. She was the one with the huge career, and I was the one who sorted out the family side of things.’

‘Has it occurred to you,’ Amy asked, ‘that that’s a strength? You were the one holding everything together. Like a human pyramid. Sure, there’s someone at the top—but without a strong base, the whole thing collapses.’

‘My point exactly. We collapsed because I couldn’t give her the base she needed. Before we qualified, she always planned to work for Doctors Without Borders, the way her parents had done when they’d first qualified. And I could see it was eating away at her that she hadn’t done it.’ His eyes were full of misery. ‘I thought maybe if she went out and spent maybe a couple of weeks a year working for them, it would make her feel that she made a difference and she’d stop resenting me for trapping her in domesticity.’

‘Did it?’

Tom shook his head. ‘It still wasn’t enough. And it’s my fault that she died. If I hadn’t suggested she did a stint every year, she wouldn’t have gone to Africa. If she hadn’t gone to Africa, she wouldn’t have caught a tropical fever. And if she hadn’t caught the fever, she wouldn’t have died.’ He ticked the points off on his fingers, and Amy could see the guilt and misery in his eyes.

‘There’s another way of looking at this,’ she said softly. ‘If you hadn’t let her go, she would’ve resented you for it. And she probably would have left you and Perdy anyway, gone out there full time. There’s always a risk when you’re working in an area with serious infectious diseases, and everyone who goes out there knows that and accepts that risk. It’s not your fault. It was her decision to go, Tom. You didn’t push her into it.’

‘Maybe not.’ He sighed, the sadness expanding inside him. ‘Ah, hell. It’s been a year, and I still can’t deal with it. I miss her—of course I miss her—and it’s so hard bringing up Perdy without having someone to talk to, someone who can help me sort out the problems before they get too huge. But I’m so angry with her at the same time. Perdy and I just weren’t enough for her, and I just can’t forgive her for that.’

‘How can you be so sure you weren’t enough for her?’

Tom sighed. ‘She wasn’t happy, right from when we found out she was pregnant. She had really bad morning sickness at the start—and as soon as that stopped, the indigestion started. She hated being pregnant. And during labour she told me she wished she’d never got pregnant.’

‘So I hear, a lot of women say that sort of thing during labour,’ Amy said. ‘Didn’t your midwife warn you not to take transition talk seriously?’

‘It went deeper than that,’ Tom said. ‘She never really bonded with Perdy. I did wonder at first if Eloise might have postnatal depression, but then I realised it wasn’t that. It was just how Eloise was, the way she’d been brought up. She just didn’t know how to love our baby. And I think Perdy knew it, too—she never talks about her mother. Ever.’ He bit his lip. ‘It worries me that she’s bottling it all up, but I don’t know how to get her to talk to me about it.’

‘People deal with things in different ways,’ Amy said softly. ‘Not talking about it to you doesn’t necessarily means she’s bottling it up. She might talk about it to someone else.’

‘Why not me? I’m her dad.’

Amy could see the hurt in his eyes. She kissed him lightly. ‘Maybe she thinks it hurts you too much to talk about her—and talking to someone else means that she won’t be hurting you.’

He sighed. ‘I just wish I could be sure that she’s OK.’

‘Hey. Parents are supposed to worry about their kids.’ Amy ruffled his hair.

‘Eloise never seemed to worry about her. Not the way I do.’ He sighed. ‘I suppose she was just following her parents’ lead. I could never quite understand them. I mean, I’m an only child too and my parents have always loved me to bits. They were so proud of me, and I always knew it didn’t matter if I didn’t come first, as long as I’d tried my hardest. I knew that coming second didn’t mean they wouldn’t love me. But Eloise…If she didn’t come top, her parents weren’t interested. And I never saw them show any affection towards her—all they were interested in was how she was doing at work, when she was going to get a chance for promotion.’

‘What about Perdy? She’s their only grandchild.’

‘Yes, and you’d think they’d have been thrilled about it. But even when they saw Perdy for the first time, they didn’t give Eloise a huge hug and tell her how gorgeous the baby was or any of the stuff normal grandparents would say, whereas my parents fell in love with Perdy from the very second they saw her. They always greeted us with a hug and a kiss, and before Dad’s arthritis got bad he always used to carry Perdy around on his shoulders and get down on the floor to play games with her. Eloise’s parents never did anything like that with her. They’ve never even read her a story or sat colouring a picture with her. They’re airkissers,’ he said, looking disgusted.

‘So are my parents,’ Amy said.

He blinked. ‘I would never have guessed. I mean, Joe and Cassie…’

‘Are incredibly warm,’ Amy agreed. ‘But I think Cassie changed Joe. She made him who he is today. My grandfather
had a real stiff upper lip, and Dad and Joe inherited it. Being the younger son, Dad felt he had to prove himself—don’t get me wrong, he and Joe love each other, but there’s a fair bit of sibling rivalry between them. I was a month early, meaning that I’m three days older than Beth, and I can just imagine how much Dad crowed that he’d produced the first grandchild. And my mother always said that there was a glass ceiling—she had to work twice as hard as Dad to get anywhere. So their work’s always been their focus in life.’

Tom frowned. ‘So your upbringing was pretty much like Eloise’s.’

‘Let’s leave it that what you told me rang a few bells,’ Amy said dryly.

‘But you’re not like Eloise was. I mean, the way you’ve spent time with Perdy—you’ve told her silly jokes, you’ve taught her skipping games, you’ve shown her how to make the dog do tricks. Eloise would never have done anything like that with her.’

Maybe that, Amy thought, was why Perdy hardly talked about her mother. Because Eloise had been as distant as her own parents had been. And Amy could so, so easily have turned out like that herself. ‘She might not have been comfortable playing games or doing messy stuff. Some people aren’t. But she did other things with Perdy, didn’t she?’

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