WARNING: THIS DOC MAY CAUSE SWOONING!
Rust Creek Ramblings
I’m sure you’ve heard there is a new doctor in town. Sexy Jon Clifton looks more cowboy than pediatrician, he’s good with kids and dogs, and what we all want to know is: Why is this man still single?
Though there are plenty of ladies in Rust Creek Falls who would like to change the confirmed bachelor’s status, Dawn Laramie alone seems to be immune to his charms. The dedicated nurse works side by side with Dr. Jon day after day, intent on keeping things professional...and distant. Meanwhile, we here at the Gazette can practically hear the tension thrumming between these two. Our diagnosis? A classic case of lovesickness with an age-old cure! But will the doctor’s proposal heal Dawn’s wounded heart?
On a scale of one to ten, with ten being the worst, the reality of sharing a bed with Jon was a fifteen.
It pushed twenty when she felt the mattress dip from his weight. And the masculine scent of his skin drifted to her, firing up her hormones even more.
“Good night.”
“’Night.” His voice was ragged, rough.
Dawn couldn’t speak for him, but she was as tense as a bowstring and ready to snap. “Jon, I—”
He threw back the covers. “This isn’t going to work.”
She rolled over to face him. “What’s wrong?”
“I want you.” There was no mistaking the need in his voice this time. It was honest and raw. “I can’t help it. I can’t make it stop. If I touch you—” He swore under his breath. “I’m going in the other room.”
This time he didn’t say anything about sleeping. And there was no mistaking the way her heart soared in response to his declaration. He wanted her.
Before he could get out of bed she moved closer and reached for him. It was automatic, instinctive. Her hand touched his arm, the warm skin. And this time she said the word. “Stay.”
* * *
Montana Mavericks: The Baby Bonanza
Meet Rust Creek Falls’ newest bundles of joy!
Teresa Southwick lives with her husband in Las Vegas, the city that reinvents itself every day. An avid fan of romance novels, she is delighted to be living out her dream of writing for Harlequin.
Books by Teresa Southwick
Harlequin Special Edition
The Bachelors of Blackwater Lake
How to Land Her Lawman
The Widow’s Bachelor Bargain
A Decent Proposal
The Rancher Who Took Her In
One Night with the Boss
Finding Family...and Forever?
Montana Mavericks: What Happened at the Wedding?
An Officer and a Maverick
Montana Mavericks: 20 Years in the Saddle!
From Maverick to Daddy
Mercy Medical Montana
Her McKnight in Shining Armor
The Doctor’s Dating Bargain
Montana Mavericks: Back in the Saddle
The Maverick’s Christmas Homecoming
Montana Mavericks: The Texans Are Coming!
Her Montana Christmas Groom
Men of Mercy Medical
The Doctor and the Single Mom
Holding Out for Doctor Perfect
To Have the Doctor’s Baby
Cindy’s Doctor Charming
The Surgeon’s Favorite Nurse
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.
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Her Maverick M.D.
Teresa Southwick
Dear Reader,
I’ve written before about my four brothers and how close my bond is with them. We also had a sister and lost her to cancer a number of years ago. I miss her very much and regret not being able to share with her all of life’s highs and lows the way only sisters can.
In Her Maverick M.D. sibling relationships play an important role in getting the hero and heroine together. Pediatric nurse Dawn Laramie and her sister, Marina, shared a childhood that didn’t include their father because mostly he stood them up for Christmas, birthdays or even visitations. The experience cemented their loyalty to each other—and also made it difficult for Dawn to trust a man with her heart. But her sister is the one who encourages her to keep an open mind about a happy-ever-after. Dr. Jonathan Clifton is more geek than smooth-talking charmer. He’s more into logic than complicated feelings, and reluctant to jeopardize the work environment with romance...until some sage advice from his brother tips the scales toward love.
The relationship between Dawn and Jon was so much fun to write, but I also found a wonderful connection to other characters in the book. And for me it was lovely to put on the page the girlie bond of sisters that I missed out on with my own.
I hope you enjoy Dawn and Jon’s story as much as I did writing it.
Happy Reading!
To editor Susan Litman,
who guides us through this Montana Mavericks maze with a combination of grace and humor. It’s always a pleasure working with you.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Epilogue
Excerpt from An Unlikely Daddy by Rachel Lee
Chapter One
Dr. Jonathan Clifton had never understood what it meant to be stopped dead in your tracks. That changed when he walked into the Rust Creek Falls Medical Clinic and saw the woman behind the reception desk. She stopped him cold—or maybe hot—with long blond hair falling past her shoulders and bluebonnet-colored eyes that could tempt a man to kiss her. Or bring him to his knees. Since he had no intention of letting that happen to him again it was strictly an observation about the very pretty receptionist he would be working with.
Moving to the open window separating her from the crowded waiting room, Jon patiently waited for her to hang up the phone. That was when he noticed her blue scrubs decorated with cartoon animals. The stethoscope draped around her neck was a clue that she probably wasn’t the receptionist. But she sounded a little frazzled, possibly fatigued and even prettier up close than she’d appeared from across the room.
When she hung up the phone, he smiled at her. “Hi. Is it always this busy in here?”
“Pretty much. But today is more crazy than usual.”
Say something brilliant, he told himself. And funny. “It’s still summer. Not even flu season yet.”
“Tell me about it,” she agreed. “Things should get really interesting in a couple months.”
“Flu shots would help. Might want to think about having a flu shot fair. Kind of like a health fair but with the focus on prevention.” When she smiled at him he nearly broke his promise to not let a woman bring him to his knees. “Just a thought.”
“It’s a good one
. There are few things Rust Creek Falls likes more than a reason for a community get-together.”
“Folks here do like a gathering.”
“So you know our little slice of Montana paradise,” she said.
“Yeah.”
The woman tilted her head, studying him. “Have we met? You look familiar.”
“I’ve been here before. My brother lives just outside of town.”
“Ah, a visitor. And you’re here to see the doctor. I’m sorry you’re not feeling well. Have you signed in?”
He looked at the lined sheet attached to a clipboard. Each line was a sticky strip. When patients arrived, they signed in then the name was removed for privacy purposes. “I’m not a patient.”
“Oh?” Her expression turned appraising and a little wary. “Are you selling something?”
He was trying to sell himself—his personality, at least—because he would be working with this woman. But he’d always been more interested in doctoring than witty repartee.
And Jon could feel it coming on. The persona his brothers referenced when they’d nicknamed him Professor. The one where he turned a little formal, a little stiff and standoffish. Too analytical. But trying not to be left him a lot tongue-tied. “I’m here— The kids—”
“So you have an appointment for your child?” She glanced past him, looking for one.
“No.” That sounded abrupt. He smiled. “I don’t have kids. That I know of.”
She looked a little surprised at the lame remark. “You’re a visitor and may not know this, but thanks to Homer Gilmore’s wedding moonshine prank more than one man became a father this year without knowing. It’s not something to be cavalier about.”
“That was a bad joke,” he acknowledged.
“No problem.” Her tension eased. “Guess we’re still a little sensitive about the incident.”
“I understand. In fact my brother was a victim of the punch. He’d just closed escrow on his ranch—”
“So, you’re a cowboy.” She looked interested.
At least he thought so and really hated to tell her the truth. “I’m not a cowboy.”
“Oh.” She sounded disappointed. “The snap-front shirt and worn jeans threw me off. Sorry.”
“No problem.”
She glanced over her shoulder and smiled apologetically. “I really have to get back to work.”
And Jon wanted just a little bit longer with her. So he started talking. “A lot of people dress like this who don’t herd cows on a ranch. In fact, you’re wearing scrubs, but I didn’t jump to the conclusion that you’re a doctor. But I feel pretty confident that you’re not the receptionist.”
“Really?” The corners of her mouth curved up. “What makes you so sure?”
“You have a stethoscope around your neck. Someone who answers the phone wouldn’t need one handy.” He smiled and leaned his forearms on the wall separating them. “And this is just the process of elimination, but my next guess would be that you’re a nurse. If I’m right, it’s a waste of your education, training and experience to have you answering phones.”
“We have a receptionist. Brandy. Somewhere.” She glanced around the front office area looking a little irritated with the missing receptionist. “But since she’s not here at the moment, my job description has spontaneously been expanded to include security checkpoint because I have to ask. Since you’re not a patient, or accompanying someone who is, do you have business here?”
“Technically the clinic is my business.” Good God, he sounded like a pompous idiot. This was not the first time he’d met and talked to a pretty girl, so what was his problem? Plastering a smile on his face, he held out his hand. “I’m Jon Clifton, MD. That is—Dr. Jonathan Clifton. I met with Emmet DePaulo about joining the staff here at the clinic—”
“The new doctor.” Suddenly her tone completely lacked warmth, as if he’d revealed his alter ego was Jack the Ripper.
“Pediatrician, technically.”
“Emmet told us the new doctor would be here in a couple of days. Wow, and I just jumped to the conclusion that you were a cowboy.” As comprehension slid into her eyes her cheeks turned pink.
The color in her face made her even prettier, if possible. “You should do that more often.”
“What? Humiliate myself?”
“No. Of course not. It’s just that blushing looks good on you.”
The brief bit of vulnerability in her expression disappeared and her blue eyes darkened with what appeared to be suspicion. “Really?”
Uh-oh. Apparently he’d stepped in it there. Note to self: they’d just met. She didn’t know his sense of humor yet. There was no way to accelerate the process of learning it. Only putting in one day after another, working together in the trenches during traumas and emergencies could do that. But maybe a little information about himself could speed things up.
“I actually live in Thunder Canyon. I’ve been working at the resort there with Dr. Marshall Cates. They added a pediatric specialist to the staff because a lot of families vacation there.”
“Is that so?”
“Yes. And when the word spread that Rust Creek Falls could use my specialty I decided to lend a hand. I signed a contract for a year.”
“Ah.”
Hmm. One syllable, technically not even a word. It was a signal but he wasn’t certain whether or not the meaning was an invitation for him to continue with information. As a physician he’d been trained that the more facts you obtained in order to make a diagnosis, the better.
“It’s possible you know my brother. Will Clifton. Like I said, he owns a ranch and I’m staying in his guesthouse—well, it used to be the foreman’s house but... Anyway, I was at the wedding last summer when he accidentally married Jordyn Leigh.”
Her full lips pulled tight for a moment. “You say that as if it wasn’t really an accident on her part.”
“Don’t get me wrong. I understand that alcohol lowers one’s inhibitions. But it seems unlikely that punch—even a spiked one—can make someone do anything they don’t really want to.” Some part of his brain registered that based on the way her eyes were practically shooting fire he should stop talking, but the words continued to come out of his mouth. “There were a lot of babies conceived, which means there was quite a bit of ill-advised behavior. Should people have known better?” He shrugged at the question.
“Have you ever heard the saying ‘Never judge anyone unless you’ve walked a mile in their shoes’?” she asked sweetly.
“Are you suggesting that I should try the punch?”
“If the shoe fits...” She stared at him. “And for the record, spiked punch means something was added without the knowledge of those drinking it.”
“True, but—”
“Sometimes things are more complicated than they appear.”
He didn’t just sound like a pompous idiot, he decided, he actually was one. In his defense— Who was he kidding? There was no defense.
“Let me explain—”
“No need. I have to go find Brandy and get back to work.”
There was a definite coolness in her tone now. “Look, I feel as if—”
“I’ll let Emmet know the new doctor is here.”
Before Jon could come up with anything to keep her there—like letting her know he wasn’t always such a jerk—she walked away. Clearly something he’d said had hit her the wrong way, so it was a good thing she couldn’t read his mind. Because he was thinking that she filled out those unflattering scrubs in a fairly spectacular way. She—
And that’s when he realized that he forgot to ask her name.
It was customary when you introduced yourself to get that important information from the person you were introducing yourself to. But he’d kept talking about himself. It was probably
just as well that she’d left before he said more to tick her off. After that fairly spectacular crash and burn he was anxious to get to work. Kids were a much easier crowd.
Moments after the nurse disappeared the door beside the reception window opened and Emmet DePaulo stood there. The man was tall and lean, somewhere in his sixties. When Jon had heard from family who lived here that there was a need in this town for healthcare professionals, he’d contacted Emmet, who was a nurse-practitioner. They’d met for dinner and Jon had found out the older man was a Vietnam-era veteran in addition to being easygoing and bighearted. He had a neatly trimmed beard that was more silver than brown and a wide, warm smile on his weathered face.
He’d explained that Rust Creek Falls was a rural area and his advanced nursing degree and certification allowed him to see and treat patients. He’d started this small clinic some years ago and kept it going through skill and sheer guts. That deserved respect. The fact was Emmet had the trust of the people in this town and Jon was the new doctor who would do his best to earn the same. In his book that made Emmet the boss.
He held out his hand. “Welcome to Rust Creek Falls, Jon. Follow me and we can talk in my office.”
Behind the other man he walked down a long hallway with exam rooms on either side. Corridors branched off and he figured soon enough he would get a tour of the place. And somewhere here in the back office was the pretty nurse he’d somehow offended, although there was no sign of her now.
The last door on the left opened to a room with a big flat-topped desk stacked with a computer and enough charts to bring on carpal tunnel. Framed degrees and certifications lined the walls along with a couple of photos. One showed a younger Emmet DePaulo in camouflage with several other people dressed the same way and a tent with a big red cross behind them. His army days.
“Have a seat, Jon.” When Emmet sat in the cushy black leather chair behind the desk Jon took one in front of it. “I didn’t expect you until next week.”
“I got here yesterday and decided to stop by. Get a jump on orientation.”
“Bored?”
Her Maverick M.D. Page 1