Highland Doc's Christmas Rescue

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Highland Doc's Christmas Rescue Page 17

by Susan Carlisle


  “I’m sitting over here because I can’t trust myself when I sit next to you. We need to talk.”

  Cass’s heart jumped. “I know what you mean.”

  That brought a smile to his lips before he said, “I know I wasn’t fair to you. I was so self-absorbed that I wasn’t thinking about what was best for you. You were here to recover from a horrible experience, and I should’ve given you more room, not asked you for more than you could give. Before you left you said some things I needed to hear. I have to admit it made me angry but that didn’t mean that I didn’t need to hear them. Or that I didn’t love you. I talked to my father. Told him in clear and concise language that I wouldn’t be returning to active duty.”

  Cass hissed in a breath. “How did that go?”

  “He didn’t like it, but he accepted it. Even told me that he’s proud of the work I’m doing at the clinic.”

  That had to have been a tough conversation for both men. She had to admire Lyle for doing it.

  Lyle continued, “At least it’s a positive start. I don’t think he’ll ever get over it but, then, I can’t live my life for him. I’ve got to live it for me.”

  “You’re right. That’s a hard lesson I’ve had to learn over the last few days as well. I knew the moment I looked out the rear window of the car for you as I was going down the drive that I was leaving behind the best thing in my life. That you held the key to my happiness. I was afraid that if I took what you offered, somewhere down the road it might be taken from me. I couldn’t stand the thought of that happening. What I soon learned was that trying to live without you was far worse. I love you, Lyle.”

  That was all it took for Lyle to come to her. He wrapped his arms around her and gave her the sweetest kiss that held a promise that he loved her too.

  After they broke apart, Lyle said, “If you don’t want to live here, we can live in America, or anywhere else for that matter, as long as we are together. I can practice medicine anywhere.”

  “Oh, no, I would never take you away from Heatherglen. Cluchlochry. You belong here. Are needed here. I’ve been thinking about something Flora said. She mentioned Esme could use me at the canine therapy center. I think I would like to train dogs.”

  “That sounds like a wonderful idea.” Lyle hugged her.

  “You think you could stand to have me around all the time?” She studied his face.

  He chuckled. “I can’t think of anything better.”

  “I love you, Lyle.”

  “I love you, Cass.”

  * * *

  Sometime later they were lying in Lyle’s large bed in each other’s arms. Cass had found the place where she belonged, where she was completely happy. “You know, there’s something to the Christmas pudding thing.”

  “How’s that?” Lyle’s hand caressed her bare back over her shoulders.

  “I asked to be happy.” She cupped his cheek. “And I am. Blissfully so.”

  He gave her a quick kiss. “And I wished for you to stay longer.”

  “Why?”

  “Because I need a date for the Christmas ball!”

  * * *

  Welcome to the Pups that Make Miracles quartet!

  Highland Doc’s Christmas Rescue

  by Susan Carlisle

  Festive Fling with the Single Dad

  by Annie Claydon

  Available now!

  And next month, look out for

  Making Christmas Special Again

  by Annie O’Neil

  Their One-Night Christmas Gift

  by Karin Baine

  Keep reading for an excerpt from Festive Fling with the Single Dad by Annie Claydon.

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  Festive Fling with the Single Dad

  by Annie Claydon

  CHAPTER ONE

  UP CLOSE, HE looked even more...

  More outdoorsy. Taller and blonder and... Just more. A two-day beard covered a square jaw, and his mane of shoulder-length hair was tied at the nape of his neck. His casual shirt and worn jeans gave the impression of an off-duty Norse god, and Flora McNeith resisted the temptation to curtsey. It was slightly over the top as a greeting for a new neighbour.

  ‘Hi. I’m Flora. From next door.’ She gestured towards her own cottage, tugging at Dougal’s lead in a fruitless attempt to get him to sit down for just one moment. ‘Welcome to the village.’

  He looked a little taken aback when she thrust the food box, containing half a dozen home-made mince pies into his hands. It might be more than three weeks until Christmas, but the lights of the Christmas tree in the village had already been turned on, and in Flora’s book any time after September was a good time for mince pies.

  ‘That’s very kind.’ His voice was very deep, the kind of tone that befitted the very impressive chest that it came from. And it appeared that whatever kind of deity Aksel Olson was, language and communication weren’t part of his remit. He was regarding her silently.

  ‘I work at the Heatherglen Castle Clinic. I hear that your daughter, Mette, is a patient there.’ Maybe if she explained herself a little more, she might get a reaction.

  Something flickered in his eyes at the mention of his daughter. Reflective and sparkling, like sunshine over a sheet of ice.

  ‘Are you going to be part of Mette’s therapy team?’

  Right. That put Flora in her place. Apparently that was the only thing that interested Aksel about her.

  ‘No, I’m a physiotherapist. I gather that your daughter is partially sighted...’ Flora bit her tongue. That sounded as if everyone was gossiping about him, which was half-true. The whisper that Mette’s father was single had gone around like wildfire amongst the female staff at the clinic. Now that Flora had met Aksel, she understood what the excitement was all about.

  ‘You read the memo, then?’ Something like humour flashed in his eyes, and Flora breathed a small sigh of relief. Lyle Sinclair must have told him about the memo.

  ‘Yes. I did.’ Every time a new patient was admitted a memo went round, introducing the newest member of the clinic’s community and asking every member of staff to welcome them. It was just one of the little things that made the clinic very special.

  ‘Would you like to come in for coffee?’ Suddenly he stood back from the door.

  ‘Oh!’ Aksel’s taciturn manner somehow made the words he did say seem more sincere. ‘I shouldn’t... Dougal and I are just getting used to each other and I haven’t dared take him anywhere for coffee yet. I’m afraid he’ll get over-excited and do some damage.’

  Aksel squatted down on his heels, in front of the ten-week-old brindle puppy, his face impassive.

  ‘Hi, there, Dougal.’

  Dougal was nosing around the porch, his tail wagging ferociously. At the sound of his name he looked up at Aksel, his odd ears twitching to attention. He circled the porch, to show off his new red fleece dog coat, and Flora stepped over the trailing lead, trying not to get snagged in it. Then Dougal trotted up to Aksel, nosing at his outstretched hand, and decided almost immediately he’d found a new best buddy. Finally, Aksel smiled, stroking the puppy’s head.

  ‘I’m sure we’ll manage. Why don’t you come in?’

  Two whole sentences. And the sudden warmth in his eyes was very hard to resist.

  ‘In that case... Thank you.’ Flora stepped into the hallway and Dougal tugged on his lead in delight.

  He took her coat, looking around the empty hallway as if it was the first time he’d seen it. There was nowhere to hang it and he walked into the kitchen, dra
ping it neatly over the back of one of the chairs that stood around the table. Flipping open a series of empty cupboards, he found some packets of coffee and a small copper kettle, which seemed to be the only provisions he’d brought with him.

  Dougal had recovered from his customary two seconds of shyness over being in a new environment and was tugging at the lead again, clearly having seen the young chocolate-coloured Labrador that was sitting watchfully in a dog basket in the far corner of the kitchen. Flora bent down, trying to calm him, and he started to nuzzle at her legs.

  ‘Kari. Gi labb.’ In response to Aksel’s command, the Labrador rose from its bed, trotting towards them, then sitting down and offering her paw to Flora. Flora took it and Kari then started to go through her own getting-to-know-you routine with Dougal.

  ‘She’s beautiful.’ The Labrador was gentle and impressively well trained. ‘This is Mette’s assistance dog?’

  Aksel nodded. ‘Kari’s staying with me for a while, until Mette settles in. She’s not used to having a dog.’

  ‘Part of the programme, up at the clinic, will be getting Mette used to working with Kari. You’ll be taking her there when you visit?’

  ‘Yes. I find that the canine therapy centre has some use for me in the mornings, and I’ll spend every afternoon with Mette.’

  ‘It’s great that you’re here to give her all the support she needs.’

  He nodded quietly. ‘Mette’s sight loss is due to an injury in a car accident. Her mother was driving, and she was killed.’

  Flora caught her breath. The rumours hadn’t included that tragic detail. ‘I’m so sorry. It must be incredibly hard for you both.’

  ‘It is for Mette. Lisle and I hadn’t been close for some years.’

  All the same, he must feel something... But from the finality in his tone and the hint of blue steel in his eyes, Aksel clearly didn’t want to talk about it. She should drop the subject.

  Kari had somehow managed to calm Dougal’s excitement, and Flora bent down to let him off the lead. But as soon as she did so, Dougal bounded over to Aksel, throwing himself at his ankles. Aksel smiled suddenly, bending towards the little dog, his quiet words and his touch calming him.

  ‘Sorry... I’ve only had him a couple of days, I’m looking after him for Esme Ross-Wylde.’ Aksel must know who Esme was if he was working at the canine therapy centre. Charles and Esme Ross-Wylde were a brother and sister team, Charles running the Heatherglen Castle Clinic, and Esme the canine therapy centre. ‘He’s a rescue dog and Esme’s trying to find him a good home.’

  ‘You can’t take him?’ Aksel’s blue gaze swept up towards her, and Flora almost gasped at its intensity.

  ‘No...no, I’d like to but...’ Flora had fallen in love with the puppy almost as soon as she’d seen him. He’d been half-starved and frightened of his own shadow when he’d first been found, but as soon as he’d been given a little care his loving nature had emerged. The strange markings on his shaggy brindle coat and his odd ears had endeared him to Flora even more.

  ‘It wouldn’t be fair to leave him alone all day while you were at work.’ Aksel’s observation was exactly to the point.

  ‘Yes, that’s right. I drop him off at the canine therapy centre and they look after him during the day, but that’s a temporary arrangement. Dougal’s been abandoned once and at the moment he tends to panic whenever he’s left alone.’

  Aksel nodded. A few quiet words to Kari, that Flora didn’t understand, and the Labrador fetched a play ball from her basket, dropping it in front of Dougal. Dougal got the hint and started to push it around the room excitedly, the older dog carefully containing him and helping him play.

  Aksel went through the process of searching through the kitchen cupboards again, finding a baking sheet to put the mince pies on and putting them in the oven to warm. The water in the copper kettle had boiled and he took it off the stove, tipping a measure of coffee straight into it. That was new to Flora, and if it fitted exactly with Aksel’s aura of a mountain man, it didn’t bode too well for the taste of the coffee.

  ‘I hear you’re an explorer.’ Someone had to do the getting-to-know-you small talk and Flora was pretty sure that wasn’t part of Aksel’s vocabulary. He raised his eyebrows in reply.

  ‘It said so in the memo.’

  ‘I used to be an explorer.’ The distinction seemed important to him. ‘I’m trained as a vet and that’s what I do now.’

  ‘I’ve never met anyone who used to be an explorer before. Where have you been?’

  ‘Most of South America. The Pole....’

  Flora shivered. ‘The Pole? North or South?’

  ‘Both.’

  That explained why she’d seen him setting off from his cottage early this morning, striding across the road and into the snow-dappled countryside beyond, with the air of a man who was just going for a walk. And the way that Aksel seemed quite comfortable in an open-necked shirt when the temperature in the kitchen made Flora feel glad of the warm sweater she was wearing.

  ‘So you’re used to the cold.’

  Aksel smiled suddenly. ‘Let’s go into the sitting room.’

  He tipped the coffee from the kettle into two mugs, opening the oven to take the mince pies out and leading the way through the hallway to the sitting room. As he opened the door, Flora felt warmth envelop her, along with the scent of pine.

  The room was just the same as the kitchen. Comfortable and yet it seemed that Aksel’s presence here had made no impact on it. Apart from the mix of wood and pine cones burning in the hearth, it looked as if he’d added nothing of his own to the well-furnished rental cottage.

  Kari had picked the dog toy up in her mouth, and Dougal followed her into the room. She lay down on the rug in front of the fire, and the puppy followed suit, his tail thumping on the floor as Kari dropped the toy in front of him.

  ‘He’ll be hot in here. I should take his coat off.’ Flora couldn’t help grimacing as she said the words. Dougal liked the warm dog coat she’d bought for him, and getting him out of it wasn’t as easy as it sounded. Perhaps he’d realise that they were in company, and not make so much of a fuss this time.

  Sadly not. As soon as he realised Flora’s intent, the little dog decided that this was the best of all times for a game of catch-me-if-you-can. When she knelt, trying to persuade him out from under the coffee table, he barked joyously, darting out to take refuge under a chair.

  She followed him, shooting Aksel an apologetic glance. His broad grin didn’t help. Clearly he found this funny.

  ‘He thinks this is a game. You’re just reinforcing that by joining in with him. Come and drink your coffee, he’ll come to you soon enough.’

  Right. The coffee. Flora had been putting off the moment when good manners dictated that she’d have to take her first sip. But what Aksel said made sense, and he obviously had some experience in the matter. Flora sat down, reaching for her mug.

  ‘This is...nice.’ It was nice. Slightly sweeter than she was used to and with clear tones of taste and scent. Not what she’d expected at all.

  ‘It’s a light roast. This is a traditional Norwegian method of making it.’

  ‘The easiest way when you’re travelling as well.’ A good cup of coffee that could be made without the need for filters or machines. Flora took another mouthful, and found that it was even more flavoursome than the first.

  ‘That too. Only I don’t travel any more.’ He seemed to want to make that point very clear, and Flora thought that she heard regret in his tone. She wanted to ask, but Dougal chose that moment to come trotting out from under the chair to nuzzle at Aksel’s legs.

  He leaned forward, picking the little dog up and talking quietly to him in Norwegian. Dougal seemed to understand the gist of it, although Flora had no idea what the conversation was about, and Aksel had him out of the dog coat with no fuss or resistance.


  ‘That works.’ She shot Aksel a smile and he nodded, lifting Dougal down from his lap so that he could join Kari by the fire.

  ‘You’re not from Scotland, are you?’ He gave a half-smile in response to Flora’s querying look. ‘Your accent sounds more English.’

  He had a good ear. Aksel’s English was very good, but not many people could distinguish between accents in a second language.

  ‘My father’s a diplomat, and I went to an English school in Italy. But both my parents are Scots, my dad comes from one of the villages a few miles from here. Cluchlochry feels like home.’

  He nodded. ‘Tell me about the clinic.’

  ‘Surely Dr Sinclair’s told you all you need to know...’

  ‘Yes, he has.’ Aksel shot her a thoughtful look, and Flora nodded. Of course he wanted to talk about the place that was going to be Mette’s home for the next six weeks. Aksel might be nice to look at—strike that, the man was downright gorgeous—but in truth the clinic was about all they had in common.

  * * *

  The first thing that Aksel had noticed about Flora was her red coat, standing out in the feeble light of a cold Saturday morning. The second, third and fourth things had come in rapid and breathtaking succession. Her fair hair, which curled around her face. The warmth in her honey-brown eyes. Her smile. The feeling in the pit of his stomach told him that he liked her smile, very much.

  It was more than enough to convince Aksel to keep his distance. He’d always thought that dating a woman should be considered a privilege, and it was one that he’d now lost. Lisle had made it very clear that he wasn’t worthy of it, by not even telling him that they’d conceived a child together. And now that he had found out about his daughter, Mette was his one and only priority.

  But when he’d realised that Flora worked at the clinic, keeping his distance took on a new perspective. He should forget about the insistent craving that her scent awakened, it was just an echo from a past he’d left behind. He’d made up his mind that being a part of the clinic’s community was a way to help Mette. And his way into that community had just turned up on his doorstep in the unlikely form of an angel, struggling to control an unruly puppy.

 

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