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Carrying The Single Dad's Baby. Kate HardyЧитать онлайн книгу.

Carrying The Single Dad's Baby - Kate Hardy


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blew out a breath. ‘There isn’t a tactful way to say it, but I get the impression you’re a straight-talker so I know you won’t take this the wrong way. Everyone thought his name was on the consultant’s job.’

      ‘So I’ve got his job and he resents me for it.’

      ‘Not necessarily,’ Sam said.

      ‘But probably. Anyone would feel that way, in his shoes.’ Beatrice bit her lip. ‘OK. Thanks for the warning. I’ll be careful what I say to him. I don’t want to rub it in and make him feel bad.’

      ‘At the end of the day, the management team chose you,’ Hayley said. ‘He’ll get over it.’

      At least now Beatrice understood why Daniel had been a little snippy with her and less welcoming than other members of the team. She’d be careful with him—not patronising, but not throwing her weight around, either.

      After Hayley scooped the sleeping baby out of Beatrice’s arms and transferred her to the pram, Beatrice enjoyed having lunch with them. Muswell Hill was a good place. She had the strongest feeling that she was going to be happy here.

      ‘It’s not just about work, though,’ Hayley said. ‘There’s the regular pub quiz between us, Maternity and Paediatrics. How’s your general knowledge?’

      Beatrice thought of her brothers. ‘A bit obscure.’

      ‘Good. You’re on the team,’ Sam said. ‘There’s a team ten-pin bowling night in a couple of weeks—everything’s on the noticeboard in the staff kitchen, if you want to sign up. Oh, and we’re having a football morning in the park on Saturday. It’s not a serious thing, really just the chance for everyone to kick a ball around, but we do a pot-luck picnic thing afterwards. And, after trying your brownies this morning...’

      Beatrice smiled. ‘Hint taken. OK. I don’t mind kicking a ball about. And I’ll make some more brownies.’

      ‘Excellent. I think you’re going to fit right in,’ Sam said with a smile.

      ‘Josh said the Red Lion’s the place to go, so I’m buying drinks after my shift today,’ Beatrice said. ‘If you can both make it, it’d be lovely to see you.’

      ‘That’s nice of you,’ Hayley said. ‘Thanks. We’ll be there.’

      * * *

      Back in the staff kitchen, as Sam had predicted, everyone wanted to cuddle baby Darcie. And people Beatrice hadn’t yet met patted her on the shoulder, welcomed her to the department, and thanked her for the brownies.

      Daniel Capaldi was conspicuously absent; and Beatrice noticed that he didn’t come to the Red Lion with the rest of the team after their shift. She could understand that. If you were really disappointed at not getting a promotion everyone thought you’d earned, it would be hard to celebrate someone else getting the post instead.

      But there was a strong chance she and Daniel would have to work together in the future, and she needed to be sure that they could do that and put the needs of their patients before any professional rivalry. As the more senior of them, it was up to her to sort it out.

      There were two ways she could deal with this. She could either pretend it wasn’t happening and wait for Daniel to stop resenting her; or she could tackle the problem head on and come to some kind of understanding with him. She’d grown up with their family motto, tenacitas per aspera—strength through adversity—so the second option was the one the rest of the Lindfords would choose.

      Tackling him head on it was.

      The next day, she was in Cubicles and Daniel was in Resus. Just as Sam had done, the previous day, she slipped into Resus at lunchtime. Daniel was on his own, to her relief, and it looked as if he was writing up notes. ‘Dr Capaldi. Just the man I wanted to see,’ she said.

      He gave her a cool look. ‘Something I can help you with, Ms Lindford?’

      ‘Yes. I’m buying you lunch.’

      ‘Thank you, but that’s not necessary.’

      He was trying to fob her off? Well, she wasn’t put off that easily. ‘I rather think it is. You and I need a chat.’

      ‘Hardly.’

      ‘Definitely,’ she said. ‘I’m not pulling rank, but I think there’s a problem and we need to sort it out rather than let it grow out of proportion.’

      ‘There isn’t a problem,’ he said.

      ‘Then have lunch with me.’

      He looked reluctant.

      ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to put arsenic in your coffee,’ she said. ‘Apart from anything else, I don’t have the licence to get hold of that grade of poison.’

      He didn’t even crack a smile.

      Taking him by the shoulders and shaking him until his teeth rattled wouldn’t achieve anything other than a temporary relief from frustration. She folded her arms to help her resist the temptation. ‘I could offer you a pair of boxing gloves, if that would make you feel better. Though I should probably make you aware that I could take you in the gym.’

      He blinked. ‘You box?’

      ‘I box,’ she confirmed. Her personal trainer had suggested it, and boxing had been one of the things that had got her on the slow road back from rock bottom. ‘I might be a galumphing five foot ten, but I’m very light on my feet. I can do the whole Muhammed Ali thing. So. Your choice. Boxing gloves or lunch?’

      ‘Lunch. Because I’d never hit a woman.’

      ‘I wouldn’t have any qualms about hitting you in the ring,’ she said.

      Was that a fleeting and grudging glimpse of respect she saw in his face?

      ‘But I think coffee night be more civilised,’ she said.

      He didn’t make polite conversation on the way to the canteen, but neither did she. And although Daniel protested when she insisted on paying for his sandwiches, Beatrice gave him the look she reserved for patients who were drunk and obnoxious on a Saturday night and he backed off.

      ‘Thank you for lunch,’ he muttered when they sat down.

      At least he had manners. Even if he wouldn’t look her in the eye. And that was going to change, too. She’d make him smile at her if it killed her.

      ‘Let’s put our cards on the table. I understand why you don’t like me. I got the job that everyone thought had your name written all over it. Of course you resent me.’

      ‘Not true,’ he said.

      She scoffed. ‘You were the only person who didn’t take a brownie yesterday.’

      ‘Because I don’t like chocolate.’

      That hadn’t occurred to her. But she hadn’t finished with her evidence. ‘And you didn’t come to my welcome drink after your shift.’

      ‘And you think that was because I’m sulking?’

      ‘Isn’t it?’

      ‘No,’ he said. ‘Everyone else thought my name was on that job. That’s the only bit you got right.’

      She frowned. ‘So what’s your take on it?’

      ‘Not that it’s anybody’s business, but I didn’t actually apply for the job.’

      She stared at him. ‘You didn’t?’

      ‘I didn’t,’ he confirmed. ‘Because I can’t give the department what it needs, right now. I’m a single dad, and my son’s needs come before the job. Always.’

      She blew out a breath. ‘Fair enough. I didn’t know that.’

      ‘Well, you do now.’

      ‘Then


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