The Surgeon's Engagement Wish. Alison RobertsЧитать онлайн книгу.
ready,’ Mike instructed. ‘And a chest decompression kit.’
‘What happens with serious chest injuries here?’ Beth queried, pulling the crumpled sheet from the bed. ‘We don’t have a cardiothoracic surgeon, do we?’
Chelsea shook her head. ‘We stabilise them and then chopper them to Wellington.’ She flapped the clean sheet to spread it over the mattress. ‘Same with head injuries. We don’t run to a neurosurgeon either.’
Chelsea told Beth who the staff members were as the level of activity in the department steadily increased.
‘That’s Kelly—she’s a radiographer. Seth is the house surgeon on call. Looks like Rowena’s coming in to help as well. She’s a midwife.’
The names flowed right over Beth’s head. These people were all still strangers and this was no time to start even trying to remember names.
‘And there’s Luke.’
Beth flicked the laryngoscope she was checking shut to turn off its light. Despite herself, her head turned sharply at that familiar name but any view of the latest newcomer was blocked by the large figure of Dennis, the police officer.
‘The ambulance is here,’ he told them. ‘I’m going to see if they need any help.’
Two other members of the local police force had accompanied the ambulance but the paramedics had been in no danger from the hit-and-run victim they were transporting.
‘Breath sounds absent on the left side now.’ A blonde woman had her stethoscope on the exposed chest, between ECG electrodes. ‘GCS has been dropping steadily. I’ve already done a decompression on the right side.’
‘Bring him straight in here.’ Mike pointed to the available resuscitation area and Beth stepped back as the stretcher moved swiftly towards her. Then she reached to help transfer the patient to the bed.
‘On the count of three,’ Mike directed, holding the patient’s head and neck still by supporting the cervical collar. ‘One…two…three!’
‘We think he was hit at a speed of at least sixty kilometres an hour,’ the paramedic informed Mike. Apparently he was airborne for twenty to thirty metres.’
Maureen handed Beth a pair of shears. ‘See what you can do to get rid of the clothing.’
Beth was aware of more people pressing into the resus area to assist. ‘Tension pneumothorax on the left,’ Mike confirmed tersely. ‘Someone get me a decompression kit, please?’
‘I can do that.’
The calm voice should have eased some of the tension but the shears in Beth’s hands closed with an uncontrolled snap. Her gaze shifted just as emphatically to the speaker and for a split second she actually forgot what she was supposed to be doing.
Luke.
It couldn’t be.
But it was.
Luke Savage.
At Ocean View hospital?
If Beth had tried to think of the last possible place on earth she would expect to see this man again, a smalltown hospital would have been way up on the list. A prison cell might have beaten it to top spot, of course, but not by much.
He hadn’t noticed her. The surgeon was completely focussed on the task of inserting a needle between the victim’s ribs to release air trapped in his chest, which was preventing his lungs from functioning.
‘Pelvis is unstable.’ Mike was doing a survey for other major injuries while Luke was attempting to establish adequate breathing.
The consultant’s statement was enough to start Beth’s hands moving again, her momentary lapse unnoticed. She peeled leather trousers clear of the deformity on the right thigh.
‘Open fracture of the femur,’ she advised.
‘Cover it,’ Mike responded. ‘We can’t deal with that just yet.’
Beth reached for a large gauze dressing and tried to concentrate on squeezing a sachet of saline onto the pad to dampen it, but she simply couldn’t help glancing back towards Luke.
Had Luke recognised her voice as easily as she had recognised his?
Apparently not.
‘Oxygen sats aren’t climbing.’ Luke was staring at the monitor above the bed. ‘We’ll have to intubate.’
‘I’ll get another IV line going,’ Mike said. ‘We need to speed up this fluid resus.’
A new face peered in through the curtain. ‘Luke? They just called to say they’re ready for you in Theatre.’
His glance seemed to bypass Beth effortlessly as she used the damp dressing to cover the gaping wound on their patient’s leg. ‘Thanks. I’ll be up as soon as I can.’
Mike took the cannula Beth was holding out for him. ‘Could you help Sid take Jackal upstairs, please?’
‘Sure.’ The prospect of making an exit was appealing.
Was Luke simply being professional, ignoring her—quite properly—due to the emergency treatment of a patient? It was possible that he had not yet recognised or even noticed her.
It was also quite possible that he just didn’t give a damn.
And why, in God’s name, should that bother her so much anyway?
Beth turned her back on Luke but she wasn’t going to escape quite so easily. The sound of breaking glass made everybody pause.
‘What the hell was that?’
‘We locked the doors when we came in.’ The male ambulance officer had abandoned his paperwork to step closer. ‘Sounds like someone really wants to get in.’
A police officer appeared behind him. ‘ETA for the chopper is only two minutes. We’ve got a bit of a skirmish going on in the car park right now, though.’
The sound of a shotgun being fired was unmistakable.
So was the alarm that sounded on the new patient’s monitor in the tiny silence that followed.
‘He’s in VF,’ Luke warned.
Mike was already reaching for the defibrillator paddles. ‘Everyone stand clear.’
‘I don’t want anyone moving from here until we get some back-up,’ the police officer ordered.
‘Stand clear,’ Mike ordered.
Beth stood clear. In fact, she was quickly penned into the corner of the area, along with the paramedic and Chelsea, and couldn’t escape the awareness of how appalling the situation was.
They watched as Maureen squeezed air into the patient’s lungs and Luke readied himself to do compressions when the initial series of shocks was completed. Mike pressed the paddles into position and pressed the buttons to deliver the second shock and then the third.
Beth closed her eyes for a moment. This was all so bizarre it was almost a joke. Some huge, cosmic joke. And whoever decided which way the winds of fate were going to blow was laughing at her right now.
She had come here to get away from the stress of dealing with violence and was now up to her neck in the most major incident she had ever encountered.
And she had also come to get away from the lingering effect Luke Savage had branded on her life. She had just ended her extremely brief engagement to Brent, for heaven’s sake, because she had recognised that the only qualities he had that were attractive had been the ones that reminded her of Luke.
The prospect of actually crossing paths with Luke Savage had haunted Beth for far longer than the fear of finding herself living Neroli’s nightmare, and coming to a small town like Hereford had seemed like the perfect way to escape that particular ghost.
And