to Adelaide?â
What? âNo, sheâs staying here.â He tilted his head slightly and met her gaze. âAbbie.â He paused for the briefest moment, the beat lending credence to his upcoming words. âThank you for your care. This isnât personal; itâs just that Davidâs experience is what Nonna needs.â
For the first time since heâd met her, a smile pulled her generous mouth upwards. It danced along her cheeks and into her eyes, making them sparkle like the rainforest after rain. And then she laughed. A laugh tinged with incredulity and yet grounded with a known truth, as if sheâd heard a similar story before. As if she saw straight through him.
A flicker of unease stirred his normally unshakeable confidence.
âItâs been a while since you last visited Bandarra, hasnât it?â
And, just like that, he felt the power shift. âWhat makes you say that?â
âDavid Martin moved to Adelaide ten months ago and the practice at Naroopna is vacant. As is the one at Budjerree. Right now, Bandarra is the only township within two hundred kilometres with medical staff. Come Wednesday, when Justin leaves, itâs just me and the nursing staff.â
His breakfast turned to stone in his gut. All heâd wanted was the best for Nonna. Instead, heâd let fatigue and fear of the past interfere with his usual clear-thinking and now heâd backed himself into a corner.
The urgent bleep of her pager suddenly blared between them and she checked the liquid display. Without a word, she sprinted past him and out of the room, leaving behind only a lingering and delectable scent of strawberries and liquorice.
He hated that he instinctively took in a deeper breath.
Â
Abbie raced into a chaotic ED, shedding all of her disconcerting and unsuitable thoughts about the infuriating and ridiculously gorgeous Leo Costa. There should be a law against men being that handsome, and a statute that stopped her even noticing. The piercing siren of an ambulance screamed in the distance, instantly focusing her with its howling volume that increased with every moment. An intense sound that never brought good news.
People were everywhere. Two teenagers sat pale and silent holding each otherâs hands, an elderly man supported a woman to a chair and a young woman clutching a baby called out, âHelp me,â and still people poured through the doors, many bloodied and hurt.
Lisa and Jason were murmuring platitudes mixed in with firm instructions as they tried to examine a hysterical woman with blood streaming down her face. Her shrieks of anguish bounced off the walls, telling a story of terror and pain.
The area looked like a war zone. âWhatâs happened and why havenât emergency services notified us?â
Justin grimaced. âApparently a bus hit a truck. Those who could, walked here.â
Triage. Years of training swung into action. âLisa, youâre on walking wounded. Get a nurse from the floor to help you stat, and get someone to ring all the nursing staff and tell them to come in. I want a list of all names and all injuries. Prioritise, treat and be aware of anyone who blacked out. Any concerns, consult me or Jason.â
âWill do.â The experienced nurse headed to the chairs as Abbie grabbed the emergency radio.
âBandarra Base Hospital to Bandarra Police, over.â
Daniel Rustonâs voice crackled down the line. âAbbie, a bus and a truck collided. The paramedics are on their way with the first of the seriously injured passengers. Itâs not pretty.â
âHow many are there?â
âTwo at least, probably more.â
âThanks, over and out.â She headed straight into the resuss room, which was technically always set up ready for any emergency but she always liked to double-check. She glanced at the brand-new Virtual Trauma and Critical Care Serviceâa video conferencing screen on