him back to the UK, no matter how much doctors were needed in the remote South Pacific jungle community, or how much he wanted to stay. He smiled down at the little girl, who was now twisting the hem of her skirt round and round in her hands.
âDo you have to go away?â she said.
He squatted down on the veranda so he could be at her level. âFor a little while, but Iâll be back very soon,â he answered, laying emphasis on the soon , knowing Shelly was listening to his every word and would understand him perfectly.
âGood,â said the girl. Satisfied, she let go of his hand and skipped off down the steps towards the stilted houses fringing the river.
âKids, can you let me say goodbye to Matt properly, please?â called Shelly.
Laughing, the children raced off, leaving Matt and Shelly alone again. He could feel the sweat pouring down his back, his shirt sticking to him. Above them the sun, white and blinding, beat down like a furnace but the fierce heat felt kind on his skin. It was natural. It reminded him of where he belonged.
Leaning on the veranda rail, he looked out over the clearing, the village, and the river, to the lush jungle that stretched endlessly all around.
âIf you care about them, go home and take a break,â said Shelly as the children piled into canoes at the waterâs edge, laughing and squealing with glee.
âThatâs emotional blackmail.â
âThat you didnât use on me when you had the chance just then. And thatâs because youâre not the stubborn bastard you like us to think.â
Matt kept his eyes forward. âWell, thanks for your support, Dr. Cabot.â
âAnd thank you for your cooperation, Dr. Landor. Now, your carriage awaits.â
She nodded at the rusty Jeep idling on the muddy red track that led from the medical center to the tiny airstrip twenty miles away. It was the only way out of the village, other than by canoe or on foot; the only route to reach patients in the outlying communities and the only way home.
âYou know this is ridiculous. Youâre desperate for medics and you send one of your most experienced back home,â he said as they walked down the steps to the track.
Standing on tiptoe, Shelly brushed his cheek with her lips. âWe can manage without you for a while, and despite what you think, youâre not the only hot-shit doctor in Tuman.â
âI never said I was,â he growled.
âReally? You could have fooled me, the way youâve been behaving, as if you want to take on the world single-handed. Jeez, you almost killed yourself.â
âIâm fine. It wasnât me that got hurt, remember?â he said, trying to banish the memory of the accident, the smell of burning rubber, of spilled diesel, the panic that had threatened to overwhelm him, the sight of his friend Aidan bleeding and unconscious in the wreckage.
âAre you okay, Matt?â
Shelly touched his arm and Matt flinched.
âYou know damn well I am.â
Shaking her head, she called to the driver of the Jeep, âDr. Landor is ready to leave now.â She turned back to Matt. âHave a good trip. Iâll see you in the autumn, if you behave back in England,â she said, kissing him briefly. Then she was walking back towards the wooden veranda of the medical station, and he was turning his back and trudging towards the Jeep with all the enthusiasm of a man heading for the tumbril that would take him to the guillotine. Ahead of him lay a two-hour road trip to the airstrip, a hop on a Cessna to the islandâs main airport, and a long, tedious flight to London.
Stretching out like a sluggish brown river lay four months of enforced rest and recuperation in England. Four months if he was lucky and could convince the powers-that-be at the medical charity that he was fit to come back and practice again. But there was one consolation, if you could call it that. Heâd
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