the room and the three women turned towards him. Dawn began to cry and Misty carried her across to her mother as she glared at her brother. Andy smiled. All three women could indicate displeasure with their eyes but his sister won hands down. Their mother had been the same but Misty would have been too young to remember that. ‘Sorry. I didn’t mean to startle everyone. Forget it.’ His sister would flay him for upsetting the baby but he was more worried about upsetting Montana. Maybe his sister could help. ‘Can I see you for a minute, Misty, please?’ Misty shrugged and Montana raised one eyebrow mockingly as if to say he’d picked the wrong household to assert his authority, but he could see she was fine with him at least. Misty approached with that militant look in her eye and he turned away with her so the other two couldn’t see their faces. ‘Sorry.’ Diversion might be a useful deflection. ‘Just wanted to ask you if you think it’s a good thing Montana stays here when it obviously makes her so sad.’ As a spur-of-the-moment diversion it had come with a lot of thought. Misty frowned and tilted her head as if to peer inside his brain. He hated it when she did that because a lot of the time she could guess what he was thinking, and he didn’t even know what he was thinking himself. ‘What choice does she have?’ She spoke slowly as she watched him and he tried his own attempt at peering. She probably thought he was interested in Montana. Well, he was—but not like that! He’d been there when Montana had said she didn’t want to come back to this house, this town, anywhere near the hospital. ‘Montana could come back to Lyrebird Lake with me and work in the hospital when she’s ready. She said she didn’t want to go back to Westside. We’re still looking for a midwife and an evening supervisor. Maybe she could fill those positions until she decides what she wants to do.’ Misty was still peering. ‘You’d have to talk to her about that yourself. And how would you get her there? She hates small planes.’ He didn’t like the scepticism in Misty’s voice but she didn’t seem as negative the more she thought about it. She shook her head but again not as convincingly. ‘I can’t imagine Montana wanting to uproot herself from Douglas’s house and head to the back of beyond with a new baby.’ It wasn’t that dumb an idea. He frowned as he watched his sister consider the idea. Too bad if she didn’t agree. It was Montana he needed to convince. ‘People in South East Queensland live there with babies. There’s no strangeness in that,’ he said. Misty screwed her face up in disbelief that he could be so obtuse. ‘There is the problem of leaving everyone you know at a time you need them most.’ He’d be there for her and so would the others. ‘She’d know me. There’s a town full of people who would help.’ ‘Strangers!’ Misty’s scorn came out a little forced and he began to hope she’d seen some advantage for Montana in his suggestion. He lowered his voice. ‘Maybe that’s what she needs right now.’ Montana drifted across the room towards them and he watched her approach. Misty looked pointedly at her brother. ‘Ask her.’ He grimaced. It wasn’t how he would have chosen to broach the subject but something told him Montana had got the gist of their discussion anyway and maybe postponing this wasn’t helping. Even from the beginning he’d never doubted her powers of observation. At least her expression could be construed as interested, not wary. Here goes, he thought. ‘I wondered if you might like a change of scene, Montana.Maybe a job when you’re ready, up my way. We have vacancies we can’t fill at the cottage hospital.’ She watched his face as he spoke and he hoped he made sense. ‘I think I’ve mentioned I live in a rambling old house with tons of room. There’s another semi-retired doctor plus any locums that can come for a week or