âNow, tell me, Katrinaâ¦
âYou will be at Rose Cottage until you start work again in September?â
âOh, yes. Do you want to send another patient to stay with me?â
âNo. I want you to be there, and free, so that whenever I can manage it, I can come and see you.â
âSee me? Why?â
âIâve fallen in love with you, but you donât feel the same about me yet.â
When she would have spoken, Simon said, âNo, donât say anything, just bear it in mind.â He spoke in a casual voice, then he added, âYou wonât mind if I just turn up from time to time?â
Katrina drew a steadying breath. âNo, I shanât mind.â
THE road was narrow, high-hedged and overshadowed by trees, and, like so many English country lanes, it wound its way in a series of haphazard curves through the quiet countryside, free of traffic and pleasantly warm in the sunshine of a spring morning.
The man behind the wheel of the dark grey Bentley drove unhurriedly, enjoying the peace and quiet, reflecting that there were still quiet corners of rural England which one came upon by chance. There had been no village for some miles, and the last of the solitary cottages along the road he had passed a mile back; there had been no cars⦠As he thought that a motorbike came round the next curve, travelling fast and in the middle of the road, flashing past the Bentley with inches to spare, just missing it.
The driver of the Bentley swore quietly as he took the next bend in the road, to slide to a halt and get out of his car. The contents of a shopping basket were strewn across the road, a bicycle, no longer recognisable as such, was tossed to one side of the verge, and sitting near it was a girl.
She appeared unhurt but in a fine temper.
âThat idiotâdid you see him? On the wrong side of the road, driving like a maniac.â
The man, walking towards her, thought what a splendid creature she was: a big girl, with quantities of dark brown hair and a face whose beauty wasnât easily forgotten.
He reached her side, a giant of a man, no longer young, his pale hair grey at the temples, but handsome, with a high-bridged nose and a thin, mobile mouth.
âYes. I saw him. Are you hurt?â
He bent to look at her and saw the blood oozing from a cut on her leg.
âStay still for a moment; Iâll fetch my bag.â
When he returned she said, âYouâre a doctor? A fortunate meeting.â
He was gently cleaning the wound. âIndeed, yes, but in hardly fortunate circumstances. This will need your doctorâs attention. Where else are you hurt? You werenât knocked out?â
âNo. Iâm a bit sore here and there.â
âThe best thing is for me to drive you to your home and get your own doctor to see you. You live near here?â
âAbout a mile down the road. Rose Cottageâitâs on the left-hand side, and another half-mile or so to the village.â
He had bandaged her leg, cleaned the scratches on her arms and legs and brushed the bits and pieces from her hair. âYou will have some nasty bruises,â he told her. He closed his bag, bent and picked her up without apparent effort, and carried her across to his car.
As he settled her in the seat she said worriedly, âYou shouldnât have done that. Iâm heavy.â
She wasnât altogether pleased when he said casually, âBut youâre a big girl, arenât you?â
He smiled at her. He had a nice smile, kind and at the same time impersonal. And it was quite true; she was a big girl. She sat, on the edge of tears now, watching him gather up the contents of her shopping basket and then pick up the mangled wreck of her bike and put it tidily on the grass verge. The sight of it was too much, and tears were trickling down her dirty cheeks when he got into the car beside her.
He took a quick look, offered a very large, very white handkerchief, and said in a voice as kind and impersonal as his smile, âYouâll feel better once youâve had a good cry. Thereâs nothing like it for relieving the feelings.â
He sat patiently while she sobbed and snuffled, then finally mopped her face, blew her nose and muttered, âIâll wash your hanky and send it to you.â She looked at him from a blotchy and still beautiful face. âMy nameâs GibbsâKatrina Gibbs.â