âA deeply emotional, heart-rending story that will make you smile and make you cry. I truly recommend itâand donât miss the second book: the story about Max.â
âHarlequinJunkie on The Gift of a Child
âWhat a great book. I loved it. I did not want it to end. This is one book not to miss.â
âGood Reads on The Gift of a Child
Welcome to Melbourne Victoria Hospitalâand to the exceptional midwives who make up the Melbourne Maternity Unit!
These midwives in a million work miracles on a daily basis, delivering tiny bundles of joy into the arms of their brand-new mums!
Amidst the drama and emotion of babies arriving at all hours of the day and night, when the shifts are over, somehow thereâs still time for some sizzling out-of-hours romanceâ¦
Whilst these caring professionals might come face-to-face with a whole lot of love in their line of work, now itâs their turn to find a happy-ever-after of their own!
Midwives On-Call
Midwives, mothers and babiesâlives changing for everâ¦!
Eight special stories to collect and treasure:
Just One Night? by Carol Marinelli Meant-to-Be Family by Marion Lennox Always the Midwife by Alison Roberts Midwifeâs Baby Bump by Susanne Hampton Midwife⦠to Mum! by Sue MacKay His Best Friendâs Baby by Susan Carlisle Unlocking Her Surgeonâs Heart by Fiona Lowe Her Playboyâs Secret by Tina Beckett
These titles are also available in eBook format from millsandboon.co.uk
Iâm so excited to have written one of the Midwives On-Call continuity stories set in Melbourne.
When Kiwis visit Australia we call it hopping across the ditch. In this case my story has hopped over there. Itâs fun to write a story set in a very different location from my usual haunts.
Flynn and Ally are made for each otherâit just takes them time to work that out. But who could go wrong with love on the beautiful Phillip Island, which sits just below Melbourne and the Victoria coastline? Throw in the cutest little boy and a big friendly dog and lifeâs a beach.
I hope you enjoy reading Flynn and Allyâs story, and seeing how it ties in with the other stories in this series.
Drop by my website, suemackay.co.nz, or send me an email at [email protected]
Cheers!
Sue MacKay
With a background of working in medical laboratories, and a love of the romance genre, it is no surprise that SUE MACKAY writes Mills & Boon® Medical Romance⢠stories. An avid reader all her life, she wrote her first story at age eightâabout a prince, of course. She lives with her own hero in the beautiful Marlborough Sounds, at the top of New Zealandâs South Island, where she indulges her passions for the outdoors, the sea and cycling.
ALYSSA PARKER DROPPED her bags in the middle of the lounge and stared around what would be her next temporary living quarters. She could pretty much see it all from where she stood. Dusting and vacuuming werenât going to take up her spare time, like it had at the last place. Sheâd have to find something else to keep her busy after work. Take up knitting? Or hire a dog to walk every day?
Her phone rang. Tugging it from her jacket pocket, she read the name on the screen and punched the âtalkâ button. âHey, boss, Iâve arrived on Phillip Island.â The bus trip down from Melbourne city had been interminable as sheâd kept dozing off. It had taken the ferry crossing and lots of fresh air to clear her head.
âHowâs the head?â Lucas Elliot, her senior midwife, asked.
âItâs good now. Who have you been talking to?â She and some of the crew from the Melbourne Midwifery Unit had gone out for drinks, which had extended to a meal and more drinks.
âMy lips are sealed,â Lucas quipped. âSo, Phillip Islandâanother place for you to tick off on the map.â
âYep.â Her life was all about new destinations and experiences. Certainly not the regular nine to five in the same place, year in, year out, that most people preferred.
âHowâs the flat?â
âAbout the size of a dog kennel.â Stepping sideways, Ally peered into what looked like an overgrown cupboard. âItâs an exaggeration to call this a kitchen. But, hey, thatâs part of the adventure.â Like she needed a kitchen when she favoured takeout food anyway.
âAlly, I forgot to tell you where the key to the flat would be, but it seems youâve taken up breaking and entering on the side.â
She was Ally to everyone except the taxman and her lawyer. And the social welfare system. âIt was under the pot plant on the top step.â The first place sheâd looked.
âWhy do people do that? Itâs so obvious.â Lucas sounded genuinely perplexed.
Still looking around, she muttered, âI doubt thereâs much worth stealing in here.â Kat, the midwife she was replacing temporarily, certainly didnât spend her pay packet on home comforts.