Chapter Two
‘EX-WIFE?’ RICHARD did a double-take, perhaps thinking he had misheard or that Dominic was joking.
‘Yes.’
‘Your ex-wife is working in Emergency? You never said you’d been married. I had no idea.’
How could he have? Dominic thought to himself. Apart from a fleeting conversation with Jordan and his wife, a couple of years ago, he’d never discussed his brief marriage with anyone. To Dominic’s colleagues, friends—and lovers—he was the personification of an eternal playboy bachelor.
‘It was a long time ago,’ Dominic clipped, already regretting saying anything. ‘It didn’t last for long.’
‘What happened?’ Richard persisted.
‘We were young.’ Dominic shrugged and turned back to the computer. ‘We got married for all the wrong reasons.’
‘Such as?’
But Dominic wasn’t going to answer that one.
‘We both agreed it was a mistake. I haven’t seen her in...’ He blew out a sigh. ‘Years.’
‘And how does it feel to see her now?’
Dominic thought for a moment. How did it feel to see Rachel again?
Challenging.
It felt as if every mistake he had ever made in life was suddenly being paraded in front of him, but he played it down to his boss.
‘Surprised. I never thought she’d leave Sheffield,’ Dominic admitted, but he deliberately didn’t offer her name, nor let on that it was Rachel.
There were always staff coming and going at The Primary, and he was quietly relieved Richard hadn’t picked up on the tension between them this morning. ‘She’s all about her family.’
‘What are they like?’ Richard asked.
‘Her mum died, so there’s just her dad—and she’s ever so protective of him.
Oh, and there are four hulking brothers.
They’re all very parochial...’ His voice trailed off.
He didn’t mean it in a derogatory way, but as an outsider it had been impossible to break in to their clique. ‘They considered me weak.’
‘Weak?’ Richard frowned, clearly nonplussed, because Dominic, as well as being tall and broad-shouldered, was incredibly confident and assured.
‘A bit of a pansy,’ Dominic elaborated. ‘And I guess I was back then.’
Richard laughed, but it faded when he saw the serious expression on his colleague’s face.
‘What was your wife like?’
‘Tricky,’ Dominic said—which was the understatement of the year.
But he really didn’t want to discuss it, so when his pager buzzed he pounced on it and saw that it was Maternity.
‘Your wife is paging me,’ Dominic said, and gave a wry smile. Richard’s wife, Freya, was a midwife, and had just started back at work after the birth of their son William. ‘I’m needed over in Maternity for an epidural.’
But Richard had more to say on the topic of Dominic’s ex-wife. ‘I can go and give the epidural. Why don’t you go and speak with...?’
Richard was waiting, Dominic guessed, for him to offer a name, but he would not be revealing that.
‘It must have been a big shock for your ex-wife too,’ Richard said.
‘She seemed fine with it.’ Dominic shrugged.
Only, he knew that couldn’t be true. Rachel buried her emotions deep, and he had been denied access to them right from the start.
When they’d first got together he had asked about her mother, wondering how her loss at such an early age had affected Rachel, but she had shut him down.
And then, in those final painful days when he’d tried to speak to her about their son, Rachel had made it very clear she did not want him to get close.
Well, she’d got her wish, and although it appeared they might be working together for the foreseeable future, they had never been further apart.
‘I’ll head up to Maternity,’ he said.
‘No, no.’ Richard stood and pulled rank. ‘I’m going. There’s a patient with COPD down in Emergency. He needs a pre-op assessment. Could you go and take care of that, please?’
Dominic’s jaw gritted.
‘And while you’re there perhaps you could manage a conversation with your ex-wife, to ensure that you’re both okay with the situation?’
‘We’ll be fine.’
‘Good. Then you’ll have no issue heading down to Emergency.’
‘Of course I won’t. But as for having a conversation with my ex-wife, there’s nothing left to talk about,’ Dominic said. ‘It was all said and done with years ago.’
Not really.
There had been an awful lot left unsaid.
* * *
Rachel had walked back down towards the Emergency Department in somewhat of a daze. She had been completely unprepared to see him and felt utterly sideswiped.
Her move to London was still so new. Of course she knew that Dominic was from here, so she’d been braced to run into him on the street, or in a shop or café, even while telling herself she was being ridiculous—after all, there were more than eight million people living in London.
Not for a second had she expected to see him at work.
A doctor?
An anaesthetist!
When?
He wasn’t exactly a people person. In fact, the Dominic she’d known had been rather socially awkward. The Dominic she’d known had had one interest—physics—and had been determined that one day he’d be a research scientist. He’d been heading off to university for just that purpose.
Okay, he’d had two interests, Rachel amended as she opened the large double doors to Emergency: physics and sex.
She dared not allow herself to think of the latter, though!
‘How’s Thomas?’ May pounced the second Rachel returned to the department.
‘I’m not sure,’ Rachel said. ‘I took Mum over to the ITU relatives’ room, but Thomas was still in Theatre when I left.’
‘I’ll call them in a little while,’ May said.
Rachel looked over to May, who was writing on the whiteboard as she chatted, and oddly found that she wanted to confide in her.
May, she wanted to say, how long has Dominic Hadley worked here? Or, May, that registrar anaesthetist—well, he just happens to be my ex-husband and I don’t know quite what to do.
But Rachel said nothing.
‘Are you okay to go back to work in Minor Injuries?’ May asked, taking her glasses off and smiling at Rachel.
‘Sure.’
‘Would you mind restocking Resus first?’ May directed a slight eye-roll at Tara. ‘You know what you used.’
Restocking was tedious, but essential—especially in Resus. It was imperative that all the equipment was exactly where it should be when it was needed the most.
A lot of the packs had been opened, though not necessarily used, so there was a lot of replacing and reordering to do. Rachel did so methodically, glad of the chance to get better acquainted with the area.
Tara was taking care of an elderly patient who’d had a seizure. He was currently sleeping while they awaited his transfer to a ward. She joined Rachel in Resus.
‘How long did you work in Emergency in Sheffield?’ she asked as Rachel replaced the oxygen tubing and mask and checked the suction.
‘Three years in Emergency all up. I did hairdressing before I went into nursing.’
They chatted lightly as Rachel worked, though Rachel’s heart wasn’t really in the conversation. She was still reeling from seeing Dominic that morning, and wondering how on earth they would be with each other when they eventually spoke.
The patient Tara was caring for was soon transferred, so she came and gave Rachel a hand, both of them checking the intubation tray’s contents before sealing it up.
‘Keep an eye on Dominic,’ Tara said suddenly.
‘Sorry?’ Rachel blinked.
‘Dominic Hadley—the registrar anaesthetist. I saw him looking at you when he was on the phone.’
Rachel decided it was best to act vague. ‘What do you mean?’
‘I’m just trying to give you a heads-up. Dominic might best be described as “nice while it lasts”—but, believe me, it never does.’
Rachel could hear the bitterness in Tara’s voice. It was clear there was history between her and Dominic, and from the sound of things, he had become a bit of a player. It was all just so at odds with the man she had once known.
She wondered what Tara’s reaction would be if she told her she had once been married to him, and decided there and then that her and Dominic’s past would not be joining them at The Primary.
There was no way she wanted the fact they’d been married to get out. And aside from that...
‘I’m engaged,’ Rachel said, ‘and even if I weren’t...’
She left it there, because it felt safer to do so than to let her imagination wander down that track.
No way!
Her heart had been placed under lock and key after she and Dominic had broken up.
It had taken years for her to forge another relationship.
There had been a couple of cursory attempts at dating, but they hadn’t worked out.
And then, when she’d first started working in Emergency, she’d met Gordon, a friend of her flatmate, who was kind and made her feel safe.
When the accounting firm he worked for had offered him a promotion that had required him to move to London, Gordon had asked her to join him.
It had felt like a big leap to agree to live with him, on top of moving cities and jobs for him, but the night before they’d left for London Gordon had, at the leaving party her dad had thrown for them, asked her to marry him. And now they were engaged.
Not that she wore her ring to work.
With the restock done, Rachel signed off and headed back to the minor injuries section.
But an hour or so later, unable to concentrate and desperate for a moment’s peace, she said she was going to find her cardigan and made her way to the changing rooms. Without even bothering to switch on the light, Rachel sat on the bench in semi-darkness, the sounds of the Emergency Department muffled behind the thick door, and put her head in her hands, trying to process things.
Dominic was a doctor.
That nerdy teenager she had known was now a sharp-suited anaesthetist with something of a reputation with women, given it had taken all of one moment in his presence to be warned of his ways.
Despite keeping her head down, the giddy feeling refused to abate—and then Rachel suddenly recognised what the feeling was: it was how she had always felt when she was with him.