
One Life-Changing Night
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Louisa Heaton
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Chapter One
SHE HADNâT EXPECTED to fall into the arms of a stunningly handsome man on her first day at work. Or to have climbed up a wobbly ladder in Welbeck Memorialâs A&E department. But it was nearly the end of January and the Christmas decorations were still up.
Naomi had offered to take them down at the end of her shift, which had been a long twelve hours, and her head was buzzing with information and protocols and procedures. But she had nothing waiting for her at homeânot even a catâand, quite frankly, putting off going back to her little bedsit with its dingy second-hand furniture had seemed like a good option. Starting a new life was one thing, but starting it in a derelict, ought-to-be-bulldozed ground-floor flat with a growing mould problem was another.
When sheâd offered to take the decorations down, the sister in charge had been very sweet. âOh, you donât have to do that! Weâll get one of the porters to do it. Itâs your first day.â
But sheâd insisted. âHonestly, itâs fine. Besides, itâs bad luck to keep them up this long. Bringing the old year into the new.â
âWell, just be careful. Thereâs a stepladder in my office you can use, but make sure you get someone to steady it for you, or youâll have Health and Safety on my back.â
Naomi smiled to herself, remembering the health and safety lecture sheâd sat through that morning. She would be sensible and follow the rules. Just as sheâd always done. She located the boxes for the Christmas decorations piled high in the sisterâs office and spent the first hour removing baubles and tinsel from the lower branches.
The old, artificial tree was almost bald in parts and she could see it was decades old, dragged out from its box year after year to try and brighten the place up. Her nose wrinkled as she leant too far into one of the branches and breathed in dust and the smell of Christmases past.
As she pulled her face free of the tree, another stenchâthis one of alcohol and body odourâmixed into the fray, sweeping over her like a wave. A scruffy-looking man with stained clothes staggered towards her. She turned to steady him as he passed by, hoping to steer him back in the direction of the waiting room, but the drunk angrily turned on her instead. âLeave me alone! Shouldnât you be working instead of playing with that tree? Iâve been waiting to be seen for ages and youâre out here messing around!â
They often saw people who were drunk in Accident and Emergency and Naomi knew they were mostly unthreatening. All she had to do was be non-confrontational and pleasant and they would be satisfied.
She smiled and led him back into the waiting room. âYouâll be seen soon, sir, donât worry.â
âBloominâ patronising me! You should be working!â he slurred.
She saw no point in telling him sheâd already worked a twelve-hour shift and that she ought to have been at home by now. He didnât want to hear that. He wanted to hear that he would be treated. âIâm sure it wonât be long now.â
Once he was settled back into his chair, she went back to the tree. To get the decorations down from the top she needed to go up the ladder. And that meant she needed someone to help steady it.
She headed back into the unit, looking for someone who was free, but everyone was so busy. And she didnât know anyone well enough yet to interrupt their work and ask them to help her. Because what was more important? Patient care, or an old tree?
Naomi looked down the long corridor at the stepladder. It wasnât that high. Just three steps. What harm would it do, if she was quick? Surely Matron wouldnât like her taking away a member of staff to hold a ladder when they could be treating someone.
Hmm. Iâll be careful. These health and safety measures are always too cautious anyway.
She positioned the ladder where she needed it, noticing that it was a little uneven, and gave a quick look around to make sure no one was about to pounce and tell her off, and climbed up. She picked off the first few baubles and strings of tinsel and dropped them into the cardboard boxes beneath, hearing them plop into the decorations below. She worked quickly, steadying herself when she felt the ladder wobble a bit beneath her feet. The star on the top of the tree was just a tiny bit out of her reach and so she leant for it, stretching. The ladder wobbled even more so and she felt it start to move beneath her. âOh!â
She felt herself fall and braced herself for the impact and the hard, unforgiving floor. But instead, her fall was broken by a solid, reassuring pair of arms.
Stunned, she looked up to say thank you, but her voice somehow got stuck in her throat.
This man was nothing like the drunk that had accosted her a moment ago. This man had captivating eyes of cerulean blue, a strong jawline and he smelt just...heavenly! Masculine and invigorating.
âWhoa! Are you mad?â That voice. The most perfect accent sheâd ever heard. Refined. Educated. Even if it was currently scolding her.
She blushed madly as she stared up into his eyes, her breath catching in her throat. She was embarrassed at having fallen. Ashamed at having been caught up the ladder when sheâd been told to get someone to help her and desperately doing her level best to appear normal and not swoon like a heroine in a romance novel. Sheâd been determined to move to London and start life as a strong, confident, independent woman and yet here she was: it was only her first day at work and she was lying in a manâs arms.
A very handsome manâs arms! Her cheeks flamed with heat as he easily stood her upright, making sure she was steady before he let her go. When he did, she almost felt disappointed to be out of those arms, but...oh!
He was tall, almost a head taller than her, well past six foot, and he had the most startling blue eyes sheâd ever seen. He was looking her over, assessing her, his gaze questioning.
She managed to find some words. âThank you, I...shouldnât have been up there.â She blushed again, brushing her hands down her clothes as if she were covered in dust and dirt. She wasnât. She just didnât know what else to do and she had to do something! Naomi had never been held in a manâs arms like that. Cradled. Protected. Vincent had never held her that way. Not that that was his fault.
This man was probably used to women blushing in front of him. Women fawning at his feet, unable to string a sentence together.
He was dressed smartly in what had to be a tailored bespoke suit that fitted his finely toned body to perfection. This man knew how to dress and he dressed well, his clothes accentuating his best features. A red scarf slung casually around his neck highlighted the auburn tones in his hair.
Still, she wasnât going to let herself be blown away by a gorgeous man. She knew men like this usually came with health warnings.
Get involved at your own risk.
Look at what had happened to her mother, for instance.
She wasnât even sure who he was. She looked for the badge that all hospital employees wore, but couldnât see it.
âYou must be new here?â She saw him glance at her name badge.
âNaomi.â She reached out her hand to shake his. âBloom. A&E nurse. First day.â
He looked at her hand briefly as if she were offering him a handful of sputum. Then he ignored it. âTom Williams. Clinical Lead and doctor. Almost your doctor for that stunt you just pulled.â
She faltered, her hand dropping away from him. This was her boss? She looked away, trying to think quickly, before returning her gaze to his. âIâm sorry, Iââ
âYou had your induction this morning?â If this had been any other situation, she could have listened to his voice all day. It was rich and warm, classy. It was the sort of voice you heard from an English villain in an American movie.
Focus.
âI did, butââ
He smiled at her but the smile didnât reach his eyes. âThe health and safety briefing was covered?â
She nodded, feeling like a naughty child who was standing in front of a headmaster. âYes, but I didnât want to pull anyone away from their work, as they were all so busy, so I thought Iâd do it myself.â The words burbled out of her quickly, showing her horror at having been caught so badly in the wrong.
Sheâd assumed she had been doing the right thing. Naomi had learnt the value of being able to do something for yourself. It was a pleasure denied to many people. A normality that they craved. To be able to do simple things like opening their own cupboard to reach for a mug, or taking themselves to the toilet. On their own. Without someone to help them.
He glanced at the tree. âWell, luckily I managed to save you from a sprained ankle. Or something worse.â He shrugged his shoulders. âA sprained neck wouldnât have gone down well on your first day. Nor would me having to fill in a three-page incident-report form after Iâve just spent twenty hours on non-stop duty.â
âIâm sorry, Dr Williams.â
Tom frowned, seeming concerned as he looked around them and over towards the waiting area. âWho asked you to do this?â
She shrugged. âI volunteered.â
âYou volunteered?â He let out a short, impatient sigh. âWell, if youâre going to insist on doing this, Iâd better stay and make sure youâre safe.â
âOh, you donât have toââ
âYou might head back up that ladder. Besides, I was only on my way home.â He placed his folded coat down on top of his briefcase, removed his scarf and rolled up his sleeves.
He had beautiful forearms... Smooth. Strong.
If he hadnât just given her a dressing-down, she might have been tempted to appreciate them a bit more. âRight. Erm...thanks.â
He looked the tree up and down. âThis old tree ought to have been passed through a chipper years ago.â
âI donât think they do that to fake trees.â
âNo. Probably not.â
He started to take off some more of the decorations that he could reach just by standing there, which Naomi hadnât had a chance in hell of reaching, and then he passed them to her, so she could put them in their boxes a little more carefully than sheâd been doing earlier. She hated feeling like a chastised child and wanted to get back on a more even keel, so she ventured some basic conversation. âSo youâve worked here for a while, then?â
He glanced at her. âYes. What made you come to Welbeck?â
He didnât need to know her history. He probably didnât even want to know. He was just being polite. Or, at least, as polite as he could be.
Sheâd already vowed not to mention her past to anyone here. She didnât want pity or sympathy. She just wanted to get on with her life. If she told people sheâd come out of a marriage where sheâd been more of a carer than a wife, they tended to look at her with pity.
âI used to live in the East Midlands, originally, but I fancied a change of pace, so I got myself a cheap bedsit down here and hoped for the best.â This was better conversation, she thought. Much better than being told off.
âI thought I heard an accent.â
She smiled, never having thought of herself as someone with an accent. âReally?â
âYes. Bit of a northern twang. Iâll go up the ladder and get the rest of them.â
âBe my guest.â She held it steady as he went up and together they made a quick, efficient team. The tree was soon naked of ornaments, broken down into its segments and boxed away for next year. Naomi quickly swept up the debris. It hadnât taken them more than fifteen minutes to get it sorted. âThanks for the help. It was really kind of you.â
âNo problem.â He seemed to look at her for a moment longer than was comfortable, then suddenly shook his head at whatever thought heâd had and picked up his coat and briefcase. âLetâs try not to get hurt tomorrow, Nurse Bloom, hmm?â
âCourse not.â She watched him walk away and let out a breath that she hadnât been aware sheâd been holding.
Wow. What a bear!
And he was her boss! That was embarrassing. Her first day and she had already been caught breaking a rule, although thankfully not breaking anything else.
She determined to try and stay out of Dr Williamsâs way as much as possible. She would only let him notice her when she was being brilliant, providing outstanding nursing care.
She headed in the other direction and went to fetch her coat.
* * *
The weather was doing its best to let the people of London know that it was winter. Thereâd been snow a few days ago and, though thereâd been nothing since, it was still on the ground, due to the freezing temperatures. The surrounding buildings looked grey, damp and cold and as Naomi came out of the hospital to head for homeâa place she really didnât want to go, knowing it would be just as awful inside as it was outâshe wrapped her knitted green scarf around her tightly and pulled on her gloves.
There were people standing outside the entrance to A&E puffing away on cigarettes, their hands cupped around them, as if somehow gaining a small measure of warmth. One of them was the drunk that had confronted Naomi earlier and he looked up, catching her gaze with vehemence. He came staggering back over to her, the overwhelming stench of body odour and stale alcohol almost overpowering. With one grimy finger he pushed her in the chest. âYou lot kept me waiting.â
Naomi felt disconcerted. And a little afraid. She could handle this sort of aggression when she was at work. In the hospital. Then she had her uniform on and was surrounded by people who she knew would come to her aid. Violence against hospital staff wasnât tolerated and they had security guards, too. But out here, outside work, in her normal clothes, she felt more vulnerable.
âLook, sirââ
âYou lot...kept me waiting!â He gave her another shove and she stumbled backwards, caught off balance, her heart pounding. What a first day she was having. Sheâd wound up her new boss and now she was being accosted by a member of the public. She held up her hands as if in surrender and backed away, afraid of what might happen, when suddenly a tall figure stepped between them.
It was Tom. He had stepped in, towering over the drunk like a menacing gladiator.
âStep away.â He dropped his briefcase to the floor without taking his eyes off the belligerent man and then slowly walked towards him.
Naomi watched, open-mouthed in shock. It had to be him! Rescuing her again!
What must he think of me?
âWhat you gonna do? Huh? I know my rights!â A small piece of spittle flew from the manâs mouth, but his swagger and bravado soon dissipated as Tom continued to step towards him.
âIf you ever touch a member of my staff again, youâll find yourself in a police cell quicker than you could ever imagine.â
The man staggered backwards, blinking. âAll right! All right! Iâm going!â He looked most put out that his bullying tactics hadnât worked and heâd been knocked back by a better, stronger man. âYou lot are all the same!â He shuffled off, muttering, his cigarette smoke surrounding him like a dirty cloud.
Tom watched him go, his coat collar turned up around his neck. Only when he was convinced that the drunk was far enough away did he turn around to look at Naomi, his gaze checking her for any injury, concern in his eyes. âAre you all right?â His voice held a note of the same concern.
She nodded quickly. Briefly. She was unable to believe how quickly the situation had escalated.
âMickâs a frequent flyer here. Often presents drunk. Heâs lonely, I think.â His voice had an odd tone, but whatever heâd been thinking disappeared from his face when he turned again to make sure Mick had truly gone.
âBut still he has a go at the people trying to help him.â
He smiled, disarming her. âIt happens.â
âYou can say that again.â She watched Mick from afar, glad that Tom had intervened. Although she felt she would have handled it, if sheâd had to. Sheâd taken kick-boxing classes once, years ago. She had needed something intensely physical to do, seeing as it wasnât required in her marriage. At home, sheâd had to be careful in everything she did, walking on eggshells, making sure she made no dramatic movements so as not to cause inadvertent injury. Being extra careful all of the time had just seemed to emphasise her natural clumsiness. By the end, her marriage had been a physical prison.
âThanks again. It seems youâve rescued me twice in one day.â She tried to break the tension she was feeling by making a joke. âYou really ought to be wearing shining armour and riding a white horse, or something.â
He just stared at her, his face impassive.
Not a lover of jokes either. Okay.
âAnyway. Thank you.â
âWill you get home all right?â
She nodded and pulled up the collar of her own coat. âItâs not far. Just around the corner, to be honest. St Bartholomewâs Road.â
âThen Iâll walk you home. Mick could still be a bother. I know him and he doesnât always do whatâs wise.â
She couldnât let him do that. Heâd done enough for her today and, besides, she didnât need him witnessing the dump she was living in. That would be too embarrassing. By his expensive clothes, she could tell this was a man that probably lived in a penthouse apartment. Heâd take one look at her bedsit and then what would he think of her? He probably already thought of her as incompetent and she didnât want him thinking of her as some sort of Cinderella figure.
âYou donât have to.â
âI do.â He smiled. âYouâve almost fallen once today. If you fell on the ice now, it would undo all of my previous hard work.â
Naomi smiled back, her grin almost freezing into place in the bitter wind.
Right. I just wonât invite him in. Then he wonât understand how bad it is. I can do this. Heâs not a complete ogre.
âOkay.â
* * *
They walked along at a pleasant pace. There was a large park by the hospital and, this late in the day, it was filled with people walking their dogs, or couples strolling hand in hand. Naomi always noticed people doing that. It had been something denied to her and Vincent. Sheâd always been pushing his wheelchair.
But today, instead, she caught herself sneaking looks at Tom and even though she tried to stop herselfâsure that he would noticeâshe kept doing it.
He was so good-looking; tall and broad, yet slim. He frightened her. Not just because he was her boss and probably thought she was an incompetent nincompoop, but because he was without a doubt the most handsome man she had ever met. Handsome men, in her experience, caused trouble. They had certainly caused enough for her mother, who had brought back endless strings of attractive men. Fast-car driving, exquisitely clothed, silver-tongued individuals, so slick youâd have trouble distinguishing them from a vat of oil. Each man had caused their own problems. Borrowing money, never calling, one even taking his hand to her mother. Each and every one had been heartache and pain in a well-dressed suit. Each of them had broken her motherâs easily led heart.
That was why Naomi had fallen so easily in love with Vincent. Why she had married him. Heâd been none of those things. Heâd been average-looking, physically disabled. Sheâd always known where she was with him. Sheâd always known the expectations. It had been simple. And thereâd been no worry or risk of him running off, having an affair and breaking her heart.
âSo how was your first day at Welbeck? Scintillating health and safety briefing aside?â
Naomi looked back at the road, busy with cars. âIt was good. Exhausting, but good. Iâll be glad to get a decent nightâs sleep. You? Did you have a busy day?â
See? I can do this. Pretend this is normal. Thereâs nothing more to it than one colleague walking another home, to ensure her safety. Having a normal conversation.
âYes.â
âWhy did you choose A&E as a discipline?â
âItâs busy.â
She waited, assuming that heâd say more, but when he didnât, she didnât push him. They were both still strangers to each other. Perhaps he had personal reasons for his career that he didnât feel like sharing with someone heâd only just met. After all, she was keeping secrets, too. Holding things back. He was entitled to do the same.
Naomi adjusted her scarf. âYou know, itâs not far now. Youâre probably coming out of your way to walk me home, so you can go, if you want to. I donât think Iâm going to get mugged in the next fifty metres.â
He turned to her. âYou donât like people helping you, do you?â
She blew out a breath. âI stand on my own two feet. Iâve got used to looking after myself and I like it. The independence. The freedom.â She couldnât tell him how much that meant to her. Being out in the world and doing her own thing without having to think of anyone else. She hadnât been able to do that for a very long time.
They continued to walk, turning into her road, and she felt twisting snakes of nervousness swirl around in her stomach the closer they got.
She knew what he would think. He would see the small front yard, littered with an old settee and someoneâs old fridge. The detritus and litter from what seemed like a million previous tenantsâempty glass milk bottles, old cans, raggedy bits of clothing, dirtied by the weather and constant stream of car exhaust fumes. And if he got past her front door? Well, sheâd tried her best to pretty the place up. She had done what she could, but it never seemed enough. The truth was, she couldnât afford anywhere better and it would have to do until sheâd gathered some more savings for a small deposit elsewhere.
Naomi estimated she had another six months of being here, before she could try and rent somewhere else. âI hope you donât think Iâm rude.â
He laughed to himself. âI can cope with rude.â
âWell, I donât mean to be.â As they came to a halt outside her front garden she hesitated, sucking in a breath, her back turned to the property. âWell, this is me. Unfortunately.â
Tom smiled and looked past her. The smile dropped from his glorious face in an instant. âDid you leave your front door open?â
âEr...no. Why?â Naomi turned around and instantly saw the splintering down the door frame where someone had pried it open. She gasped and went to take a step forward, but Tom gripped her arm, holding her back.
âStay here. Call the police.â
âYouâre not going in?â Whoever had broken in could still be in there! He had no idea what he would be walking into. There was splintered wood all over the place and goodness knew what theyâd done to all her things inside. He could trip on anything, hurt himself. The burglars could be waiting with weapons. It was dangerous, and...
Heâs not Vincent. Tom can handle himself.
Heâd certainly shown himself to be capable when heâd sent Mick away outside the hospital. Heâd had no hesitation about stepping into the fray there.
âJust stay here.â He laid a comforting hand upon her arm and then he was gone, darting through the doorway like an avenger, keen to surprise whoever might still be inside.
Naomi pulled her phone from her coat pocket and stabbed at the buttons, dialling for the police. Once sheâd reported the break-in, she stepped towards her flat, her legs trembling, her knees weak.
Sheâd heard no sounds from within. No sudden clashing of Titans, no battle, no fight for survival. Whoever had broken in must be long gone. Feeling sick, she peered through the doorway. âDr Williams?â
âItâs okay. You can come in, thereâs no one here!â
She stepped forward, into the small hall and then through the doorway to her lounge-kitchen.
It was as if a typhoon had swept through it. Sofa cushions had been tossed around, her coffee table knocked over and broken, her books strewn all over the floor. The few pictures sheâd found at a marketânothing special, just bright printsâwere on the floor, their frames smashed, the glass cracked and broken.
All of her precious belongings had been tossed around, as if they were nothing but rubbish at a dump. The sense of loss and devastation was overwhelming. With her hand over her face, she began to feel a tremble overtake her body, until she was shuddering and shaking, sobs gasping from her body as if every intake of breath were a desperate struggle for survival.
Tom frowned from his place in the kitchen and stood awkwardly as she cried.
She had no idea how long she stood there like that, just crying. For the loss of her things, for the loss of her privacy, for the uncaring way in which her things had been used and tossed aside. Sheâd never claimed to be rich, or to have expensive objects that she treasured, but this had been her very first venture out into the world to stand on her own two feet alone. The items sheâd gathered in that home might have been from car boot sales or markets or pound shops, but theyâd been hers. Theyâd each been treasured and valued as theyâd arrived in her home to take their place and make the hole that she was living in a beautiful, homely place to be. Or at least, an attempt at one.
That someone had forced their way in, breaking and trashing everything...well, it broke her heart. So she cried. And she cried. Until suddenly she realised she wasnât crying any more and Tom had started trying to sort through her belongings. Heâd been picking up books and ornaments, trying to straighten them, trying to return them to their rightful place.
She couldnât look him in the eye. Had she not embarrassed herself enough in front of this man, today? Falling from a ladder. Being rescued from a drunk. Being heard as she cried like a baby? That last had been the most horrifying. It was embarrassing. Crying always made other people feel incredibly awkward and she didnât need to look at him to know how much he wanted to leave, but was staying because he now felt obligated.
What am I putting this man through, today? The impression Iâm making is terrible!
âItâs okay, you can go. Iâll wait here for the police. Iâll deal with it. You must have things to do.â
âIâll stay.â
She found an old tissue in her pocket and she pulled it out to wipe her nose and then dab at her eyes. She must look a sight! Her eyes would be all puffy and her face all red...
âNo, really, you donât have to...â
âIâll stay until youâre done with the police. Then, youâll need someplace to go. I wonât feel safe with you sleeping here on your own tonight. It wonât be secure.â
âThe police will fix the door.â
âWith a sheet of plyboard. Hardly Fort Knox. I wonât leave you here with that as your sole defence against the world in this neighbourhood.â
A short brief smile found its way onto her ravaged features. She was appreciative of his kindness. He clearly wasnât all gruffness. âThank you.â
âNow you ought to check to see if anythingâs missing.â
She nodded. He was right. There were only a few things that really meant anything to her. Her photos of her and Vincent. Her old wedding ring in her bedside table that she never wore to work, as jewellery wasnât allowed.
Alone in the bedroom, she made the grim discovery that the ring was gone, stolen. Along with some cheaper bits of jewellery that sheâd bought and an old watch.
She felt strangely empty as she recounted what was missing to the police when they arrived.
Throughout it all, Tom was kind and attentive. He just sat there and listened to her ramble, making them both a cup of tea and heaping hers with sugar for the shock.
Although it had been caused by a terrible situation, Naomi found herself enjoying their conversation. Just sitting and talking to someone. Something she hadnât truly experienced since Vincent had passed. She missed him greatly, but she knew he was in a better place. No longer in pain. No longer a prisoner in his own body. No longer feeling guilty for what heâd done to her life.
So it was nice just to sit and talk. Even if it was only happening because sheâd been burgled!
Her first day at work had gone fine. It was only the things that had happened after her shift that had been so awful! Now, after being berated by her boss and saved by him from physical assault, she was being comforted by him. He might not be the most smiley individual in the world, but he was being kind.
âYou need to pack some clothes for an overnight stay.â
âRight.â He was right. Being practical would also help to take her mind off what had happened. She couldnât stay here. The place felt violated. Dirty. She didnât want to have to stay there a moment longer than she had to. âYouâre right...â
âWhat is it?â
She bit her lip. âI have nowhere to go.â
âYou must have family?â
âTheyâre all up north. A four-hour drive away.â
He frowned. âFriends?â
âIâve just moved here. I donât know anyone.â
âOf course not.â He let out a heavy sigh, his hands on his hips. âA hotel?â
She winced at having to admit it. âI couldnât afford it.â
âRight. I suppose youâll have to come to mine, then. For the night. I can take you to work in the morning, too.â
Naomi tried hard not to show how horrified she was by the thought of having to share a living space with the one man whom sheâd humiliated herself in front of so much today.
She couldnât stay at his. Theyâd only just met and, yes, he was her boss, but he was also a prickly individual, standoffish and cool. He already clearly thought of her as incompetent and now he was offering to share his home with her...
Seriously...she couldnât accept his offer.
âThatâs very gracious of you, butââ
âThen itâs settled. Pack your things and letâs get going.â
Her mouth dropped open for a moment and when she became aware that she probably looked like a landed goldfish, she closed it again and headed to her bedroom.
I canât believe Iâm doing this.
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Harlequin








































