
The Police Doctor's Discovery
Author
Laura MacDonald
Reads
19.9K
Chapters
10
Chapter 1
CHAPTER ONE
âNICK!â She stopped dead as the main doors of Westhampstead Police Headquarters closed behind her and the dark-haired man talking to the desk sergeant turned to face her.
âRachel...?â There was a flash of something in his eyes along with recognitionâshock? Pleasure maybe? She wasnât sure, she only knew that her heart had turned over at the sight of him and even now was hammering uncomfortably in her chest. âWhat are you doing here?â The eyes as dark as his hair narrowed slightly.
âI could ask you the same question.â She managed to speak lightly, even though her heart continued to perform gymnastics at the sudden and unexpected sight of this man who had once meant so much to her.
âI work here,â he said simply, âor didnât you know?â
âI knew you were a policeman certainly, but I thought you were with the Metropolitan Police.â
âI was,â he said, âbut Iâve recently transferred back here to Westhampstead.â
âSo weâve both come home.â
âYouâve returned?â
âFor the time being, yes.â She swallowed, still struggling to control her reactions. âOne of the partners at the group practice is taking a yearâs sabbaticalâIâm filling in for him.â
âSo how can we help you?â
âDr Beresford.â The voice of the duty sergeant broke in and Nick Kowalski turned slightly towards the man, whom to Rachelâs relief seemed to know exactly who she was and why she was there. He extended his hand and enclosed hers in a huge paw-like grip. âIâm station sergeantâHarry Mason.â
âI thought Iâd come and familiarise myself with the place before Iâm called out,â said Rachel, aware that beside her Nick had grown very still.
âCalled out?â He frowned and just for a moment Rachel was glad that she had this slight advantage over him.
âYes,â she said smoothly, âIâm to provide medical cover for this station.â
âI thought that was Steve OâMalleyâs job,â said Nick and Rachel thought she detected a sudden sharp edge to his voice, almost as if greeting her and talking to her were one thing but having her work there was another thing altogether.
âItâs Steve whoâs on sabbatical,â she replied calmly. âLike I said, Iâm taking his place.â
âHave you done any police work before?â It was almost an accusation and Rachel saw a frown cross Harry Masonâs face.
âAs it happens, yes, I have.â She spoke coolly, in control now. âI was Police Doctor at my last practice in Stockport.â
âLet me show you around.â As if he sensed some sort of tension between the two of them, Harry Mason beckoned to a young constable to take over the desk.
But Nick interjected before the constable had time to move. âIâll do that, Harry,â he said curtly. Glancing at Rachel, he added, âIf you have no objections?â
âWell, no.â She hesitated slightly, aware that Harry Mason seemed put out at having his role hijacked but at the same time suspecting that Nick Kowalski was pulling rank. âOf course not.â She had no idea of Nickâs rank, as he was not in uniform, but as she followed him down the corridor she found her thoughts in turmoil. Sheâd known heâd gone into the police force, of course she had. Hadnât there been conjecture at the time that Westhampsteadâs wild boy might turn to enforcing the law instead of ending up behind bars, as so many had predicted he would?
Her suspicions of his high rank intensified as they passed a man in the corridor, also in plain clothes, who nodded at Nick and muttered the single word, âGuv.â
âYouâre CID?â she asked as he led the way past a huge control room and opened the door of an office, standing back for her to precede him.
âYes.â He nodded.
âRank?â she asked as he closed the door behind them.
âDCI.â
âIâm impressed,â she said softly. âDetective Chief Inspectorâwho would have thought it?â
âWho indeed?â His gaze met hers levelly. âCertainly not the good folk of Westhampstead, thatâs for sure.â
âYouâve done well, Nick.â She glanced around the office as she spoke, at the desk, the filing cabinets, the computer and phonesâanywhere rather than at the dark gaze that was still levelled at her with that same, albeit slight measure of accusation, as if for all those years heâd carried the assumption that she and her family, and indeed many others in their home town, had believed he would never amount to much.
âYes, well.â He shrugged, then, his eyes narrowing again, he added, âYou havenât done so bad yourself, Rachelâbut, then, I donât think there was ever any doubt that you would.â He paused but his comments were loaded and for a moment, as once again her gaze was dragged back to his own, they were both transported back to their youth and the anguish of the love they had shared.
âSo.â It was Nick who recovered first, apparently pulling himself together and turning his head away from her so that she couldnât see the pain that had flared in his eyes. âDo you think you might stay in Westhampstead this time?â
âI donât know.â She shook her head. âSteve has only gone for a yearâbut if I like it here there may be an opening at the practice when Calvin Davenport, the senior partner, retires. So, who knows? I may just decide to stay.â
âWhere are you livingâwith your parents?â Did his lip curl ever so slightly at mention of her parents, or had she imagined it?
âNo, at a house in Cathedral Close.â
âVery cosy.â He raised his eyebrows and she thought she detected a faintly mocking air about him now. It irritated her and drove her to retaliate.
âAnd you?â she said. âI heard you were marriedâI dare say by now you have a horde of children.â
âI have one daughter,â he said quietly, and Rachel felt a sudden sharp stab of some emotion she was unable to define. âAnd my marriage ended in divorce.â
Rachel wished she hadnât spoken. âIâm sorry,â she muttered.
âItâs OK.â He shrugged. âUnfortunately marriage and my career werenât compatible.â
âDo you see your daughter?â
âYes, she lives with her mother but she visits me whenever the job allows me the time.â He paused. âAnd you, Rachelâare you married?â The tension in the small room seemed heightened as he waited for her reply.
âNo.â She shook her head. âIâm in a long-term relationship...â
âAnd?â
âI felt it wasnât going anywhere so this year is by way of a decider...â She trailed off. âI donât know why Iâm telling you this.â She gave a quick, dismissive gesture.
He grinned and for a moment the tension between them dissolved and he was once again the Nick Kowalski she had once knownâthe wild boy from the wrong side of town, the boy with a motorbike who had only kept out of trouble with the law by not being caught, the boy with laughter in his wicked black eyes, the boy deemed wholly unsuitable for Rachel Beresford, only daughter of Westhampsteadâs highly respected GP and his wife, Diana, herself a magistrate.
âCome on,â he said, âlet me show you around and introduce you to the rest of the crew. Iâm sure youâll find them a good bunch on the whole.â
âIâm sure I shall,â said Rachel as she followed him out of his office and into the control room.
Half an hour later Rachel found herself sitting in her car in the car park of police headquarters. Before switching on the ignition, she sat for a while, her hands resting on the steering-wheel as she gazed up at the building before her. It had been a shock seeing Nick again, she couldnât deny that. Even though since her return to Westhampstead she had met up with many old friends and acquaintances, she hadnât expected to see Nick because she hadnât known that he, too, had returned to their home town.
For a moment it had taken her right back to that long hot summer when she had returned from her girlsâ boarding school for the holidays and had taken the car her parents had given her for passing her exams into the garage where Nick had worked as a mechanic. Sheâd seen him before, of course, around the town when she had been at home on holiday, and had long been attracted to his dark good looks and the stories of his rather wild reputation, but it had been that visit to the garage that had been the start of their brief, passionate affair. Heâd asked her out and had picked her up from home on his motorbike, roaring off into the night with her riding pillion. Her parents had been appalled and had done everything in their power to bring the romance to an end. But Rachel had fallen head over heels in love and had had no intention of giving up her new boyfriend. They had spent the whole of that long hot summer together and when at last Rachel had gone to medical school she and Nick had written to each other for weeks.
But then his letters had suddenly stopped, leaving Rachel hurt and bewildered, and shortly afterwards Rachelâs mother had told her that she had seen Nick in town with someone else. Several years later Rachel had heard that he had married another local girl, the daughter of a friend of his mother. She in turn had got on with her own life and had thought she had put the boy from the wrong side of town firmly out of her mind.
Seeing him today had shown her otherwise and had brought the past sharply into focus once more. She wondered if he, too, had felt as she had, but somehow she doubted it. After all, it had been Nick who had stopped the contact between them, Nick who had married someone else. Not that she had carried a torch for him all these years, she told herself firmly. After all, sheâd had Jeremy, hadnât she? She frowned at the thought of Jeremy and at the way their relationship had gone, then with a little sigh she started the engine and drove out of the car park.
The Beresford Medical Centre, named after its founder, Rachelâs father James, was situated in an old Victorian house in a leafy avenue in the fashionable part of Westhampstead. James Beresford had retired some years previously and together with his wife was still living in Ashton House, the family home on the far side of town where Rachel had been brought up. Rachelâs mother was in poor health, having recently been diagnosed with Alzheimerâs disease, and both she and her husband had been delighted when Rachel had agreed to take up the position at the medical centre.
âItâs what weâve always wanted,â her father had said as heâd hugged her.
âI know,â Rachel had replied, âbut you mustnât forget this is only a trial runâit may not turn out to be what I want permanently.â
âPerhaps Jeremy will want to move down here,â her father had added hopefully.
âI shouldnât count on it,â Rachel had replied.
Now, as she entered the large hallway of the house, which had been turned into a spacious reception area, she made a conscious effort to put Jeremy out of her mind and concentrate on the fact that she would have a full afternoon surgery to face. But as she collected the bundle of patient records that receptionist Danielle Quilter passed to her, she found, somewhat disconcertingly, that it wasnât Jeremy who dogged her thoughts but Nick.
âAre you OK, Rachel?â asked Danielle, peering up into her face.
âYes.â Rachel paused and frowned. âWhy?â
âYou look pale,â said the girl, âlike youâve just seen a ghost.â
Rachel blinked. âLike Iâve just...?â she said, then she gave a short laugh. âHa! Well, maybe I have.â Shaking her head, she made her way up the stairs and down a short corridor to the large first-floor room that was Steve OâMalleyâs consulting room and which had been allocated to her for her time at the centre.
The room, at the rear of the house, with its huge sash windows, overlooked the garden, which was enclosed by a high, red-brick wall. Now, as September got into its stride, the leaves on the trees were turning gold and the herbaceous borders, which through the summer months had been a blaze of colour, were now looking tired and turning brown. Rachel slipped off her jacket and hung it on a hook behind the door, dumped her case behind the large pine desk then crossed the room to wash her hands in the small handbasin. Danielle had said she looked pale. Curiously she peered at herself in the mirror above the basin, critically surveying her appearance. Brown eyes stared solemnly back from beneath her fringe of honey-blonde hair. She didnât think she looked particularly pale, although she had most certainly had a shock, seeing Nick again. Would he have found her changed after all this time? There were bound to be differencesâafter all, it had been a long time since theyâd seen each other. Sheâd slimmed down a little, her features losing the roundness of her teen years, and there were a few tiny lines around her eyes, a result, no doubt of the long hours spent on duty as a hospital doctor.
And what of Nick himselfâheâd changed, too, hadnât he? She frowned slightly as she tried to recall. He seemed more powerfully built now in his thirties than he had before and his features more defined somehow, but his colouring was as dark as it had ever been and those eyesâwell, there was no changing those. She gave a little shiver as she remembered how he had looked at her, the gaze every bit as challenging and uncompromising as it had ever been. But then there had been that brief moment of wicked laughter and with a thrill sheâd all but forgotten sheâd been reminded anew of how it had once been between them.
It had never been like that with Jeremy. Carefully she dried her hands then, crossing the room again, she sat down at her desk, switched on her computer and drew the bundle of patient records towards her, reading the name on the top one and smiling as she did so before pressing the buzzer that indicated to the reception staff that she was ready to start her afternoon surgery.
Moments later Tommy Page came into the room, accompanied by his mother Eileen. Tommy had suffered brain damage at birth that had left him with severe learning difficulties and now at twenty-eight he still lived at home with his mother, although on three days a week he attended a local day centre.
âHello, Tommy.â Rachel smiled. âCome and sit down and tell me how I can help you today.â This was Tommyâs third visit to the surgery in the short time that Rachel had been in Westhampstead.
âSore throat,â he said. Sitting down in one of the chairs beside Rachelâs desk, he unwound the football scarf he was wearing and pointed to his throat.
âHow long have you had this sore throat, Tommy?â asked Rachel, glancing at his mother, knowing that Tommy was given to exaggeration.
âHe says for the last couple of days,â said Eileen. âIâm sorry, Dr Beresford, but he insisted on coming to see you.â
âItâs all right,â said Rachel reassuringly. âNow, Tommy, I think Iâd better have a look at your throat.â Tommy opened his mouth and allowed Rachel to insert a flat wooden stick, obediently issuing the âahâ sound she requested.
âYour throat doesnât seem too bad,â she said at last, after gently testing the glands on either side of his neck.
âIt really hurts,â Tommy said, obviously fearful now that Rachel didnât believe him.
âIâm sure it does, Tommy,â she said. âI think you may have a cold developing so what I want you to do is to drink plenty of warm fluids and suck some throat pastilles.â She looked at Eileen. âIf he starts to run a temperature give him soluble paracetamol every four hours.â
âVery well, Doctor.â Eileen stood up. âI hope we havenât wasted your time.â
âOf course you havenât,â Rachel replied, then, looking at Tommy, she said, âHave you been to the day centre today, Tommy?â
âNo, because of my sore throat,â Tommy replied.
âTheyâve been very good to him,â said Eileen. âTheyâve even fixed him up with a computer so he can play games at home.â
âComputer,â said Tommy, pointing to Rachelâs.
âYes.â Rachel smiled. âJust like mine. Thatâs wonderful, Tommy.â
âCome on, Tommy,â said his mother, taking his hand, âwe mustnât take up any more of Dr Beresfordâs time.â
âBye, Tommy,â said Rachel.
Just before the door closed behind them she heard Tommy say to his mother, âSheâs ever so nice, Dr Rachel.â
âYes, Tommy, she is,â his mother agreed.
âI love her,â said Tommy.
With a smile Rachel pressed the buzzer for the next patient.
Steadily she worked through the list. There were many people in Westhampstead who had been patients of Rachelâs father and who remembered Rachel as a child, and it seemed to her that these early surgeries of her days at the centre sometimes took far longer than they should as people reminisced or wanted to know where she had been working. Some, she suspected, even came out of curiosity, perhaps for a second opinion, or to see if Rachel was anything like her father had been as a GP.
âSo, how is he nowâyour father?â One such patient came towards the end of that afternoon surgery, a woman called Peggy Reilly who had known Rachel since sheâd been a baby and who indeed had been a patient of her father.
âHeâs very well, thank you, Peggy,â Rachel replied, wondering as she did so whether she should issue a bulletin on her father, which could perhaps be posted in Reception for the benefit of all those who wished to know.
âAnd what about your poor mother?â Peggyâs voice lowered sympathetically.
âWell, Mumâs health is not as good as it once was.â Rachel knew there was no point in denying itâher motherâs forgetfulness and deteriorating health were well known amongst the residents of the town. âBut Dad looks after her beautifully.â
âIâm sure he does,â Peggy agreed, âbut it canât be easy.â
âWell...â Rachel gave a little shrug. âNow, how can I help you, Peggy?â
âItâs my arthritis playing up again, Doctor. It happens every year about this timeâthe temperature drops a bit, the evenings begin to draw in and my old joints give me gyp. And I have to say my usual tablets donât seem to be helping at all.â
âRight,â said Rachel, âletâs have a look at your medication chart and see if there are any changes that we can makeâthere are several new anti-inflammatory drugs on the market so Iâm sure weâll be able to find one that suits you.â
At the end of surgery Rachel made her way downstairs to Reception where she found one of the receptionists, Julie Newton, leaning across the desk, talking to a man. As she approached the desk the man turned his head and she saw it was Julieâs husband Philip.
âAh,â said Julie, looking round, âhereâs RachelâIâm sure sheâll buy a ticket.â
âWhatâs this?â Rachel smiled at Philip.
âItâs a draw for more equipment at the day centre,â Philip explained. âOne of the prizes is a weekend in a luxury hotelâwith me.â
âPhilip!â Julie exclaimed, and the other receptionists laughed.
âOnly joking,â said Philip with a grin. âBut you still get the luxury weekend and there are plenty of other really good prizes.â
âIâll buy some,â said Rachel. Rummaging through her shoulder-bag, she produced a five-pound note and took the pen Julie offered her.
âThatâs generous of you,â said Philip as she began filling in her details.
âI think the day centre does a fantastic job,â Rachel replied, mindful of Tommy Page and his computer.
âCan I just say I think itâs great that youâve come back to Westhampstead?â Philip added.
âThank you, Philip.â Rachel glanced up. âHowâs your mum these days?â
âNot so bad.â He paused, his head on one side as if reminiscing. âWe had some fun in those days, didnât we?â he said at last.
âEh? Whatâs all this?â Danielle looked from one to the other.
âMy mum was housekeeper for Dr and Mrs Beresford,â Philip explained. âWe lived up at Ashton House when I was a kid.â
âOh,â said Danielle, âI didnât know that.â
âShall I fill in the rest of those for you, Rachel?â asked Julie as Rachel began to fill in the second counterfoil.
âThanks, Julie,â Rachel replied, pushing the counter-foils and the pen across the desk and stuffing the tickets into her bag. âI am in a bit of a rushâas usual.â She pulled a face. âI must go. Nice to see you again, Philip. Say hello to your mum for me.â With that she hurried out of the centre and into her car to make the two house calls she needed to do before she could go home.
Home for Rachel, as she had told Nick Kowalski, was a house in Cathedral Close, which she was renting for a year from friends of her parents who were travelling abroad. Tucked away in one corner of the close in the lee of the great cathedral, St Edmundâs was an elegant, stone-built Georgian-style house filled with antiques, and if the furnishings were a little too traditional for Rachelâs more modern tastes it was something she felt she could live with. Some of the more expensive pieces of glass and porcelain she had locked away in the glass-fronted cabinets in the dining room, terrified that she might break them, but after a while she had begun to relax and enjoy the undeniable comfort and luxury of the house. In many ways it was similar to Ashton House, her parentsâ home, but it had been many years since she had lived there and she had since become used to a more modest way of life, first in student then hospital accommodation and more recently in the apartment she had shared with Jeremy.
As she thought of Jeremy she kicked off her shoes and sank down onto one of the two deep, comfortable sofas. When she had first met Jeremy, a fellow doctor in the practice where she had been working, and had brought him home to meet her parents, he had been hailed as a perfect match for her and the perfect son-in-law for them. The son of wealthy parents, educated at one of the countryâs top public schools and with a career that looked set to take him to his own Harley Street practice, he must have seemed like the answer to Rachelâs parentsâ prayers, but for Rachel things hadnât quite worked out that way. She was fond of Jeremy, of course she was, but somehow their relationship had become static, with neither of them seemingly interested in marriage or starting a family, which, from Rachelâs point of view at least, was strange because she knew deep in her heart that she wanted both of thoseâto be married and to have children. But somehow sheâd never been able to visualise either with Jeremy. They were friends, good friends, but that was all and their relationship seemed to lack the extra spark that Rachel felt sure should be there if any further commitment was to be made.
The spark had been there with Nick. The thought, unbidden, came into her mind. Why should she think of that now? Only because she had seen him again that day, she told herself fiercely. Her relationshipâif you could even call it thatâwith Nick had been years ago. They had both been very young and they had both, without a doubt, changed in the intervening years. But that spark had been there. It had been there all those years ago, it had been there every time he had as much as looked at her and even more so whenever he had touched her. And her skin, without fail, had tingled in response, and it had been there again today.
She gave an angry little gesture as the realisation hit her. It was ridiculous that she should even think such a thing. It had simply been the shock of seeing him again after all that time that had done itânothing more at all. Nick Kowalski was bad news. Heâd been bad news then with his high-speed motorbike and his wild ways and he was probably bad news now. It was surprising that heâd done so well in the police forceâhe was young to be a DCI but, no doubt, he had ridden roughshod over anyone who had got in his way on his passage through the ranks. Somehow she couldnât quite think of him as an utterly reformed character. No doubt his wife had sufferedâby his own admission his marriage had ended in divorceâand there was a child, a little girl. She couldnât imagine Nick as a father but his face had softened when heâd mentioned his daughter.
But what in the world was she thinking about Nick for anyway? Hadnât he hurt her beforeâdumped her unceremoniously without so much as a word of explanation, leaving her desolate? The last thing she wanted now was to have too many dealings with him. That she might have to spend time with him occasionally in her work with the police was quite enough, although with a bit of luck even that shouldnât be too often. Rachel knew from experience that most of her work would be not with plainclothes CID officers but with the uniformed station staff and, provided that Westhampstead was still the quiet country town it had always been, she saw little reason that should change.
With that slightly reassuring thought uppermost in her mind, she stood up and made her way into the kitchen where she began preparing pasta and salad for her supper.
She had barely finished eating when her phone rang and, desperately trying to swallow the last mouthful, she answered it, expecting it to be her father or perhaps Jeremy, although she and Jeremy had agreed to have as little contact as possible during this trial separation period.
âHello?â she said. There was a silence on the other end then the caller hung up. With a little grimace Rachel replaced the receiver, only for the phone to ring again immediately.
âHello?â she said, âWho is this?â
âRachel?â
Her heart jumped. âYes...?â
âItâs Nick. Nick Kowalski.â
âOh,â she said, âhello.â Sheâd known it was him as soon as heâd spoken her nameâhad recognised his voice.
âYouâre eating,â he said abruptly. âSorry.â
âNo, itâs all right,â she said breathlessly. âIâve just finished.â
âI understand you are duty doctor for the station tonight.â
âYes,â she said. âThatâs right.â
âI need a doctor to examine a man who has been brought in for questioning.â
âWhatâs the problem?â She hoped she sounded professional and efficient even though for some extraordinary reason her pulse was racing.
âHe seems disorientated and his movements are uncoordinated.â
âHas he been drinking?â
âNot as far as we know.â
âIâll come down now.â
âThanks.â
âOh, Nick?â There was a slight pause.
âYes?â
âDid you phone just nowâa moment ago?â
âNo. Why?â
âOh, it doesnât matterâit must have been a wrong number. Iâll be with you shortly.â
She hung up and stared at the phone for a moment. Why in the world had she reacted in such a silly way to the sound of Nickâs voice? Had it been because she hadnât imagined that he would phone her? But that was stupidâgiven the fact that she was area police doctor, it was quite on the cards that he might phone her. Usually she would expect it to be the duty sergeant who would do so but it certainly wasnât outside the realms of possibility for a DCI. Hastily she took her dishes to the kitchen then ran upstairs, changed her skirt for a pair of trousers and pulled on a warm sweater before picking up her case and leaving the house. In spite of her earlier conclusions that Nick was bad news and should be avoided at all costs, she found that as she drove to police headquarters her pulse was still racing and she felt a level of excitement at the thought of working with him that she hadnât felt for a very long time.




