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Page 6 of Doing No Harm (Carla Kelly’s Regency Romances #5)

H is was a thoughtful walk back down the High Street to Miss Grant’s Tearoom, encumbered as he was with a no-hoper pup without a single thing going for him, who still managed to wag his tail.

The encumbrance came with the realization that Miss Grant might not care for a dog on the premises, especially one as bedraggled as the Tavishes already in temporary residence.

He held the dog out for a better look. “I will tell Miss Grant that you leaped into my arms to escape bears,” he said, glancing around first to make sure that no one stood close by to hear him talking to the malnourished little scrap.

“You could use a bath and a haircut.” He chuckled. “Come to think of it, so could I.”

He had second and third thoughts about his impulsive act. Since Edgar was a small village, there wasn’t time for fourth thoughts before he opened the door to Miss Grant’s Tearoom. “Here goes, you mutt,” he whispered. “Look sagacious and competent.”

“You’re talking to a dog,” was Miss Grant’s first comment, as she eyed the trembling little beast in his arms. “And he doesn’t smell good.”

Oh, what now? he thought, not knowing this freckled woman well enough to throw himself on her mercy, especially as she was already housing his first patient in Edgar. And there he went again, implying that Edgar was going to be his future home.

He took a closer look at her in better light than upstairs and was instantly charmed. “My stars, Miss Grant, you’re heterochromatic.”

He could have slapped his head, but he chose honesty, since nothing else was going to succeed.

“I am an idiot too,” he said. “All that means is that you have a …” He looked closer, because it wasn’t so obvious. “… a blue eye and a brown one: heterochromia.”

She stared at him, and then laughed. “I never knew it had a name. There was an old herb woman in Edgar once who crossed the street to avoid me.”

“It’s certainly not contagious,” he said, happy she was ignoring the pup squirming in his arms now. “Although if that had happened six hundred years ago, you might have been burned at the stake. A pity, but there you are.”

She shook her head, her heterochromatic eyes merry. “Captain …”

“Mister …”

“… Mister Bowden, is this what passed for small talk in your ship’s wardroom?”

“No. Only in Stonehouse, where surgeons congregate and have as little small talk as I.” He looked down at the pup. “I stopped at the Tavish’s miserable house just as this pitiful specimen burrowed out from under truly nasty blankets.” He remembered his own childhood. “Miss Grant, may I keep him?”

She didn’t try to hide her smile, so he knew she must have used the same ploy on her parents, years ago. “Only if you promise to take care of him. ”

“I couldn’t leave him there. He’s as thin as the rest of them, and I don’t think Mr. Tavish will be inclined to charity, when he finds his family gone.”

“Set him down, Mr. Bowden. I think he …”

They watched as the nameless pup sniffed the air, probably breathing in wonderful fragrances from the kitchen, even though the luncheon hour had long passed. But no, another sniff, and he headed for the stairs, doing his purposeful best, even though he wobbled with hunger and ill-use.

“He’s a loyal little brute,” Miss Grant said softly. “He’s starving, but he’s trying to find his boy. Pick him up, Mr. Bowden, and take him upstairs. I will find some kitchen scraps and follow you.”

Douglas did as she said, marveling yet again at the kindness of women. He opened the door quietly to see Mrs. Tavish dozing, and Tommy squinting at the ceiling as though he ached even to open his eyes all the way. He glanced sideways, in too much pain to even turn his head.

“Looks like I’m not a minute too soon, lad,” Douglas whispered. “I brought you a friend.”

He set the pup down on Tommy’s bed, hoping the critter wouldn’t jostle the boy, but trusting in the kindness of dogs.

His trust was not misplaced. After a sniff of the splints, the pup heaved a sigh that shook his skinny frame and curled up on Tommy’s good side, well within reach of the boy’s hand, which came down heavily and stayed there.

“How is it they know?” Miss Grant said from the doorway, bowl in hand. She set it on the bed, close to the pup, who fell on the food almost as eagerly as the Tavishes had devoured their meal. “What’s his name, Tommy?”

“Duke,” the boy said through clenched teeth. “After Wellington.”

“That’s a lot of name for not much,” Douglas said as he washed his hands and dried them on a towel which Miss Grant, thoughtful woman, had brought upstairs with her. “You have the makings of an excellent pharmacist’s mate,” he told her.

Miss Grant rolled her heterochromatic eyes at him. “I am no nurse! Your small talk truly leaves a great deal to be desired.”

“It’s not likely to change,” he admitted. “I am thirty-seven and set in my ways.”

She was a tease. “I would have thought you older, Mr. Bowden,” she told him, taking back the towel and draping it over the footboard to dry.

Joking or not, she knew just what to do when he approached the bed with a glass of dark liquid in his hand. She put her hand behind Tommy’s head and raised him up so gently that he scarcely had time to groan. Down went the draught, and not a drop spilled.

“That’s it for now,” he told Tommy, his hand on the boy’s forehead. “You’re going to sleep for a long while, and when you come up, I’ll put you under again. You need to sleep and heal.”

Tommy nodded. A few minutes later, his eyes closed, and Douglas felt his own relief.

“Will … will he die?”

Douglas turned to see Mrs. Tavish watching them, her eyes troubled. He knew it was time for plain speaking.

“He will die if he returns to the miasmic air and foul humours in your house,” Douglas said.

He moved to take her by the arm and help her to her feet because she was struggling to rise.

She shrank back in the chair, telling him worlds about her own treatment by the lump of sodden carrion probably still snoring on the High Street.

“I shouldn’t stay here. Joe will miss me.”

He stepped away from Mrs. Tavish and let Miss Grant help her to her feet.

“Do you have a place you can stay until Mr. Tavish … feels better?” Miss Grant asked .

“Aye. My neighbor Mary Cameron,” Tommy’s mother said. “She’s done it before.” Big sigh. “And probably will again, mind.” Her eyes turned wistful. “We were neighbors back home in the glen.”

“Mrs. Tavish, you would be better off leaving such a man,” Douglas said, unable to help himself.

“He’s my husband,” was her quiet reply. She bent over Tommy awkwardly and kissed his forehead, and then went downstairs. When the door closed so quietly, Douglas felt his heart sink.

Douglas didn’t even want to look at Miss Grant. “Sometimes I am ashamed of men,” he said, embarrassed.

Miss Grant tidied Tommy’s bed, apparently not willing to look at him, either. “We keep hoping that Joe Tavish will catch his death some night …”

“There’s no … no … squire or man of consequence to deal with someone such as that man?”

“No laird,” she said. “Lady Mary Telford lives in that large manor near the old castle, but she is English and doesn’t concern herself with us.”

She gave him a hopeful look. He knew he had to squelch any designs on her part. He was not the man to change things in Edgar. Useful as he might prove, he had no standing in a village such as this, where even useful new arrivals were probably considered foreigners forevermore.

“Miss Grant, I have no intention of staying in Edgar any longer than to see Tommy on the mend,” Douglas announced, feeling remarkably foolish, for some reason. He had barked orders to pharmacist’s mates and other surgeons for years, but he felt painfully like an ungrateful idiot.

To his relief, if not strictly balm in Gilead for his conscience, Miss Grant took his declaration in stride. “We are all grateful that you were here this day to save a little boy’s life,” she assured him.

She had the cutest freckles, freckles all over her face and what he could see of her neck—little faded freckles that must have been much more pronounced when she was a child, but now a shade just this side of charming.

Coupled with her heterochromia and deep red hair, she was a colorful woman. What was that word …

“Ephilides!” he exclaimed. “It’s been nagging at me since I first saw you.”

Tommy stirred. Miss Grant took Douglas by the arm and led him out to the landing. She stared at him and then gave him that patient look he had seen once in a great while, since he had never spent much time on land to observe the fair sex.

“You’re so kind to suffer this fool gladly, Miss Grant.

Ephilides is the scientific word for freckles.

” I’ve done it again , he thought in desperation.

Might as well blunder on so she will be glad to see me leave.

“You have as charming a set of ephilides as I ever hope to see.” There. Call me an idiot to my face .

To his amazement, she clapped her hands in delight. “Heterochromia and ephilides? Da always said that my eyes were evidence that God Almighty has a rollicking sense of humour. Mam told me that a host of angels kissed me and freckles are the result. It’s bricíní in Gaelic, by the way.”

“You must think me an idiot,” he said in apology.

“Since we are into plain speaking, I think you remarkably kind to help Tommy Tavish,” she said simply. “Certainly we wish you would stay, but Edgar isn’t for everyone.”

“It’s for you, though?” he asked, grateful to have bumbled through his lack of manners, and in addition, be given an easy exit from the village.

“I’m needed here, and it is my home. Now then, Mr. Bowden, will you be wanting to stay here tonight?”

“If it isn’t too much trouble.”

“Will the room across the hall do? ”

Her offer sounded sensible, except that a more martyr-like approach to Tommy Tavish’s care might further atone for his blunders. “Better I sleep in his room. He might be afraid if he wakes up alone.”

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