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here’s Anton.’ Louise had beamed as he had stopped by the bed for a chat.

      ‘Anton!’ Mrs Calini had started talking in rapid Italian, saying how gorgeous her baby was, just how very, very beautiful he was. Yes, there was nothing specific but Anton had been on this journey with his patient and Louise was right, this was most irregular.

      Twelve hours and a lot of investigations later, Mrs Calini had moved from elation to paranoia—loudly declaring that all the other mothers were jealous and likely to steal her beautiful baby. She had been taken up to the psych ward and her infant had remained on Maternity.

      Two weeks later the baby had been reunited with Mrs Calini on the psychiatric mother and baby unit and just a month ago they had gone home well.

      Anton looked up ‘bah, humbug’ and soon found out she wasn’t talking about odd-looking black and white mints when she used that term.

      He read a little bit about Scrooge and how he despised Christmas and started to smile.

      Oh, Louise.

      God, but he was tempted to text her now, by accident, of course. In his contacts Louise was there next to ‘Labour Ward’ after all.

      He loathed that she was with Rory but, then again, she had every right to be happy. He’d had his chances over the months and had declined them. So Anton decided against an accidental text to Louise, surprised that he had even considered sending one.

      He wasn’t usually into games.

      He just didn’t like that the games had now ended with Louise.

      Louise checked her phone the second she awoke, just in case Emily had called or texted her and she’d missed it, but, no, there was nothing.

      It had been a very restless night’s sleep and it wasn’t even five. Louise lay in the dark, wishing she could go back to sleep while knowing it was hopeless.

      Instead, she got up and made a big mug of tea and took that back to bed.

      Bloody Anton, Louise thought, a little embarrassed at her blatant flirting when she now knew he had the stunning Saffarella to go home to.

      Had it all been one-sided?

      Louise didn’t think so but she gave up torturing herself with it. Anton had always been unavailable to her, even if just emotionally.

      After a quick shower Louise blasted her hair with the hairdryer, and as a public service to everyone put some rouge on very pale cheeks then wiped it off because it made her look like a clown.

      She took her vitamins and iron and then decided to cheer herself up by wearing the best underwear in the world to work today. She had been saving it for the maternity Christmas party but instead she decided to debut it today. It was from the Mistletoe range, the lace dotted with leaves of green and embroidered silk cream berries topped with a pretty red bow—and that was just the panties. The bra was empress line and almost gave her a cleavage, and she loved the little red bow in the middle.

      It was far too glamorous for work but, then, Louise’s underwear was always far too glamorous for work.

      Instead of having another cup of tea and watching the news, Louise decided to simply go in early and hopefully put her mind at rest by not finding Emily there.

      She lived close enough to walk to work. It was very cold so she draped on scarves and walked through the dark and damp morning. It was lovely to step into the maternity unit, which was always nice and warm.

      There was Anton sitting sulking at the desk, writing up notes amidst the Naughty Baby Club—comprising all the little ones that had been brought up to the desk to hopefully give their mothers a couple of hours’ sleep.

      Louise read through the admission board, checking for Emily’s name and letting out a breath of relief when she saw that it wasn’t there.

      ‘How come you’re in early?’ she asked Anton, wondering if he was waiting for Emily.

      ‘I couldn’t sleep,’ Anton said, ‘so I thought I’d catch up on some notes.’

      They were both sulking, both jealous that the other had had a better night than they’d had.

      ‘I’m going to make some tea,’ Louise said. ‘Would you like some?’

      ‘Please.’ Anton nodded.

      ‘Evie?’ Louise asked, and got a shake of the head from the night nurse. ‘Tara?’

      ‘No, thanks, we’ve just had one.’

      Louise changed into her scrubs then headed to the kitchen and made herself a nice one, and this time Anton got a hospital teabag.

      He knew he was in her bad books with one sip of his tea.

      Well, she was in his bad books too.

      ‘You and Rory left very suddenly,’ Anton commented. ‘I didn’t realise that the two of you …’

      ‘We’re not on together,’ Louise said. ‘Well, we were three years ago but we broke up after a few weeks. We’re just good friends now.’

      ‘Oh.’

      ‘Rory took me home early last night because I’m worried about Emily,’ Louise admitted. She was too concerned about her friend to play games. ‘She hasn’t called you, has she? You’re not here, waiting for her to come in?’

      ‘No.’ Anton frowned. ‘Why are you worried? She seemed fine last night.’

      ‘She was at first but then she was suddenly tired and went home. Rory said that she’d had a big day at work but …’

      ‘Tell me.’

      ‘She snapped at me and she had that look,’ Louise said. ‘You know the one …’

      ‘Yep,’ Anton said, because, unlike Rory, he did know what Louise meant and he took her concerns about Emily seriously.

      ‘How many weeks is she now?’

      ‘Twenty-seven,’ Louise said.

      ‘And how many days …?’ Anton asked, pulling Emily’s notes up on his computer. ‘No, she’s twenty-eight weeks today.’ Anton read through his notes. ‘I saw her last week and all was fine. The pregnancy has progressed normally, just the appendectomy at six weeks.’

      ‘Could that cause problems now?’ Louise asked.

      ‘I would have expected any problems from surgery to surface much earlier than this,’ Anton said, and he gave Louise a thin smile. ‘Maybe she was just tired …’

      ‘I’ll ring Theatre later and find out what shift she’s on,’ Louise said. ‘In fact, I’ll do it now.’

      She got put through and was told that Emily was on a late shift today.

      ‘Maybe I am just worrying about nothing,’ Louise said.

      ‘Let us hope so.’

      A baby was waking up and Tara, a night nurse, was just dashing off to do the morning obs.

      ‘I’ll get him.’

      Louise picked up the little one and snuggled him in. ‘God, I love that smell,’ Louise said, inhaling the scent of the baby’s hair, then she looked over at Anton.

      ‘Did Saffron have a good night?’

      She watched his lips move into a wry smile.

      ‘Not really,’ Anton said, and then added, ‘And her name is Saffarella.’

      ‘Oh, sorry,’ Louise said. ‘I got mixed up. Saffron’s the one you put in your rice to make it go yellow, isn’t it?’ Louise corrected herself. ‘Expensive stuff, costs a fortune and you only get a tiny—’

      ‘Louise,’ Anton warned, ‘I don’t know quite where you’re

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