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it occurred to you that I only spend a couple of hours a day with you? That I might go insane on a cattle station for weeks on end? Or, that you most probably don’t have any of the equipment needed? Not only that but you’ll be away from your doctor.’

      He shrugged. ‘I’ve got his go-ahead and I can fly him out if necessary. Ditto all the equipment—there’s already a gym and there’s a pool.’

      Sienna sank back and took the first sip of her soft drink; it was delicious, a blend of mango and orange with a dash of mint. Her thoughts were slightly bitter, however.

      The McLeod family, now headed by Finn, was extremely wealthy and had diversified from cattle into many areas. She’d never doubted that, it was well known, as were some other facts about the dynasty.

      Finn’s parents had divorced and his father had remarried. The new Mrs McLeod, Laura, had presented Finn’s father, Michael, with another son, eight years Finn’s junior. The first Mrs McLeod had, according to popular belief, never recovered from the divorce and pined away. Some years later Michael and Laura had been killed in a plane crash. The pilot had been Michael’s brother, Finn’s uncle Bradley, who had perished too.

      Alice, Finn and Declan’s aunt on their father’s side, had brought the boys up.

      So it was a colourful dynasty with a tragic background, now added to after that terrible car crash when a drunken driver had ploughed into them and his fiancée had been thrown clear but killed instantly and Finn had been trapped in the car. But that didn’t alter the fact Sienna found herself somewhat annoyed that Finn McLeod could virtually wave a magic wand to achieve his goals and, on top of that, expect everyone to jump to his tune.

      ‘I’m sorry—’ she started to say, but he intervened.

      ‘As for your spare time, I happen to know that the Augathella Hospital would be more than happy to have the extra services of a fully-trained physiotherapist to call on for a few weeks.’

      She stared at him incredulously. ‘How do you know that?’

      He raised an ironic eyebrow. ‘I checked it out with them. The hospital is not that far, as the crow flies, from Waterford.’

      Waterford was the principal cattle station in the McLeod crown.

      Sienna licked her lips. ‘I do work, you know. I’m employed by a consultancy so, apart from anything else, they would not be too happy for me to disappear beyond the black stump for several weeks. I do have other patients.’

      ‘Your boss is quite happy for you to do it.’

      Sienna put her glass down with something of a rap. ‘Now look here, Finn, that’s going too far! How dare you do all this behind my back?’

      He shrugged. ‘Just thought I’d clear the decks of any unnecessary objections you might be likely to make.’

      ‘Well, that may be how you do business but—’

      ‘It is,’ he drawled. ‘You’d be amazed how successful it usually is. Look—’ he sat forward ‘—it’s actually a feather in your cap. When I discussed it with your senior partner, he told me that you were establishing a growing reputation in accident rehabilitation therapy. I told him I could believe it, you certainly seemed to be working wonders for me and that’s why I want you and no one else.’

      Sienna blinked, then frowned. ‘A feather in my cap? I would call it something else. A subtle way of twisting my arm and, I’m sorry, but I’m not going to do it.’

      ‘Why?’

      She regarded him for several moments. His glossy dark hair was still tousled, there were blue shadows on his jaw, he had a decisive mouth and a tapering chin. It was a memorable face—she thought suddenly that she’d probably remember it for a long time—and it was accompanied by a memorable physique. Finn McLeod was six feet four, broad-shouldered, narrow-hipped, long-legged and what had undoubtedly helped him along his path to rehabilitation was the fact that he’d been in prime physical shape when the accident had happened.

      Why not? she thought. Yes, he was the kind of man many women would wonder about, but she didn’t have that problem, did she? So was she worried about his motivation? Because she’d been well taught to be on guard against patient attachment where you became the focus of their lives?

      But, from his point of view, was this the same thing or simply the machinations of a wealthy man entirely too used to getting his own way? Much more likely, she suspected.

      ‘Finn,’ she said slowly and choosing her words with care, ‘any good physiotherapist could have done what I’ve done. Actually, you’ve done it. It’s been your will-power. You don’t need me, per se.’

      ‘Afraid I’m falling in love with you?’ he queried.

      Sienna took an unexpected breath, then narrowed her eyes. ‘Are you?’

      ‘No.’ He put his glass down and stretched. ‘When you’ve had the best—no insult intended, Sienna—and lost it, you probably don’t ever expect it to happen again.’

      Sienna stared at him, frowning again. She couldn’t take issue with the “best” tag because Holly Pearson, his fiancée, had been, in a word, glorious—and not only to look at. She’d taken the country by storm as a TV weather presenter, then become a TV personality in her own right, frequently appearing on talk shows and capturing audiences with her zany humour and her warmth.

      But had Sienna detected a tinge of something she didn’t understand in Finn McLeod’s voice, something at variance with his words like the prick of a pin you hadn’t known was there? Or had it been the bitterness he still felt about losing Holly? Of course, that had to be it, she thought and felt a rush of compassion for him.

      ‘Are you?’

      Sienna came out of her thoughts and looked at him. ‘Am I what?’

      ‘Falling in love with me?’

      Her eyes widened and her lips parted. ‘Have I ever given you the slightest reason to think that, Finn McLeod?’ she retorted.

      ‘On the contrary.’ He grimaced. ‘Although that doesn’t precisely answer the question but, anyway, what is the problem?’

      Sienna shot him a dark look. ‘I don’t like being manipulated. I resent the fact that you imagine I can just drop everything at a moment’s notice—’

      ‘A week.’

      She waved a hand dismissively. ‘I—’

      ‘Look, think it over, Sienna. You can let me know tomorrow.’

      She opened her mouth, then shrugged, finished her drink and got up to go. ‘All right, but I don’t imagine I’ll change my mind. You should shower and change now. I’ll call Dave.’

      ‘Yes, ma’am,’ he said meekly enough, but his dark blue eyes were full of satirical amusement.

      Sienna swished her pony-tail and walked away.

      She shopped for fresh fruit and vegetables on the way home.

      Her apartment was small but pleasant, a second-floor flat in a two-storey building in the suburb of Red Hill, perched on the northern rim of the city.

      It had cool tiled floors, white walls and all mod cons, but the broad balcony was her favourite spot. It was fitted with sliding insect screens, and had grand views of the city below. She had a table and chairs on it and a bevy of flowering pot-plants as well as an array of herbs—she loved growing things.

      For the rest of her flat, she’d kept her decorating fairly minimalist to suit the climate. There was a sumptuous corn gold settee and two plain cane chairs in the lounge with moulded Perspex side tables. On one of the white walls she’d hung a large, lovely print of a girl walking on a beach at sunrise beside a calm, shining sea that seemed to draw you into its cool, tinted waters.

      A beaten silver urn found in

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