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able to continue their rehab, contribute to society and find a little perspective.’

      ‘And you’re the perspective?’ she asked, smiling.

      Ethan looked embarrassed but smiled back. ‘Anyway …’ he said, looking around, ‘clinic is done by twelve and then your day is your own as long as you stay on the property and have your pager on you in case an emergency arises.’

      ‘Does that happen very often?’

      Ethan shook his head. ‘The last one was a couple of months ago when there was an incident with a nail gun.’

      She raised an eyebrow. ‘Do I want to know?’

      He grinned and shook his head. ‘Nope.’

      Evie nodded slowly, also looking around. ‘So, that’s it? A two-hour clinic and the odd nail-gun emergency?’

      Ethan nodded. ‘Think you can cope?’ he teased.

      Compared to the frenetic pace of a busy city emergency department Evie felt as if Ethan had just handed her the keys to paradise. And there was a beach to boot! ‘I think I can hack the pace,’ she murmured. ‘In fact, I think I may just have died and gone to heaven.’

      He grinned. ‘C’mon, I’ll show you the rest.’

      Ten minutes later they pulled up at what appeared to be a massive shed that actually housed an Olympic-sized indoor swimming pool and a large gym area where she caught up with Bob, the physiotherapist she’d met last night. He was in the middle of a session with two below-knee amputees so they didn’t chat.

      From there it was another ten minutes to a series of three smaller sheds. The side doors were all open and the sounds of electric saws and nail guns pierced the air as Ethan cut the bike engine.

      ‘This is where we build the roof trusses I was telling you about last night,’ Ethan said as they dismounted.

      With a noticeably absent Finn over dinner last night, Ethan had filled her in on the flood-recovery project the retreat participants contributed to during their stay. Several extreme weather events had led to unprecedented flooding throughout Australia over the previous two years and demand for new housing was at a premium. Roof trusses were part of that. It was a small-scale project perfect for Ethan’s ragtag band of clients, which aided both the flood and the soldiers’ recovery.

      It was win-win.

      They entered the nearest workshop, which was a hive of activity. The aroma of cut timber immediately assailed Evie and she pulled it deep into her lungs. One by one the men stopped working.

      ‘I suspect,’ Ethan whispered out of the side of his mouth, ‘you may well see an increase in visits to the clinic in the next few days. Just to check you out. Not a lot of women around here.’

      Evie smiled as all but one lone nail gun pistoned away obliviously. It stopped too after a few moments and the owner turned and looked at her.

      It was Finn.

      Evie’s breath caught in her throat. He was wearing faded jeans and an even more faded T-shirt that clung in all the good places. A tool belt was slung low on his hips. Used to seeing him in baggy scrubs, her brain grappled with the conflicting images.

      Her body however, now well into the second trimester and at the mercy of a heightened sex drive, responded on a completely primitive level.

      Tool-Man Finn was hot.

      A wolf whistle came from somewhere in the back.

      ‘Okay, okay back to work.’ Ethan grinned. ‘Don’t scare our doctor away before her first day.’

      One by one they resumed their work. Except Finn, who downed his nail gun, his arctic gaze firmly fixed on her as he strode in her direction.

      ‘Uh-oh,’ Ethan said out of the corner of his mouth. ‘He doesn’t look too happy.’

      Evie couldn’t agree more. She should be apprehensive. But he looked pretty damn sexy, coming at her with all that coiled tension. Like he might just slam her against the nearest wall and take her, like he had their first time.

      ‘I don’t think happy is in his vocabulary.’

      Finn pulled up in front of Ethan—who seriously should know better than to bring a woman into an environment where most of the men hadn’t seen one in weeks—and glared at his friend. Who had clearly gone mad.

      ‘What is she doing here?’ he demanded.

      Ethan held up his hands. ‘Just showing the lady around.’

      ‘She only needs to know where the clinic is,’ Finn pointed out.

      ‘Well, apart from common courtesy,’ Ethan murmured, his voice firm, ‘Evie really should know the lie of the land in case of an emergency.’

      Finn scowled at his friend’s logic. ‘Now she knows.’ He turned and looked at Evie in her clothes from yesterday, her hair loose. ‘This is no place for a woman,’ he ground out.

      Having been in the army for a decade and here for almost five months, Finn knew these men and men just like them. Even hiding away, licking their wounds, sex was always on their mind.

      Evie felt her hackles rise. Had she slipped back into the Fifties? She glared at him, her gaze unwavering. ‘You ought to talk,’ she snapped, pleased the background noise kept their conversation from being overheard. ‘What kind of a place is this for a surgeon, Finn? Wielding a nail gun when you should be wielding a scalpel!’

      Finn ignored the dig. ‘Get her out of here,’ he said to Ethan.

      Finn scowled again as Ethan grinned but breathed a sigh of relief when Evie followed Ethan out, every pair of eyes in the workshop glued to her butt.

      His included.

      On their next leg, they passed a helipad and a small hangar with a gleaming blue and white chopper sitting idle.

      ‘Yours?’ she asked.

      He nodded. ‘Handy piece of transport in the middle of nowhere.’

      They drove to a large dam area, which had been the source of the silver perch they’d eaten last night. Above it evenly spaced on a grassy hill sat ten pre-fab dongas.

      ‘Each one has four bedrooms, a bathroom, a kitchen and common area,’ Ethan explained, as he pulled up under a shady stand of gumtrees near the dam edge and cut the engine. ‘They’re not luxurious but they’re better than anything any of us slept in overseas.’

      ‘So your capacity is forty?’

      ‘Actually, it’s forty-five if you count the homestead accommodation,’ Ethan said, dismounting and walking over to inspect the water. ‘That’s over and above you, me, Bob and Finn.’

      Evie nodded, also walking over to the water’s edge. The sun was warm on her skin and she raised her face to it for long moments. She could hear the low buzz of insects and the distant whine of a saw.

      Ethan waited for a while and said, ‘So … you and Finn …’

      Evie opened her eyes and looked at him. ‘What about me and Finn?’

      ‘You’re … colleagues? Friends …?’

      Evie considered Ethan’s question for a while. She didn’t know how to define them with just one word. Colleagues, yes. Lovers, yes. Soon to be parents, yes. But friends …?

      She shrugged. ‘It’s … complicated.’

      Ethan nodded. ‘He’s a complicated guy.’

      Evie snorted at the understatement of the century. ‘You’ve known him for a while?’

      Ethan picked up a stone at his feet and skipped it across the surface. ‘We served together overseas.’

      ‘You know his brother died over there?’

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