small as big. This was a skin graft area. If it extended Zoe could lose the whole graftâan appalling prospect.
Elsa had found it while she was applying Zoeâs suncream and now she was hovering between wait and see or ring the local medical centre and get it seen to now.
Only it was Sunday. Their normal doctor would be away. Waratah Cove had a small bush-nursing hospital, manned by casual staff over the weekend. Less experienced doctors tended to react to Zoeâs injuries with fear, dreading under-treating. If she took Zoe in, sheâd be admitted and transferred to hospital in the city. Simple as that.
And they were both so weary of hospitals.
Her worry almost made her forget Stefanos was comingâbut not completely. The sound of a car on the track made her feel as if the world was caving in, landing right on her shoulders.
She hated this. She just hated it.
She tugged a T-shirt over Zoeâs scarred little body and turned to welcome him. And almost gasped.
This was a different Stefanos. Faded jeans. T-shirt. Scuffed trainers.
Great body. Really great body.
A body to make her feel she was a woman again.
She had to do something about these hormones. They were doing things to her head. Sheâd married Matty. His picture was still on the mantel. Get a grip.
âHi,â he said, and smiled at the two of them and Elsa couldnât resist. She had to smile. It was as if he had the strength to change her world, just by smiling.
âHi,â Zoe said shyly and smiled as well, and Elsa looked at Zoe in astonishment. Two minutes earlier the two of them had been close to tears.
Stefanosâs smile was a force to be reckoned with.
âI thought youâd be at the beach,â he said, and then he looked more closelyâmaybe seeing the traces of their distress. âIs something wrong?â
âWe thought we wouldnât go to the beach this morning,â Elsa said repressively. Zoe loathed people talking about her injuries. Sheâd had enough fuss to last one small girl a lifetime.
Stefanos had never mentioned her scars. Maybe he hadnât even noticed. Orâ¦not.
âWhy not?â he said gently, and suddenly he was talking to Zoe, and not to her. As if heâd guessed.
âThereâs a bit of my skin graft come loose,â Zoe said.
Once again it was as much as Elsa could do not to gasp. Zoe never volunteered such information.
Sheâd had the best doctorsâthe best!âbut almost every one of them talked to her and not to Zoe. Oh, they chatted to Zoe, but in the patronising way elders often talked to children. For the hard questionsâeven things like: âIs she sleeping at night?ââthey turned to her, as if Zoe couldnât possibly know.
So what had Stefanos done different?
She knew. He hadnât treated her as an object of sympathy, and heâd talked directly to her. Simple but so important.
âWhereabouts?â Stefanos asked, still speaking only to Zoe.
âUnder my arm at the back.â
âIs it hurting?â
âNo, butâ¦itâs scary,â Zoe said, and her bottom lip wobbled.
âCan I ask why?â
âElsa will have to take me to hospital and theyâll make me stay there, and I donât want to go.â Her voice ended on a wail, she turned her face into Elsaâs shirt and she sobbed.
âZoe,â Stefanos said, in a voice sheâd not heard before. Gentle, yet firm. He squatted so he was at her eye level. âZoe, will you let me take a look? I donât know if I can help, but Iâm a doctor. Will you trust me to see if I think you need hospital?â
He was a doctor?
There was a loaded silence. Zoe would be as stunned as she was, Elsa thought.
You still canât have her, she thought, her instinctive response overriding everything else, but she had the sense to shut up. The last thing Zoe needed was more fear.
Because, astonishingly, Zoe was turning