Also published as Private Duty for Nurse Scott
When Stella Bennett
had a stroke, Nicole Scott, R.N., rushed to nurse her old friend back to
health. So absorbed did Nicole become in her patient, that she began to forget
her problems with Mark, her fiancé. But other complications arose in the person
of two new men—the handsome nephew of her patient and the mysterious ranch
manager, Lee Whitney. Suddenly all these various matters came to a head—and
Nicole was forced to make the most important—and what turned out to be the most
endearing—decision of her life.
GRADE: B+
BEST QUOTES:
“Nurses get sassier every day. Used to be they all but bowed
down when a doctor came into the room. Ah, those good old days!”
“I take temperatures much better than I cook.”
REVIEW:
Nurse Nicole Scott, like many VNRN heroines, is engaged. You
will not be shocked, therefore, when you deduce on the second page that this
arrangement is not likely to come off as planned. Mark Foster runs a hardware
store, “but right now every penny was going to pay off the mortgage he had
taken in order to remodel and restock. Because of this, he didn’t feel marriage
was in order. ‘My wife will not work,’ Mark said emphatically.” So when author
Arlene Hale tells us two pages later, “All was not as rosy as it should have
been,” we were already online with Bed, Bath and Beyond to cancel that wedding
gift. Page after page of their incompatibilities—he loves baseball, she does
not; he is shy, she is outgoing; he’s lazy, she likes activity—are trotted out
to hammer home the obvious point. Nicole continues with the charade, however,
because “if you’re not careful, you’ll end up like Lorena,” her helpful mother
says, holding up Nicole’s quiet, baseball-loving homebody sister Lorena, who
has reached the shocking age of 25 “and no beaus,” mom says, that ignorant
silly, since everyone knows the plural of beau
is beaux.
But fate intervenes when Stella Bennett has a stroke and
requires round-the-clock nursing care in her home. Stella’s nephew Corbin
Bennett III, an old school chum of Nicole’s, comes home to help care for his
aunt. A profligate, drifting young man, he nonetheless is one of the few such
young men who deeply cares for his rich dowager aunt, and spends hours each day
talking to her, helping with her physical therapy, and making her laugh. And a
fair amount of time trying to woo Nicole, who is unimpressed with Corbin’s
flighty ways. Mark, too, is not happy to see Corbin again, but to such a degree
that it’s clear there’s some dark history between the two, and Mark is
remaining secretive on the subject. “Let’s just say I can’t stand him and let
it go at that,” he snarls, and Corbin for once has nothing to add.
While Nicole is busy caring for Stella 24/7, she asks Lorena
to keep Mark company, and then when she has a day off, she heads down the road to
the ranch that’s owned by Stella but managed by hunky cowboy Lee Whitney, who
also drops by daily to have pleasant chats with the invalid. And maybe the
nurse, too. Before long, he’s gently kissing Nicole, and she’s returning the
favor, having dinner with him at his house. “How comfortable she had been
there. It was as if she need be no one but her true self. She had relaxed as
she hadn’t relaxed in a long time. With Mark it was sometimes like walking a
tightrope. What a pleasant change Lee had been!” Yet she’s still talking about
her impending marriage to Mark. That young man is not helping; after talking on
the phone with Nicole’s sister and realizing that “somehow with Lorena, he
could be more himself than with anyone else,” he immediately decides to rush
over and propose to Nicole. Along with his declaration of love—oh, wait, rather
his declaration that “I decided I’ve had enough. I don’t see why we should
wait. Let’s get married,” burbles the impetuous fool—he insists that if she
wants the ring, she must quit working. “I will not have you working. I want you
home. Where a wife should be. You should be willing to give this up for me!”
Uh, okay, she stutters, and though she does bring up his own very long hours at
the hardware store, before she can get to the point he literally shuts her down—“We
won’t say anything more, okay?”—and that’s the end of that. (Lee, on the other
hand, is outraged when Nicole tells him of Mark’s demand: “Nursing isn’t just a
job,” Lee says. “It’s a profession, a necessity, something so essential—”
because we didn’t have enough hints about who the right man really was.)
Before her engagement party, Nicole finds a book of poetry
on Lorena’s desk, all full of sappy odes to Mark, and now she knows that Lorena
is in love with Mark, which for some reason bothers her more than the fact that
she’s kissing Lee behind every closed door. Because no one can have an honest
conversation with anyone, it takes a fall down the stairs that puts Lorena in
the hospital with the usual coma to bring everything out: Days later, when Lorena
finally wakes to see Mark sitting beside her, she says, “Hello, Mark, darling.
I love you,” and goes back to sleep. In their joy that Lorena is getting
better, Nicole tells Mark that Lorena is in love with him, and that he is in
love with Lorena. Well, gosh, now that you mention it, he says, and Nicole runs
off to find Lee.
There’s not much to this story, just a straightforward
telling of how when you throw a bunch of charged particles into a jar and shake
it around a bit, eventually all the like molecules will find each other. But it’s
not badly told, and gently glides along. Lee Whitney is definitely the most
charismatic person in the book, a sexy, kind man who never grabs the woman and
bruises her lips in an assault presented to us gullible maiden readers as a
pass. Some parts of the story are maddening, like all the glaring highway signs
screaming that Nicole is on the wrong road, which we realize on the second page,
yet have to watch Nicole flounder for a hundred more pages until she starts to
clue in. One odd side plot revolves around a woman named Elaine, whom Mark had
been madly in love with before he knew Nicole, and whom Corbin had taken away
from him. The two men even come to blows over it—Corbin knocks loser Mark down
in two minutes flat—but neither man will discuss the reason for the fight with
Nicole. Elaine’s name keeps coming up as both Mark and Nicole wonder if Mark
will ever tell Nicole the story, but the last we hear of Elaine is Nicole’s resolution
not to ask Mark any questions: “She would wait until Mark told her,” she decides.
He never does. Interestingly, Lorena knows all about it, since, as the
librarian, she knows all the town gossip, but she’s not going to enlighten
Nicole, either. Is this supposed to be some metaphor for the deep understanding
between Mark and Lorena’s souls that is missing in the relationship between
Mark and Nicole? Because it only comes across as a major drama made out of a
high school crush, and Mark’s persistent refusal to tell Nicole shows him up as
an immature egocentric. It seems that poor Lorena is getting the worse end of
the stick when she ends up with Mark, but at the dried-up age of 25, beggars
can’t be choosers.
Amazing. Hardware store guy, ranch manager and a rich young playboy. Nary a doctor in sight.
ReplyDeleteIt is a bit of an anomaly ...
ReplyDeleteHi any idea who the cover artist was?
ReplyDeleteThanks!
I don't, but Charles Gehm and Uldis Klavins both did this style of cover for Ace in the past. It's a good cover!
ReplyDelete