Could the brilliant surgeon she loved love her?
Gran had said it herself: “Life isn’t going to be easy for you, Natalie. You feel things too deeply. You’re liable to be hurt, my dear.”
Then Gran died, and Natalie was alone…alone with her love for Dr. Bob Bradburn and her deep desire to become his nurse. Courage and determination carried her through nurse’s training, and part of her ambition became reality. Dr. Brad wanted her as his nurse, and she became invaluable to him…as his nurse. But in the meantime, he had married the beautiful but ruthless Marjorie. Natalie knew her love for Dr. Brad would never die. Could she face a lifetime of working with no hope that that love would be returned?
Dr. Dorothy’s Choice
A beautiful young doctor risks everything to save her hospital, her career — and her love.
As a doctor at the Still River hospital and as the bride-to-be of Tom Norman, Doc Bailey had exactly what she wanted in life — to cure the sick and to love and be loved.
Then both her career and her love were threatened — one by an ambitious doctor, the other by a beautiful, seductive woman. Both had power, money and cunning behind them.
Alone, with only her conscience and her love to guide her, Doctor Dee had to make the decision which would determine not only her own future, but the future of the hospital and the entire Still River community as well.
Dr. Jane’s Choice
Dr. Jane Langford Latham, believing that her love for Dave Riley is not big enough for marriage — certainly not the all-encompassing love she had felt for Bill Latham — leaves Halesville, Indiana, for Central City, where she has been offered the post of Director of Out-Patient Medical and Nursing Service at City Hospital. In Central City, away from Dave, she feels she can come to a decision about her future and, at the same time, perform a valuable service.
But City Hospital has changed. Dr. Grady Blaine, an ambitious and self-seeking man, is now chief of staff, replacing the beloved Dr. Warren of Dr. Jane’s internship years at City. At every step of the way, Dr. Jane is opposed by Grady Blaine, and when, because of the needless death of a young girl in “Rivertown,” she becomes involved in an active campaign to clean up Central City’s slum district, Dr. Blaine’s hostility becomes an open and malevolent thing.
Homesick for Halesville — more homesick, too, for writer Dave Riley than she will acknowledge — Jane welcomes the opportunity to visit Johnson Memorial Hospital and talk with Dr. James Hanna, upon whose shoulders has fallen the full burden of Dr. Jane’s former practice. Dr. Hanna has a “case” he wishes to discuss with Jane, he says, but Jane finds that the case is a hypothetical one involving an article Dave Riley is writing…
Dr. Hanna’s ruse to get Dr. Jane back to Halesville works — her choice is made. She returns to Central City to complete the reforms she has started, secure in the knowledge that her real happiness lies in Halesville, working with Jim Hanna and loving the reporter-turned-writer whom Fate had sent thousands of miles to meet a dedicated young woman doctor in a lonely mission post in Africa.
Duty Nurse
They were caught in a triangle of tenderness and tragedy. The doctor, the patient, and the beautiful nurse.
The girl in Room 17 was so young and lovely and had so little time left. How could the doctor deny her anything…even himself?
The duty nurse was kind and wise beyond her years. Could she deny her tragic patient anything…even the man she herself loved?