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‘That was exceptionally decent of him,’ said Jenny in a tight voice. ‘You’d better go off to Theatre now, Staff.’
After the door had closed she sat there for a moment, perfectly still, her loud breathing the only sound to be heard in the small office. The red book! The bible of Rose Ward! Stuffed into a dusty old cupboard because some insolent upstart who didn’t even know the hospital properly had deemed that it had ‘gone out with the ark’. Just who the hell did he think he was?
Jenny decided that she would speak to Dr Trentham and give him a few home truths, but she didn’t dare risk having him bleeped just yet; she felt so shaky with anger that she didn’t trust herself not to scream down the phone at him.
She took a few deep breaths to steady herself, and then there was a tap on the door.
‘Come in,’ she called.
It was Nurse Galloway. ‘Did you want us in for report, Sister? Are you all right? You look really shaky!’
‘I’m fine, thanks.’ She was not going to have all the staff thinking that there was something wrong with her. She was not going to appear unprofessional for the first time in her working life.
‘Do come in, girls,’ she spoke calmly, ‘and I’ll give report.’
After report she had him bleeped, and after a couple of minutes the phone rang.
‘You’re bleeping Dr Trentham?’ queried a breathless voice.
‘Yes, is he there?’
‘He’s in Theatre at the moment. He’s operating. Can I give him a message? Is it urgent?’
Of course, he would be operating—how stupid of her to forget. What was happening to her?
‘It’s Sister Hughes on Rose Ward. Could you please ask him to ring me when he has a moment? It’s not urgent.’
‘Yes, Sister.’
But he didn’t ring back, nor did he come to the ward, and she was due to go off duty.
She looked at the clock furiously—it was nine-thirty, and operating finished at six or seven at the latest. She glanced through the Theatre list—the last case had been a simple pin and plate which would have taken half an hour at the most, and she knew that he wasn’t doing an emergency because she would have been informed. He just hadn’t bothered to contact her.
Well, he could learn that his sloppiness would simply not be tolerated at Denbury Hospital. Small it might be—but its standards were as high as anywhere in the country, and someone just ought to point that out to Leo Trentham.
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