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Bargaining for Baby(2)

By:Robyn Grady


But she only rolled her teeth over her bottom lip, her eyes huge and …

Frightened?

He assessed her classic bone structure-flawless porcelain complexion,   the delicate curve of her jaw-and, despite the day, an instinctive   flicker of arousal licked over his skin.

Was she implying that the child was his?

Some time after his wife's death, concerned friends had tried to lure   him out from behind the walls he'd built around himself. They'd invite   him to Sydney, to introduce him to suitable ladies within their circles.   Although his heart had remained closed, there'd been a time or two  he'd  invited a date back to his inner city penthouse.                       
       
           



       

Was that why this woman seemed familiar? Had he slept with her sometime in the past?

He shucked back tense shoulders.

No. He'd have remembered those lips.

"Look, Miss-"

"Maddy."

He spared a tight smile. "Maddy. Neither of us is in any mood for games.   Whatever you have to say, I'd appreciate it if you would spit it out."

She didn't flinch or coil away from his candor. Rather her expression took on a steely air.

"Dahlia left the baby with me today," she said. "He's not my son. This baby is your nephew."

Two beats of roaring silence passed before her words hit his chest,   winding him as surely as if he'd been rammed by a twenty-foot log. He   blinked rapidly, tried to find his breath. He must've heard wrong.

"That's … not possible."

A tear rolled down her cheek, catching and beading on the bunny   blanket's blue hood while her periwinkle eyes gleamed with quiet   strength.

"Your sister's last wish was for me to introduce you to one another. She   wanted you to take him, Jack. Take him home with you to Leadeebrook."





Two




Fifteen minutes later, sitting across the table from Jack Prescott,   Maddy brought the china cup to her lips, certain that she'd never seen   anyone look more drawn.

Or more handsome.

With the shadow on his strong square jaw-as well as his demeanor-growing   darker by the minute, his teaspoon click-clacked as he stirred sugar   into his cup.

Over the intercom, someone called for Dr. Grant to go to ward 10. An   elderly woman at a nearby table smiled at the baby before tasting her   scone. By the cashier, a nurse dropped a full plate. The clattering echo   bounced off the walls yet Jack Prescott seemed oblivious to it all.  His  hooded yet intense gaze was focused only inward.

From beneath her lashes, Maddy analyzed the planes of his rugged,   Hollywood face-the cleft chin, the straight proud nose. How he managed   to look both passionate and detached at the same time she couldn't   guess. She sensed a fierce, almost frightening energy broiling beneath   the mask. He was the kind of man who could single-handedly beat a   bushfire in forty knot gusts and refuse to let anything he cared for   suffer or die.

The million dollar question was: What did Jack Prescott care about? He'd   barely looked at the baby, the orphaned darling he'd only just met.  The  man sitting at this table seemed to be made of stone, a perfect  enigma.  She might never know why Dahlia had excluded her brother from  her life.  If it weren't for little Beau, Maddy wouldn't want to know.

Jack settled his cup in its saucer, and then slid a bland expression   toward the baby, who was settled again, asleep on his side in the   carriage with a tiny fist bunched up near his button nose. Jack had been   the one to suggest coffee, but after so long of a silence, Maddy   couldn't stand his chilly calm a moment more. She had a task to   complete-a promise to keep-and a finite amount of time in which to do   it.

"Dahlia was a great mother," she told him. "She'd finished her degree in   business marketing before the baby was born. She was taking a year off   before finding and settling down to a good job." Maddy's gaze dropped  to  her cup as a withering feeling fell through her center. Now was the   time to say it. Now was the time to confess.

"Dahlia had barely been out of the apartment since bringing him home,"   she went on. "I'd talked her into going to the hairdressers, having her   nails done-"

Maddy's stomach muscles gripped and she grimaced under the weight of her guilt.

If she hadn't suggested it, hadn't made the appointment and practically   pushed her friend out the door, Dahlia would still be alive. This baby   would still have his mother and have no need to rely on this brusque  man  who seemed set on ignoring him.

"He's three months old today," she added, in case he was interested, but   Jack only concentrated on stirring more sugar into his drink.

Maddy blinked several times then pushed her cup away and glanced, sick   at heart, around the noisy room. This exchange was never going to be   easy, but could it have gone any worse? What was she supposed to do now?   The man was as sensitive as a slab of cold steel.

"Where's the father?"

Maddy jumped at his graveled question. But the query was an obvious one, even if he wouldn't like the answer.

She lowered her voice. "Dahlia was the victim of a rape." His face   darkened before he swore and shoveled a hand though hair black as ink.   "And before you ask," she continued, "she didn't report it."                       
       
           



       

Flecks of gold ignited in the depths of his hostile green eyes. "Why the hell not?"

"Does it matter now?"

Like so many in her situation, Dahlia hadn't wanted the misery of a   trial. She hadn't known her assailant and preferred to keep it that way.   She'd needed to heal as best she could and bury the horror as well as   the hurt. Then Dahlia had discovered she was pregnant.

Choking on raw emotion, Maddy focused and straightened her spine. "What   matters is she had a beautiful baby." This bright little boy she'd  loved  very much.

Jack studied the baby, the single line between his dark brows deepening   as a pulse ticked at one side of thick, tanned neck. His next question   was a grudging growl.

"What's his name?"

"Beauford James."

Jack Prescott's nostrils flared and his gaze slid away.

Maddy smothered a humorless laugh. Was this man a machine? Certainly   these were special circumstances-he'd lost his only sibling today. But   did he ever deign to show the world any emotion other than irritation?

Hot tears pricked behind Maddy's eyes as her hand tightened around her   cup and rising emotion blocked off her air. She couldn't hold her   tongue. No decent person would. Nothing had mattered more in her life   than the outcome of this meeting-fulfilling the promise that she'd   made-and if she had to brush an over-indulged ego the wrong way to get   results, then by God, that's precisely what she'd do.

"He's your flesh and blood," she challenged. "Don't you want to pick him up and hold him?"

Promise him everything will be all right? That he'll be safe?

A dreadful thought struck and the fine hairs on her arms stood up at the   same time as she slumped back. "Or would you rather he go straight to   foster care?"

Not that she would let that happen. She'd take Beau herself first. Her   own mother had died when Maddy was five. Growing up she'd longed for   someone to braid her hair in the morning, burrow down beneath the covers   with and read to her at night.

Maddy's father was a good man but obsessed with his business-sometimes   it seemed as if Tyler Advertising was more Drew Tyler's child than his   only daughter. He ran his corporate castle with an iron fist and didn't   see a place on its staff for a "delicate girl" like Maddy. She   disagreed. After serious and extended debate, she'd won and had gone to   work at the firm.

These past weeks her father had become understandably edgy over his   daughter closing her first big solo deal. Beneath the brave face, Maddy   was nervous, too. But, come hell or high water, she'd have the   signatures she needed and by the date promised. One month from today.

No one would guess how painfully shy she'd been as a girl, how hard   she'd worked on her flaws in order to reflect her father's celebrated   style of business savvy and determination. Now, not a day went by that   Drew didn't in some way acknowledge his daughter's efforts. Still, there   were times she wished she'd known a mother's love.

Her gaze fell to the baby.

How would this little one fare?