Reading Online Novel

Having the Billionaire's Baby(17)



"Call me anyway."



She called, Nick thought, as he slipped into the auditorium and stood in   the shadows at the back of the crowded room. He'd give her that much.   But her call had come while he'd been on the plane. She'd left a   message, her voice soft and awestruck, assuring him that everything had   gone well.

Soon after that she'd left a second message, professional, though   vaguely defensive and full of excuses, as she listed far too many   reasons why they should delay meeting again for another two weeks. He   wasn't having it, so he'd flown back to Sydney where she was presenting   at this conference.



And so here he was, watching as she stood in the center of the stage,   exuding passion and expertise. A microphone the size of a pinot noir   grape was attached to the lapel of her tailored jacket. Her dark hair   was pulled sleekly back from her face. Her fitting skirt skimmed her   knees. Ostensibly, there was nothing provocative about her. A pair of   ankles and a shapely calf should not make his thoughts go where they   were heading. Back into the land of fantasy. But he knew how soft her   skin was, knew the throaty sound of her laugh. And he wanted her. The   reaction was instinctive. The logical side of him could and would deny   it, but it was there.

He could scarcely reconcile this polished professional with the woman   with paint smears on her face, or the woman standing frightened and   uncertain in the moonlight. He had ached to wrap his arms around her   then, too, and just hold her, but he couldn't trust himself, he was too   willing to overlook logic and reason where she was concerned.

It was almost ironic. He was usually the one who stopped people from   getting too close. He knew the hurt that led to. And now Callie was   trying to keep him at arm's length. She had given him no idea of whether   she would want too much or not enough.                       
       
           



       

From the front of the room she glanced his way and paused a beat, but he   was confident she couldn't see him. She stood in the full glare of the   lights, while he was in shadow.

He hadn't missed her assertion the other night, that aside from Jason,   her then partner, he was the only other man she'd slept with. It didn't   seem possible. A woman this vibrant, this attractive? But the   implications of that fact ran deep. She took her relationships   seriously.



He frowned as he noticed the bandage on her hand, realized also that she   was wielding her pointer with her left hand with a hint of slowness.   Her right hand passed in front of her abdomen, still flat.

She was carrying his baby.

Regardless of what she did or didn't want, he would be a part-an integral part-of his child's life.



As the door to her hotel room swung shut behind her, Callie slipped out   of her shoes and wriggled her toes on the carpet. She shrugged out of   her jacket and tossed it onto the first of the two beds. As she was   peeling off the panty hose from beneath her skirt, the phone on her   bedside table rang. Still pulling the last leg of the hose off, she   hopped over to the phone and dropped onto the bed as she picked up the   handset. "Callie speaking."

"You made it to your room at last."

She knew that deep voice too well. "Nick?" Her pulse quickened, as it always did around him.

"You were expecting someone else?"

She stood as though that could give her the strength she needed to deal   with this man. "I wasn't expecting anyone." She'd known she'd hear from   him again sooner or later-she'd valiantly hoped for later.

"Even though we agreed we'd talk this week?" His voice sounded almost   pleasant. Callie didn't trust it for a moment. He'd be annoyed that   she'd put him off, knew that his gentleness when she'd spoken to him   outside the doctor's had been a passing illusion. Not something she   could, or would, want to rely on.

"I called and left you a message explaining."

"It was a cop-out, Callie. We both know that."

"It wasn't a cop-out. I didn't have my personal organizer when we agreed   on this week, and you'll appreciate my thoughts were in turmoil that   evening. I have it with me now-give me a second and I'll get it from my   briefcase." She dropped the phone on the bed and retrieved her   organizer, then switched it on as she was picking up the phone again.   "I've got it in front of me, and next week is looking more flexible.   Name your day."

"I don't want to leave it till next week to talk to you."

She knew better than to think that meant he wanted to see her for her   own sake. "I can't see you any sooner than that. I'm tied up at a   conference this week and I won't be back in the office till next week."

"You didn't mention in the message you left where the conference was."

She hesitated. The omission had been deliberate. And given that she was   now on the phone to him, he obviously knew where she was. "Sydney," she   said on a sigh. Sydney, where the head office of Brunicadi Investments   was located.

"Then I think we should meet sooner than next week."

"Nick, I don't-" A knock sounded on her door. "Hang on a second, someone's here."

"I'll talk to you soon then." The dial tone sounded in her ear.

As she crossed to the door Callie knew he'd gone too easily. Duh. The   unexpected knock suddenly made depressing sense. She looked through the   peephole, saw him waiting in the corridor. And even through the   distortion of the glass she saw that mix of careless elegance and   intensity that was Nick's alone. His dark jacket hung open, revealing   the white shirt beneath. She opened the door and for a second they   looked at each other. Again, Callie felt the awareness that invariably   rolled through her like a deep tremor whenever she saw him. Green eyes   searched her face. Then, breaking that contact, he strolled in.

"I have a sponsor's dinner to go to shortly." She spoke to the back of his dark head and broad shoulders.

Nick surveyed the room. Too late, she remembered the clothes scattered   around and the panty hose discarded on the floor by the phone. She also   remembered that one other time she'd been in a hotel room with him.   Clothes discarded then with even less thought. Her face heating, she   strode past him, picked up the scattered items and dropped them into her   suitcase, pushing down the lid that stood open.

"If there's such a rush, why weren't you up here earlier?" He turned and   suddenly his river-green gaze held hers-dark, unreadable.                       
       
           



       

Her heart quickened, and again memories surged of that other hotel room,   the penthouse suite. A gaze darkened with desire then. Callie spoke   slowly, tried to make her voice sound even. "I was in the salon trying   to get a hair appointment." The parameters had been set-they were   business partners and accidental parents to be, nothing more. She   reached behind her head and removed the clasp that held her hair in   place. Unruly curls cascaded around her face. "But there's a celebrity   auction for breast cancer here tonight, and they can't fit me in. And   neither can any of the other nearby salons." She ran her fingers through   her hair. "It needs a wash and I can't do it because I can't get this   stupid hand wet." She lifted her right arm. "For which, rightly or   wrongly, I hold you in part responsible."

"Why is it still like that? The stitches should have been out by now." The concern in his voice surprised her.



"It got infected." She shrugged. "It should be okay in a few more days."

His gaze shifted from her hand back to her face. "I saw your presentation this afternoon."

"That was you standing at the back of the room?"

He nodded.

She'd had a feeling that he was there, had looked for him in the   audience once it was over, then decided she'd been imagining things.

Idly, he picked up her organizer from the bedside table, flipped it over   to look at the back, and then replaced it before Callie could protest.   He turned the full force of his attention on her. "We need to talk  about  your pregnancy, about our child. About what we're going to do."

Our child.

Hearing the words out loud made it so very real. She was pregnant by her   client's brother, her ex-boyfriend's brother-in-law and her new   business partner. She couldn't have made this any messier if she'd   tried.