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Millionaire in Command(4)

By:Catherine Mann

       
           



       

She'd thought this through. People  got hitched in Vegas every day for  far more flimsy reasons. Wedding vows  meant next to nothing to most  people these days.

And they would certainly mean nothing to her ever again.

She  started toward him. Their cubby of space went darker as another  person  strode under the ivy-covered arch, snapping Phoebe back into the   present. She needed to be on guard for those press people he'd   mentioned. Backlit, the shadowy figure was still obviously a woman.

"Kyle,  dear, there you are." An older blond woman stepped into the glow  of the  flickering light. She rested a hand on his arm, manicured nails  tipped  white.

His mother.

Even if Ginger Landis Renshaw weren't  famous for her political prowess  as a former senator and then secretary  of state, Phoebe would have  noticed the family resemblance. Their hair  color was different but  their faces, their smiles, were the same.

Somewhere  in her early fifties and carrying it well, Ginger smoothed a  hand over  her simple red Chanel evening gown, almost managing to  disguise her  curiosity. "Our guests are beginning to ask where you've  run off to."

"Mom,  we need to find an empty room and talk. Immediately." He stepped  aside,  clearing the view for the woman's gaze to fall squarely on  Phoebe.

Ginger's blue eyes darkened from curiosity to concern. "Kyle? What's going on?"

"Not now, Mom," he said quietly, his voice urgent. "We need to move this to a room, preferably one with a closed door."

She  straightened with a take-charge efficiency that had won respect  around  the world during her secretary-of-state days. That political  sway  continued now in her tenure as ambassador to a small but  politically  powerful South-American country. "Of course. This way."


She  tucked out of their garden nook and sliced a path straight into the   country club. A quick flick of her hand had the manager rushing ahead  to  unlock his office. Phoebe followed, unable to squelch her awe at  this  woman who made things happen so effortlessly.

Damn it. Forget  awe. She would stand down anyone for Nina if need be.  But she hoped she  would find an ally in a political powerhouse.

The door clicked  closed behind them, sealing them inside an office with  looming dark  furniture and heavy tapestry upholstery. The scent of  furniture polish  and fresh-cut flowers coated the air thickly.

Ginger turned  toward her son but looked at Phoebe and gestured toward a  wingback  chair. "Have a seat, dear. Even little babies can grow quite  heavy when  you've been holding them for too long."

Phoebe blinked back her  surprise and sat. Disobeying this woman  wouldn't dawn on her, and her  feet were throbbing. All the same, she  wouldn't relax her guard for even  a second. Winning his mother's  support was just as important as gaining  Kyle's trust.

Ginger pinned her son with a questioning stare.

He scratched the back of his neck. "Mom, it appears I may have left a child behind when I went to Afghanistan."



Kyle knew one thing in this crazy, mixed-up night. Give a Landis a crisis and they start things cranking at Mach speed.

He  had no more than announced the possibility of this child being his  and  his mom had spun into action. She'd called for her trusted  assistant and  gathered the rest of the family. So much for keeping  things secret.

With  four Landis brothers, two of whom were married, that made for  quite a  group packed into the country club office. His brother  Sebastian sat at  the sprawling wood desk, putting his legal eagle-eye  and degree to work  reviewing the documents. The rest of the family  seemed transfixed around  the wingback chair where Phoebe fed the little  scrap of a kid a bottle.  Kyle paced. He damn near wore a hole in the  Persian rug as he moved  restlessly behind his brother. Sebastian was a  year younger than Kyle,  but his quiet soberness had always made him  seem older. They needed his  calm efficiency right now.

Sebastian closed the file and glanced up somberly. "Is she your daughter?"

Kyle  stopped in his tracks and dropped to sit on the edge of the desk,  his  foot twitching. "It's a distinct possibility." A possibility that  still  sucker-punched him harder than the missile that had taken down  his  aircraft in Afghanistan. He pinched the bridge of his nose briefly   before his hand fell away. "If she's really Bianca Thompson's daughter,   the timing of our, uh, week together lines up."                       
       
           



       

"A week, huh?" A rare hint of humor lit his normally serious brother's eyes.

Kyle  wasn't in the mood to laugh. "We hooked up when I was in between   rotations overseas. Neither of us was interested in anything long-term."

"You never are." Sebastian looked away and back at the papers.

Yeah,  he wasn't known for serious relationships, but at least he  understood  himself, rather than sending out mixed signals. "Which makes  it all the  more ironic that Phoebe would toss out a marriage proposal  to me."

"I  think it makes her seem like a more logical type." Sebastian kept  his  voice low enough that the cluster of people a few feet away  wouldn't  hear. "If she knows your reputation, then she has no reason to  worry  about you growing attached to her or the baby."

"She said she  only tossed it out there in desperation. That she didn't  really mean it,  and could I come up with something else." Still it  rattled around in  his head. "You got any suggestions?"

Sebastian scrubbed a hand  over his face, a near mirror image of Kyle's.  "I think the first order  of business is finding out if she's really  yours. I've never been one  who could see Great-aunt Whoever's chin on  some infant, but I have to  confess, she looks just like a Landis."

The uncertainty was already chewing him up inside. "Any idea how long it takes for the results of a paternity test?"

"Gotta  admit, I've never needed one." His eyes slid over to his wife  with  obvious affection. Their son had been born a few months ago, a  surprise  pregnancy after the crushing loss of the baby daughter they'd  adopted,  only to have the birth mother change her mind. "Jonah should  know,  though."

Their youngest brother had always been a hell-raiser, so  much so that  after a while it became tough to distinguish between truth  and  reputation. Kyle had always understood his younger brother better  than  the rest of the family, although the military had helped him rein  in  his wilder impulses.

And yet still, somehow, he may have screwed up. "The sooner we can clear this up, the better."

"What  do you know about her?" Sebastian nodded toward Phoebe, who was  lifting  the baby up to burp, a hand towel from the bathroom draped over  her  shoulder.

"Nothing at all." Kyle flipped open the manila file  folder again and  thumbed through the papers. "I'd never met her, but  those photos of her  with Bianca look real."

"The private  investigator I keep on retainer will be able to verify her  story by  morning. The fact that she lives and works in state makes  things easier  all the way around." Sebastian tapped the documents  spilling out across  the desk. "Everything seems authentic and in order  though. We'll see  soon."

Not soon enough. "So, we're stuck for now." Kyle lowered  his voice,  even though no one across the room seemed to be paying any  attention to  them. "Either she's on the up-and-up helping out a friend,  in which  case she needs help, so the baby stays. Or she's a nutcase, in  which  case for the baby's safety, she has to stay."

"Be careful, my brother." Sebastian leaned closer. "There's a lot of money at stake here."

Sebastian's wife glanced over her shoulder. "Men are so cynical."

Damn,  he could have sworn they were keeping their voices down. Could  Phoebe  have overheard them too? Not that they'd really said anything  that  mattered. She should expect they would have her investigated.

The  wife of their oldest brother, Matthew, stepped aside, opening the   circle as she caressed the slight curve of her stomach. "They're right   to be concerned," Ashley said. "I've seen some sad cases of how   heartless people can be when it comes to the needs of a child."

Their  youngest brother, Jonah, snorted, lounging on the other wingback  chair,  one leg draped over the armrest. "Who are you condemning here?  The  baby's mother or Phoebe?"