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The Billionaire's Borrowed Baby(7)

By:Janice Maynard


Hattie shook her head, eyes stinging. "No. She doesn't. I can't let Eddie take her. She's so innocent, so perfect."

Luc turned, his strong, masculine features shadowed in the half-light.   His somber gaze met her wary one, some intangible link between them   shrouding the moment in significance. "We'll keep her safe, Hattie. You   have my word."

Quietly, he left the room.

Hattie changed into a gown and robe. Ordinarily, she slept in a T-shirt   and panties, but with Luc in the house, she needed extra armor.

She folded the comforter and turned back the covers before heading for   the bathroom. Well, shoot. She'd forgotten to give Luc even the basics.   Taking a new toothbrush from the cabinet, she returned to the living   room. "Sorry. I meant to give you this. There's toothpaste on the   counter, and if you want to shave in the morning-"                       
       
           



       

She stopped dead, her pulse jumping. Luc stood before her wearing   nothing but a pair of gray knit boxers, which left little to the   imagination. Every inch of his body was fit and tight. His skin was   naturally olive-toned, and the dusting of fine black hair on his chest   made her want to stroke it to see if it was as soft as she remembered.

Long muscular thighs led upward to …  She gulped. As she watched in   fascination, his erection grew and flexed. She literally couldn't move.   Luc didn't seem at all embarrassed, despite the fact that her face was   hot enough to fry an egg.

"Thank you for the toothbrush." A half smile lifted one corner of his mouth.

She extended the cellophane-wrapped package gingerly, making sure her fingers didn't touch his. "You're welcome."

And still she didn't leave. The years rolled away. She remembered with   painful clarity what it was like to be held tightly to that magnificent   chest, to feel those strong arms pull her close, to experience the hard   evidence of his arousal thrusting against her abdomen.

His gaze was hooded, the line of his mouth now almost grim. "Like what you see?"

The mockery was deliberate, she had no doubt … as if to say you were so foolish back then. Look what you gave up.

Heat flooded her body. The robe stifled her. She wanted to tear it off,   to fling herself at Luc. But her limbs couldn't move. She was  paralyzed,  caught between bitter memories of the past and the sure  knowledge that  Luc Cavallo was still the man who could make her soar  with pleasure.

"Answer me, Hattie," he said roughly. "If you're going to look at me like that, I'm damn sure going to take the invitation."

Her lips parted. No sound came out.

The color on his cheekbones darkened and his eyes flared with heat. "Come here."

No soft preliminaries. No tentative approach.

Luc was confident, controlled. He touched only her face, sliding his   hands beneath her hair and holding her still so his mouth could ravage   hers. His tongue thrust between her lips-invading, dominant, taking and   not giving. She was shaking all over, barely able to stand. He kissed   her harder still, muttering something to himself she didn't quite catch.

She felt the push of his hips. Suddenly, her body came to life with   painful tingles of heat. Her arms went around his waist, and she kissed   him back. But when his fingers accidentally brushed the painful knot on   her skull, she flinched.

Instantly, he cursed and thrust her away, his gaze a cross between anger and incredulity. "Damn you. Go to bed, Hattie."

If she had been a Victorian heroine, she might have swooned at this very   moment. But she was made of sterner stuff. She marshaled her defenses,   muttered a strangled goodnight and fled.



Aeons later it seemed, she rolled over and flung an arm over her face.   Bright sunshine peeked in through a crack between the curtains. She had   slept like the dead, deeply, dreamlessly. A glance at the clock stopped   her heart. It was nine o'clock. Deedee. Dear heaven. The baby was  always  up by six-thirty.

She leaped from the bed, almost taking a nosedive when the covers   tangled around her feet. The crib was empty. She sucked in a panicked   breath, and then her sleep-fuddled brain began to function.

Luc. Memories of his kiss tightened her nipp**les and made her thighs   clench with longing. She touched her lips as the hot sting of tears made   her blink and sniff. Ten years was a lifetime to wait for something   that was at once so terrible and so wonderful.

She opened her bedroom door and simultaneously heard the sound of   childish gurgles and smelled the heavenly aroma of frying bacon. Luc   stood by the stove. Deedee was tucked safely in her high chair nearby.

He glanced up, his features impassive. "Good morning."

The baby squealed in delight and lurched toward Hattie. Luc unfastened   the tray and handed her off. "I fed her a bottle and half a jar of   peaches. I didn't want to give her anything else until I checked with   you." The words were gruff, as if he'd had to force them from his   throat.

Hattie cuddled the baby, stunned that Luc had taken over with such   relaxed competence. Not that she didn't think he was capable. But she   had never witnessed him with children, and she was shocked to see him so   calm and in control, especially when Hattie herself had experienced a   few rough moments in the last six weeks.

He started cracking eggs into a bowl. "This will be ready in five, and   the movers will be showing up shortly. You might want to get dressed. I   can handle Deedee."

Hattie held the baby close, realizing with chagrin that she had jumped   out of bed and never actually donned her robe. The sheer fabric of her   nightie revealed far too much. "She'll be fine with me." Suddenly she   noticed the sheaf of legal papers on the nearby coffee table. "Luc … I'm   so sorry. With everything that happened, we never did get around to   dealing with the marriage stuff."                       
       
           



       

He popped two slices of bread into her toaster. "No worries. We'll have time later today."

She hesitated, eager to leave the room, but feeling oddly abashed that   he had watched her sleeping … without her knowledge. Though they had made   love many times when they were together, only once or twice had they   enjoyed the luxury of spending the night together.

She cleared her throat. "Thank you for getting up with the baby. I can't believe I didn't hear her."

He shrugged. "I'm an early riser. I enjoyed spending time with her. She's a charming child."

"You haven't seen her throw a temper tantrum yet," she joked. "Batten down the hatches. She has a great set of lungs."

He paused his efficient preparations, the spatula in midair. "You're   doing a great job. She's lucky to have you as her mother." His eyes and   his voice were serious.

"Thanks." Despite the task he had undertaken, nothing about the setting   made Luc look at all domestic: quite the opposite. Luc Cavallo was the   kind of man you'd want by your side during a forced jungle march. He   possessed a self-confidence that was absolute.

But that resolute belief in his own ability to direct the universe to   his liking made Hattie uneasy. In asking for his help, she had   unwittingly given him the very power she had refused to allow in their   previous relationship. Even if she had second thoughts now, the   situation was already beyond her control.



The contents of the small apartment were packed, boxes loaded and rooms   emptied by 12:30. Luc had already paid out the remainder of Hattie's   lease. All that was left for her to do was turn in her keys to the super   and follow Luc out to the car where Sherman was waiting. But there she   balked. "I'll follow you in my car."

Luc frowned. "I thought we had this discussion."

"I like my car. I'm sentimentally attached to my car. I'm not giving it away."

The standoff lasted only a few seconds. Luc shrugged, his expression resigned. "I'll see you at the house."

It was a small victory, but it made Hattie feel better. Luc had a habit   of taking charge in ways that ostensibly made perfect sense, but left   Hattie feeling like a helpless damsel in distress. She had asked for his   help, but that didn't mean she'd let him walk all over her.

She strapped Deedee into the old, shabby car seat and slid into the   front, turning the key in the ignition and praying the car would start.   That would be the final indignity.