Treasured by Thursday(89)
Gabi went cold. “Do you think Hunter knew that?”
Lori raised a brow. “Did he know about the insurance policy . . . the accounts?”
Gabi didn’t answer and Lori shook her head. “Hunter didn’t get where he is by stupid luck.”
Even if he had known . . . things had changed.
Hadn’t they?
“He’s not as selfish as it seems.”
Lori scoffed.
“No, really,” Gabi defended him. “He’s with his lawyers right now working on the immediate removal of Hayden from his mother’s custody.”
“Taking a child from his mother. Sounds noble.” The sarcasm was rich on Lori’s tongue.
“The woman is crazy.”
Lori tilted her head and stared. “Let me paint this picture a little more clearly. Blackwell wanted a wife to demonstrate to the court what a stable married man he was . . . and he’s working hard to find fault with the child’s mother to gain full custody.”
“She wants money. She doesn’t care about the baby.”
“Is that what she told you . . . or him?”
Gabi opened her mouth. Closed it. Then muttered, “I trust him.”
Lori pointed directly at her. “That’s your first mistake.”
“You don’t know him.” There was a little less defense in Gabi’s tone.
“No, you’re right, I don’t know him. But I know his type. He’s rich, arrogant, and will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Men like him bend the law, bribe the law . . . seduce it even, to reach their goals. You went into this contract cold and detached, Gabi. I suggest you find that woman and bring her back if you want to walk away a whole person. Don’t let Blackwell do to you what Picano did.”
“That’s not possible.”
“Are you sure about that?”
Gabi stared at her lawyer and knew the woman gave sound advice.
Not that Gabi wanted to hear it.
Back inside the car, Solomon reached inside the glove compartment and removed a small box. “Neil had this made,” he told her. “And he wants you to wear it at all times.”
She opened the lid and found a locket on a silver chain. “Why would Neil be buying me jewelry?”
Solomon laughed as he pulled out into traffic. “It’s a GPS device. As much as one of us will be glued at your side, there are times, like today, where you’ll be out of our sight. I meant to give it to you earlier. Sitting in the lobby reminded me that you didn’t have it on.”
She placed it over her head and looked at the simple design. Fiddling with the latch didn’t result in opening it.
“It doesn’t open.”
“Oh.” Overkill. From bodyguards to lockets.
“It’s merely a tracking device, right? It doesn’t record what I’m saying?”
Solomon offered a shake of his head. “Nope. Just GPS. It’s waterproof, too. So you can shower with it.”
With a shrug, Gabi tucked the locket under her shirt and focused on the passing landscape and the barrage of people surrounding them . . . people who weren’t wearing tracking devices or traveling with an armed bodyguard at their side.
The morning visit to his office was met with a subpoena from Sheila requesting Hayden’s child support. Seems the woman was moving forward faster than Hunter could run.
Hunter sat across from Ben Lipton and his team of family law attorneys.
“She has to consent to a paternity test,” Ben told him.
Hunter already had one. Underpaid staff in the clinic Sheila was taking Hayden to had no problem supplying saliva for a little money.
“The test will prove I’m the father,” he told them. “Your job is to use the information I give you to obtain my complete and exclusive custody.”
“As I told you before, she has to be unfit to care for her son. Your stability and proof positive that Hayden is your son will only grant you partial custody. Child support will be inevitable.”
“The woman wants a payout, not the title of mother.”
The lawyers glanced at each other. “She will appoint a paternity testing doctor, and we’ll have ours. That will buy us forty-eight hours to find something on her that’s unfit.”
“You have the reports from my investigators.”
“An antidepressant isn’t a smoking gun. And she hasn’t seen a doctor for anything psychological in five years. She might not provide well for Hayden, but she does have him with adults when she’s not by his side.”
“Incompetent adults.”
“Which makes them liable, not her,” Ben told him.
The attorney on Ben’s left sat forward. “She’s not expecting you to take her son. She might come back fighting.”