Her Baby's Father. Anne Haven

Her Baby's Father - Anne  Haven


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      Shit, Drew thought. Just what he needed today—to be called on the carpet by his saintly older brother.

      Ross stepped back to let him enter. A small brown dog shot into the front hall on three legs. The crazed-looking Chihuahua spent more time moving in circles than going straight forward.

      “Yours?” he asked. It would be just like his brother to take on a crippled dog.

      “Kyle and Melissa’s.”

      Drew didn’t spend a lot of time socializing with Ross’s friends. No time at all, in fact. But he’d heard Ross talk about these particular friends and their daughter. They seemed to have a perfect life. Drew wouldn’t be surprised, though, if one of them walked into his law office someday seeking a divorce. Love was fun, but life was real. He didn’t have a lot of illusions left about human nature, his included.

      “So what’s this all about?” he asked, pretending he didn’t know.

      “Jennifer Burns.”

      “Yeah? I saw her car. How is she?”

      “She’s in the study. Why don’t you go see for yourself.”

      CHAPTER FIVE

      JENNIFER WATCHED DREW saunter into the study with his cocky, self-assured stride, and wondered what she’d ever seen in him. As a teenager or as an adult.

      He rescued you, she told herself. And he charmed you. And he made you feel special when you couldn’t do it for yourself.

      And look where it got you.

      Ross stood in the doorway. He met her gaze and she read his expression.

      I’ll be fine, she tried to telegraph. I can handle this. And she could. She knew she could. Because she knew from Drew’s demeanor exactly what would happen.

      Ross stepped back and closed the door.

      The study was simple, with a wall of medical books and a wide wooden desk. Jennifer sat behind it in Ross’s large padded chair. His laptop computer rested, lid down, to her right. A single window looked out into the side yard. She liked the room’s masculine feel—and the idea that Ross spent time in here gave her a kind of strength, though she didn’t want to question that fact too deeply.

      Drew sat down on one of the chairs across the room. He leaned back and rested one ankle over a knee, smooth and relaxed, hands resting on his thighs.

      She took a deep breath, reminding herself not to give up on him without giving him a chance.

      “I’m sure this comes as a bit of a shock,” she said.

      He seemed unaware of her meaning, though he’d seen her full belly behind the desk. He flashed her a casual smile.

      “How’s it going? Must have been a long drive from California in that old car.”

      She stared at him. His appearance was the same as it had been last December. Lighter hair than Ross’s, boyishly handsome face, great body, expensive blue suit. He did absolutely nothing for her.

      “That’s not what I’m here to talk about.”

      “Ah,” he said. “Your pregnancy.”

      “Yes.”

      “You do look quite different from the last time we saw each other. But pregnancy suits you. What are you—five, five-and-a-half months along?”

      He should know exactly how far along she was. But perhaps his math skills weren’t up to par. “Twenty-seven weeks,” she said.

      “I always forget how it works. Is that twenty-seven weeks since your last period or twenty-seven weeks since you conceived the child?”

      “This child was conceived on December twenty-second,” she said, ignoring his question and his mention of her period, which was no doubt intended to embarrass her.

      He betrayed no reaction. “So you’re trying to suggest it’s mine.”

      She’d expected the indirect denial but couldn’t stop the shudder of pain it caused. “I’m carrying your child.”

      “Do you have any proof of your allegation?”

      “There’s a risk of early labor or injury to the baby with any of the sampling techniques.”

      “So, that would be no.”

      “No.”

      “You’re asking me to take you at your word.”

      She forced herself to remain calm. He was acting like the lawyer he was, but she wouldn’t let him intimidate her or provoke her into saying something she would regret. “I’m not a liar,” she said.

      He raised an eyebrow. “Are you implying that I am?”

      “You’re married.” And Jennifer felt truly sorry for his wife. She would rather be in her current predicament, if the alternative included marriage to a man like Drew. If it included the awful disillusionment Lucy was sure to experience with the person she’d chosen as her life partner.

      “Yes,” he said.

      “You told me you weren’t.”

      “Did I?”

      “Yes.”

      “Think carefully.” Drew paused. “You asked me if I was in a relationship. I said, ‘Who would have me?’ You didn’t pursue it. You could have. I understood that you didn’t really want to know.”

      “You remember your exact words? Six months later?”

      He shrugged. “Sure.”

      Jennifer realized why. Because he’d used those same words before or since. They worked. They’d worked on her because she hadn’t wanted to believe he would take her to dinner if he was in a relationship. And they might work on other women who didn’t care, as long as they didn’t have to face facts head-on.

      “It was a lie of omission,” she said as evenly as she could.

      “I’m not responsible for your assumptions.”

      “You weren’t wearing your ring.”

      He glanced at the gold band on his finger, then waved away the issue. “Let’s return to the matter at hand. And let me tell you how it will appear to an impartial observer.

      “You’ve come to me with a claim you refuse to support, and you know your allegations could have a detrimental effect on my marriage. That smells of extortion. For all anyone knows, the child belongs to some other man, who won’t acknowledge it, and you plan to hit me up for some quick cash and disappear before my paternity can be disproved. Now, I’m not saying that’s what you’re doing. But it could look that way.”

      Jennifer refused to back down. He could spin things any way he wanted. In the end, he was still the father. She cut to the chase. “When the baby turns out to be yours,” she said, staying cool, “what are you going to do about it?”

      “If that were to happen,” he said, “which I very much doubt, then we would work something out.”

      “You’ll be a father to your child?”

      Drew looked at her as if she’d said something mildly idiotic. “Is that what you want?”

      “Yes.”

      He gave an uncomfortable laugh and shifted around on his chair. “I would have thought Ross had told you. My wife is pregnant. Our child is due in a few months. I can hardly be a father to yours, can I?”

      Thank goodness she had known about his other baby, she thought, or his careless announcement would have rattled her composure further. “So what do you plan to do?”

      “Jennifer, this is all a surprise. I can’t make any promises without time to consider. But


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