Prescription: Baby. Jule McBride
that. Don’t you want to invite some friends, at least? You said your family’s close. Shouldn’t we wait until your father—”
“Comes back to town?” she interjected. “Absolutely not. That won’t be for a couple more weeks. His contracting company’s still on a job, and when he comes back, I want to be able to tell him the ceremony’s over.”
“I get the feeling he’ll be sorry he missed it, Katie.”
“True. But…”
When she didn’t say anything, Ford prompted, “But what?”
“But he’ll guess…we’re not in love, Ford. He knows me like the back of his hand. Really, it’s better if we just tell him we eloped when he comes back.” There was a pause. “Well, sort of eloped,” she added. “We do have to be married in a church. A Baptist church,” she clarified.
“I’m already making arrangements, but are you positive you don’t want anyone to come?”
“Not unless you want your parents….”
Ford could do without them, too. Besides, Katie was right. The marriage wasn’t going to last. Why make a big deal out of it? Biting back a sigh, he chewed on his inner cheek, not about to examine his annoyance. He’d asked Katie to marry him so they could insure the trust for the baby, right? So, what was his problem? “Look, why don’t we meet,” he found himself saying. “You know. Get together. Maybe have some dinner. Talk about all this.” Waiting a long moment, he shifted the phone from one ear to the other, then prompted, “Katie? Are you still there?”
“Still here,” she said in that sweet Texas slur that set his already wild imagination rolling like a movie camera. “I think we both agree,” she continued, “we really do need to keep this strictly business.”
“I’m trying,” he muttered. But he was also wondering what Katie was wearing. Nightgown? Sweatpants? Jeans? And what did her apartment look like? Big? Little? Throw pillows and knickknacks? Even though it was only for six months, would she miss her place while she was staying here? “Do you really think eating with me would interfere with things?”
She inhaled sharply. “Don’t you think so?”
“You’ll be eating with me sometimes once you move into the house,” he said diplomatically.
“I know. But…” Another faintly exasperated sigh sounded before she changed the subject. “Uh, you finished working everything out with the lawyer, right?”
“Right,” he said uncomfortably, wishing the situation wasn’t starting to rankle. Katie hadn’t wanted to get together over the past week except to work out necessary details about their marriage. Finally, he added, “Yeah. The lawyers talked. Mine said yours was good.”
Actually, brutal was the word he’d used. Katie had lost no time in having someone carefully lay out the terms of a prenuptial agreement that would cover the baby if she and Ford divorced, which of course they would. Surprised he felt so unreasonably emotional, Ford added, “As soon as we’re married, your lawyer said the paperwork would go to my parents and to Gil Gilcrest. He’s the Carrington Foundation’s lawyer—”
“Blane’s father?”
“You know Blane Gilcrest?”
A full moment seemed to pass. “Only by name. We don’t exactly run in the same crowd.”
“No,” he murmured, realizing Katie had probably seen Blane’s name on the society page. Getting back to the issue at hand, he continued, “Sure you don’t want to get together to take the edge off this? We’re doing the right thing, Katie, but…”
He thought he heard her voice catch again. “But?”
He glanced toward the red-carpeted steps leading upstairs, hardly wanting to contemplate the amount of time he’d spent deciding which sheets should go on the bed Katie would soon be using. He’d settled on red satin. “But it’s strange to be sitting here, planning a divorce before we’re even married,” he admitted. Strange, too, to think Katie Topper would soon be sharing his house, sleeping right down the hall from him.
She exhaled another quick breath. “Strange or not, it’s what we’re doing, isn’t it?”
Yes. But she didn’t have to sound so…well, businesslike. He understood, he even knew she was right, but that didn’t stop him from wanting her where she’d been months ago, naked and shivering in his bed, smiling at him in the moonlight flooding the room. To his ears, the words sounded lame. “I’d just like to see you before the wedding.”
There was a long pause, and then she said, “Why?”
Why? After the night they’d shared, how could she ask? “So we’d feel more comfortable with each other when you move in.”
“I’ll think about it and get back to you,” she said.
“You do that.” Even though hers was probably the wisest course, her businesslike tone, the cold legality of dealing with lawyers, the fact that she didn’t want to see him—it was all so frustrating.
Right before the phone went dead, she conceded, “Oh, I don’t know, Ford. Maybe we could get together just once. Like I said, I’ll get back to you.”
“She’ll get back to me,” Ford muttered to the dial tone. He was hardly used to this treatment from women and he found he didn’t particularly like it.
STANDING NEXT TO FORD at the altar in a small Baptist church that wasn’t but six miles away from the one her papa attended so faithfully every Sunday, Katie tried to tell herself that to refuse ten million dollars and a well-known Austin surname for the baby would have been to look a gift horse in the mouth—a cardinal sin in Texas, if there was one.
Not to mention she’d now be allowed to live.
She shuddered to think of her papa’s reaction if she’d had to announce she was unmarried and pregnant. So what if she’d been secretly enamored of Ford Carrington ever since she’d met him? So what if the rose Ford brought her today tempted her to imagine she was wearing a gown and he was wearing a tux. Or that a flutist and pianist were playing Brahams and her friends and family were here. Yes…Ford loved her. Tonight, they’d be sharing a bed.
Stop it, Katie!
Smoothing her best sage dress, she curled her fingers tightly around the rose stem, feeling a pang that was sad and wistful by turns. Moments from now, it would look as if her every secret fantasy about Ford Carrington had come true. But fantasy was exactly what this marriage was, and she simply couldn’t afford to forget that.
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