The Pregnancy Pact. Kandy Shepherd

The Pregnancy Pact - Kandy  Shepherd


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a huge chandelier and deep distressed-leather sofas grouped around a fireplace.

       No wonder he had never come home.

      “Wow,” Jessica said, gulping. “Our little place must seem pretty humble after this. I can see why you were just going to give it to me.”

      Kade looked around, as if he was puzzled. “I actually didn’t pick the place,” he said. “The company owns several units in here that we use for visiting executives. One was available. I needed a place to go and we had one vacant. I rent it from the company.”

      She cast him a glance as they took a quiet elevator up to the top floor. He really did seem oblivious to the sumptuous surroundings he found himself in. Once off the elevator, Kade put a code into the keyless entry.

      “It’s 1121,” he said, “in case you ever need it.”

      She ducked her head at the trust he had in her—gosh, what if she barged in when he was entertaining a girlfriend?—and because it felt sad that she knew she would never need it. Well, unless she did stay for a couple of days until the disaster at her place was sorted.

      Already, she realized with wry self-knowledge, her vehement no to his invitation was wavering.

      Maybe that wasn’t so surprising. Kade was charming, and he could be lethally so. She needed to remember charm was not something you could take to the bank in a relationship.

      He opened the door and stood back.

      “Oh, my gosh,” Jessica said, stepping by him. The sense of being seduced, somehow, increased. She found herself standing in a wide entryway, floored in huge marble tiles. That area flowed seamlessly into the open-space living area, where floor-to-ceiling windows looked out over the park and pathways that surrounded the Bow River.

      The views were breathtaking and exquisite, and she had a sense of being intensely curious and not knowing where to look first, because the interior of the apartment was also breathtaking. The furnishings and finishes were ultramodern and high-end. The kitchen, on the back wall of the huge open space, was a masterpiece of granite and stainless steel. A huge island had the cooktop in it, and a space-age stainless-steel fan over that.

      “Let’s eat,” Kade said. He’d obviously gotten used to all this luxury. The fabulous interior of his apartment didn’t create even a ripple in him. “Maybe on the deck? It’s a nice night. I’ll just get some plates.”

      Jessica, as if in a dream, moved out fold-back glass doors onto the covered terrace. It was so big it easily contained a sitting area with six deeply cushioned dark rattan chairs grouped together. On the other side of it sat a huge rustic plank table with dining chairs around it. It looked as if it could sit eight people with ease.

      Huge planters contained everything from full-size trees to bashful groups of purple pansies. She took a seat at the table and wondered about all the parties that had been hosted here that she had not been invited to. She looked out over the river.

      She felt as if she was going to cry. The apartment screamed to her that he had moved on. That he had a life she knew nothing about. After all their closeness this afternoon, she suddenly felt unbearably lonely.

      Kade came out, juggling dishes and the pizza.

      “What?” he said, sliding her a look as he put everything down.

      “Your apartment is beautiful,” she said, and could hear the stiffness in her own voice.

      “Yeah, it’s okay,” he said. She cast him a look. Was he deliberately understating it?

      “The kitchen is like something out of a magazine layout.”

      He shrugged, took a slice of pizza out of the box and laid it on her plate, from the pepperoni half, just as if they had ordered pizza together yesterday instead of a long, long time ago.

      “I think I’ll look for open concept in my next place,” she said. She bit into the pizza and tried not to swoon. Not just because the pizza was so good, but because of the memories that swarmed in with the flavor.

      “Don’t,” he said.

       Swoon over pizza?

      “It’s not all it’s cracked up to be, open concept.”

      “Oh,” she said, relieved. “You don’t like it?”

      “You can’t be messy. Everything’s out in the open all the time. Where do you hide from your dirty dishes?”

      “That would be hard on you,” Jessica said. She remembered painful words between them over things that now seemed so ridiculous: toothpaste smears on the sink, the toilet paper roll put on the “wrong” way. “But I didn’t see any dirty dishes.”

      “Oh, the condo offers a service. They send someone in to clean and make the beds and stuff. You don’t think I’m keeping all those plants alive, do you?”

      “Very swanky,” she said. “Kind of like living at a hotel.”

      “Exactly. That is probably why this place,” Kade said, “has never felt like home.”

      Jessica felt the shock of that ripple through her. This beautiful, perfect space did not feel like home to him?

      “I’ve missed this pizza,” he said.

      “Me, too,” she said. But she knew neither of them was talking about pizza. They sat out on his deck and watched the light change on the river as the sun went down behind them. The silence was comfortable between them.

      “I should go,” she finally said. “I have to make some phone calls. It’s probably getting late to call a friend for tonight. I’ll go to a hotel and arrange something for the rest of the week.”

      “You shouldn’t bother. It sounds as if it’s going to be a lot of hassle. There is lots of room here. There’s a guest room.”

      Logically, Jessica knew she could not stay. But it felt so good to be here. It felt oddly like home to her, even if it didn’t to Kade. Maybe it was because she was aware that, for the very first time since she had been attacked in her business, she felt safe.

      And so tired. And relaxed.

      Maybe for her, home was where Kade was, which was all the more reason to go, really.

      “Okay,” she heard herself saying, without nearly enough fight. “Maybe just for one night.”

      The logical part of her tried to kick in. “I should have packed a bag. I don’t know why I didn’t think of it.”

      “I told you,” Kade said with an indulgent smile, “you don’t think well when you’re hungry. I thought of it, but then I wondered if your stuff was going to smell like that burning sander. Don’t worry. Like I said, the place is set up for visiting execs. The bathrooms are all stocked up with toothbrushes and toothpaste and shampoo and stuff. And you don’t need pajamas.”

      She could feel her eyebrows shoot up into her hairline.

      He laughed. “The guest bedroom has its own en suite, not that I was suggesting you sleep naked. You can borrow one of my shirts.”

      Good grief, he was her husband. Why would she blush like a schoolgirl when the word naked fell, with such aggravating ease, from his gorgeous lips?

       CHAPTER TWELVE

      “AND WHAT SHOULD I do for clothes tomorrow?” Jessica asked. Her voice felt stiff with tension.

      But Kade did not seem tense at all. He just shrugged, and then said, his tone teasing, “We will figure something out. It’s not as though we could do worse than what you have on.”

       We.

      She ordered herself not to give in to this. It was a weakness to let him look


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