Billion Dollar Bride. Muriel Jensen

Billion Dollar Bride - Muriel Jensen


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into his empty bowl and stared at her in wide-eyed disbelief.

      “Mom,” he said gravely, “you’re kidding, right?”

      She shook her head. “I’m not. They want a medieval English wedding, and I have to find costumes and armor and horses.”

      His mouth fell open.

      “You can help me with that part if you like,” she said.

      He still didn’t believe her. “No way!” he challenged.

      “Way,” she assured him.

      Hero worship blazed in his eyes as he finally realized she spoke the truth. “But…he lives in Dallas!”

      “Right. But Caroline lives here in Austin.”

      “Wow.” He pushed his bowl aside and leaned toward her pleadingly. “You think I’ll get to meet him?”

      She remembered Cahill’s resistance to Caroline’s suggestion. “He’s pretty busy right now,” she said gently. “He’s involved in getting ready for the wedding and trying to run his business from here.”

      He absorbed that information, then seemed to dismiss it, as though the notion that he could be this close to his hero and not meet him was unthinkable.

      “Did he say anything about the RoyceCo takeover?” Will asked eagerly. Before she could answer, he added, “Did he say what he’s going to do about the pet stores in their subsidiary company?”

      “Didn’t you just buy us RoyceCo stock?” Anna frowned in puzzlement. “I thought it was a grain company.”

      He nodded. “I bought it because I knew Austin Cahill was looking at it seriously. I think RoyceCo bought a dog-food company as a place to use some of their grain, and those guys had pet stores. Anyway, those stores—I think they’re called Dogdom—have been in violation of Texas animal protection laws. Somebody has to make them change.”

      “He didn’t say any—”

      “I’ll bet that’s why he bought it!” Will beamed. “’Cause he heard the animals weren’t being treated right and he wanted to fix that!”

      Anna was willing to let him believe that. It reminded her again that although her son had a keen, almost adult mind, he was still a little boy. He understood the workings of business, but not the motivations of those who made the deals.

      She doubted seriously that Austin Cahill had purchased RoyceCo to see that the animals owned by the subsidiary pet stores were better treated. He was taking a wife for the sole purpose of producing an heir. With so little regard for a human being, he couldn’t possibly care that much about animals. He was in it for the profits in grain.

      “Maybe we’ll run into him,” Will said hopefully, “while I’m helping you with the armor and the horses.”

      “Maybe. We’ll have to find a way to work it out when his schedule loosens up.”

      Mary Jane brought their dinners, and conversation stopped while Will consumed his, then finished off the second half of Anna’s.

      “Sara’s a really good cook,” he said appreciatively as he contemplated the last bite. “I’ll bet she cooked for the president or somebody.”

      Anna had to agree that her chicken and dumplings were delicious. The seasoning was perfect, the biscuits light, the mashed potatoes creamy. An hour on the treadmill tonight, she thought, might save her hips from retribution.

      “I can stay up late tonight,” Will boasted as he pushed his plate aside, “’cause I don’t have school tomorrow. Can I have peach cobbler?”

      “Sure.”

      “A là mode?”

      “Is there any other way?”

      Anna beckoned to Mary Jane, who brought Will’s favorite dessert without being asked.

      “Aunt Beth wondered,” Anna said casually, “if you could help out at the day care tomorrow, since you have the day off.”

      Will gave her a direct look that changed subtly to one of disapproval. “Mom, I’m on to you. You think if you make me feel like Aunt Beth needs my help, I won’t get mad about having to spend the day with a bunch of little kids. I thought I was going to spend the day with Uncle R.J.”

      She hadn’t been able to skate anything past him since he was four. She didn’t know why she continued to try.

      “It helps her a lot when you read to the little ones,” she insisted. “And Uncle R.J. and Aunt Dana have an appointment he’d forgotten when he said you could stay with him.”

      He looked disappointed. “Why can’t I just go over to Eddie’s?”

      “Because no one’s home at Eddie’s house.”

      “Mom, we’re ten years old.” He said it as though they were twenty-one.

      “I know that, Will,” she replied patiently, “but I’m more comfortable knowing that you’re nearby, and that someone I trust has an eye on you.”

      “But it’s embarrassing to have to stay at a day care!”

      “You’re not staying there, you’re assisting.”

      “I’ll bet Austin Cahill never had to stay at a day care when he was ten,” he grumbled, then finished his cobbler in silence.

      Anna put an arm around him as they walked to the cashier. “We’ll stay up late and scarf brownies while we’re watching Leno, okay?”

      That earned her a tentative smile. “Okay. But you owe me big for this, Mom.”

      She squeezed him to her and kissed the top of his head. “I owe you big for a lot of things, kiddo.”

      WILL LAY on the sofa, covered with a throw, and watched television. Curled up near his feet, Anna checked her source catalogs for the unique requirements the Lamont-Cahill wedding would call for.

      She’d made a few notes when there was a knock at her door just after nine. She walked from the family room at the back of her rambling ranch house, through the kitchen, the dining room, then the living room, wondering who would be calling at this hour.

      Her brother and his wife stood on the doorstep, their cheeks flushed and their eyes alight with their love for each other.

      Anna smiled to herself. That love had come as such a surprise to her brother R.J. As president of Maitland Maternity Clinic, he’d hired Dana as his secretary years ago and had worked closely with the beautiful blonde every day without noticing what had grown between them.

      “Hi!” Anna greeted them. “What’s up?”

      “My hormone level!” Dana replied without trying to ease into the reason for their visit. Her green eyes were alight with excitement. “We’re going to have a baby!”

      R.J. turned to his wife, laughing. “Oh, that was well done. What happened to ‘Let’s be subtle and mysterious?’” R.J.’s hazel eyes could often be difficult to read, but tonight they were as revealing as Dana’s.

      “I couldn’t stand it another moment!” Dana cried as she wrapped her arms around Anna. “Oh, Anna. We’re so excited!”

      “What?” Will demanded, racing to the door in his Dallas Cowboys knit pajamas, rubbing sleep from his eyes.

      “You’re going to have a cousin!” Anna exclaimed to Will as she drew his aunt and uncle inside and closed the door. “Well, I’m excited, too! That’s wonderful! Have you told Mom?”

      “Not yet,” R.J. replied. “I wanted to tell you first.”

      “Will,” Dana said, “I hope our baby is half the sweetheart you are.”

      Will blushed furiously. “Sweetheart?” he


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