Baby for the Billionaire(97)



“I’m Robert Stefano,” he announced. “And I’m looking for …” He froze, his eyes arrowing in on Annalise.

“Leese?”

“Daddy?” Annalise erupted from her chair and threw herself into the man’s arms. “Finally! I have been trying to reach you for ages.”

He gave his daughter a fierce hug. “Didn’t you get my message?”

“About your charter? Yes, yes. Bub passed it on. But—”

He held her at arm’s length. “I came as soon as I heard the news. Of course, by the time it reached me, it was long out of date. What the hell have you gone and done?”

He looked over her shoulder toward Jack, who climbed to his feet and set the yawning puppy on the ground beside him. “It’s a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Stefano,” he said, holding out his hand. “I’m Jack Mason.”

To Jack’s dismay, his father-in-law swept his daughter behind him in a protective manner. “Not him, Leese. Tell me there’s been a mistake and you haven’t actually married this man.”

“Is there a problem?” Mrs. Locke interrupted.

“No problem at all,” Jack replied smoothly. His hand dropped to his side. “You need to leave. Now. This is a family matter and none of your business.”

Of course, she didn’t listen. She settled more firmly into her chair. “If this affects Isabella, it most certainly is my business.”

“Mr. Stefano?” Jack approached the other man. “I’m Annalise’s husband.”

“I know who you are.” Robert tore off his cap and crushed it between his callused hands. “What I don’t yet know is what sort of game you’re playing with my daughter.”

Annalise stepped out from behind her father, confronting the situation head-on, just as she had from the moment he’d first met her. “Dad, this isn’t a game.”

“You’re damn right it isn’t.” Grief tore into the older man’s face. “Does he know? Does this supposed husband of yours know the truth?”

To Jack’s surprise she faltered, her forthrightness stumbling. “No,” she admitted. “He doesn’t.”

Dread swept through him like the first winter breeze. “Somebody tell me what the hell is going on,” Jack demanded.

“And then you can explain it to me,” Mrs. Locke added.

Robert opened his mouth to reply, but before he could his gaze shifted and locked onto something in the middle of the lawn. Mister Mayhem scampered in that direction and Jack saw why. Isabella had exited into the yard through his study door. She greeted the dog with a crowing laugh.

“Oh, God,” Robert whispered. His cap dropped to the patio flagstones. “Is that her?”

He took a step in Isabella’s direction, a step that carried him into the sunlight. The strong summer rays caught in the short brown curls, highlighting them with gold. He stared at Isabella, stared at her with eyes the exact same shade of olive green as those of Jack’s niece. Robert clenched his squared jaw, but couldn’t seem to keep it from wobbling. And then he broke into a broad grin of incandescent delight. In his cheek a dimple flashed.

Without a word, Jack turned toward Annalise. Tears rained down her cheeks. She caught his look, holding his eyes for an endless moment, hers assuming a defiant slant. He went to her, stepped with her into the shadows of the patio overhang, away from listening ears.

“Isabella looks just like your dad. Is she your sister?” Jack questioned in a hard undertone. “Is Robert Stefano her father?”

“I’m an only child,” Annalise stated.

An arctic wind blew through him and he could literally see the life he’d built shattering around him. “Then she’s—”

“Mine.” Annalise squared her shoulders and lifted tarnished eyes to his. “Isabella is my daughter.”





Ten




“It was all a setup, wasn’t it?”

“No.” Annalise shook her head, speaking with a quiet dignity that cut deep. “No!”

Jack stepped away from her, unable to hide his raw pain and anger. There was no way he could. His fury battered him with all the elemental power of a hurricane, driving emotions he’d always been able to keep under rigid control. They whipped free, exploded from him in a messy, illogical, unmanageable torrent.

“I have to hand it to you. Your plan was absolutely brilliant.”

Maxine Sullivan's Books