“Yes.”
Nick rolled over on his back. Patrick was his son.
No wonder he’d liked the boy so much. Damn, he was a bright kid. Good-looking, too. He’d be a heartbreaker, that’s for sure. Just like his dad.
He was a father. He had a child with Jenny, who meant more to him than any woman, any person, ever had.
He rolled back to his side and found Jenny staring at him with wide, frightened eyes. He touched her cheek, lifted a tear with his index finger. “We have a kid,” he whispered. “How do you like that?”
“I like it fine. How about you?”
“I’m knocked out,” he said. “Patrick’s an amazing kid. And you. You’re…”
“I’m what?”
Reality set in just then, and his mood darkened. “In danger. We have to get the hell out of here before we’re caught, before they know the truth….”
Dear Harlequin Intrigue Reader,
Spring is in the air and we have a month of fabulous books for you to curl up with as the March winds howl outside:
• Familiar is back on the prowl, in Caroline Burnes’s Familiar Texas. And Rocky Mountain Maneuvers marks the conclusion of Cassie Miles’s COLORADO CRIME CONSULTANTS trilogy.
• Jessica Andersen brings us an exciting medical thriller, Covert M.D.
• Don’t miss the next ECLIPSE title, Lisa Childs’s The Substitute Sister.
• Definitely check out our April lineup. Debra Webb is starting THE ENFORCERS, an exciting new miniseries you won’t want to miss. Also look for a special 3-in-1 story from Rebecca York, Ann Voss Peterson and Patricia Rosemoor called Desert Sons.
Each month, Harlequin Intrigue brings you a variety of heart-stopping romantic suspense and chilling mystery. Don’t miss a single book!
Sincerely,
Denise O’Sullivan
Senior Editor
Harlequin Intrigue
Not-So-Secret Baby
Jo Leigh
www.millsandboon.co.uk
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Jo Leigh lives way the heck up on a mountain in Utah with her own personal hero and her many chipmunk friends. She loves to hear from readers at http://www.joleigh.com.
Jenny Granger—She escaped from a madman once, but now he has her baby!
Nick Mason—With the world’s safety at stake, how can he blow his cover and help the woman he loves?
Patrick Granger—Two and a half; the innocent child born in secret.
C. Randall Todd—Casino mogul, billionaire, killer.
Henry Sweet—Todd’s right-hand man, with an itch to get rid of Nick Mason.
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Epilogue
Once the coast was clear, Jeannie hurried over to where Kelly was picking up the Lincoln Logs. “Tanya called me this morning,” she said, keeping her voice low so none of the other mommies could hear. “Her Nate got a call yesterday to fix an air conditioner at Mary Pierson’s place. He said she’s just as neat as a pin. Nothing out of place, not even in the baby’s room. He said she’s got one of those leather couches they were selling at The Junction last summer. You know, the leather seconds? And she’s got a ton of books lining the walls in the living room.”
Kelly dumped an armload of pieces into the big cardboard box. “Did he see her bedroom?”
Jeannie nodded. “Double bed. Dresser. An armoire he swears used to belong to Ann Keating before her husband died.”
“I remember that. She had that garage sale. I picked up her old stand mixer. It still works. I made up a batch of butter cookies for the church bazaar just last month.”
“Oh, yeah. They were scrumptious. But here’s the thing,” Jeannie continued. “Nate said she didn’t have any pictures except two of baby Patrick. Nothing on the mantel, nothing in the bedroom. It’s like the woman has no past. Like she came here from outer space or something.”
“My Alan, he says she never talks about herself at work. He says she reads on break or she writes in that journal of hers. Lisa asked her straight-out where Patrick’s daddy was and she wouldn’t say. She said she didn’t like to talk about it. If you want my opinion, I’m thinking he was bad news, you know? Hit her, probably. Like Bonnie’s husband?”
“That, or she doesn’t know who the daddy is.” Jeannie bent to pick up a Barbie doll. “She has that sadness about her. So pretty, and yet, I don’t know…”
“Yeah,” Kelly said. “Like she’s running from something.”
“Heck, why else would a single woman move to Milford? She has no family here.”
“I remember the day she got here. She was driving that beat-up old Chevy.”
“Still is.”
“Right.”
“How long has it been?”
“Got to be two years.”
Jeannie nodded. “Two years, and we still don’t know beans about her.”
“Not that she isn’t nice.”
Jeannie shook her head, a strand of auburn hair loosening from under her headband. “Nice as can be for someone with so many secrets. Lily, you put that down right now.”
Kelly glanced over at Lily, Jeannie’s three-year-old who’d gotten hold of the watercolor paint set. Kelly’s son, Jack, had been born two weeks to the day of Lily’s birth, sealing their already solid friendship. “I surely would like to know what happened to that girl.”
“Me, too.” Jeannie shook her head. “Maybe I’ll do a little research at the library, now that they’ve got the Internet.”
“Oh, good idea. Why don’t we go tomorrow?”
“Can’t. I have a doctor’s appointment.”
“How about Friday?”
“Friday. Okay. We’ll take the kids.”
MARY PIERSON walked down Hill Street toward the market, her young son holding her hand, scurrying on his short legs to keep up. Mary let him step on the mat in front of the grocery store so that the automatic doors would open. He liked that.
Inside, Gary, the butcher, waved. “Getting ready to close shop here. You gonna need anything? I could cut it fresh for you.”
“No, thanks,” Mary told him. “Just grabbing a few things.”
“Okay. Next time.”
“Next time.” She put Patrick in the cart seat and headed down the aisle. Canned corn, tomato soup, bread, milk, butter. She picked through the skimpy produce selection, finally choosing a reasonably fresh head of lettuce and some broccoli. She chose a prewrapped pound of hamburger and, on her way to the register, added a package of spaghetti. Patrick loved spaghetti.
“How are you this evening, Mary?”
“Fine, Marge. You?” Mary lifted her boy from the cart while Marge toted up the groceries and placed them on the belt.
“I’m good, thanks.”
Mary could see the older woman wanted to talk, but it was late and all she wanted was to get home. “Could you toss in a book of stamps, please?”
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