Michelle Douglas - The Secretary's Secret
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- Название:The Secretary's Secret
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Soon. He’d have to answer those questions soon.
‘Alex, it’s lovely to see you again. I’m so glad you could make it.’
He latched onto the distraction. ‘Nice to see you again, Mrs…uh…Patti,’ he corrected at her glare.
‘Thank you for the cake, dear. Now, head on over to the tables and grab yourselves some food before it’s al gone.’
‘No chance of that,’ Alex said. ‘You’l be eating this for a week!’
Patti touched his arm. ‘Make sure my
granddaughter has something with lashings of fresh cream. It’s good for the baby.’
Fresh cream? He frowned. He’d baked a simple sultana pound cake. He wished now that he’d baked something with lashings of cream, like a strawberry shortcake. Tomorrow he’d make Kit one of those.
He liked to watch her eat. He’d like to watch her lick whipped cream from her fingers. He’d like to drop dol ops of whipped cream onto her naked body and slowly lick—
Whoa!
He did his best to banish that image as he fol owed Kit. She pushed an unerring path through the crowd towards laden trestle tables groaning under the weight of luncheon goodies.
She glanced back at him over her shoulder. ‘How d’you learn to bake anyway? I thought you said your mum couldn’t bake to save her life.’
‘I spent a lot of time in the kitchen when I lived at my grandfather’s, watching the housekeeper. Some of it obviously rubbed off.’
She started fil ing two plates with sandwiches, cakes and slices. He scanned the table for something laden with whipped cream. He seized a chocolate éclair and popped it onto one of the plates. ‘Your grandmother’s orders,’ he muttered at her raised eyebrow.
Her laugh made him grin. He couldn’t help it. He Her laugh made him grin. He couldn’t help it. He should be doing his best to keep his distance until he’d worked out how he was going to deal with…
everything. When he was with her, though, that resolution flew out of the window. She made it impossible.
‘Did you like the housekeeper? Was she kind to you?’
He met her gaze and saw hope there—hope that he hadn’t been completely alienated whilst at his grandfather’s. He swal owed. ‘Yes,’ he lied.
He told himself it was only half a lie. The housekeeper had been kind. She’d taught him how to cook and had taken him under her wing. She’d ruffled his hair and wrapped an arm around his shoulders at least once a day—her every caress a treasure to a lonely boy’s soul. Until his grandfather had found out about it and she’d been dismissed.
After that, Alex had been banished from the kitchen.
He hadn’t tried making friends with any of the other staff.
‘Here.’ Kit pressed a laden plate into his hands.
‘Fol ow me.’
He shook off the sombre memory and fol owed her.
The smal talk wasn’t the chore he’d dreaded. He found himself in a circle with four of Kit’s male friends from school talking renovations and home maintenance. He took mental notes when they discussed
the
predominantly
sandy
soil
compositions of the area and the best remedies.
Kit’s lawn could do with some serious TLC.
Eventual y, however, the crowd and the chatter grew too much. He eased himself out of the hal and found a quiet spot in the garden, lowered himself to a rock that bordered a flower bed. The sun beat down overhead. Kit was right, the day would be warm, but a nearby tree fern provided filtered shade and kept him cool.
‘Hel o.’
Alex’s gut clenched. He swal owed and turned.
Davey stood nearby. He moistened suddenly dry lips. ‘Hel o,’ he croaked back.
The little boy took a step closer and frowned.
‘Don’t you like me?’
Heck, where had that come from? Then he remembered his abrupt departure earlier in the week when he’d thrust the little kid into Kit’s arms and had bolted. He hadn’t meant to hurt the little guy’s feelings. ‘Sure I do.’ He held out his stil half-ful plate as a peace offering. ‘Want a cake?’
Davey’s eyes brightened in an instant. He raced over and promptly settled himself on Alex’s left thigh and helped himself to a cupcake. Alex clenched his jaw at the child’s warm weight, the smel of him. He beat back the panic that threatened to rise up and smother him. Panic he couldn’t explain. This little guy—he wasn’t Chad!
Chad. His hand tightened around the plate until he thought it might break as he fought the urge to remove the child from his lap.
Normal. Act normal.
He fought for control, fought to find his voice.
‘Comfortable?’ he drawled.
Davey nodded, oblivious to Alex’s discomfort. ‘I’m not supposed to get dirty,’ he confided. ‘If I sit on the ground I’l get dirty.’
Fair enough. He held the plate out to Davey again once the cupcake was gone. ‘I hear the caramel slice is very good.’
Davey ignored him and reached for a piece of coconut ice instead. Alex considered eating the caramel slice himself—to give him something to do with his hands, in an attempt to occupy his mind with something other than the smel and feel of warm child—but he doubted his stomach would deal with food at the moment.
Given the choice, what would Chad have chosen
—caramel slice or coconut ice? Grief as raw and hard as it had been two years ago sliced through him now. He set the plate on the ground, aghast at how his hand shook.
‘Can I tel you a secret?’
Alex nodded. It was al he was capable of.
‘Auntie Kit is having a baby. Did you know?’
‘Yes.’ The word croaked out of him.
‘Wel , I heard her and Mum talking and if she has a boy she wants to cal him Jacob and Mum thinks that’s a great name but there’s a Jacob at my pre-school and he picks his nose and…’
The rest of the childish patter was lost to him.
The day darkened. He clenched his fingers into the soil of the garden, held on tight with both hands as the earth turned al the way over. He dragged in a breath and fought to remain upright. He would not be sick!
sick!
It came to him then, the answers to the questions he’d so desperately put off answering.
He couldn’t do this.
He wanted to get up and run. Who was he trying to kid? He couldn’t do any of this. He could not be the father Kit so desperately wanted for her child.
Any child, every child, reminded him of Chad, had memories threatening to burst forth—memories and pain. Davey, here, and…and Kit’s baby, would act as constant reminders of his loss, would have panic rising through him…and grief.
Not to mention anger. How could he be a proper father to Kit’s child when he couldn’t see past Chad?
Ice trickled across his scalp and down his spine.
He couldn’t. The bottom line was that he couldn’t.
Was this how his grandfather had felt when Alex’s mother had left? Was that why he hadn’t been able to show softness and love to his grandson? The way Alex now knew he couldn’t show softness and love to his own child?
It would’ve been better for al of them—but especial y for Kit—if he’d left that first day when she’d told him to. It would’ve been better for her if she’d never clapped eyes on him.
‘…anyway, I think it’s a dumb name, don’t you?’
Eyes the same colour as Chad’s lifted to his. It didn’t make any difference tel ing himself that ninety per cent of the population had brown eyes. At this moment in time they were the spitting image of the child’s he’d loved and lost.
‘What would you cal a baby boy?’
Chad. He’d chosen Chad.
Davey frowned. ‘Are you feeling sick again?’
Alex latched onto the excuse. He didn’t know what t he again was about, but… ‘Uh-huh.’ He glanced down at the child in his lap, blinked to clear his vision. ‘Do you think your mum would give Auntie Kit a lift home?’
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