Billion dollar baby bargain.txt

Home > Fantasy > Billion dollar baby bargain.txt > Page 6
Billion dollar baby bargain.txt Page 6

by Неизвестный


  thinking?

  Or not thinking.

  Clearly Suzy had not imagined dying. Suzy would not have thought how impractical it all was to juggle

  such a young baby between two households.

  Sure, it had been done before. But Connor had no motive to cooperate—it wasn’t as if he was the baby’s

  father. Still, as a single man who ran a large business, he probably wouldn’t want to be hamstrung with a

  baby. Her heart lifted a little at the realization. In fact, he’d be glad to be rid of the burden.

  Connor moved his chair a little nearer and Victoria tensed as she always did when he invaded her space.

  He stopped, too close now, and leaned toward her. Protectively she tightened her arms around herself.

  She could smell the crisp, lemony scent of his aftershave, which still lingered after the long day.

  The light-gray eyes held her captive. “Victoria, if you don’t mind keeping Dylan for another day or so

  while I get a room ready and painted out for him, I’ll take him as soon as I can. Certainly by Thursday.”

  The spell snapped. Don’t mind keeping Dylan? Then give him up to Connor in a day or two? That

  wasn’t happening!

  Pushing her chair back, she leapt to her feet. “Dylan will live with me,” she cut in, desperate to get this

  settled as quickly as possible.

  “With you?” Connor tilted his head back and gave her a raking glance. He looked unnervingly assured.

  “No way!”

  “What do you mean, no way?” For one awful moment she thought he’d seen all the way to her soul.

  Read her doubts about her mothering abilities. Then she pulled herself together. She would learn. She

  would ask the caregivers at the day-care center a thousand questions. There was no way she could do a

  worse job than her own parents. “How will you cope with a baby? You don’t even have a home!” At the

  blaze of fury in his eyes Victoria wished she’d left the last rash bit unsaid. Heck, she didn’t even know if

  it was still true. “I mean, your ex took your home.”

  “And I bought another,” he said very softly, his eyes glinting dangerously.

  So he thought a home could simply be bought?

  Something of her skepticism must have shown, because he added, “I have a house with a garden to play

  ball in and a swimming pool to splash around in—not a shoebox like this.” Connor cast a disparaging

  look around the small deck, his gaze pointedly resting on the pale-cream couches and white carpets

  visible through the glass sliders. “At least Dylan will be able to grow up a boy in my home. What kind

  of life would he have here?”

  “I’ll buy a suburban house with a garden,” she said, thinking back to the warmth and love that had filled

  Suzy’s parents’ home. “I haven’t needed more than this until now.”

  She could afford to do it. Her savings were in a healthy state. Despite the lump sum she’d insisted on

  giving Suzy to help with the IVF expenses, which had been worth every cent. The outcome had been

  Dylan.

  “And that’ll mean your commute to work will increase.” He gave her that sharklike smile. “Or did you

  intend to stop working?”

  “Of course not!”

  She needed to carry on working, otherwise how would she be able to give Dylan everything he

  deserved? Good day care and private schooling were expensive. And Dylan would get the best. She had

  no intention of leaving Dylan to the mercy of her own ignorance. And besides, it wasn’t only for Dylan.

  She loved her job. It gave her a sense of self-worth. And it paid pretty damn well, too. She couldn’t

  imagine giving up the client base she’d worked so hard to build. Nor would she ever throw away the

  independence she’d strived all her adult life to secure.

  “Don’t try telling me you would give up work if Dylan lived with you,” she challenged, “because I

  won’t swallow it.”

  “But I can take as much time off as I want to spend with Dylan—I’m the boss. And I have a full-time

  housekeeper. Dylan would be well cared for. It has nothing to do with double standards.” His bleak gaze

  settled on her. “Unlike you, I can devote as much time to Dylan as he needs.”

  The emptiness that lay behind his eyes was the very reason she could never surrender Dylan into his

  care. He would never be able to convince her he could give Dylan more love than she could. If her

  parenting skills were in doubt, Connor’s were even more so.

  A strong surge of maternal yearning took her by surprise. She swallowed. She would not lose Dylan to

  the block of rock who stood in front of her.

  The baby was hers.

  Hers.

  And she would fight with everything she possessed, every weapon at her disposal, to make sure Dylan

  stayed with her. She, at least, was capable of giving him love.

  “He’s not leaving here.” She realized her voice had risen.

  “Victoria, be sensible—”

  “I’m being perfectly sensible.”

  He gave a snort. “With the hours you work you don’t have time for a baby. Suzy told me—me and

  Michael,” he amended as her brows drew together. “She was worried about you. She thought you’d

  buried yourself alive. All you lived for was building a practice that would lead to more status.”

  “Buried myself alive?” The idea that Suzy had discussed her with Connor hurt. “What about you? You

  started a new company—and not just any company, the Phoenix Corporation is a huge venture.”

  “Yes, but I employ a large staff, I delegate—I don’t do everything myself. I still found time to visit

  Michael and Suzy—”

  “You pig!” Victoria couldn’t believe she’d heard right. “How can you say that? You cruel—”

  “Oh, God, I’m sorry, Victoria.” His chair crashed backward and he came toward her, his hands

  outstretched. “I didn’t mean it that—”

  She slapped his hands away. “You meant it exactly that way.” Her fingers stung. She stared down at her

  reddening palms. The tears she’d stanched so fiercely for the past two days leaked out.

  “Victoria, I’m sorry.” His arms closed around her.

  She fought him off, elbowing him fiercely. “Let go of me, damn you!”

  He dropped his arms and stepped back, breathing heavily.

  She stormed past him through the glass sliders. Half a dozen strides carried her across the living room

  and she yanked the front door open, her clammy hands clutching the door handle to keep her trembling

  knees from giving out. She’d wanted him to hold her, to share the grief…but never like this. “Get out.”

  “We need to talk about Dy—”

  “I have nothing to say to you. Go.”

  “Victoria—”

  She kept her gaze averted, horribly conscious of the soundless tears streaming down her face and the

  nausea rising in the back of her throat. “Please, just go.”

  He stumbled past her. At the last moment he turned. “If you need—”

  Hot, blinding anger surged, and she said, “I don’t need anything you can give me.”

  Without another word Connor left.

  The funeral was finally over. Mourners huddled in groups in the church hall sipping coffee from white

  cups.

  Connor glanced to where Victoria stood in silence beside three women who he assumed must’ve been

  friends of Suzy’s. The scooped neckline of the fitted black dress she wore accentuated her collar bones

  and the delicate line of her throat, and her tall, slender body moved t
o-and-fro as she rocked Dylan. But

  she didn’t spare him a glance. She’d barely spoken to him today.

  Guilt gnawed at him. How had he managed to screw up so royally two nights ago? Judging by the dark

  rings around her eyes, she hadn’t slept since. She was hurting. He could feel it. Hell, she’d made him so

  mad, but that was no excuse. Nor did the knowledge that he’d never intended to wound her so deeply

  ease his guilt.

  He was worse than the pig she’d called him.

  She’d loved Suzy. She would never forgive him for implying that she’d neglected Suzy before her tragic

  death. And how could he blame her?

  The baby’s head was nestled close against her shoulder, and Dylan’s eyes widened with interest as

  Connor came closer.

  “Here, let me take the baby.”

  He saw her stiffen, her hold tighten around the baby, as she became aware of him. “No!”

  Did she think he was going to rip the baby away from her?

  “Please?” Couldn’t she see his remorse? “Dylan must be heavy.”

  She edged away from the group she’d been standing with, but not before one of them gave him a strange

  look. He didn’t care. It was Victoria that concerned him right now.

  “We’re fine.”

  Her pallor, her reddened eyes, the way her fingers dug into the blanket that swaddled Dylan gave lie to

  that. She so wasn’t fine. But he wasn’t about to argue with her here for everyone to see.

  “Victoria…” Connor searched for the words that would mend everything between them, that would put

  them back into the state of almost-truce that had existed before his insensitive accusation. And came up

  dry.

  “Go away,” she hissed. “You’re not taking the baby from me.”

  “Victoria—” An elegant woman with short hair wearing a black-and-white houndstooth suit came up

  beside them eyeing Connor with curiosity. “I wanted to say how sorry I am for the loss of your friend.”

  “Thank you, Bridget.”

  “And who is this fellow?” Bridget studied Dylan with decidedly wary eyes, causing Connor to suppress

  his first grin in days.

  “This is Dylan, Suzy’s baby.”

  “Oh.” Bridget exchanged long looks with Victoria. “How dreadful. Is her family looking after him?”

  “Suzy doesn’t have any close family—her parents are dead, and she was an only child. Dylan’s been

  staying with me.”

  His smile fading, Connor watched Bridget—whoever the hell she was—process that information

  silently. Victoria must have seen her doubts, too, because her arms tightened around the baby, causing

  Dylan to squawk in protest.

  Connor reached for the wriggling baby. “I’ll hold him for you.” Dylan lurched toward him with a gurgle

  before Victoria could argue.

  Bridget examined him with interest.

  Connor nodded politely.

  With visible reluctance Victoria performed the introductions. “Bridget, this is Connor North, a friend of

  the Masons. Connor, Bridget Edge is managing partner at Archer, Cameron and Edge.”

  “Connor North? Of the Phoenix Corporation?” Bridget’s gaze sharpened. Connor could see her mentally

  tallying up his assets. “I didn’t know you were connected to Phoenix, Victoria.”

  Victoria looked trapped.

  Connor couldn’t resist saying wickedly, “We’ve been friends for years. We met at Suzy and Michael’s

  wedding—I was best man and Victoria was maid of honor.”

  “How romantic.” Bridget gave him a thin smile before her gaze settled back on Dylan. “This

  arrangement of looking after the baby isn’t going to be permanent, is it?”

  “No,” said Connor.

  “Yes,” said Victoria, her color high.

  Dylan blew a raspberry.

  “Well, it sounds like you two have matters to sort out.” Bridget’s carefully plucked eyebrows were

  nearly up to her hairline. “Please call me at the office later, Victoria. I think we should talk.”

  The tension in Victoria’s slim figure only increased with her boss’s departure. As the last of the

  stragglers drifted out, leaving Connor alone with Victoria…and a sleeping Dylan in his car seat, he said,

  “Come, it’s been a long day. Time for me to take the two of you home.”

  “You know I’m going to have to call the office,” said Victoria.

  Work. The funeral barely over and already she was fretting about work.

  “All Frigid wants is for you to confirm that the baby won’t interfere with your billable hours.” Connor

  knew his cynicism was showing.

  “Bridget. Her name is Bridget.”

  He kept his face deadpan. “I’ve always had a problem with names—you know that.”

  “Let it go, Connor.” But her lips twitched.

  So she did have a sense of humor. If he hadn’t been watching her carefully he’d have missed that barely

  perceptible movement.

  Outside the sky had turned gray and ominous, promising rain. As they headed toward the row of pines

  where the Maserati was parked, Connor said, “If Dylan comes to stay with me that will solve all her

  concerns.”

  “No.”

  So Victoria was digging in her heels. Connor knew the only way he was going to make her see sense

  was to be brutal.

  “You’ll never be able to raise a boy.” Pausing beside the car, he set the infant seat down and opened the

  rear door. After securing the infant seat without waking Dylan, he turned back to Victoria and raked his

  gaze over her, telling her without words that he considered her wanting. “I give you two weeks tops

  before you surrender.”

  For a moment, he thought he’d shaken her. Then she narrowed her pinkened eyes. “You don’t think I

  can do this? I’m the one who was watching him in the first place!”

  Victoria had backbone, he had to give her that. But then, given her career he would’ve expected it. The

  question was: would she be able to cope all alone with a demanding job and a baby? He doubted it.

  Connor took in her hands clenched in front of her breasts, and the way her mouth trembled. Her crushed

  rose lips only emphasized her pallor. She looked too damned fragile.

  For a moment he considered sweeping her into his arms, holding her close…

  Then he shook the impulse away.

  This was Victoria, not some frail butterfly. And she didn’t need anything from him—she’d told him so

  herself.

  He stepped closer to her. “That wasn’t a dare. You don’t need to prove anything to me. All I want is

  Dylan.” And dammit, that was the truth of it. “Make it easy on yourself, let him stay with me.” That’s

  what he wanted desperately—what Michael would’ve wanted—his son to stay with him. But he couldn’t

  say that. He’d already hurt her enough. “You can come and visit as often as you want.”

  The gold-green eyes that clashed with his were full of turbulence. “You think I haven’t thought of letting

  him go to you? But I can’t!”

  “Why not?” he challenged.

  “Because…” She gnawed at her lip.

  “Because?” he prompted, forcing his gaze not to linger on her mouth.

  “Don’t ask this of me.” There were shadows in her eyes that went way beyond grief. “I can’t do it.”

  “It would be the easy solution.”

  She hesitated, clenching and unclenching her hands. “Easy solutions aren’t always right. Suzy and I had

  been inseparable since we were five. I met her on our first d
ay of school. Did you know that?”

  He shook his head.

  “She was tiny, like a beautiful, blue-eyed doll. She had blond curls, whereas I had dead straight, mousy

  hair. I felt so thin and tall next to her—she made me want to look after her.”

  Victoria’s eyes had glazed over, and Connor knew she’d forgotten about him, about where they were,

  about the approaching storm. She was in a place he could not reach.

  “We seemed like such opposites. Suzy so social, me so quiet.”

  “You were fortunate that your friendship endured for all those years.”

  “She was so much more than a friend. More than a sister, even. She was my confidante. My family. The

  person I trusted more than anyone else in the world when my family let me down.” Her gaze cleared. “I

  can’t give Dylan up. Don’t ask it of me.”

  Connor’s sigh went all the way to his soul. He’d already hurt her beyond belief with his swipe that she

  hadn’t had time for Suzy before she died. How could he take her last link with her friend away from her?

  Even though he knew that Michael would’ve wanted Dylan to be with him.

  The provision for sharing of guardianship and custody in the will had startled him. Victoria was a

  working woman who clearly didn’t have time for bringing up a child. What had the Masons been

  thinking? Suzy must’ve insisted on it, never believing the will would have to be acted on long before

  Dylan grew to adulthood.

  But whatever the will provided for, it was absolutely irrefutable that Suzy’s death had left a vast chasm

  in Victoria’s life.

  Connor drew a deep breath and made the biggest concession of his life. Despite what he believed was

  the right thing for Dylan—and him, he would go along with the provisions of the will. “Then we’ll have

  to split the custody—work out which of us gets which days.”

  Emotion flashed in her eyes. “How can you even suggest that? It took Dylan almost the whole weekend

  to settle with me. He’s missing his parents, and now you’re suggesting ripping him away from me.”

  “Not ripping,” said Connor firmly. “We’ll share him.”

  “And he’s going to know what’s happening?” She shook her head so hard the silken mass of her hair

  whipped from side to side. “No, he’s not going to understand the terms of a custody arrangement. His

 

‹ Prev