“Don’t look at me,” Jonas teased.
Patty laughed. “It’s your turn.”
They joked back and forth until Jonas finally said, “Seriously, I’ll change him if you want.”
“That’s okay. I can do it. You’re almost finished and I don’t want to interrupt.” Patty kissed his cheek, then disappeared through the apartment’s front door.
Cal looked at Jonas, trying to think of something to make conversation with a kid he had little in common with. “So how’s it going?”
“You know. Working full-time keeps me busy.” The teen brushed his forearm across his forehead. “I’ve got a break between summer classes and the fall semester, but it feels like a vacation. I get to spend more time with Patty and Henry.”
“Where do you work?”
“At the Suncoast Hotel. I park cars but I’m off today.”
“I hear that can be pretty good money.”
Jonas shrugged. “Can’t complain.”
“What are you studying in school?”
“Accounting.”
“Are your grades good?” Cal asked.
“You sound like my dad.” He shrugged again. “They’re not bad.”
Cal wanted to ask how he kept up the grind, but he already knew. At the same age, he’d only juggled school and work because the baby part had been a lie. His own grades had gone up because he’d used studying as an excuse to get away every time his wife had pulled some episode for attention, a halfhearted pill overdose or wrist wound. After every stunt, he’d put a bandage on the relationship, then bury himself in classes, internship or residency and shoot to the top of the class.
His folks had taught him not to take marriage vows lightly and he’d stayed because it was the right thing to do. But Patty and Jonas hadn’t taken vows and he wondered what was keeping them together.
“So you like spending time with Patty and the little guy?” Cal asked.
Jonas met his gaze. “Yeah.”
No elaboration. “If you’re here all the time anyway, why not get married?”
“Because my folks are helping, and I want to wait until I can take care of Patty and Henry by myself. Both of us need an education so we can make a life for Henry. Just because we’re not married doesn’t mean I won’t be there for them.”
Cal remembered what Em had said about education. She was right and the teens were definitely taking her philosophy to heart. His respect for her wisdom and courage continued to grow.
Patty came back outside with Henry who was carrying a toy car. When he saw Cal, he dropped it and held out his arms.
“Hey, big guy,” Cal said. “I take it operation diaper change was successful?”
“Oh, yeah,” Patty said. “He’s a happy camper now.”
“Where’s Lucy?” Cal asked.
She and Jonas exchanged a glance before Patty answered. “Her boyfriend showed up a couple of weeks ago.”
“Oscar’s dad?”
Jonas nodded. “He says he wants to be around.”
“You don’t sound convinced.” Cal settled Henry on his forearm.
“For Lucy’s sake I hope he’s sincere,” Patty said. “But it seems to me that if he’d wanted to support her, he’d have been around when she was pregnant and Oscar was born.”
“Maybe he had a good reason,” Cal suggested, being that he hadn’t known about Annie.
Before they could answer, the door behind him opened and Emily walked out with Annie in her arms. Cal’s first thought was that she shouldn’t be doing any lifting, but before he could say so, Annie took one look at him holding Henry and started to fuss and hold out her arms.
“She wants you to take her,” Em pointed out.
“Imagine that.” He gave Henry to Jonas and took his daughter. “If I’d only known that jealousy was the way to win her heart.”
Like father, like daughter. Cal had last felt the sting of the green-eyed monster while watching his partner hug Em. That shouldn’t have bothered him but it did, although he refused to believe it was because he wanted her for himself. He wouldn’t be that stupid again.
“How do you feel?” he asked Em.
“Not too bad.” She rolled her shoulder. “A little sore. I’m just glad it’s over.”
“Me, too.”
The four of them chatted for a while, letting the children play and toddle outside. Jonas gave Henry a small piece of sandpaper and tried to show him how to smooth out the top of the table. But when he and Annie kept sticking it in their mouths, it was agreed that handyman skills would have to come a little later.
When Cal’s cell phone rang, everyone’s attention turned on him. “Yeah,” he answered.
“Cal, it’s Dennis from the lab.”
“What have you got for me?”
“The biopsy for Emily Summers that you wanted. It’s benign. No evidence of abnormal cells. Just your garden-variety intraductal papilloma.”
Relief flooded through him. “Good to hear. Thanks, Dennis.”
“No problem.”
He flipped his phone closed and looked at the three expectant faces. “It’s benign.”
“Thank goodness,” Patty said to Em. “I’d hug you but I’m afraid I’d hurt you.”
Cal’s sentiments exactly. “This is cause for celebration.”
“What did you have in mind?” Em looked as relieved as he felt.
“Barbecue. Your place. I’ll get the hamburgers, hot dogs and everything else.” He looked at the teens. “You guys are invited. And Henry.”
“Cool,” Jonas said.
On the way to his car, Cal glanced over his shoulder to look at Emily. She was smiling with the teens and helping keep the two toddlers out of mischief. The motley group was her family, he realized. By choice. The relatives she’d picked for herself. He’d always had his parents and brother, but their family dynamic was different. It was subtle but understood that you handled your problems because that was the right thing to do.
And that’s why he’d married his girlfriend when she claimed to be pregnant. Instead of a helpmate, she’d been another kind of problem and he’d done his best to handle it.
Emily helped the teens because she understood their problems and empathized. They needed her. Cal had gotten used to not needing anyone, but prolonged exposure to Emily was changing that. And he had to do something to stop it. Now that her health crisis was resolved, he could just be Annie’s dad, and only her dad, because Annie’s mom could rip his heart out.
A little after five in the afternoon Emily drove into the parking lot at Nooks and Nannies, The Nanny Network Child Care Center nestled between Maryland Parkway, Tropicana Avenue, Flamingo and Paradise Roads, not far from McCarran International Airport. She pulled into an empty space close to the entrance. The one-story white-stucco building had a red-tile roof and fenced in yard with equipment that included swings, a sand box, climbing apparatus and a playhouse.
The facility had an excellent reputation as well as impressive adult-to-child ratios that ensured a safe environment. As if that wasn’t enough plusses, her best friend, Sophia Green, worked here. She remembered telling Cal that Sophia had been there for her when Annie was born. She’d left out of her narrative the parts after the birth when Sophia supported her through the next six months of maternal confidence crisis. Her friend had been the voice of reason during hormonal fluctuations, sleep deprivation and everything in between.
Although she knew it was the right decision to tell Cal about their daughter, she also had Sophia to thank for the current emotional upheaval telling him had caused. Absently she touched her fingertips to her chest, grateful the lump was gone and had turned out not to be serious. The same couldn’t be said for her situation with Cal.
Em got out of the car and locked it, then walked to the dark double-glass entrance doors and pulled open the one on the right. A blast of cold air hit her and it felt good after the August heat outside. This building housed administration offices and separate rooms for meetings, Momm
y and Me classes and community education workshops.
She turned right into the first office reception area noting that there was no one behind the desk. Probably the receptionist was gone for the day. Em tapped lightly on the half-open door and Sophia glanced up from her computer monitor.
Sophia had a beautiful smile but her gray eyes never quite lost their tinge of sadness. A byproduct of doing social work for the Clark County Child-Welfare Department. She’d intervened for kids who needed help most and could break your heart with their stories. The children she’d helped were grateful. The ones she couldn’t haunted her and that’s what had influenced her decision to work in the private sector.
Sophia’s reddish-brown hair cut in a short, shiny bob enhanced her girl-next-door prettiness. Men wanted her; women envied her. Em loved her loyalty and friendship.
She lifted a hand in greeting. “Hi.”
Sophia got up and came around the desk for a hug. “Hi, yourself. You’re here to pick up Annie?”
“Yeah.” Because Cal was working and couldn’t watch her.
“It’s been a while since you stopped in to see me.”
“I know. I’m usually in a hurry when I come by. Things have been crazy since—”
Glancing away from her friend’s direct look, Em studied the pictures on the walls. The black-and-white photographs were enlarged and framed, arranged in groupings. There were no people in them, just outdoor scenes—ocean, lake, mountains and forests. This wasn’t the first time she’d noticed them, but it occurred to her that in a world where nothing was ever black and white, at least it could be that way in Sophia’s space.
She leaned a hip on the corner of her desk and finished the thought about why things had been crazy. “Since you told Cal he has a daughter?”
“Pretty much.”
“How’s that going?”
“Oh, you know.” Em shrugged.
“If I knew, I wouldn’t have asked. What don’t you want to talk about?”
“So many things, so little time.”
Sophia nodded. “Okay. Why don’t you start with Cal. How is he?”
Handsome. Charismatic. Sexy.
“He’s fine.”
“What does he think of his daughter?”
Em smiled at the instant mental image of Cal playing with Annie in the pool. He was playful, protective and positively awesome. “I guess I’d have to say that he’s pretty much in love with his little girl.”
“That doesn’t surprise me,” Sophia said.
“It surprises me after all the things he said about commitment being a four-letter word. I honestly figured he would say thanks, but no thanks and that would be the extent of our interaction.”
“But since you’re now too busy to stop by and say hello when you pick up Annie, I’d have to assume that he’s at least marginally involved in your life.”
“You could say that,” Em hedged.
“Care to elaborate?”
Did she have to? But Em knew any attempt to dodge the question would be a waste of time.
“Cal has embraced fatherhood enthusiastically. He’s learning about his daughter. He was there for me when I saw the doctor—”
“Oh, my gosh, I can’t believe I forgot to ask.” Sophia shook her head. “What did the doctor say?”
“I had tests and finally had the lump removed. It was an intraductal papilloma—”
“English please.”
“A small wartlike growth in a milk duct. Completely harmless.”
“Thank goodness,” Sophia said. “Remind me to punish you severely for not letting me know.”
“Considering the fact that I’m dealing with Caleb Westen fallout, I would ask you to cut me some slack.”
“Done,” her friend agreed. “But it’s a one-time pass, and I’d advise you not to let it happen again.”
“I swear.” Em made a cross over her heart to seal the promise.
“Okay, then. So tell me about the fallout. What’s going on?”
Em sank into one of the visitor chairs. “He’s doing all the right things. Offered financial support.”
“Knowing and loving you as I do, I’m guessing it was refused?”
“Yeah. He didn’t believe at first that I wasn’t after money. Or something.”
“Or something?” Sophia crossed her arms over her chest. “If he’s the picture of paternal perfection, why don’t you look happier?”
“For starters, he doesn’t trust me. After not telling him about Annie, I can’t say I blame him.”
“But? And I know there is one.”
“You and I know that everyone has reason to question their faith in people to varying degrees. We’ve all been let down at one time or another. But, Soph, it goes deeper with Cal.”
“How do you know?”
Em thought about how to put this into words. “It’s a feeling really. The way he questions everything. And—”
“What?” her friend prompted.
“Something his father said.” She smiled softly. “It was Annie’s first birthday. A party at his house.”
“I wasn’t invited.”
“I’ll make it up to you.” Em sighed. “It’s no excuse, but I’ve had a lot on my plate. I realize now how selfish it was to keep Cal in the dark about Annie. His folks met her for the first time on her birthday. They adored her on sight and barely managed to keep in check their hostility toward me. Again, I don’t blame them. But his father said something.”
“Which was?”
“About Cal’s past. When I asked him to cut me some slack—” Em smiled wryly. “Apparently I’m doing that to everyone lately.”
“You think?”
Ignoring the barb, she continued, “Anyway, I was explaining that I had my reasons for keeping quiet about the pregnancy but didn’t want to talk about them. His dad said I wasn’t the only one with baggage. Cal was married.”
Sophia frowned. “Did you get the details?”
“He said it was Cal’s story to tell.”
“Can’t argue with that, Em. And you won’t have to ask. Cal will tell you if he wants you to know.”
Emily twisted her fingers together in her lap. “Something happened to him.”
“That doesn’t make him unique,” Sophia said. “It’s not your problem, Em. What do you care what he thinks of you?”
“I don’t. Not really. Except that his opinion could impact Annie’s perceptions.”
“That’s not what’s getting to you. It’s more personal.” Sophia tapped her index finger against her lips. “You’re falling for him again, aren’t you?”
“Don’t be silly,” Em scoffed. “I’m smarter than that. Again implies I had deep feelings the first time around, but I walked away, remember?”
“Not without regret.” Her friend’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “You slept with him, didn’t you?”
Technically when he’d had his way with her they were standing up and no one had been sleeping, least of all her. Em shivered with the memory of how desperately she’d wanted him. “Why would you think that?”
“Oh, please. Don’t even try to wiggle your way out of telling me. You’re a very bad liar.”
“Cal wouldn’t agree with you about that. And the truth is that we were intimate.” Em squirmed in the chair. “Please don’t lecture me. Anything you say is nothing compared to what I’ve said to myself. It was stupid and won’t happen again.”
“Because you got him out of your system?”
If only. From her mouth to God’s ear.
“I’m still working on it. The problem is now that he knows about Annie and has taken to being a father, there won’t be any way not to see him.”
“So what you’re saying is that the only way you can get over him is out of sight, out of mind?”
It was more like out of the frying pan into the fire. Em didn’t want to admit that not seeing Cal hadn’t worked very well in getting over him.
“Look, Soph, I’m sailing in uncharted waters
here. I didn’t mean to keep you out of the loop.”
“I know. That’s not your style, and no one knows that better than me. But it’s too much fun and too easy to give you a hard time.”
Em grinned. “I’ll get even with you. Don’t think I won’t—” Her cell phone range interrupting her. She dug it out of her purse and flipped it open. “Hello?”
“Em? It’s Patty.”
She knew from the teen’s tone that something was wrong. “What is it?”
“Henry fell and hit his head. He’s bleeding. He’s not crying—like he’s out of it. Jonas wants to take him to the clinic, but I don’t think that’s best—”
“Go to Mercy Medical Center, Patty,” she said. “Cal’s there. He’ll take care of Henry.”
“What if he won’t?” There was panic in Patty’s voice.
“He will because I’m going to call him right now. I’ll meet you at the E.R.” Just in case they needed backup. She flipped her phone closed and looked at her friend. “Can you keep Annie for me?”
“Of course. I’ll bring Annie home with me. Sounds like Patty needs you more right now.”
“Thanks. I’ll get her as soon as I can. I owe you more than I can say, but right now I have to go.”
Chapter Ten
Emily parked her car outside Mercy Medical Center’s emergency entrance and hurried into the crowded waiting area. She scanned the faces and didn’t see Patty and Jonas, which meant either that they’d been taken to an exam room or hadn’t arrived yet. Stopping at the information desk, she was just about to ask which when Cal came through the double doors to meet her.
Without a word he took her elbow and guided her to a quiet place in the hall just around the corner. She’d felt so scared and alone during the twenty-minute drive here that his hand on her arm felt really good. It was warm and safe, a sensation that had never been very familiar to her until Cal. And she didn’t want to count on it—especially from Cal.
“Hi,” she said, meeting his gaze. “Did Patty and Jonas get here yet?”
He nodded. “After you called me I was waiting for them.”
“How’s Henry? Can I see him?” She tried to read his expression, wondering if he was worried or just tired. “I know I’m not family. Technically. But Patty wants me to be there for her.”
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