Читать книгу A Baby for the Bachelor - Victoria Pade - Страница 9
Chapter Four
ОглавлениеNoah was a no-show for work on Monday. He didn’t call. He didn’t send any kind of message saying he wouldn’t be there. He didn’t respond to the voice mail Wyatt left when Wyatt called to ask where he was before Neily and Wyatt left for their honeymoon.
“It’ll be fine. I’ll deal with it. It isn’t as if I haven’t handled contractors before,” Marti assured both of her brothers so Ry could get on the road to Missoula, too.
But underneath it all?
Marti was even more of a wreck than she’d been before.
She just didn’t know why.
So what if Noah had freaked out about the baby? So what if he didn’t want anything to do with her or the pregnancy or with his child once it was here? She hadn’t intended to make him a part of it before this, she’d intended to do it on her own anyway.
What difference did it make if he’d ended up knowing? It didn’t change anything. The baby was still hers. She was still going to have it, raise it, love it. If he didn’t want any part of that, fine, she told herself.
Absolutely fine. No problem whatsoever. All the better, probably.
Yet, for some reason, thinking that that was the reason he’d done a disappearing act today had thrown her off balance, and by the end of Monday afternoon she just wanted to get away from everything to have a moment to herself.
So she trudged up to her bedroom, feeling the weight of all she’d found in Northbridge bearing down on her. Wondering if she really could do what she’d convinced her brothers she could when it came to the conundrum surrounding Theresa, and taking the next steps in opening a new Home-Max in the small town and overseeing the renovations of the house by the contractor who had gotten her pregnant and now made himself scarce…
No, it was okay that Noah seemed to have vanished into thin air, she told herself again as she closed the bedroom door and pressed her forehead to it. At least nobody else knew he was the baby’s father. At least nothing on the surface had changed.
And if she’d gone to bed last night thinking about those deep, dark eyes and that smile that could spread out so slowly it was like waiting for Christmas and a voice as rich as hot fudge? Well, now she knew how Noah had gotten to her in Denver, but it didn’t have anything to do with here and now.
Here and now the fact of the matter was that Noah was not Jack—Jack who would have been thrilled with a baby, who would have marveled at every minute of the pregnancy they shared, who would never have left her hanging—and she needed to make sure she didn’t lose sight of that.
But yes, today she felt as if she was carrying a pretty heavy load on her shoulders, and despite her show of strength and confidence and invincibility to her brothers, she was feeling anything but.
The house phone rang just then and Marti held her breath, hating that everything seemed to pause as she waited to hear if the call might be from the sexy contractor.
And then Mary Pat yelled up, “It’s for you, Marti. It’s Noah,” and in that split second the dark clouds over her head seemed to part.
But that wasn’t good, either, she cautioned herself.
“He’s probably just calling to say he’s history when it comes to the baby and the remodel,” she muttered.
But if that was the case, she needed to get it over with so she would know exactly where she stood and could just get on with this new twist, too.
So she hollered back to Mary Pat, “I’ll be right there,” and pushed away from the bedroom door to open it.
As she retraced her steps downstairs to take the call there sprang to life a tiny ray of something she tried to ignore.
Something that felt a little like the hope that underneath Noah Perry’s laid-back charm and simmering sensuality she might find that he was a stand-up guy after all.
Marti arrived at the coffeehouse earlier than she’d told Noah she would be there. That had been the purpose of his phone call late in the afternoon—to ask her to meet him for coffee that evening. He hadn’t apologized for not coming to work, nor had he said anything about the baby. In a very serious, sober tone of voice, he had merely told her he wanted to meet with her. And she’d agreed.
Then she’d skipped dinner because her stomach had been too tied in knots to put food in it. Instead she’d taken a second shower, shampooed her hair and carefully chosen a pair of low-slung brown linen slacks and a cream-colored silk sweater set. She’d caught the sides of her hair in a clip in back and left the rest of it to fall free, added mascara, blush and a little lip gloss to finish her efforts, then drove Wyatt’s SUV to Main Street and the small establishment that served hot and cold beverages and a few pastries.
And there she was, trying to prepare herself for whatever was about to come her way. Anticipating the worst.
She didn’t have long to wait. Noah arrived five minutes after her. The front of the place was all windows so from her seat at a corner table where her back was to the wall, she saw him drive up.
He parked his white truck at the curb and got out. Marti couldn’t be sure, but she had the impression that he might have put some thought into his own clothes. He had on a pair of dark denim jeans and a tan V-neck sweater over a white crew-necked T-shirt. There wasn’t even the hint of a beard on his handsome face so she knew he’d shaved right before he left.
Looks can be deceiving, though, she thought when she couldn’t help the twinge of appreciation for the sight he presented. No matter how good a presentation he made, if he was there to tell her what she thought he was there to tell her, he was a creep.
He spotted her the minute he walked into the place and came over to her. “Hi,” he greeted her simply with a tightlipped impersonation of a smile that was clearly wary.
“Hi,” she answered just as guardedly.
“Thanks for coming.”
Marti nodded.
“What can I get you?” he asked with a glance over his broad shoulder toward the counter where orders were taken. “Can you drink coffee? Do you drink coffee?”
We don’t even know that about each other, Marti lamented.
“I’ll have a decaf nonfat latte.”
“I’ll be right back,” he said as he left again.
Marti watched him at the counter, unable to deny that the rear view was almost as good as the front because his jeans encased a derriere too prime not to notice.
Then he turned with their coffees and she quickly raised her gaze to his ruggedly striking face again.
When he reached the table, he set one of the two cups in front of her and kept the other in hand as he sat across from her.
Marti tasted her coffee and waited—he’d asked for this meeting, it was his show.
“I’m sorry about not working at the house today,” he began. “And for not answering the voice mails.”
Marti merely nodded.
“I had a lot of thinking—and some other things—to do after…the news I left with last night.”
There was nothing to be said to that so she just went on waiting.
“I don’t…” he began, stopped, restarted. “It occurred to me when your brothers said you were pregnant Friday that I could be…the cause. Not right away—I was actually slow on the uptake. But then I realized that it was a possibility. So I don’t know why it hit me like a ton of bricks last night when you said the baby is mine, but it did.”
“It has a way of doing that,” she allowed conservatively.
“I paced the floors most of the night and then today I went to see my lawyer—”
“Your lawyer?” she repeated, cutting him off as her mind started to race again.
Was he going to demand proof? A paternity test? What exactly was he implying about her? And if he had proof, would he be willing—reluctantly—to concede to being this baby’s father?
“Look,” Marti said then, ire echoing in her tone, “until I just happened to meet you again on Friday, I fully intended to do this on my own. I don’t want anything from you. I don’t need anything from you. If you want to tell yourself this baby isn’t yours, if that makes it easier for you, then be my guest. As far as I’m concerned—”
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” Noah said in an angry tone of his own to go with the dark frown on his handsome face. “Who said anything about me wanting to think it isn’t mine?”
“Isn’t that why you went to a lawyer? To force some kind of paternity test in hopes that you aren’t the father?”
“That didn’t even cross my mind. Should it have?”
“No. There have only been two men on my dance card—the man I should be married to right now and you.”
That had probably not been the best way to put that and the minute the words were out, Marti regretted them. This was all just so hard and complicated.
But Noah didn’t seem to take offense. In fact, he did the opposite—his temper seemed to recede and in its place he became conciliatory.
“I’m not questioning whether or not the baby is mine. The timing is right. I don’t remember a whole lot about that night but I do remember that we were drunk enough to take the risk of not using protection. You’d already told that artificial insemination story to your brothers—I don’t think you would have done that if the father was someone you know or were involved with. And another one of the few things I recall is you saying more than once that night in Denver how that wasn’t something you’d ever done or ever did—and that struck me as true. Plus, while I don’t know much about you, what I’ve seen doesn’t make me think that you’re someone who would try to pass off someone else’s kid on me.”
Apparently he thought higher of her than she’d been thinking of him in the last several hours. It helped Marti to calm down slightly.
“Thanks for that at least,” she said. “And I didn’t faint on Friday, it was—”
“I know, it was a dizzy spell,” he said with the first hint of a genuine smile—and it was only a hint. “But when I saw you go down I thought you’d passed out.”
They both sipped their coffees and after a brief pause, Marti said, “So why did you go to a lawyer today?”
“To find out what I needed to do to protect my rights.”
“Your rights?”
“As the father. I’m not trying to figure a way out of this, Marti. I want to make sure I have a firm footing in it.”
That surprised her.
And then it alarmed her. In her wildest dreams she hadn’t thought there was any risk of the father of this baby doing anything that might take it away from her in some fashion.
“What does that mean?” she asked in a quiet voice.
“This is a big deal to me,” he said with enough gravity that she didn’t need any more convincing to believe he wasn’t taking this lightly. In fact, he said it with so much gravity that it made her wonder if there was more motivating him than she knew.
But he was still talking and this was all too important for her to let her mind wander.
“I realize that I’m as responsible for this as you are,” he was saying. “And I’m not one of those people who can ignore that I’ll have a kid floating around out in the world and just go on about my business as if I don’t. There’s no way I’d let you go through this alone, and once the baby is here, I want to be a father to it. I want to be a part of its life.”
“Okay…” Marti agreed with reservation because she still wasn’t sure exactly where he was going with this. “What did you have in mind?”
“First of all—I want to know that you aren’t going to have an abor—”
“No,” she said firmly. “I’m having the baby.”
“Great.” Noah looked relieved.
“And second of all?” she said.
His face broke into a bigger and even more genuine smile. “As long as there is