no! When my lawyers asked for DNA proof they backed down.â
Of course they did. Brodie sighed and tried to ignore the growing hurt enveloping her heart. âSo, naturally, Iâm just another one-night stand, another woman you slept with who wants to trap you.â She released a small, bitter laugh and lifted her hands in a what-was-I-thinking? gesture. âThatâs an example of how extraordinarily stupid I can be on occasion. Goodbye, Kade.â
Brodie took a couple of steps before turning around once more. âMy lawyer will contact yours. I really donât think we have much more to say to one another.â
Brodie walked away and Kade didnât call her back, didnât say another word. When she hit the trail to the cottage, Brodie patted her stomach.
So itâll be you and me, babe. Weâll be fine.
Of course she would. She always was.
* * *
So that wasnât what heâd been expecting, Kade thought as he sank to the sand and stared at the wild waves slapping the beach.
Brodie was pregnant? With his child? What the hell...? He scrubbed his face with his hands. What were the chances? And why was fate screwing with him?
Kade stroked Siâs head and rubbed his ears. With his busy schedule, just remembering to feed and walk Si was problematic. And life was expecting him to deal with a child?
This was karma, Kade thought. Life coming back to bite him in the ass because heâd been so rude about Mac becoming a father. But Mac had Roryâpatient, calm and thinkingâto guide him through the process.
Kade didnât have Brodie and, judging by the final sentence sheâd flung at him, he didnât need to worry about her or his child. She was prepared to go it alone.
He shouldnât have accused her of lying. Brodie wasnât another bimbo trying to drag a commitment out of him. Brodie didnât want a relationship. She didnât need a man in her life. She was independent and self-sufficient and she was strong enough to raise her childâtheir childâon her own.
If he wanted to he could walk away, forget about this conversation and forget he had a baby on the way. According to Brodie all he needed to do was sign a piece of paper and his life would go back to normal.
No child.
No Brodie.
Pain bloomed in the area below his sternum and he pushed his fist into the spot to relieve the burn. Could he do it? Could he walk away and not think about her, them, anymore?
Probably.
Definitely.
Not.
He couldnât keep Brodie off his mind as it was. There was something about her that was different from any other woman heâd ever known. He was, on a cellular level, attracted to her, but despite her I-can-handle-whatever-life-throws-at-me attitude, he sensed a vulnerability in her that jerked his protective instincts to life. She also had more secrets than the CIA, secrets he wanted to discover. Oh, he wasnât thinking of her with respect to the long term or a commitment. He hadnât turned that mushy and sentimental, but he couldnât dismiss her.
It would be easier if he could.
As for her carrying his child...
Heâd always been ambivalent about having children. As a child, his family situation had been dysfunctional at best, screwed up at worst. Heâd been an afterthought to his parents and when his mom died, heâd been nothing more than a burden to his head-in-the-clouds father. Practicality had never been his dadâs strong suit and, teamed with a wildly impulsive nature, having a ten-year-old was a drag. A kid required food, clothes and schooling, and sometimes his dad hadnât managed any of those. To his father, Kade had been a distraction from his art, a responsibility heâd never signed on for.
Kade felt his jaw lock as the realization smacked him in the face: his child would be a distraction from his own career and a responsibility heâd never signed on for.
Like father, like son.
Except he wasnât
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