The Baby Surprise

The Baby Surprise Read Free Page A

Book: The Baby Surprise Read Free
Author: Brenda Harlen
Ads: Link
height, his obvious strength, his overwhelming masculinity.
    She glanced at him as she reached for the empty carafe from the coffeemaker, and she swallowed hard when she found those intense and stunningly blue eyes on her. The tug of attraction came again, and she found herself as annoyed as she was baffled by it.
    Of all the times for her body to suddenly decide it had been in stasis for too long, now was not a good one. And even if it had been a good time, Zach Crawford was definitely not a man she should ever find herself attracted to. Not just because of the uniform, but because he had once been intimately involved with one of her best friends.
    It occurred to her that the uniform might have been why her friend had never told her about the man who had fathered her child. Because Olivia knew something of Paige’s history with her father, she knew Paige would question her decision to get involved with a man who could never make her or their daughter a priority in his life.
    She was considering this as she turned on the tap to fill the carafe. “Do you want coffee?” she asked Zach.
    â€œI’ve been on the go since oh-five-hundred,” he told her. “I would love coffee.”
    She’d been up since oh-five-hundred herself—5:00 a.m. to nonmilitary people—and she would have preferred to skip the coffee and sink into her mattress and into the oblivion of sleep as peacefully as Emma had finally done.
    But she knew she wouldn’t get any sleep tonight—not until she had some answers to the questions that had been swirling through her brain since Lieutenant Colonel Zach Crawford had spoken the two words that continued to echo in her mind.
    Emma’s father.
    If it was true, if Lieutenant Colonel Zach Crawford reallywas the father of Olivia’s baby, that simple fact would change everything.
    Paige worried over the possibility as she put a filter in the basket and measured out the grounds.
    It was easy to see how Olivia might have been attracted to the man. Over and above the fact that he was six feet three inches of mouth-watering masculinity, he moved with a sense of purpose and carried himself with an aura of command that were as much a part of who he was as those blue, blue eyes.
    She reached into the cupboard for two mugs and filled them from the carafe.
    â€œCream? Sugar?” she asked him.
    â€œJust black, thanks.”
    She handed him one of the mugs and added a splash of milk to the other.
    He waited until she’d taken a seat at the pub-style table in the dining room, then sat down across from her.
    â€œI understand you worked at Wainwright, Witmer & Wynne with Olivia?” She nodded.
    â€œYou were good friends?”
    â€œSince our first year at law school together,” she told him.
    â€œShe never mentioned you to me.”
    â€œShe never mentioned you to me, either,” she told him. “In fact, she never said anything about Emma’s father.”
    He raised an eyebrow. “Nothing at all?”
    â€œThe only thing she ever told me, and only when I asked where the baby’s father fit into the picture, was that he wasn’t interested in playing any role in his child’s life.”
    He scowled at that. “I might not have been thrilled by the news of her pregnancy, if she’d ever bothered to tell me, but she had to know there was no way in hell I would abandon my child.”
    â€œIf Olivia never told you she was pregnant, how didyou find out? And how do you know that you are Emma’s father?”
    â€œWell, at this point, I’m not one-hundred-percent certain,” he admitted. “But I have a letter from Olivia that says I am, and I have no reason to disbelieve it.”
    â€œYou just said Olivia lied.”
    â€œShe lied to you, ” he clarified, “if she told you that I didn’t want to know my child. Because the truth is, I didn’t know about the baby. Not until I got home from

Similar Books

Billionaire Kink

Virginia Wade

Queen by Right

Anne Easter Smith

Bradbury Stories

Ray Bradbury

Thursdays At Eight

Debbie Macomber

Sure Thing

Ashe Barker

The Grey Man

John Curtis

Hotel Living

Ioannis Pappos