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Authors: Lori Foster

Bewitched (18 page)

BOOK: Bewitched
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Ralph and Floyd started to back up, but they were quickly subdued by the older folk. Floyd screeched like a wet hen when his arm was twisted high, and Moses, with a look of disgust, muttered, “Sissy.”

Pops stepped forward and wagged a fist. “Shoot 'em!”

Harry's gaze met Charlie's, and he smiled. “He's as bloodthirsty as you are, brat.”

Carlyle lurched, trying to break free, and without a single hesitation, Harry punched him the jaw. The man went down like a lead balloon. Very slowly, Charlie applauded.

The police showed up in two patrol cars and a plain sedan. The detective in charge appeared to know Harry. With the men subdued in cuffs, the trunk of Carlyle's car was opened and Charlie glimpsed a variety of weapons, rifles and guns and ammunition. There were so many of them, it looked like an arsenal.

One of the officers whistled low.

“They're dealing in illegal and stolen weaponry.” Charlie noticed Harry didn't mention the embezzlement, keeping to his promise not to involve the older proprietors. “I can give you an address of an abandoned warehouse where you'll find more of the same, as well as evidence of other illegal activities.”

The detective clapped Harry on the shoulder and they spoke quietly for a few minutes. The officers were questioning everyone and to Charlie's surprise, the seniors loved it. They fairly crowed in their excitement. Charlie used the moment to go to Dalton.

“Where's my sister?”

He was still catching his breath, but he looked relieved. “Inside. My assistant is practically sitting on her. She wanted to rush out with me, but seeing you threatened was more than enough.” He touched her face and his hand trembled. Charlie took his arm and hustled him to a shop stoop to sit. Even as he did her bidding, he asked, “Are you okay?”

She smiled. At the same time big tears welled in her eyes. “That was my question to you.”

“Now that you're safe, I'm fine. But I don't mind telling you, seeing that bastard put his hands on you nearly stopped my—”

“Your heart?” She knelt down in front of him and took his hands. “Are you sure you're all right?”

“You know?”

“That you had a heart attack? Yes. Harry finally came clean.”

Dalton sighed heavily. “It wasn't your fault, you know. Your letter didn't distress me. It thrilled me and made me so proud I wanted to dance up and down the street.”

“It was a hateful letter.”

“It was a letter filled with guts and courage and pride. I knew the moment I read it you were an incredible young woman. I was right.”

The tears trickled down her cheeks and she impatiently swiped them away. “That was a dirty trick you played on me, having Harry lie about everything. But under the circumstances I suppose I understand.”

“Do you? I couldn't take the chance you'd shut me out. I'd waited too long to get my girls back.” His own eyes teared up, breaking Charlie's heart. “I'm so sorry I hurt you earlier today.”

She shook her head. “It doesn't matter.”

“That's not what Harry said. I've known him since he was a boy, back when his father and I were friends. We've always been as close as two men can be, and that's the first time he ever raised hell with me.”

Once again, her temper rose. “Harry yelled at you?”

Scoffing, Dalton shook his head. “Harry never yells. He just gets glib and lectures. He told me what a wonderful woman you were, and he insisted there wasn't a single thing about you that needed to be changed.”

Charlie was absorbing that when a voice from behind her said, “What I didn't tell you is that I love her.”

She jerked around so fast, she landed on her rump. Since that particular part of her anatomy was already sore from the skirmish, she scowled at Harry. He didn't give her a chance to grumble, reaching down and grabbing her under her arms, then lifting her completely off her feet until she was eye level, dangling in the air.

Charlie gulped, eyeing Harry cautiously. His shirt was un-tucked and only half-buttoned, and he had on shoes but no socks. He'd obviously dressed in a rush.

Shaking her slightly, he shouted, “You scared the hell out of me, taking off like that!”

Charlie glanced over at Dalton, who sat there grinning, and she said, “I thought he never yelled.”

Dalton shrugged.

Harry shook her again, making her feet swing. “In the normal course of things, when not unduly provoked, I
don't
yell! But you have a way of pushing me on everything.”

Despite her ignominious position, she lifted her chin. “Good. Because you push me, too.”

That vexed him for a moment, and he growled, “Damn right! And I'm going to continue to do so. I love you, damn it. Doesn't that matter at all?”

Pops leaned in to say, “It should matter.”

Moses nodded. “Always used to matter in the good ole days.” The rest of the seniors offered mumbled agreements.

An elderly woman with gray hair escaping her bun patted Charlie on the arm. “You should listen to him, honey. Harry's a good man, and he packs one helluva punch.”

They all nodded, even the officers. Moses stepped forward and he looked sheepish. “Harry convinced us we couldn't handle those punks on our own. We should have trusted the cops. Even outnumberin' 'em two to one, they almost got away from us.”

Harry, still holding Charlie off the ground as if her weight
were totally negligible, said to the hovering group, “I couldn't have done it without your assistance.”

Charlie frowned. “It was a plan?”

“A very sound plan. I knew Carlyle would be with Ralph and Floyd today, and I knew they'd have the guns.”

Charlie gasped. “This is the news you refused to share with me! I suspected something was going on, but you wouldn't tell me a damn thing, and you kept sneaking off without me—”

“Which wasn't easy, I'll have you know. You're too nosy for your own good.”

Dalton blustered. “
Charlie
was involved in that?”

Harry didn't answer, however his eyes glittered. “After picking up the money, they were going to make a deal—and the police would be ready.” He glared at Dalton. “Things would have gone as planned if people didn't throw wrenches into the works, skipping dinner and coming here first.”

“I had no idea!” He frowned at Harry, then shrugged. “I needed a reservation, so we were going back in an hour.”

“And,” Harry added, drawing Charlie so close she could see the fiery specks in his light brown eyes, “if stubborn women would only listen when given a heartfelt declaration of love.”

“It really was heartfelt?”

“Haven't you been listening?”
He shook her again, then hugged her tight. “It was extremely heartfelt.”

Charlie looped her arms around his neck. “I haven't forgiven you yet for lying to me.”

Harry pulled her slightly away and he looked at Dalton. “I compromised your daughter.”

Dalton started in surprise. “You did?”

“Yes. But I'm willing to do the right thing.”

The old people cheered all the more.

Charlie, enjoying herself now that she no longer doubted her father—or Harry—pretended to think things over. “I'm going to keep my bar.”

“Fine. As long as you live with me.”

“What about Jill?”

“She's more than welcome as long as she doesn't object to Ted, or Grace and Sooner.”

Dalton stood. “Or she could live with me!”

Jill appeared, dragging the assistant in her wake. Several of the young officers looked at her with interest as she forged a path to her sister. “I'm going off to college, remember? But it's nice to feel so wanted. Who're Ted and Grace and Sooner?”

Harry brought Charlie close again and kissed her. In a whisper, he said, “I do love you, Charlie. So damn much. Please don't ever scare me like that again.”

Those stupid, ridiculous tears threatened, but they were happy tears now. “If I marry you, can I help in all your investigations?”

He pretended to stagger with the mere thought, making her laugh. But that was the thing about Harry. Even from the first, he'd managed to bring fun and laughter back into her life. He'd even given her back her father. And now that she had those things, she couldn't imagine letting them go.

She pressed her face into his throat and said, “Since I love you, I suppose we should get married.”

“That's a yes?”

“That's an absolute.”

Sirens from the retreating patrol cars mingled with the shouts from the seniors and the happy shrieks from her sister. Dalton just sat there grinning—like a very proud papa.

MARRIED TO THE BOSS

To Emily Toerner,
A gem for a gem. I couldn't have chosen better myself, and that surely puts my mother's heart at ease.

CHAPTER ONE

A
S SOON AS
R. J. Maitland turned into the sweeping drive of Maitland Maternity Clinic, he saw the mob. Not a rioting mob, but every bit as bloodthirsty.
Reporters.

They wouldn't destroy property, but they were certainly doing their best to destroy his reputation and that of the clinic. As president of Maitland Maternity, he felt responsible for its good name.

As a man, he felt a red-hot rage.

His hands tightened painfully on the wheel of his Mercedes, the only sign he allowed of his inner turmoil. Damn Tanya Lane for naming him as the father of the abandoned baby. And damn himself for having ever been involved with her in the first place.

Hoping to go unnoticed by the milling, impatient crowd, he drove to the parking lot around the corner. It turned out to be a futile effort; his car was spotted, and the mob rushed his way, flashbulbs popping, video cams zooming in, reporters with microphones extended, running to reach him, hoping for the first damaging quote of the day.

Since the baby had been discovered on the steps of the clinic in September, it had been like this, but now the focus had changed. He was the target.

Though his anger was near the boiling point, he remained outwardly aloof, ignoring them all and walking with an unhurried stride to the door. A security guard stood there, ready to block out the unwelcome press, but it wasn't easy getting past
them. Questions were shouted at him, questions he couldn't honestly answer, and that made the rage all the worse.

“R.J.! Are you the father of the baby?”

“What do you intend to do about your child?”

“How does your family feel about this unexpected turn of events?”

He'd been asking himself the same things over and over again, ever since the basket with the little boy had been left at the clinic with a note claiming that he was a Maitland. Now, of course, the situation was worse.

Tanya Lane, an ex-girlfriend, had deliberately labeled him the father.

He forged onward, his jaw locked, his hands curled into fists. Just as he stepped through the polished brass-and-glass door, another reporter shouted loudly, “R.J., do you think you and Ms. Lane will reconcile now?”

R.J. stopped in midstep, then turned with fatal deliberation, jaw set, eyes hard. He sought out the reporter, who blinked owlishly in response to his visible fury, and with icy disdain said, “No.”

A hush settled over the reporters with the finality of that single word, then they quickly erupted with more questions. Damn it, he knew better than to respond to the press at all. It was best to simply ignore them, to claim
no comment.
But he was sick and tired of their barbs, and he was fed up with being labeled as the type of bastard who would walk away from his responsibilities. He was used to controlling his life, to adjusting events, plans and people to suit his purposes. But in this, he had little control at all. It was intolerable.

Turning his back on the throng of reporters, R.J. headed into the clinic while the doorman struggled to close the door behind him.
Reconcile with Tanya?
he thought with acid disgust.
Not in this or any other lifetime.
He hadn't seen the woman for months. If it hadn't been for that TV reporter Chelsea Markum, offering a paltry bribe to get the negligent
mother to come forth, he probably still wouldn't have heard from Tanya. Their parting hadn't been particularly pleasant, but it had been final.

At the time, Tanya had accepted his decision, taking the farewell money he offered her and walking away—as he'd known she would. She'd said nothing about a baby, not even about the possibility of a baby. Yet a baby had been left, alone and unprotected, on the clinic doorstep, and that sickened him as nothing else could.

If Tanya Lane was the mother, R.J. thought viciously, she would be wise to stay the hell out of his sight, and well out of his reach.

The elevator was thankfully empty as he rode to the second floor, where his office was located, giving him the few necessary moments to reign in his temper. He wanted, needed to shut himself inside and concentrate on work, on getting back on track. He hoped to find the usual relief in his daily routine, but he doubted he would, given his dark mood.

The second he stepped through the office door he saw Dana Dillinger, his longtime secretary, preparing a cup of coffee. Dana was quietly efficient, totally competent and a balm to his escalating frustration. Somehow, Dana always seemed to know exactly when he would walk in, and she continually found ways to make his work environment as comfortable for him as possible. Today he appreciated that more than ever before.

He eyed her prim back for a moment, watching her economical, graceful movements. “Good morning, Dana.”

She looked up at him with a commiserating smile as she stirred just the right amount of creamer into his coffee. As usual, her dark blond hair was neatly swept into a sophisticated twist at the back of her head, and her light gray suit was tailored, perfectly pressed and eminently suitable for the secretary to the president. “I guess you saw the reporters outside?”

“They'd be damn hard to miss.”

She didn't so much as flinch at his sarcastic statement. Instead, she followed him into his office with the coffee in one hand and a bagel in the other. “You probably haven't eaten today, have you?”

As well as being a top-notch secretary, Dana had the tendency to coddle. She was, in fact, the only woman he let get away with it. “I'm fine,” he said as he sat in the black leather chair behind his desk.

“No, you're not.” Never one to be affected by his moods or surly temper, she set the steaming coffee at his elbow then insistently pushed the bagel in front of him. “Eat. You'll feel better.”

He stared at her in disbelief. Feel better? Is that what she thought, that he merely needed to
feel better?
Everything he'd carefully constructed—his reputation, his standing in the community, his contacts and associations—was threatened by the recent scandal. And the reputation of the clinic was undergoing critical speculation.

“Dana,” he growled, not bothering to regulate his tone now that he was away from the press, “I seriously doubt a goddamned bagel is going to do much to repair the damage from all the vicious gossip.”

She bit her lip, then sighed. As usual, she took his moods in stride, never backing off, never flashing her own temper in return. That, too, was a blessing, allowing him the total freedom to be himself, without having to concern himself about the impression he might give.

At moments like this, she positively amazed him.

“R.J., anyone who knows you realizes you'd never abandon a woman just because she got pregnant. You're far too conscientious for that. Miss Lane's ridiculous story that you got her pregnant and then refused to marry her is just that—utterly ridiculous.”

Her overwhelming belief in him made his stomach muscles
tighten in response. He watched her, his expression deliberately impassive. “She was no more than a casual, ill-advised fling, Dana. Available for what I wanted, which sure as hell wasn't marriage. I'd hardly rush to the altar with her, regardless of the situation.”

Though a blush brightened her fair complexion and her eyes wouldn't quite meet his, she muttered stubbornly, “Maybe not, but you wouldn't abandon her, either. You wouldn't leave her to take care of the situation on her own.”

He gave her a hard look, judging her earnestness, then shook his head. In a low, nearly imperceptible whisper, he muttered, “You sound pretty sure of that.”

Her chin lifted resolutely. “I am.”

R.J. wasn't given to self-doubt or worry, but then, this was a unique situation. No woman had ever dared to try manipulating him as Tanya had, and never before had his honor been questioned. He found himself moving the bagel from one side of the plate to another as he considered his very limited options. A sleepless night had done little to help resolve the issues. He wanted—needed—to talk, to sort out his thoughts, and right now his family had more than enough to deal with. That left Dana as his only sounding board.

Without an ounce of apology, he met her steady gaze and admitted, “It's possible that I could be the father.”

Dana stared at him, her expression blank. He'd noticed her wide green eyes before, of course, since they were a focal point of color against her fair skin. But never before had he seen them look so wary. She stood there before him for a frozen moment in time, then suddenly launched into a flurry of efficiency, straightening books on a shelf, putting away a file. When she spoke, her hands nervously and needlessly tidied the subdued twist in her blond hair.

“That's absurd.” She didn't meet his gaze, but rather stared at his tie clip as if fascinated by it. “I seriously doubt Miss Lane is even the baby's mother, so how could you be the
father? She just wants the five thousand dollars that TV reporter offered, that's all.”

R.J. saw the way her straight shoulders had stiffened inside her suit, how her hands, with their short, unpainted nails, were clenched tightly together, turning her knuckles white. Her distress was plain to see, and for one ridiculous moment he wanted to soothe her. He shook off the aberrant sensation.

“I hope you're right,” he said quietly, still watching her. “But I did some calculations last night, and the timing works.”

Dana closed her eyes and let out a long, shaky breath.

She looked so distraught, he felt a frisson of uneasiness. He grimly tamped it down. “Dana?”

Shaking her head, she turned away and stalked to the window behind his desk. She wrapped her arms around herself in a strangely defensive gesture that he didn't understand, and when she spoke, her voice emerged as a rasp. “You didn't…didn't use protection with her?”

An instinctive flash of anger took him by surprise. He was far too old, and far too private, to be explaining himself or his actions. No one—family, business associates or friends—dared to take him to task. Under normal circumstances he would have responded to such a question with contempt.

But he supposed he'd invited the query by bringing up the topic. He almost grinned as he considered her question. Never would he have imagined having such a discussion with his professional-to-the-bone secretary. Dana was so straitlaced, so proper, R.J. doubted she understood the most basic aspects of hot, gritty lust. But he certainly did, and he'd long ago learned to utilize his icy self-control even during the most heated moments, refusing to be drawn in by any woman, refusing to take unnecessary chances. His sense of responsibility and his natural inclination to have the upper hand had always kept him safe from any long-term commitments—and fathering a baby would definitely be considered long term.

Though he was half amused, he also resented Dana's lack
of faith. “Of course I took precautions,” he said coolly, letting her feel his displeasure over her implications. “In this day and age, only an idiot wouldn't, and I promise you, I'm not an idiot.”

She looked startled. “I never meant—”

He cut her off, not wanting to hear her clarify her doubts. “Nothing is foolproof, Dana, you should know that. But if Tanya did get pregnant, this is the first I've heard about it.”

The tightening grip of rage he'd been experiencing ever since the baby had been found threatened to break his control.

Damn it, he didn't want his reputation trashed just because he'd made an error in judgment. He should never have slept with Tanya, but he hadn't realized what a conniving bitch she was at the time. She'd claimed to want the same things as he, and that damn sure didn't include being a parent. But if a baby had been conceived, she should have known him well enough to realize he would never disregard his obligations.

R.J. came to his feet, hating the look he'd seen on Dana's face, one of disappointment, when all he'd ever seen there before was admiration and respect. He wouldn't tolerate it. He clasped her shoulders and turned her to face him, aware suddenly of how small she seemed. If she leaned forward, she'd be able to nestle against his chest perfectly.

That errant observation took him by surprise, and he ground his teeth together. He wanted to shake her, more out of anger at himself than at Dana.

“If I am the father, she never bothered to tell me. All that garbage about me refusing to marry her, to acknowledge the baby—it's all lies. I'd
never
turn my back on my responsibilities. You know that, Dana.”

His statement demanded that she agree. She looked at him, her eyes liquid, as if she were on the verge of crying, which didn't make a damn bit of sense. Dana never showed excesses of emotion. She handled his office and his business affairs
with a remarkable competence that sometimes left him awed, but she never got emotionally involved. In all the time he'd known her, he'd never seen so much as a hint of her personal side. When she was sick, she stoically denied it. When she was tired, she hid it. If she'd ever been hurt, or if she'd ever grieved, he knew nothing about it. Even though his sister Abby and Dana were longtime friends, Dana's personal life was a mystery to him.

Which was how he'd always wanted it.

As if it had never been there, Dana's tearful expression disappeared. She visibly drew herself together and mustered a shaky smile. R.J. felt as if he'd just taken a punch to the gut. Without meaning to, he tightened his hands on her fragile shoulders.

“I know, R.J.,” she said, her gaze unwavering. “You're the most dedicated, reliable, professional person I know. You just…just took me by surprise.”

Struck by some unnameable emotion, R.J. released her and stepped back. The urge to pull her closer, to see just how well she might fit against him, had nearly overwhelmed him and he didn't like it. The whole situation was getting out of hand, taking its toll on his lauded control, which he assumed could explain his sudden need for her trust and understanding. But he'd be damned if he let things get to him that much.

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