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Authors: Marie Ferrarella

Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary Romance

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BOOK: Borrowed Baby
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"No, of course not, but..." Her voice trailed off as she looked up at him, confused.
Griff allowed a small smile to appear beneath the trim, dark brown mustache. "Lady, you look like you've already got enough trouble, what with four kids—"
"Four?" Her brows jumped together as her head swung around, the freshly made ponytail slicing the air as she turned. "I had five when I started out."
"Get off me, Nathan!" a muffled voice cried. Winston.
She turned back around. "Five," she asserted, relieved.
"Five," Griff echoed dubiously and shook his head. He had thought the day of the large family had gone. After seeing this family in action, he could well understand why that particular setup was becoming extinct.
He tipped his hat and took a step back from her car. "Drive carefully."
She grinned at him. The man had a heart after all. You learn something everyday. "Definitely," she promised with a wink.
That wink was most likely what had gotten her pregnant in the first place, he thought. It had "sexy" written all over it. Her husband probably couldn't keep his hands off her. Not that he blamed him. Looking somewhat apprehensive and harried, there was still something captivatingly attractive about the woman.
Griff turned and walked back to his car. Seating himself behind the steering wheel, he watched and waited for her to pull away.
Liz waved at him, feeling almost giddy at the reprieve. Then, turning on her ignition again, she was on her way, ready to rescue her about-to-be-burnt cake. The argument in the back seat had resumed, but she barely paid any attention.
Griff shook his head. He must be getting soft in his old age. Either that or the taco had gone to his brain and done serious damage. Muttering a disparaging comment, Griff turned his patrol car toward the station off Jamboree. He rubbed his stomach, making small, concentric circles with his large hand. It didn't help.
Under normal circumstances, he would have given the woman a ticket even if she had so many children that she had to strap them to the roof of her car. Maybe he was just having an off day. Or maybe it was the fact that her eyes reminded him of Sally. Not the shade so much as the wide-eyed innocence. Of course, a woman with five children could hardly be called innocent by any stretch of the imagination.
What the hell, one ticket wouldn't make or break the department and it wasn't as if she had flagrantly disregarded the stop sign. Rolling stops were just possibly the main source of revenue in Bedford. Overlooking one was no big deal.
Still, he was surprised at himself. He had never looked the other way before. He believed in rules and regulations. That was why he had become a policeman in the first place. Without structure, without order, there was nothing, he reminded himself as he pulled up in front of the precinct. Everyone needed structure in their lives, even if they had nothing else.
Nodding at several officers on their way out, Griff walked into the newly constructed building adjacent to the new city hall. The city had only been incorporated for eighteen years. Everything was new in Bedford. Only he felt old. An odd way to be at twenty-seven, he thought darkly as fragments from his past came and went through his mind.
"Hey, Griff, why so glum? Couldn't find anyone speeding today?" C. W. Linquist called out as Griff walked by him on the way to the locker room.
"Nope, just another peaceful day in paradise," Griff quipped.
C. W. followed him into the locker room. The sound of running water was heard from the shower area as officers coming off duty prepared to meet more pleasurable challenges that evening.
C.W. nodded toward the showers. "Hey, how about joining Ernie and me tonight? Ernie found a great singles' club. We're trying it on for size right after we grab a bite to eat. Might find something there to take the starch out of your mustache." C.W. nudged him. Five years older and a full six inches shorter, C.W.'s elbow dug into Griff's waist.
Griff opened his locker and took out the shirt he had left hanging there. "I like my mustache starched, C. W. Thanks just the same."
He stripped off his uniform shirt and tossed it into his duffel bag. Griff saw C.W. looking at the taut, muscular torso with unabashed envy. While the rest of them indulged in pizza, Griff spent his time in the gym.
C.W. straddled the bench as he pulled off his shoes and dropped them into his locker with a thud. "C'mon, Griff. I never see you go out with the ladies. Don't you ever like to cut loose?"
Griff tucked his fresh shirt into the waistband of his jeans. "No, it takes the edge off."
"Someday, fella," C.w. predicted, ''that edge is going to slice you in half."
Griff didn't care to be analyzed, especially not when he was suffering with hearburn. "Well, then that'll be my concern, won't it?" He picked up his bag and headed toward the door.
"You know your problem?" C.W. called after him. "You think life's too serious."
Griff stopped at the double doors and turned to look over his shoulder at the slightly overweight, redheaded policeman. "Well, isn't it?"%
C.W. shook his head. "No, it's what you make it, Griff."
"Yes," Griff agreed, leaving. "It is."
He supposed that he could have gone along with C.W. and Ernie, Griff thought as he drove home. After all, the man didn't mean any harm. He was just trying to be friendly. But being friendly didn't really have a place in Griff's life. He wasn't certain that he even knew how to be friendly anymore. Polite, yes. Civil, definitely, but friendly? Spending an evening exchanging small talk about trivialities that neither person really cared about? That was just a waste of his time, a waste of effort. And he had wasted far too much effort trying to make contact in his lifetime, had tried too hard and wouldn't think about trying again.
He learned his lessons well.
It was growing dark earlier and earlier now that Christmas was drawing near. Hardly four o'clock and dusk was quickly approaching. He thought again of the woman he had failed to ticket today. C.W. would probably have tried to make a little time with her, undoubtedly flirting outrageously. C.W. wouldn't be hampered by the fact that the woman was obviously married and the mother of four, no five, Griff corrected himself, remembering the muffled voice that called out from beneath one of the other boys.
Why would someone so young want to tie herself down with so many kids? he wondered.
Love, a small voice within him seemed to whisper.
Griff's thoughts came to an abrupt halt. Where had that come from? He would have thought that he'd grown sufficiently past notions like that. Besides, that many kids didn't mean love—it meant pandemonium.
He drove into his development and found himself taking the long road toward his block. Curiosity prompted him to drive down Chambers Street. He saw the dusty yellow Honda parked in the driveway. He slowed down then drove on. There was no reason to hurry. There was nothing waiting for him at home. Nothing and no one. No attachments. And that was just the way he wánted it.
His life was exactly the way he wanted it. He was aware that he stated the fact to himself a bit too emphatically, but dismissed it.
When he turned onto his block and neared his tidy, three-bedroom house, he was surprised to see that there was someone standing on his front steps, waiting. At first glance, he thought it might be the woman  he had stopped, but he rejected the idea as being absurd. She had no way of knowing where he lived. Besides, there was no reason for her to seek him out. He hadn't given her a ticket.
He squinted slightly. The fading light made it difficult to distinguish the figure at first. And then...
The last fifteen feet to his driveway unfolded in slow motion as he suddenly recognized the person standing before his house.
Sally.
After all this time. Sally.
For a moment, he was transported back in time. Once again, it was just Sally and Griff, Griff and Sally. Two against the world. Tough odds, but he had beaten them. He had managed to keep them together, from foster home to foster home.
As far back as he could remember, he was all that Sally had had. And she was all he had.
Vaguely, he remembered a limp-looking woman with tired eyes watching as a man beat him. He remembered biting his lip not to cry, not to cry so that Sally wouldn't be afraid. And then a tall, pretty lady who smiled and smelled of soap had come and taken him and Sally away, down a long, dim corridor. The beatings stopped after that. So did the rage and the hurt. And all the feelings. All but one. Protective- ness. He always felt that he had to protect Sally. She was so little. And she cried so easily. But she stopped crying when he sang to her. And she believed him when he said that things would get better. No matter what, Sally always believed.
Only he didn't.
Griff pulled up short and was out of the car, walking like a man in a daze. "Sally?"
The petite brunette nodded, flashing a brave smile. "Surprise." The small mouth trembled and the smile dissolved as tears suddenly formed. "Oh, Griff, I don't have anywhere to go!"
Griff put his arms around the sobbing girl he hadn't seen in two years and held his sister close. "Yes, you do. You're home."
But as he held her, he became aware that there was something between them, something Sally was holding. It squealed. Griff moved back abruptly as if he had been burned.
Sally was holding a baby.
Griff stared down at the bundle, dumbfounded. "Um, when did—?"
Sally pulled back the blanket from the child's face. "Six months ago. Griff," she said, her hopeful eyes on his face, "this is your niece, Cassandra."
It took Griff a full minute before the shock had passed and he could speak again. "Sally, we've got a lot of talking to do."
Chapter Two
Griff unlocked the front door feeling both sad and apprehensive. And angry. A baby. How could she have gotten herself into this much trouble? Glancing over his shoulder, he noticed that Sally stood in the open doorway, looking a little uncertain. The anger softened. "Nothing's changed since you left," he assured her.
He set down Sally's single suitcase and the infant seat next to the living-room sofa they had picked out together. "Traveling light, aren't you?"
Sally took a deep breath and appeared to slowly absorb the surroundings. Her face seemed to relax a little as she smiled sadly. "I haven't acquired too much since I last saw you."
Griff looked dubiously at the baby she cradled against her hip. "Oh, I wouldn't say that." He watched Sally move around the room, touching, absorbing, obviously remembering. She looked a lot thinner. The baby gurgled. Griff's thoughts returned to the infant. "Was it the guitar player?"
His sister swung around. Her arm tightened around her daughter. "His name is Buddy." Sally raised her small chin defensively.
"His name is mud from where I stand." He saw the tension return to her face and reach her shoulders. They weren't going to get anywhere arguing, he told himself. It was enough that she was back. Griff raised his hands to call a truce. "Okay, we'll drop it for now. Hungry?"
Sally looked relieved that he had changed the subject. She nodded her head.
Griff grinned. "I can still boil a mean frozen dinner pouch;"
Sally laughed, obviously remembering that it was practically the only kind of meal they had ever had. "Anything," she said.
Griff looked down at the baby. He still couldn't bring himself to accept that it was hers. Part of him, he knew, still thought of Sally as a baby. "How about, um—?" He nodded toward the infant.
"Casie," Sally supplied quickly. "Cassandra's kind of a big name for her," she admitted, "but she'll grow into it. Buddy picked it out."
"It figures," Griff muttered.
Sally acted as if she hadn't heard. "I have everything she needs right here." Sally patted the oversize weather-beaten tan purse that hung from her shoulder. "Don't worry, she'll let us know when she's hungry."
"Swell. C'mon." He led the way into the kitchen. Shifting Casie higher on her hip, Sally picked up the infant seat and followed him.
"You really haven't changed anything." Sally looked around the small kitchen with its light blue wallpaper. Tiny flowers networking their way up the walls gave the kitchen a warm feeling. She and Griff had spent a lot of time in this room, talking. Sally set the infant seat down on the table and strapped Casie into it.
"I didn't have to. I liked everything the way it was." He opened the freezer and took out a Chinese entrée that promised heaven in a transparent pouch. Griff pulled out a pot from the cupboard and filled it with water. He kept his silence long enough to place the pot on a front burner and turn up the heat beneath it. Then he turned and looked at his sister.
"So what happened?"
Sally didn't meet his gaze right away. Instead, she nervously played with the ruffle on Casie's dress. "You mean lately, or in the past two years?"
Griff crossed his arms before his chest and leaned back against the sink. "Any way you want to tell it."
She shrugged, and he thought that she looked more like a baby than her daughter did, if that were possible. She looked so young, so lost. She was only twenty-one. Old enough, obviously, to have a child, and yet not nearly old enough for this kind of respon-sibility. She was as young as he was old.
"It started out pretty terrific," she said, her voice small.
"But—?"
Sally shot Griff a defiant look. "I know what you're thinking, but Buddy loves me."
Griff looked pointedly at Casie. "Obviously."
"Don't get sarcastic, Griff," Sally pleaded.
He realized that she needed him to understand. Just as he always had. Griff struggled to keep his temper and the explosive words that formed in his mind from falling off the tip of his tongue. "I wasn't being sarcastic, I was contemplating justifiable homicide."
Sally looked away. "Buddy's just having trouble coping with all this. The baby, me, his career not going anywhere."
"Good excuses." Griffs voice was cold, as was the fury he felt against his sister's lover. "And so he walked out on you."
"Kinda."
He straightened and crossed over to her until he was directly behind her chair. "What's that supposed to mean?" For a moment, his hand hovered over her head, wanting to stroke it, wanting to make everything all right. But he let his hand drop. He couldn't afford to let his emotions cloud his judgment. That was a luxury that belonged to other people, not to him.
"It means I'm not sure."
"He left his clothes?"
"No."
"His guitar?"
"Look—" Sally's voice rose "—will you stop being a cop?"
"I thought I was being your big brother."
"Sorry." She looked down at the hands on her lap. She was clasping and unclasping them, as if trying to grab hold of something to make her strong. "You're right, I'm wrong."
Griff turned back to the stove. The water was boiling madly, spilling over the top of the pot and creating billows of steam as it contacted the red-hot burner. He turned down the heat and reached for tongs to fish out the pouch of food. He forced himself to smile. "Well, at least you've learned a little good sense since you've been gone. I accept your apology. Let's start over."
Cutting open the bag, he poured out the contents on a plate. Steam rose and left an airy trail as he brought the plate over to her.
Sally bit her lower lip. "I wasn't sure if I'd still find you here."
Griff placed a fork in front of her and then straddled the chair next to her. "Where would I go? This is our home, remember?"
"It's your home."
"No, it's ours," he emphasized, a touch of annoyance in his voice. "I bought it for us. So that we could be like normal people. Remember? Those were your words." He pointed to her plate. "Now eat before your dinner gets cold."
Sally laughed. "You sound like a mother hen." Her expression softened. She reached across the table and placed her hand over his, her fingers curving. "Griff?"
"Yeah?"
"I love you."
He became aware of his heartburn again. It suddenly seemed to have returned with a vengeance. He stood up. "I'll get your room ready."
"Sentiment still embarrass you?"
" Just eat before you waste away." He left the room.
The insistent whimpering grew louder until it finally penetrated Griff's consciousness and forced him: to open his eyes. He rolled over in bed and looked bleary-eyed at the glowing red numbers on the digital' clock that sat on the nightstand. It took him over a minute to focus in. Four o'clock.
What was that sound?
And then it came back to him, Sally. The baby. That was it. The baby was crying.
He sighed and sank back on his pillow. She'd take care of whatever it was that was ailing the kid.
The crying persisted.
How could something so small make so much noise? Maybe there was something wrong. He threw off the covers with a resigned sigh. Once he was awake, there was no going back to sleep. He might as well see if Sally needed help. As he rose, he automati-cally tugged up the cutoff shorts he always wore to bed, even on the coldest nights. Somehow, pajamas were too restricting to him. The only restrictions he accepted Were ones he made for himself.
Groggily he rubbed the sleep from his eyes and shuffled down the hall to the room that had once been, his sister's. When she left, he had kept it just the way it was. This house had been Griff's one last stab at normalcy. He had bought it with hopes of giving Sally a real home and, at the same time, giving himself one as well. He had intended on going on with his work on the force, and she was going to graduate from high school and attend college. She was going to become someone, and they were going to beat the odds against them.
The American dream, he thought cynically.
That had been the plan. But plans, he had learned time and again, often found a way to go awry. He should have seen it coming. He was enough of a realist to have been alert to the dangers of dreaming. Sally had fallen in love with a would-be rock star and sud-denly he and Sally couldn't carry on a conversation anymore without shouting. The arguments had grown more and more heated the more he tried to show her the error of her ways.
The last time he had seen her, two years ago, she had been on the back of her boyfriend's motorcycle, heading off for parts unknown.
Well, all that was behind them now. Maybe he could somehow make up for lost time. He knocked on her door. "Sally, is everything all right?"
No answer met his question, except for the baby's wail. Inexplicable fear rose up to his throat, where it was wont to lodge when he couldn't put a name on things. "Sally, are you all right?"
Still nothing.
He tried the doorknob and discovered that the door was unlocked. He pushed it open. The room was illuminated by the lamp that stood next to her bed. Sally's bed hadn't been slept in. On top of the covers lay the baby in her infant seat, thrashing about, her arms waving to and fro. Next to her was a note. He didn't want to think about it, "Sally?" he called out again, hoping that this wasn't what it looked like.
Casie stopped crying for a moment and seemed to be listening to the sound of his voice.
Griff rushed into the room. The bathroom door was open but the room was empty. She was gone. Why?
He sank down on the bed. The infant seat tipped in his direction. Mechanically, he stopped it without looking at Casie. He picked up the note. It took him a few minutes before he could get himself to read the words.
Dear Griff,
Please try to understand. I have to sort things out for myself. I realized last night that I can't let you do it for me. And I can't do it with Casie. It wouldn't be fair to her. Please take care of her for me, she deserves better than me. So do you.
Love, Sally
"Damn!"
He crumpled the note and threw it on the floor. All through her childhood and adolescence, Sally had left messes for him to straighten out.
"This is a little more serious than an unmade bed, Sally," he called out in frustration, addressing the emptiness. "Just what in hell am I supposed to do with her?"
Casie gave a little cry. Griff sighed and stared down at the baby in bewilderment. "What am I supposed to do with you?" Casie's lower lip trembled, but the crying stopped. She seemed intrigued with the sound of his voice. "Take you in the squad car and have you ride shotgun?" Casie answered him in strange noises. Griff threw up his hands. "Great, just great. Not fair to Casie. How fair is it to leave her with me?" he complained angrily. "I don't know the first thing about babies."
Casie laughed, her eyes bright and fixed on Griff. For a second, he almost felt as if she understood. "It's not going to work, kid. I haven't got the faintest idea what to do with you."
What was he going to do?
He thought of calling in sick, but they were in the middle of a flu epidemic and already operating at only three-fourths capacity. Besides, taking the day off wouldn't solve anything. This wiggling inconvenience in a pink dress would still be here tomorrow.
There was no one he could turn to. His sphere of acquaintances contained only bachelors. There was no kindly captain's wife to take his niece to, no friendly neighborhood mother to offer her services.
Unless...
He thought of the woman with the carload of children he had stopped yesterday. Didn't she live close by? Maybe she could be prevailed upon to help. He knew he was grasping at straws, but he was three steps past worried, on his way to desperate. What was her address? He wished he had given her a ticket, then at least he'd have her address in his book.
It took him several minutes to remember. When he did, the feeling of triumph quickly dissipated as he realized that he was going to have to ask a stranger for help. But there was no other way.
He made up his mind just as Casie began to whimper again. "Okay, kid, I think I might have found someone to take care of you, at least for today. Maybe I can find your mother by tonight."
Holding the infant seat in place to keep it from tipping again, he rose and began to leave. He turned, noting that Casie's wide blue eyes followed him. As the distance between them grew, so did her whimpers, until a wail burst forth. Griff crossed back to her. The whimpering subsided. ''Look, I'm just going to get dressed, okay?"
But as he began to move away, Casie started to cry again.
He sighed in exasperation as he ran his hand through his hair. "Not okay."
He hesitated for a moment, then shrugged, defeated. He scooped Casie up, infant seat and all. "Okay, but keep your eyes shut, you hear? Otherwise, you're going to wind up getting an education and seeing things that you've got no business seeing for at least another twenty years." He looked down at the wide, innocent blue eyes. She seemed to be listening to every word he said, even though he knew that was preposterous. "Maybe longer."
With a sigh, he lugged the infant seat and Casie back to his bedroom.
* * *
Liz had just bounced out of bed and had poured her first cup of life-giving coffee from the preset coffee machine when she heard the doorbell ring. She glanced at the kitchen clock on the wall behind her. No, she wasn't behind schedule. Someone was early. But who could be calling at six-thirty in the morning?
Hurrying over to the front door, she looked through the peephole and saw a policeman standing on her front step. The policeman. What was he doing here at this hour? And how on earth did he know where she lived? He must have remembered her address from checking over her license. Had he changed his mind about giving her a ticket? Could he do that?
Liz quickly undid the lock, her curiosity consuming her. It intensified when she saw the baby he was holding.
He wasn't prepared to see her like this. Griff forgot what he was going to say. When she opened the door, Griff's eyes involuntarily slid over Liz's slender body. She was wearing a football jersey that obviously hadn't once belonged to the biggest man on the team. More than likely, it had belonged to the smallest. The navy blue jersey barely skimmed the tops of her thighs. Firm thighs from what he could see. Probably kept in shape dashing after that gang of boys of hers.
BOOK: Borrowed Baby
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