Of course as soon as he mentioned it, her gaze went straight to his mouth. Some subconscious part of her wondered how his lips would feel against her own and the thought made her shiver. What was that about? Fear? Awareness? Weather-related? Darned if she knew. But the reaction told her she should refuse his deposit and tell him if the date opened up, she would let him know.
He met her gaze and assumed a puppy-dog expression to ratchet up his persuasion. “Kendra would be very disappointed.”
Drat. That was the only thing he could have said to win her over. Thea couldn’t let down a teenage girl whom she suspected had been let down one too many times already.
“All right, Scott. You win. I’ll do the party.”
He grinned again, showing his straight white teeth and very attractive smile. She thought of Little Red Riding Hood and the Big Bad Wolf and couldn’t help feeling she’d just stepped alone into the woods on her way to Grandma’s house.
Scott looked at his daughter biting into her enchilada. “Thanks for throwing dinner together, sweetie. I planned to get home early, but there was a problem at one of the sites.”
“That’s okay. Do you like it?” she asked, about the meal.
“It’s great.” And that was no lie. “When did you get to be such a good cook?”
“Thea gave me the recipe when she catered my friend’s birthday party. She said it wasn’t hard to make and almost impossible to mess up. I guess she was right.”
Thea Bell. He’d had trouble getting her off his mind since leaving her office that morning. And that wasn’t at all like him. He’d dated here and there, but nothing serious. And it had been a long time, so he wasn’t used to thinking about a woman. Normally work was the only thing that took his mind off the ups and downs of his kids. But he’d found Thea was one smart cookie and pretty intuitive. She’d been right about the fact that he should listen to his daughter instead of lecturing.
But there was still the matter of that pregnancy test and it was too important to ignore. He so badly wanted to tell Kendra to do as he said, not as he’d done. He didn’t want her to learn the same lessons he had learned in the school of hard knocks. But how could he get through to her? How would Thea approach this potential minefield?
He started to say there was something he wanted to talk to her about, then checked himself. That would be his daughter’s signal to shut down.
He looked across the dinner table and decided to try a different tack. “This is nice. Having dinner together.”
“Yeah. Nice.” Warily, she met his gaze.
“I don’t stop to appreciate it enough. And I should,” he added.
“Why?”
“Lots of reasons. Because I enjoy spending time with you. And because when your sister was a baby, I hardly ever got to share a meal with the family.”
“It’s not that big a deal, Dad,” she said. Her expression and tone told him she was ready to shut him down in a nanosecond if necessary.
“Yeah, it is. In those days, I was going to college at night and working during the day.”
“But it’s Grandad’s company.”
“That didn’t mean I could slack off,” he explained. “If anything, he was harder on me because we were related.”
“I know the feeling,” she muttered.
He refused to be sidetracked by even a mumbled verbal projectile. “The point is that between work and school, I put in a lot of hours away from home. It cost me time with you guys.”
She pushed her plate away. “What are you really trying to say, Dad?”
So much for his different tack. He put his fork down. “Okay. Here’s the deal. I made some choices that sent me on a path in life,” he said, recalling what Thea had said. “I love you and your sister very much and wouldn’t trade either of you for anything. But it was a path that took away my carefree youth. I don’t want to see that happen to you.”
She rolled her eyes. “Here we go.”
“About the pregnancy test,” he said. There was no subtle way to do this.
“I don’t want to talk about it.” She started to get up.
“Sit, Ken. I need to know. Was the test positive?”
“You saw the stick,” she said, her hostility simmering. “Don’t you know?”
“Thea said the results are inaccurate if it’s been sitting for more than twenty minutes.”
She’d known right off the top of her head what the stick was and how to interpret it. Along with the rules that would affect the damn plus or minus sign. He’d had no idea. It must be a female thing.
“Look, Dad, I really don’t want to talk to you about this.”
“Believe me, I don’t like this any better than you. But I need to know if you’re pregnant or not.”
Her cheeks turned pink, and she stared down at her plate. “Not.”
The weight he’d felt on his shoulders lifted and inside he was pumping his arm and hollering hallelujah with an exclamation point. Outside, he struggled not to react at all.
“Okay. That’s good.” Now part two of the conversation that was every father’s worst nightmare. This was even worse than the birds and the bees talk that had led to an explanation of menstruation. At times like this, he was still angry as hell at his ex-wife for walking out. The hurt had disappeared long ago. But the resentment…he would carry that scar forever.
“The thing is, Ken, I’d have to be an idiot not to know you’ve had sex.”
She looked at the table, refusing to meet his gaze. “I so don’t want to talk to you about this. If you’re going to force me to stay, can you just give me the Cliff’s Notes on this lecture?”
“I’m not going to lecture,” he said. “This is a dialogue.”
“Meaning I have to talk?”
“That would make it less like a lecture,” he pointed out. “Let me start by asking how you felt when you did the test.”
She looked as if she wouldn’t answer, then let out a sigh as she glanced up. “Scared,” she admitted.
“I bet. Believe me, I understand. But you dodged a bullet. You get another chance to get it right. By ‘it,’ I mean birth control.”
“I don’t need another chance.”
“If you think you’re immune from the consequences of unprotected sex, I’ve got news for you—”
“I know, Dad. I got the message when my period was late.”
“Then are we talking abstinence here?” he asked, his inner parent doing the dance of joy.
“Yes. I don’t ever want to do ‘it’ again.” Her eyes filled with tears.
He reached out and covered her hand with his own. It pleased him when she didn’t pull away because he couldn’t stand seeing her cry. Everything in him wanted to fix it—like he’d always done when she was a little girl. “What is it, Ken?”
“He was a creep. I can’t believe I was so stupid.”
“What?”
“In health class, the book said to use a condom because it’s not only about not getting pregnant. I asked him to, but he said it doesn’t feel as good. He said if I loved him I’d—” She met his gaze and said, “You know.”
Yeah, he knew. Damn it all to hell, he knew. He tamped down the urge to put his fist through the