Luke nodded. He knew what it was like to have things work out in ways you never expected. “I’m widowed.”
“Sorry.”
Luke nodded. “Same to you.”
Silence. Knowing there was no easy way to broach this, Luke forged on. “Meg has a son.”
Kip did a double take, looking just as shocked as Luke had been initially. “Meg—a single mother?” Kip asked in a low, stunned voice.
Luke nodded. He waited, but to his frustration, Kip did not leap to the conclusion Luke would have expected him to make. Which meant he was going to have to spell it out for him. “Jeremy is five now,” Luke said patiently. “His birthday is December first. He’ll be six.”
Kip’s brow furrowed. “Did Meg adopt this son of hers?” he asked finally.
“No.” Luke exhaled slowly. “Jeremy is her biological child.”
Another pause. “I don’t suppose she was artificially inseminated,” Kip guessed reluctantly after a moment.
Luke shook his head. Again, silence fell between the two men. Wondering what it was going to take for Kip to own up to his responsibility, Luke pushed on with difficulty. “The thing is, Jeremy’s a terrific kid. And he wants to know who his father is.”
Kip continued to look baffled. “You want my law firm to find this guy?”
“I want you to take responsibility for him.”
“Whoa.” Kip lifted both hands and held them in front of him like a shield. “No can do.”
Luke had been afraid he might be met with this type of reaction. If so, it explained a lot about what Meg had been going through. “This boy needs a father,” Luke said firmly.
“I understand that,” Kip said readily enough, leaning forward in his chair. “I even sympathize. And if he were mine, I wouldn’t hesitate to do right by him. But he isn’t mine, Luke.”
So Meg hadn’t told Kip she was pregnant with Jeremy, just as Luke had thought. “Going by the birth date, you were still dating Meg when Jeremy was conceived.”
“Which makes it all the worse.” Kip frowned.
Luke’s glance narrowed. “What do you mean?”
“Do you know why Meg and I broke up?” Kip rubbed the back of his neck, looking increasingly uncomfortable.
Luke shrugged. “All she would ever say on the subject was you two wanted different things out of life.”
“Sounds like Meg.” Kip shifted in his chair and shook his head. “Discreet to the max.”
Luke waited.
Finally Kip rubbed his jaw and continued, “It boiled down to a couple of things. One, I was jealous of her increasingly intimate friendship with you. And two, she wouldn’t sleep with me. Wouldn’t even come close, which in turn led to a whole host of other problems between us. So you see,” Kip concluded heavily, “whoever Jeremy’s father is, it sure as hell isn’t me.”
TWO HOURS LATER, Luke was back in Laramie and still reeling from what he had discovered. He called Patricia Weatherby on his cell phone—learned all was fine with the girls—and asked for a little more time.
He drove over to John and Lilah McCabe’s ranch. He knew as soon as they ushered him in that he was interrupting something important. They had paperwork scattered across the kitchen table and a laptop computer plugged into the phone line. “I should have called first,” Luke apologized.
“Nonsense. We’re just doing the paperwork for our trip to Central America in a few weeks. We’re doing medical relief there.”
Luke hadn’t known. “That’s wonderful,” he said as he pulled up a chair alongside them.
“What’s up?” John asked, as ready to help as ever.
Luke drew a breath and worked to ease the tenseness of his muscles. “There’s no way to broach this subject gracefully, so I’m just going to be blunt. I need to ask you a few questions in complete confidence, and they’re really important, or believe me, I wouldn’t be here right now, inquiring.”
Lilah and John exchanged concerned glances. “Go ahead,” John said as Lilah got up to pour them all some coffee.
“Was Meg Lockhart’s son, Jeremy, born here in Laramie?”
“Yes.” A quizzical expression on her face—clearly she didn’t understand why Luke was asking—Lilah set a stoneware mug down in front of Luke and filled it to the brim. Then she topped off John’s mug as well as her own.
“Was he born prematurely?” Luke forged on. “Say by about a month?”
Again Lilah and John exchanged looks that indicated they didn’t want to be in the middle of this “situation” between Luke and Meg any more than Luke wanted them there. “I don’t think that’s a question you should be asking us,” Lilah said finally, as she returned the glass carafe to the warmer and returned to her seat at the table. “Medical records are confidential.”
“I know that. I also know I could get the answer easily enough by asking around town. And I don’t want to do that. I figure enough eyebrows have been raised regarding Jeremy’s paternity as it is.”
Abruptly John McCabe looked as protective as any parent. “Have you asked Meg these questions?”
Luke nodded grimly. “I talked to her about Jeremy’s paternity yesterday. She was evasive, to say the least.”
John rubbed his jaw and continued to regard Luke thoughtfully. “And yet you still think this is your business?”
Luke took a sip of Lilah’s hot, delicious coffee. “If Jeremy was born prematurely, it is.”
John and Lilah exchanged troubled glances. “You’re saying you two…that Jeremy might be…?”
Luke sighed and shoved a hand through his hair. “Meg and I got to be very good friends when she was doing graduate work in Chicago. It was a strictly platonic relationship because we were both romantically involved with other people—except for the night her parents were killed. That night pretty much ended our friendship, at least as far as Meg was concerned.”
John and Lilah looked at each other again, sighed and linked hands. “This explains a lot,” Lilah said eventually. “Like why Meg was so upset when she learned John had met you at a medical conference and recruited you to take over for him. And why she’s been ducking you ever since.”
“I wouldn’t be asking you this if it weren’t very important to Jeremy, Meg and me.” Luke went on to explain about Jeremy’s running away the previous evening. “Despite Meg’s denials to the contrary, I assumed by Jeremy’s birth date that his father was Meg’s former boyfriend, Kip Brewster. I know Kip. I know Kip can be a little arrogant or over-the-top at times when it comes to getting what he wants, but I also knew he would want to take responsibility for his son, if he knew about him. But I just got back from talking to Kip. He says it’s not him—he never slept with her. If it wasn’t him…” He paused before stating, “I know Meg.”
She was not, had never been, promiscuous. She wouldn’t have slept with someone on the spur of the moment under normal circumstances. The only reason they had been together that way was that she had just found out her parents had died, and she was out of her mind with grief. Helpless to do anything about the circumstances that had robbed Meg and her sisters of their parents, helpless to get Meg back to Texas any sooner than the first flight out the following morning, Luke had been desperate to just get her through the night and comfort Meg in any way she wanted or needed. It had only been later, after they’d experienced such mind-blowing passion, that Luke had discovered that hot, ardent lovemaking hadn’t been what Meg wanted or needed, at least not on any rational