Extreme Measures. Brenda Harlen. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Brenda Harlen
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия: Mills & Boon Vintage Intrigue
Жанр произведения: Ужасы и Мистика
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781472076755
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one who will have to deal with the fallout when you’re not around anymore.”

      “I’m not going anywhere.”

      “What happens if your contract is renewed in Texas?”

      “I’m not going to debate with you about something that might or might not happen,” he said.

      “She’s the one who’ll be hurt when you leave town again.”

      “Why are you so quick to assume that I’d abandon her?”

      Nikki looked away. She was afraid for Carly, but she was also afraid for herself. Colin affected her as no other man ever had, and she couldn’t bear to see him walk out on her again. And she knew that he would leave. Sooner or later, Colin always left.

      “Because you’re always looking for something better. And when a situation becomes a little too difficult, you walk away rather than trying to make it work.”

      “Are you still talking about Carly?” he asked. “Or us?”

      Nikki flushed. “Obviously our history has colored my perceptions, but you can’t blame me for wanting to protect Carly.”

      “I would never hurt her, Nikki.”

      I would never hurt you, Nikki. Yes, she’d heard those words before. She’d even believed them at one time. Not anymore.

      “If you really want to be her father, you have to start thinking about what’s best for Carly. You need to consider how it will affect her when you walk out of her life as abruptly as you’ve walked into it.”

      “Dammit, Nicole. What do you want from me? What am I supposed to do to prove that I’m committed?”

      “I don’t know,” she admitted. “But you don’t get to call yourself her father until you’re ready to take the responsibility of being a father.”

      “Maybe we should see what a family-court judge says about it.”

      The words, once they’d been spoken, surprised Colin as much as they surprised Nikki. He certainly hadn’t come over here this morning with the intention of threatening to take her to court. But he should have expected the unexpected—nothing had gone according to plan since he’d walked back into this town.

      And although he was tempted to follow through on the threat, to force Nikki to accept him as part of Carly’s life, he knew he couldn’t. Court documents were a matter of public record, accessible to anyone who cared to look. Filing a legal claim to his daughter would not only announce his location to the world but potentially endanger Carly as well.

      Despite Detective Brock’s phone call last night advising of Duncan Parnell’s arrest, Colin remained wary. Unless and until Parnell signed a confession, he couldn’t let himself believe the threat had passed. He couldn’t let his guard down for a minute, which meant he couldn’t sue for custody of his child.

      But Nikki didn’t know this, and her face drained of all color in response to his impulsive statement. “You wouldn’t dare.”

      “Don’t tempt me,” he warned.

      She blinked back the tears that shimmered in her eyes. “I’m only trying to do what’s best for Carly. Why can’t you see that?”

      “How can not knowing her father be best?”

      “It has to be better than knowing he didn’t care enough to stick around.”

      He raked his fingers through his hair. “Dammit, Nikki. I didn’t know you were pregnant.”

      “And I didn’t think you’d care!”

      Her outburst, and the depth of her anger, stunned him into silence for a moment.

      “How could you think that?” he asked at last. “How could you think I’d walk away from my child?”

      “I didn’t know what to think,” Nikki said bluntly. “But I didn’t think the man who’d told me he’d love me forever would serve me with divorce papers ten months after our wedding, either.”

      “You know why I ended our marriage,” Colin said.

      “No, I don’t. I’ve listened to all the reasons you’ve given to justify your decision, but I still don’t understand how you could walk out when you supposedly loved me. How could I be sure that you wouldn’t walk out on your child, too?”

      “Because I wouldn’t,” he said simply.

      He might be a lot of things, but irresponsible wasn’t one of them. Having a baby wasn’t something they’d planned, but if he’d known she was carrying his child, he would have done everything in his power to make their marriage work.

      “You told me you didn’t want kids.”

      He frowned, having only a vague recollection of a conversation in which she’d asked him about children. It had been shortly after their wedding, and he’d been too preoccupied with his new wife and his lost career to think about anything else. He probably had said he didn’t want them, certainly not at the time.

      “Maybe I did,” he agreed. “But there’s a huge difference between the theory of a child and the reality of a little girl who is my own flesh and blood.”

      Which reminded him of another issue that had nagged at the back of his mind since he’d first set eyes on Carly. He’d been stunned, not just by the fact that Nikki had had a child, but by the realization that he’d fathered the child. Because if there was one thing in his life that Colin had always been circumspect about, it was birth control.

      He always used protection. Even after he and Nikki had been married, he’d kept a supply of condoms in the bedside table. He’d never made love to her without one.

      Except…

      “When is Carly’s birthday?” he asked abruptly.

      She showed no hint of surprise at the question. “October sixth.”

      He did a quick mental calculation, confirmed from her response what he’d only just begun to suspect: their child had been conceived the very last weekend they’d been together. The weekend he’d come home to bury his father.

      Nikki nodded, somehow following his thoughts, confirming his conclusion.

      That weekend had been hell for Colin. He’d been overwhelmed with grief and guilt, and he’d willingly lost himself in the comfort she’d offered without thought of the consequences—without thought of anything but how much he needed her. He’d taken advantage of her warmth and her compassion and her love, and then he’d walked out on her.

      He scrubbed a hand over his face. The separation necessitated by his job had been difficult for both of them, and that weekend he’d finally acknowledged the truth of what his father had been saying—Nikki deserved more than a husband who was gone most of the time. She deserved so much more than he could give her.

      He’d ended their marriage not because he didn’t want to be with her, but because he wanted her to have the life she deserved. A husband who could be with her, the family she’d always wanted. It had almost killed him to think of her with someone else, but he’d forced himself to walk away, to give her that chance.

      At the time, he’d honestly believed he was doing what was best for Nikki. As she’d done what she had for their daughter.

      So how could he blame her for keeping her pregnancy a secret when her reasons so closely paralleled his own?

      Nikki finally sank down into one of the vacant kitchen chairs, obviously drained by their argument. “I think what’s more important than what either one of us did five years ago is what you want to do now.”

      “I want to be a father to my daughter.”

      Her hesitation spoke volumes, and had his anger rising again.

      “For how