Read His Pregnancy Bargain Online
Authors: Kim Lawrence
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Contemporary
âWell, anyway, I'm not filthy richâ¦not in the way you mean.'
His brows arched sardonically. âThere's more than one way?'
She flashed him an unamused grin. âDad left Mum well provided for, but the bulk of his estate went to me,' she admitted. âBut I don't take any money out of the estate,'
she went on to assure him. âI went over things with John, and he explained that Dad ploughed the money back into the estate. He managed to do a lot over the years but when he bought the place it was really run down; there's still a lot of work to be done.'
âI thought your family had lived in the place since for ever?'
âThey have, but Dad's grandfather had to sell the place to pay off death duties. Dad bought it back years later when he'd made his money. I suppose he wanted to make sure that history didn't repeat itselfâthat's why he handed the place over to me years before he died. Up until now it hasn't really been feasible for me to live there on a permanent basis. John will be pleased that I'm moving back,' she reflected thoughtfully.
That name again. âJust who the hell is John?' he demanded.
A perplexed frown pleated Megan's brow.
âJohnâ¦?'
The overt hostility Luc was radiating bewildered her. âJohn is the estate manager. To be honest I don't know how we'd cope without him,' she confided. âHe's been totally marvellousâa tower of strength.'
More muscle than brain, Luc translated. Why did women go for men like that? âI'm sure he is,' he agreed pleasantly. He probably thought marrying the owner would be a good career move.
Megan warmed to her theme. âThe hours he puts in are unbelievable; I sometimes feel quite guilty,' she admitted.
âSo your mother's been running the estate for youâ¦with the help of John?'
âGracious, no, she'd
hate
that. When Dad died, John just carried on running things. He's very committed. He runs things by me but I trust him implicitly.' The hints he'd been making recently about retiring were a source of concern. There were not many like John out thereâplenty of people
with impressive paper credentials but not many with a genuine love of the land.
âAnd how did your mother feel about all this?'
âHow do you mean?'
âBeing effectively disinherited. Being out of the loop?'
âRelieved,' Megan said immediately.
Luc looked sceptical and, annoyed by his response, she pushed home her message.
âYou can take the girl out of the cityâ¦' Her slender shoulders lifted expressively before she went on to explain. âMum got married and moved into the place with Dad when she was eighteen. She
tried
to love it because he did. Dad,' she recalled with a reminiscent smile, âalmost threw a fit when she suggested moving into a vacant cottage on the estate.'
âThat must have put a lot of pressure on their marriage,' Luc observed.
âNot really, they were both prepared to compromise. Dad bought the house in town and spent time there even though he hated it. He said if Mum could spend time in a drafty old pile with bad plumbing, he could put up with London traffic and fashionable dinner parties.'
She knew she'd lost him before she'd reached the end of her explanation. Luc had tuned her out.
She watched as he ran his fingers along his jaw. His expression indicated his thoughts were not just elsewhereâ¦but another solar system.
âThis changes things.'
âIt
does
�' she said, expectant.
What?
He flicked her an impatient look.
âObviously.
If we're not going to get our own place together, I suppose the logical alternative would be for me to move in with you.'
Mouth open, she looked at him in disbelief. Had he really said
logical
�
âDid I miss somethingâ¦? Get a place together? Since
when were we getting a place together?' Had he planned on mentioning this at some point? she wonderedâ¦
âAh.' His speculative gaze skimmed her face. âYou were thinking of marriage?'
She gasped. âNo, I was
not
thinking of marriage!' she denied, turning prettily pink.
âMost women are,' he observed, âno matter what they say to the contrary. Are you telling me it hasn't even crossed your mind?'
She directed a narrow-eyed look at the tall, lean figure sprawled on the sofa; his contemptuous attitude made her want to hit him. âNo, it damn well hasn't! I can't think of anything more stupid than marrying someone you have not the slightest thing in common with.'
âOutside the bedroomâ¦' Megan froze at this soft addition, her eyes sealed with his brilliant cynical gazeâ¦and beyond the cynicism was a primitive hunger that made the core of heat in her stomach tighten.
His sensual mouth twisted. âNot that we made it to the bedroom.'
By sheer force of will she made herself smile back as though the subject were one that amused her. Inside her head she could feel every inch of his hard, vital body pressed up against her. She had perfect recall of every insane, intoxicating moment up to and including the moment of shattering climax. If he asked, she'd do it again in a heartbeat. This insight really shook her.
âI didn't come here to ask you to make an honest woman of me,' she croaked contemptuously.
âWhy did you come here, Megan?'
âDo you need to ask?' she exclaimed indignantly. âFine! I came because I thought you had a right to know about the baby, and I'm not cold enough to send news like this via an email. The fact is I wouldn't marry you if you came gift-wrapped!'
âThat makes you my sort of woman.
The fact is,
Megan, I've been married once and I'm not very good at it.'
She widened her eyes and, not wanting to drop Uncle Malcolm in it, feigned ignorance. âYou were marriedâ¦?'
My sort of womanâ¦
If only that were true, she thought sadly. How different this would feel if she were carrying the baby of the man who loved her.
He nodded. âFor ten years.'
This time her surprise was genuine. Ten years was a long time! âYou must have been very young,' she observed.
âI was twenty, Grace, my wife, was a couple of years older.'
âWere you unfaithful?
There was a startled silence during which Megan wished herself anywhere but here and now.
Me and my wretched tongue!
âNo, I was never unfaithful,' he said, scanning her flushed face, his glance lingering longest on the full soft contours of her mouth. He pressed back harder into the seat; it was getting increasingly difficult to ignore the voice that urged him to part those delicious rosy lips and slide his tongue inside her mouth.
âBut I was a lousy husband,' he framed matter-of-factly, âwho wasn't there when my wife needed me.'
A comment like that and you'd have to be not human not to be curious, but from the closed expression on Luc's face and his body language as he picked up his mug of tea it was obvious that, as far as he was concerned, the subject was closed.
I'll respect his privacy, she decided.
Almost as soon as she had made this resolve, a sudden thought came to her that made it impossible for her to honour it. âDid you and your wifeâ¦did youâ¦have you got any children?'
Why hadn't she thought of this earlier? She had been assuming parenthood was as new an experience for him as
it was for her, when for all she knew Luc might have a brood of children already!
âGrace was pregnant once,' he told her without any discernible expression in his voice, âbut she lost the baby.'
He'd come to realise that by that point in their marriage they had drifted so far apart that the prospect of the baby had been the only thing holding them together. Perhaps if he'd spent more time with Grace and less trying to make money to buy her the pretty things she loved things might have turned out differently. The irony was he had hated the job that he had put before his wife.
Megan felt the deep, abiding pain behind his pragmatic words as if it were her own. She wanted to hold him so badly it hurt.
âI'm so sorry.' The trite response was wildly inadequate, but she couldn't think of anything else to say.
His bleak eyes narrowed on her face. âShe had a fall,' he supplied without her asking.
It had been at the height of the scandal and the press pack, who had been after bloodâspecifically hisâhad latched onto the personal tragedy. Without anyone printing anything libelous, they had managed to intimate that there was a question mark over the accident.
Had the wife fallen or had she been pushed? Grim statistics about domestic violence would coincidentally appear on the same page. The fact he had been in Spain trying to locate his treacherous partner at the time had been no obstacle to a good rumour.
âThat must have been terrible for you both.'
âMaybe it wasn't meant to be,' he reflected. âThe baby had a congenital abnormality; they picked it up on a scan. Nothing life-threatening or anythingâa cleft palate.'
Megan nodded. She had a friend who had been born with the condition, not that you could tellâthe surgery she had had as a child had been very successful.
âGrace,' he recalled in a voice wiped clean of all emotion,
âwanted to have the pregnancy terminated when they told us. She couldn't stand the idea of having a baby that wasn't perfect,' he explained.
Megan tried not to let her natural repugnance to the idea show on her face. You couldn't judge another person's actions without standing in their shoes, her father had always said, and he was right. Who knew what pressures the other woman had been under?
âBut she changed her mind.'
âI changed it for her,' Luc admitted. âAnd in the end she lost him anyway. If I hadn't pressured her she wouldn't have had to go through the pain and trauma of a miscarriage.'
âIt wasn't your fault!' Megan protested, horrified by this insight into the burden of guilt he carried with him. âIt was an accident, a terrible accident,' she added, her voice thick with emotion.
Her spontaneous outburst brought his eyes to her face. The tears trembling on the end of her dark lashes made his jaw clench. âPlease don't go all soft and understanding on me, Megan.'
His sardonic sneer, the sudden cold hostility in his manner, made Megan tense.
âI can see you're just aching to be a shoulder for me to cry on. Frankly I don't have any use for your pity. And before you suggest therapy, I'm totally in touch with my feelings,' he pronounced caustically. âAnd I don't believe in living in the past or pointlessly dwelling on things I have no ability to change.'
To have her sympathy thrown back in her face was incredibly hurtful. Megan instinctively hit back. âIf you're so
over it
â¦' she gave a derisive snort and sketched invisible inverted commas in the air ââ¦tell me how is it you got writer's block when your wife wanted a divorce?'
His eyes narrowed to suspicious slits. âHow would you know that?'
Oh, God!
She felt as if guilt were written all over her face. âNever mind howâ'
âOh, but I do mind,' he cut in silkily. âI'm assuming you've had a heart-to-heart with Malcolmâ¦' An icy note of menace entered his voice as he added softly, âJust exactly what did Malcolm tell you?' His expression was so savage that Megan began to feel concerned for her uncle.
âMalcolm didn't tell me anythingâ¦well, he might have mentioned in passing that you had got divorced.'
âSo you already knew I'd been married?'
She nodded. âAnd don't blame Uncle Malcolm; he didn't want to tell me where you were. In fact he refused point-blank until I told him about the baby. He was pretty shocked.'
âAnd exactly who else knew about the baby before meâ¦?'
M
EGAN
stuck her chin out. She was getting pretty cheesed off with Luc's attitude. âI told my mother,' she announced. âDo you have a problem with that? Actually, I don't care if you do because what I do or don't do is none of your damned business. You may prefer to grit your teeth and be a
man
when your life falls apart, and I'd be the first to defend your right to behave like a total prat.' She paused briefly for breath; she was so mad that she was shaking.
At any other time the gobsmacked expression on Luc's face might have made her laugh, but right now she was too angry to see any humour in this situation.
âBut when I'm upset,' she continued, â
I
talk to people, the people who care about me!' She swallowed as her voice developed a wobble. âThey'd be hurt if I didn't.'
For a moment Luc sat there watching her struggling not to cry. âThat's some temper you have.'
She sniffed and found a tissue placed in her hand.
âThank you. I'm generally considered to be a pretty placid sort of person.'
He grinned. âSure you are.'
âIt's not me,' she protested. âIt's you! You justâ¦' The tissue between her clenched fingers mangled as she struggled to come up with a suitable definition for what he did to her. âYou're hopeless,' she pronounced irritably.
âAnd you're delicious.'
Her mouth fell open at the unexpected tribute.
Delicious�
For God's sake, don't start reading too much into it, she cautioned herself.
âI'm glad you had people to share this with over the past few weeks, Megan,' he continued as though he'd not said
anything out of the ordinary. âYou're lucky you have people who care about you.'
âPeople care about youâ¦or they would do if you let them!' She was going to have to stop blurting out the first thing that popped into her head. âThat isâ¦'
Without warning he leaned across and brushed a strand of soft honey hair from her brow. This time he made contact, his touch was brief, but enough to send a shiver of intense longing through her bodyâ¦
âDon't worry too muchâthere are still one or two people who are prepared to put up with me.' It had been a brutal method of learning who your real friends were, but he did have a group of loyal friends who had stood by him during the scandal.
Megan flushed. She felt a total idiotâof course he had friends!
âAnd would you be one of those people who cared if I let you, Megan?'
Megan stiffened and felt her heightened colour intensify until she felt as though she were burning up. She was going to have to learn to guard her tongue in the future.
âWell, you're my baby's father; it would be better if we learnt how to get on.'
âThat's a reply but not to the question I asked.'
âIt's the only reply you're getting.'
Her grim retort drew a reluctant bark of laughter from Luc. Then his expression hardened. âGrace and I separated not long after she lost the baby, but we wouldn't have if the baby had survived.'
âCan you be so sure?' Megan wanted to know.
Luc responded without hesitation with a firm nod of his dark head. It would have taken compromises but he would have made it work. âA child needs two parents, whether they are married or not is irrelevant,' Luc announced, nursing the hot drink between his big hands. âWhat matters is that they operate as a single unit where that child is concerned.'
âI think they call that a family. Hardly a new concept, Luc.'
While she respected his views, and even shared them, there was no way she would countenance going along with what he planned. Her smooth brow creased, she searched his lean face. It was weirdâwhile she felt emotionally and physically drained by this difficult scene, now that it had sunk in that he was going to be a father Luc appeared incredibly energised. Never an easy man to say no to, he looked so charged up and resolute at the moment that she knew it was going to be difficult to make him recognise that his idea was a non-starter.
âLike they say, if it ain't broke don't fix it,' he quoted. âFamilies work.'
âNot all families are nice or safe places to grow up in,' Megan pointed out gently.
His eyes narrowed on her face. âBut yours was?'
She nodded. âI was very lucky,' she agreed.
âWould you deny your child what you enjoyed?'
She gave a sigh of frustration, he was trying to tie her in knots and mostly succeeding. âIt isn't the same thing,' she gritted.
âWhy?'
Her eyes slid evasively from his. âMy parents loved one another.'
âI loved my wifeâ¦' Or thought he had. Lately he had begun to appreciate that what he and Grace had shared had been an infatuation, strong, but not long-lasting.
His honesty had inflicted more pain than she would have believed mere words could.
âBut
love
isn't a magic formula for happy ever after,' he continued. âMy father brought me up alone. He didn't have any optionâmy mother died when I was ten.' His dark lashes swept downwards, making it impossible for her to read his expression. âI don't want that for my child.'
This explained his determination to make sacrifices for
his unborn child. The image of Luc as a small boy without a mother flashed across her vision and immediately Megan felt the sting of tears behind her eyelids. Maybe it was her newly awakened maternal instincts that made her empathise so strongly with the motherless child? Then again, she had grown to accept that all her emotional responses seemed to be heightened where Luc was concerned.
âAre you all right?' His deep voice held a rough note of concern.
She blinked to clear her blurred vision. Her throat ached as she shook her head and tried to get a grip. âGod, yes, I'm fine. Totally fine,' she assured him, smiling to illustrate the point.
âWhen did you last have anything to eat?' He gave a self-condemnatory grimace. âI should have thought.'
Megan pushed her hair behind her ears. âI had something on the motorway.' The
something
had been a sandwich, which had tasted like plastic; she had left most of it untouched on her plate.
âThat was hours ago.'
âWas it?' The last twenty-four hours had been such a blur that she had lost all sense of time.
His searching scrutiny took in the dark shadows beneath her big china-blue eyes. âYou're running on pure adrenaline, aren't you?' he accused.
âPlease don't fussâI hate being fussed.'
Her frown deepened ominously as he talked right across her petulant complaint. âYou've got to look after yourself now,' he reproved.
âI doâ¦I amâ¦'
âHow about an omelette? You sit thereâ¦better still, lie there, and I'llâ¦'
As he began to rise Megan reached out and caught him by the wrist. She lifted her eyes to his and thought she saw something move at the back of Luc's eyes as he stared
fixedly at the pale, slim fingers curved over his much darker skin.
Self-consciously she let her hand fall away and struggled to regain her composure.
The muscles in Luc's brown throat rippled as he swallowed hard, but still he didn't meet her eyes.
âI couldn't eat nowâ¦not with things the way they are.'
He turned his head and their eyes locked, smoky grey on shimmering blue. Megan's breathing slowed, everything slowed as she registered the build-up of tension in the air around them.
Even in the privacy of her own thoughts Megan was reluctant to use the only adjective that could begin to describe this dangerous tensionâ
sexual
. It had a tactile quality and like an invisible envelope it enclosed them in a highly charged bubble.
âThe way they areâ¦?'
The throaty rasp of his voice vibrated through her. âI'm sorry that you didn't have the sort of upbringing every single child deserves, but proposing that we set up home together is no solution. You can't realistically expect us to pretend that we are a coupleâ¦?' She shook her head. âIt's a crazy idea. I can't even believe you're suggesting it.'
âI don't want my child growing up with a father he sees every other weekend. I want to be an integral part of his life.'
âI appreciate that,' she said softly. âBut you have to see that living under the same roof, but leading separate lives, is a non-starter even in a house as big as Underwood.'
He frowned. âWho said anything about leading separate lives?'
Megan went pale. âWell, naturally I just assumedâ¦' She swallowed and directed a questioning look at his chiselled features. âYou're not seriousâ¦?'
âI'm deadly serious,' he assured her grimly. âActually I've never been more serious in my life.'
Megan lifted a hand to her spinning head. âYou want us to
live
togetherâ¦? Live together likeâ¦share the sameâ¦?' She gulped and began to shake her head vigorously.
âIsn't that what I've been saying? It's the practical solution.'
âI don't want to be practical,' she wailed. âI wantâ¦' Her eyes lifted to his and she stopped dead just before she blurted out the forbidden,
I want you to love me!
Luc wasn't sympathetic. âYou don't want to be pregnant but you are; people do things they don't want to all the time.'
Megan found this contention deeply depressing, she had to assume that living with her came under the heading of
Things he didn't want to do
. His what's-your-problem attitude stemmed from the fact he was willing to do anything for the sake of his unborn child.
There were any number of flaws in his reasoning, which Megan suspected had more to do with emotion than common sense, but she had to admit he made his case pretty effectively. If she said no she would be putting her own selfish needs before those of their unborn child. She took a couple of deep breaths to calm herself.
âWhat about love?'
Luc studied her in silence for a moment before responding, âYou want me to say I love you?'
âI want you to consider the very real possibility that one or both of us will fall in love for real at some point. What's that going to do to our child?'
âI'm not going to fall in love with anyone.'
âIt's not something you plan.' She could attest to this personally. Had she planned to walk into that flat and find a man who would change her life totally? âAnd you may have given up hope of finding a soulmate, but I haven't.'
Luc's regard became cold as stone as his eyes narrowed on her flushed defiant face. âDid you have anyone in particular in mind?'
Megan frowned; his soft query confused her. âI don't know what you mean.'
âHe wouldn't happen to be called John, would he?'
âJohn? I don't know anyâ' She broke off, a bubble of laughter forming in her throat. âJohnâ¦you mean John Saxon, my estate manager?'
How many
Johns
did she want? he wondered sourly. âThe John who runs the estate single-handed, the one who is waiting your return with bated breath.'
âJohn is very attractive, but he celebrated his sixtieth birthday last year. It was a great nightâhis wife, three sons and eight grandchildren were all there,' she said, taking malicious pleasure from the bands of dark colour that appeared across the angles of his cheekbones.
âWere you jealous? My God!' She gaped, studying his face. âYou were, weren't you?'
Luc's mouth thinned. âI don't want another man bringing up my child.'
âWell, there's not much chance of that happening in the near future,' she admitted.
âSo you're not planning on falling in love?'
âThat's an extremely stupid question.'
âHumour me and answer it.'
âLike I already told you, it's not the sort of thing you plan,' she retorted, studying her feet. âBut as I can't rule it out totally at some future date,' she lied, âyou'd better get used to the idea.'
His eyes narrowed to slits. âI don't damn well want to get used to the idea!'
âThat's not a very sensible attitude.'
âSensible!'
His sensual upper lip curled in derision. âSense doesn't come into any of this. No buts,' he added before she had even opened her mouth. âJust sit there and be quiet while I make you some food.' He scanned her face with an unnerving laser-like intensity before pronouncing, âYou look absolutely awful.'
Luc was efficient in the kitchen, but then, she thought, he did everything efficiently. The omelette, which he filled with mushrooms and chives from a pot on the window ledge, was delicious. The crusty bread he spread with butter was equally tasty.
Luc brought the food to her on a tray, which she balanced on her lap. He didn't eat; he just sat and watched her, which ought to have put her off, but once she started eating Megan discovered she was so ravenous that nothing could stop her enjoying her impromptu meal.
âThank you, that was delicious,' she said primly when her plate was clean.
âI feed all the women I get pregnant.'
The self-recrimination in his voice made her frown. âI don't blame you you know.'
He removed the tray and shot her a strange look. âI know you don't.'
Megan puzzled over his somewhat enigmatic response as she listened to him banging things in the kitchen area. After a long, exhausting drive and all the days tension, a full stomach and the warm fire had a predictable effect.
She'd just close her eyes for a few moments.
Â
The next thing she knew the room was in darkness. Her fingers touched an unfamiliar throw that was laid over her. Totally disorientated, Megan sat bolt upright with a start.
âDon't panic,' a voice in the darkness soothed.
It all came flooding back. âI fell asleep.'