The Sheikh's Triplet Baby Surprise (The Sheikh's Baby Surprise Book 3) (26 page)

BOOK: The Sheikh's Triplet Baby Surprise (The Sheikh's Baby Surprise Book 3)
3.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

FOURTEEN

Morgan was sitting in a field of bright green grass. The landscape was lush and beautiful, and it stretched out as far as she could see. Glancing up, the sky was an ethereal shade of blue, and she realized she was sitting under a tree. A man was approaching from a distance, and she watched quietly as he grew closer and closer.

 

It was Morgan’s father.

 

“Hi, pumpkin,” he said as he reached the tree, taking a seat next to her.

 

“Am I dead?” Morgan asked, remembering suddenly that she had been shot. She wondered what had happened, and if Hassan was okay. And the baby!

 

“Don’t worry, everything’s fine. You’re not dead, Morgan. You’re just dreaming.”

 

It felt so good to hear her father’s voice again. Morgan wondered how real this was, but suddenly didn’t care. It was a real as she wanted it to be, and that was that.

 

“It’s good to see you,” she said, smiling.

 

He smiled back at her, placing a gentle hand on hers. It felt so warm, so real.

 

“I’m always with you, sweetheart. Never far off.”

 

“Except when you’re haunting Mom, right?”

 

Morgan’s father grinned. “Yes, only except then. How are you feeling, honey?”

 

Morgan reached down and touched the place above her hip where her gunshot wound would be. Nothing was there—no mark or blemish.

 

“I feel fine. Why?”

 

“I want you to remember this feeling. You’re going to wake up soon, and it’s going to hurt a little.”

 

“Dad?”

 

“Yes, sweetheart?”

 

“Is my baby going to be okay?”

 

Her dad winked at her then, in that way he always did. “She’s going to be just fine.”

 

Morgan’s eyes lit up as she stared at her father. Placing a gentle hand on her belly, she looked out across the field and thought she could see the profile of a little girl in the distance, but she couldn’t be sure.

 

The child began to move further away, and Morgan’s father stood, brushing invisible dirt from his jeans.

 

“You’re doing a good job, Morgan. Keep up the good work,” he said, turning to walk away.

 

Morgan could hear a beeping noise in the distance, and knew her time was about to be up.

 

“Dad?” she asked, and he turned back to face her. “Thank you, for teaching me to live my dreams. I took this job because of you—I wouldn’t have done it without your example.”

 

“Sure you would have. You’re a smart kid,” he replied with a grin, turning around again.

 

Morgan began to feel a pain in her side, and she pressed a hand to her wound. Her fingertips were stained with blood again, and she gasped.

 

Morgan opened her eyes. The hospital room was sterile and white, a single window allowing afternoon light to pour through onto her face.

 

Peering around, she took in her surroundings. She was propped up on a pile of pillows in a hospital bed, surrounded by beeping machines and wires. Glancing down at her hand she saw an IV attached to it, tying her to a fluid bag. She took another breath, and pulled the blanket back a little to take a look at her side.

 

Beneath her hospital gown, her wound was patched up with a large piece of gauze and tape. Pulling the dressing back a little, she observed the stiches there, before replacing the bandage. It looked like a clean wound, just along her side, and far away from her womb, luckily. Still, Morgan felt a twinge of fear for her baby after being involved in such a high-stress situation. No matter what happened in her dreams, Morgan lived in the real world. She needed to know what had happened.

 

Hassan walked in then with a cup of coffee in his hand. He glanced at her and did a double take, finding her awake for the first time in hours.

 

“Morgan! Oh thank God!” he rushed to her side and took her IV-free hand, giving it a gentle squeeze. To her surprise, Morgan saw tears glistening in his perfect eyes.

 

“The baby…” she said, the question written on her face.

 

“Is absolutely fine,” he said, and Morgan released a breath she didn’t know she’d been holding. She smiled then, but Hassan didn’t return the gesture.

 

“What’s wrong?” she asked, trying to fight the grogginess clouding her mind. She longed to get up and walk around, to join the living again, but Hassan’s tears and frown held her in place.

 

“This is all my fault,” he whispered, lowering his head. “I should have left you at the motel, and come back after the job was done. I should never have gotten involved with Daryl in the first place. I was stupid, and I almost got you killed.”

 

“If I hadn’t been there, you would be dead by now,” Morgan said coolly.

 

“You don’t know that,” Hassan replied, holding her hand as tight as he dared.

 

Morgan lifted an eyebrow. “Yes, I do,” she said, and Hassan gave her a small grin.

 

“Maybe a part of me wanted you there for backup, just in case. After all, you’re a former police officer and a damn good detective. I would always prefer to have you by my side…but not like this,” he said, his grin melting as his thoughts returned to her condition.

 

Morgan gave his hand a reassuring squeeze. “No one can control the actions of the deranged, Hassan. Tell me, what happened to Daryl after I blacked out?”

 

Hassan’s expression hardened, and he stared out the window. “I called Carlos back out from his hiding place in the back and told him to call an ambulance. Told him I’d let him keep the money, but if he wanted Daryl out of his life for good he’d have to find a cop that wasn’t corrupted by the guy. Carlos said he knew just the man to call, and I left him to it. From what I’ve heard since, Daryl was sent to jail in Lubbock. I don’t think he’ll be getting out of there any time soon—one look at that guy’s record and the scale of his operation is going to be pretty obvious.”

 

“So you’re saying we beat the bad guy and I solved my missing person case?” Morgan said with a grin.

 

It was good to hear that justice would be served—hopefully. Morgan knew enough about the police force to know that everyone came with a price. If Daryl had enough money, he might be loose on the streets again, but hopefully that wouldn’t happen for a very long time.

 

Hassan gazed back into Morgan’s eyes, placing a gentle hand on her belly. “You two all right?” he asked.

 

Morgan smiled then, a real smile. “We will be. We’re fighters, this little nugget and I. Bullets can’t keep us down!”

 

Hassan laughed, letting his guilt go for the moment and leaning in to kiss Morgan. She held a gentle hand against his face, relishing in the peace that she had been seeking for so long.

 

“I love you,” he said finally, breaking off the kiss and staring deeply into her eyes.

 

Morgan gazed back into those brown depths, looking at a man that she both knew and didn’t know all at once. Life was so crazy, and it made almost no sense, but facing death had a way of clearing up many things. Life was short, and could be taken in an instant.

 

“I love you, too,” she said, resting her forehead against his.

 

They enjoyed each other’s company for the rest of the afternoon, Hassan leaving only briefly to grab dinner for them both. They watched movies and laughed together between doctor check-ins, knowing they’d be cleared to depart the next day, headed for the rest of their lives.

 

Or so they thought.

 

 

FIFTEEN

Later the next morning, Morgan was finishing her packing, her bag full of little toiletries she had stolen from the bathroom. Next to the bag was a little ultrasound picture of her little peanut. Morgan wondered if her dream had any merit, and if she would be having a daughter. She had had many friends give birth before, and all of them had had gender dreams, so she told herself that they would know eventually and let it drop.

 

Placing the photo in her bag, she turned when she heard footsteps entering the room, and froze.

 

Ahmed and Almera stood there in their colorful Middle-Eastern clothing, staring at her.

 

She stared back at them, not at all sure what to say, when Almera walked over and threw her arms around Morgan, crying into her shoulder.

 

“It’s all right,” Morgan said, patting Almera’s back. What were Hassan’s parents doing here? How had they even known where to go?

 

“We saw what happened in the newspaper!” Almera sobbed, stepping back and wiping her heavily-lined eyes.

 

“What?” Morgan asked.

 

Ahmed pulled a sheet of newspaper from a pocket somewhere and handed it to Morgan. Taking it with unsteady fingers, she read the short article from the
Lubbock Evening News
.

 

Wanted criminal Daryl Trent was apprehended yesterday evening after a heated scuffle with a man known only as ‘the Sheikh’. The man reportedly knew of Trent’s crimes and sought to bring him to justice with the help of Houston detective Morgan Springfield. Sources say that Springfield was shot during the exchange, and is currently hospitalized. There is no word yet on her condition. Trent is being held on $100,000 bail at the Lubbock County Jail, charged with multiple counts of assault, larceny, and bribing a police officer.

 

Morgan stared at the short article. It sounded so cold to hear about her injury this way, like she was just something to report.

 

Gazing back up at Hassan’s parents, she found herself at a loss for words. Fortunately, that was when Hassan entered the room, and froze in the doorway.

 

“Mom? Dad?” he asked, glancing from one parent to the other in disbelief. “How did you find me?”

 

Morgan cleared her throat meaningfully and held out the newspaper to him, which he took and read quickly. He looked back at his parents, who were frowning.

 

“’The Sheikh’, Hassan? Really? That’s what you chose as your gang name?” Ahmed’s voice was furious, and Hassan’s shoulders tensed.

 

“I’m not in a gang, Dad! It says right here that I was trying to stop the man, doesn’t it? Why are you assuming the worst?”

 

“Look at you! You’re wearing peasant clothing!” Ahmed said, glancing up and down condescendingly at Hassan’s simple outfit of jeans and a grey T-shirt.

 

“We’re in America. There’s no such thing as a peasant class—everyone is equal here,” Hassan retorted.

 

“Posh! There is a class system here just like there is anywhere else, and it’s time you learned your place in it!”

 

Morgan watched them argue back and forth for a few minutes, her head darting from one Al-Khali to the next. Finally, Almera spoke up.

 

“Would you both just stop?!” she cried, standing between them. “I am sick and tired of this same old fight. I am tired of anger ruling our family instead of love.”

 

Almera looked at Ahmed, her eyes pleading. “Ahmed, we have found our son. He is safe, and he is happy. Look at him—really look!”

 

Ahmed reluctantly met his son’s angry eyes, and Morgan took a look at him too. In spite of the anger rolling off of him, he looked healthy and strong.

 

Ahmed’s shoulders began to lower, and he took a step back. Hassan did the same, responding to his father’s gesture.

 

Ahmed sighed. “You are a man now, and have been for some time. I didn’t want to see it. I wanted to keep you safe, to ensure your security through our wealth. If you return, my son, you will have endless riches and a safe place to call home. You will be able to determine the fate of our nation as a sheikh, as you were meant to do.”

 

“But don’t you see that I’m not cut out for that life? That’s not what I want,” Hassan said, his tone earnest.

 

“Who doesn’t want endless riches? A lifetime of security and power?”

 

“I don’t. I want to make my own way, here. I want to be known for the life I made for myself, not the life that was handed to me. I am not the sheikh you want me to be, Father.”

 

“But who will take on the estate when I am gone? Who will take care of your mother?”

 

Hassan sighed. “You’ll figure it out. I can’t take the position out of guilt. That’s no way to live.”

 

The two men stared at one another for some time, then, quite suddenly, Ahmed pulled his son into a fierce hug, and they stood like that for even longer.

 

Afterwards Hassan went and hugged his mother, who cradled him in her arms, tenderly playing with the strands of hair at the nape of his neck. While Hassan was speaking with his mother, Ahmed approached Morgan and handed her a bulky envelope.

 

“Thank you for protecting my son, and for finding him, Morgan. Please, accept the rest of the payment.”

 

Morgan began to protest, but Ahmed held up a hand. “Consider it a going-away present from a grateful father—no strings attached.”

 

Morgan glanced over at Hassan, still catching up with his mother, who was dusting off invisible dirt from his shoulder. Morgan wondered what kind of mother she would make—would she be able to love her child enough to set them free?

 

Grabbing the envelope, she handed it back to Ahmed, grasping his hand as she did. “We’re going to be all right, Ahmed. We’re capable people with a lot of skills between us. It’s possible for us to make a life here.”

 

Ahmed stared at her, then, clearly struggling with whether or not to keep trying to push the money on her. Finally, he sighed. “You young people these days are very stubborn, you know that?” he said, but there was no venom in his words.

 

Morgan grinned. “You don’t know the half of it.”

 

“Where is she? Where is my daughter?”

 

Morgan’s eyes widened as her own mother entered the room, looking tired and frantic.

 

Ahmed bowed away and turned back to Hassan, the three of them staring at the wild-eyed woman who stormed across the room and pulled Morgan into a firm hug.

 

From behind her mother’s shoulder Morgan watched Hassan give a gentle wave before ushering his parents out, clearly having reconciled. She turned her attention back to her mom.

 

“Mom, it’s okay! I’m all right!”

 

But her mother refused to let her go, and Morgan hugged her just as tight. She would know what it meant to be a mother soon, and she could imagine the fear her mom must have felt finding that article.

 

“I google your name every day to see if you’re in the news. And every day I don’t see it there is the best day of my life…until it wasn’t. Oh, Morgan, you promised me you’d take care of yourself!”

 

Morgan fought off the twist of anger at those words; her mom was worried, that was all. She took a steadying breath.

 

“I’m fine, Mom. We’re all fine.”

 

“Who was that family in here? I didn’t know you had any Middle-Eastern friends,” her mom said, pulling back from her hug and playing absently with Morgan’s hair, tidying it.

 

Morgan hesitated. “It’s kind of a long story,” she said, not wanting to give away any of the details. Subconsciously she placed a hand on her belly, and instantly regretted it.

 

Her mom’s gaze followed her hand, and she gasped. “You’re pregnant?! And still putting yourself in harm’s way?”

 

“Mom, when are you going to trust that I can take care of myself?”

 

“The day you stop getting shot and I have to read about it in the paper!”

 

Morgan’s nostrils flared as she fought to control her temper. She had a life growing inside her now, and she needed to be calm.

 

“Mom. I am going to do what I need to do to be happy. If that means putting bad guys in jail, so be it. If that means going into scary parts of town to save a girl who’s been kidnapped, so be it. I will not stand by and look out only for myself because it suits you. That’s not how it works.”

 

Morgan’s mother stared at her with tears in her eyes, while Morgan gazed back wistfully at the hospital room door, wishing that somehow she could have had Hassan’s experience instead of this one.

 

“Come home with me, Morgan. We can raise the baby together, in Florida. Just you and me.”

 

“No.” Morgan said, shuddering at the thought. “I love him, Mom.”

 

“Really, Morgan. How long have you known that man? You’ve never once brought him up to me.”

 

“I’ve known him long enough to know that he loves me and this baby, and I know that we’re going to have an amazing life together.”

 

“Well, you do that,” her mom sniffed, rolling her shoulders back.

 

Morgan watched as her mother turned on a heel and stormed out of the room, leaving the door open in her wake. She felt hollow inside, seeing her mom’s back like that, but the woman refused to let Morgan be the owner of her own life. Who would she become if she was forced to live with her mom in Florida? Who would her child become?

 

Hassan entered the room again then, his expression concerned. “Are you okay? Your mom just stormed out of here, didn’t say anything to us on her way out.”

 

Morgan’s eyes filled with tears, and she buried herself in Hassan’s arms. He let her cry, pulling back to cradle her face in his hands and wipe away her tears with his thumbs.

 

“Not all of us get a happy ending with our parents,” she said with a sad smile.

 

Hassan continued to hold her close until her breathing calmed. “Maybe not,” he said calmly. “But you get a new beginning as a parent yourself, a chance to be the mom you always wanted. Let’s focus on that for now, okay?”

 

Morgan nodded, zipping up her bag.

 

Hassan took it from her, strapping it across his shoulder, and the two of them exited to the lobby of the hospital. His parents were waiting for them by the sliding doors.

 

“Where will you go?” Almera asked, hugging Hassan one more time.

 

Hassan and Morgan glanced at one another.

 

“We’re not sure, yet,” Hassan said. “But we’ll let you know in case you’d ever like to come and visit.”

 

“Oh, we will,” Ahmed assured them, hugging them both.

 

Morgan felt a little better as she slid into the passenger seat, pulling out the ultrasound image of her baby again.

 

“Do you think I’ll make a good mother, Hassan?”

 

“I think you will make the best mother,” he said without hesitation, starting the car and pulling out of the lot.

 

When they got to the main road, he glanced over at her. “East or West?”

 

“West,” Morgan said. “I’ve always wanted to see what life is like on the West Coast.”

 

Hassan turned the car toward the highway, guiding them in that direction.

 

“Then let’s just see where life takes us, shall we?”

Other books

The Lost Swimmer by Ann Turner
Mischief in Miami by Nicole Williams
Rocks in the Belly by Jon Bauer
Summer Breeze by Catherine Palmer
Exiles by Alex Irvine
Midnight Kiss by Robyn Carr, Jean Brashear, Victoria Dahl
Innocence by Lee Savino
The Dervish House by Mcdonald, Ian