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She was tossing his words back at him. Odd that he didn’t mind. Kyle inclined his head. “You’re a quick study.”
“Whenever possible.” On her feet again, telling herself that the wobbly feeling in her thighs was a result of not finishing the single sandwich she’d allowed herself for lunch, Abby hesitated as she studied Kyle’s expression. Damn it, but she truly did believe he was sincere. “If this is really that important to you, you’re welcome to follow me to the house and wait in the library until I’m free. With luck, it won’t take too long.”
Tacitly, Kyle accepted the invitation, knowing it was not a choice. “I get the feeling that there’s no other way to see you except on your terms.”
He made it sound as if she were drafting a treaty. “I don’t have terms, Mr. McDermott. I just have a very busy life.” She pulled open the bottom drawer. “Take it or leave it.”
“I’ll take it.”
Abby raised her eyes until they met his. He surprised her. She hadn’t really thought that he would agree; it was just an offer she felt compelled to make because he had vanquished her tension headache. And because he’d looked, for just a moment, like a determined white knight.
She was far too easygoing for her own good, she chided herself. But now that she’d made the offer, she knew she couldn’t very well rescind it. That wouldn’t be playing fair.
With a sigh, she pulled her purse out of the drawer and let the drawer slide back into place. “All right, the address is—”
That she felt she had to actually give it to him amused Kyle. “Everyone knows where Maitland Mansion is.” What went unsaid was that, as a teenager, he used to drive by the estate in his second-hand car whenever the opportunity presented itself, vowing that someday he’d have a mansion just like it. And a life just like the Maitlands’. A life that commanded respect.
“All right, then.” Resigned, she led the way out. “Let’s go.”
SHE DROVE TOO FAST, Kyle thought, following Abby’s bright red Jaguar up the winding hill that led to her family’s estate. He wondered if her speed was a natural outpouring of residual energy, or if she just had an incredibly heavy foot.
Or maybe she was trying to lose him.
In any case, a doctor should have known better than to drive like that. She didn’t weave in and out of traffic, but that was only because there was no other traffic.
He decided that being in a hurry was a natural part of Abby Maitland’s makeup.
The Maitland estate was located a mere ten blocks from the clinic, but upon driving into the compound, housed behind tall, imposing electronic black gates, Kyle felt as if they had entered another world. In the distance, the stately white house rose up in front of him. Four sprawling floors reaching up to the sky beneath a light clay-tiled roof that seemed more reminiscent of an old English castle than a Texas mansion.
There was a guest cottage on the premises, barely visible off to the side. Hidden from view were the tennis court and the pool that Kyle knew were located at the rear of the property. The tennis court alone was larger than the lot on which his boyhood home had stood.
The rich sure knew how to live, he thought. It was a talent he was still trying to acquire. But work kept getting in the way. Another skill he had yet to acquire, he knew, was the ability to delegate. But he couldn’t overcome the nagging fear that if he wasn’t involved in all phases of operation, everything would break down and come to a grinding halt. Being on the leading edge of communications technology meant never slowing your pace.
It looked as if Abby hadn’t been blowing him off about the “meeting,” after all, Kyle thought as they approached the mansion. There was a squadron of cars parked in the circular gray-and-white paved driveway. He quickly surveyed the various makes and models. They would make an automobile aficionado drool.
It was difficult not to feel out of place, even behind the wheel of a Mercedes. He supposed that was because no matter what the numbers on the ledgers said, deep down he was still that scrawny, awkward kid in his cousin’s hand-me-downs.
Kyle was beginning to have doubts that he would ever be entirely free of that image.
But for now, he pushed that negative thought aside, just as he had countless other times during the early years of his business when all his efforts looked as if they might blow up in his face. It had taken fierce determination for him to believe in himself, but it had paid off.
He was as good as any of these people, Kyle told himself. He just had to hold on to that thought.
After pulling up beside Abby’s car, Kyle turned off the engine and got out quickly. Abby was already ahead of him, waiting on the bottom of the steps that led up to the massive front door. Kyle lengthened his stride, sensing she would only wait a moment. “You drive too fast.”
The blunt observation surprised Abby. People who wanted to win you over to their side didn’t start out by admonishing you. It seemed the man was full of contradictions. He was also undoubtedly accustomed to getting his way, if not through sheer force of will, then by his looks. She found herself wondering if any woman had ever said no to him—and meant it.
“So my brothers say,” she acknowledged, inclining her head. “I tend to do that when I’m running behind.” The look she gave him was long, penetrating and deep. “I’m sure someone like you can understand that.”
He could, but he also knew better. Life had taught him that. “Better late than never,” he countered. When she raised a quizzical brow, he added, “My mother drove like you do. She died in a car crash a little more than sixteen years ago.”
Caught unprepared, Abby could only murmur, “I’m sorry.”
He said nothing, merely shrugged as he fell in beside her. There was no point in going over what was in the past and couldn’t be changed. He was interested in the present, and how it could influence the future.
Kyle drank in the splendor that was Maitland Mansion. The word grand seemed hopelessly insufficient. It took him back to the boy he’d been. The dreamer. “I’ve always wondered what it looked like inside.”
The admission made Abby smile. He probably didn’t realize that he sounded almost wistful. Taking the lead, she hurried up the steps. “Then wonder no more.”
She rang the doorbell even though she had a key. Harold would be there to open the front door before she ever located her key within the jumble of her purse.
The stern face that appeared when the door was opened broke into a wreath of smiles as recognition sank in. Clear blue eyes crinkled with pleasure. “Miss Abby, how nice to see you again.”
She could remember a time when the tall, stately man had seemed larger than life to her. Now there was a touch of frailty hovering over him that tugged on her heart strings. “Hello, Harold.”
She surprised Kyle by brushing her lips over the butler’s cheek. The pale complexion grew pink where her lips had touched it.
“Am I the last one?” she asked, walking in.
Harold nodded. “They’re all in the living room.” He inclined his head in that general direction, but his eyes rested on Kyle. There was not even the slightest spark of curiosity in them. To Harold, curiosity was a plebeian sentiment. What he needed to know he would be told, by and by.
Abby glanced toward the living room. The doors were closed. Not a good sign. She wondered if anything had been decided yet.
The slight, almost imperceptible clearing of a throat made her remember the man at her side. And her manners. “This is Kyle McDermott. Mr. McDermott, this is Harold, without whom everything in the Maitland household would fall to pieces.”
The modest smile threatened to take possession of the butler’s entire face. “You flatter me, Miss Abby.”
She caught the old man’s arm in a quick, affectionate embrace. “Not nearly enough.” She released her hold. Time to see what was going on. “Please show Mr. McDermott to the library, Harold.” She spared Kyle a quick glance. “I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
“I’ll be waiting.”
“I’m sure you will,” she murmured, hurrying away.
Kyle watched her for a second, noting that the gentle sway of her hips increased as she picked up speed.
“This way, sir.”
It sounded more like a command than a request. Turning away, Kyle followed the older man.
The butler was silent as he led the way down a hallway discreetly showcasing fine sculptures and paintings that looked vaguely familiar from an art history course dating back to Kyle’s freshman year in college.
He wondered if he should be dropping bread crumbs to help him find his way back, in case the good doctor forgot about him. He would have been willing to bet that more than one person had gotten lost here.
“May I bring you some refreshments?” Harold asked as he opened the double doors that led into the library.
The room more than deserved its name. The mingled scent of lemon oil, leather and roses greeted him. For a moment, Kyle didn’t acknowledge the butler’s question, as he looked around the room. It rose two stories, with books residing on dark oak shelves that completely lined three of its walls. In the rear of the library, stairs led to an alcove that housed more books and a long table.
Had Abby done her studying here? Kyle wondered. Or was this all for show? “Quite impressive.”
“The Maitlands all like to read, sir. Some of the books here are over two hundred years old,” Harold told him. “About the refreshments?” A gray brow rose.
Kyle shook his head, still looking around. “Nothing for me, thanks.”
Harold remained standing where he was. “It might be a while, sir.”
Kyle looked at the man, feeling as if he had been given a subtle hint. “In that case, make it a scotch. Neat.”
A small smile played along the very thin lips. “We’re never messy here, sir.” With that, Harold turned and discreetly faded, more than walked, from the room. He closed the doors behind him.
Was that for privacy, or to seal him in? Kyle had a feeling it was the latter.
Over the years Kyle had found that the kind of books people kept on their shelves gave him useful insight into the people themselves. So, with nothing else to do, he began reading the lettering along the leather spines.
CHAPTER FOUR
ABBY EASED THE DOORS shut behind her. “Sorry I’m late, everybody.” She went no further with her excuse. There was no point, for the moment. Kyle McDermott’s presence in the house had no bearing on this meeting.
Her mother was on the sofa, with Beth and Ellie on either side of her. Like a tribunal, Abby thought, amused at the image. Both girls looked like a younger version of their mother. Photographs of Megan Maitland at twenty-five bore that out.
Crossing to her mother, Abby bent and kissed Megan’s cheek. “So, did I miss anything?” She purposely infused her voice with a cheeriness she didn’t quite feel.
“Nothing more than the rest of us,” R.J. told her tersely. His glass empty, he turned toward the decanter on the bar for a refill.
He was drinking his whiskey straight tonight, Abby noted. R.J. rarely drank at all. Was the unexpected appearance of this baby responsible? Or was it just, as in her case, general tension that forced him to seek any kind of relief?
Anna, the oldest of the Maitland daughters, came up behind her to hand her a glass of wine.
Abby shook her head, passing. “I have that and I’ll fall asleep before anyone says anything.”
“I doubt that.”
Nonetheless, Anna set the glass down on the bar and picked up her own goblet of wine. She looked around the room, her eyes coming to rest on Megan. Though they didn’t share the same blood, no daughter could love a mother more, Abby thought.
Though obviously worried about how this would all effect Megan, Anna struggled to force a brave smile to her lips. “I doubt any of us will get much sleep for at least the next few days to come.”
Megan drew herself up, bracing for the unpleasant task before her.
“I think we should get to the heart of this matter as quickly as possible, and I felt it was something we needed to do in person.” Her eyes swept over her children. They were a close unit, and nothing was going to change that. “As uncomfortable as this is for me to ask, is either one of you responsible for this child?”
Her gaze came to rest on R.J. and Mitchell. She’d always liked to believe that she was a good mother, a kind mother, with an endless supply of love, understanding and support for all her children. Because of this, she required—and got—nothing but the truth from them.
She wanted the truth now.
R.J. cleared his throat and regarded his drink. The slight hint of color that rose to Mitchell’s face aroused Megan’s curiosity. Older than Abby by two years, Mitchell had gone into science. Now a fertility specialist, he had, like his siblings, dedicated his talents to the clinic.
Megan began with him. “Mitchell?”
He shook his head, a rueful smile on his lips, a touch of embarrassment in his eyes. “Not me, Mother. In fact, this isn’t the kind of thing that a fertility specialist would like to have get around, but I haven’t been with a woman for over a year.” He took the last sip of his drink, then put the glass down. “The only way that baby is mine is if there’s been another case of divine intervention.”
Megan shifted her gaze to R.J.
He looked more than mildly uncomfortable, Abby thought. Just as he had earlier this morning. Was that guilt, or only R.J.’s displeasure at having the family name dragged through the mud?
“It’s not mine,” he finally said. But his voice didn’t carry its customary conviction.
Beth exchanged a look with Ellie, but neither said a word. And then Mitchell said aloud what they were all thinking. “That leaves us with Jake.”
“If the baby really is a Maitland, then Jake’s the most likely candidate,” Abby reluctantly agreed. Jake was her younger brother and she loved him dearly, but there was no denying that he’d distanced himself from the family. He was the only one—other than Anna, who was a wedding planner—who didn’t work for the family in some capacity. “Nobody knows where he is.”
“Or what he does for a living,” Anna added. Jake was the family’s man of mystery, slipping in and out of their lives like an evening breeze.
“No,” Megan pointed out, “that doesn’t leave us with only Jake.” The others all turned to look at her. “Of course, he’s a strong possibility, but there are other Maitland men to consider, if in name only.”
R.J.’s expression brightened a little, and if Abby hadn’t known any better, she would have said he looked almost hopeful.
“You mean Connor, don’t you?” he asked.
They all knew about Connor O’Hara, though not even their mother had seen him since he’d been a boy of three. Connor was the adopted son of their father’s sister, Clarise, and her husband, Jack. The O’Hara family had become estranged from the rest of the Maitlands after a petty misunderstanding between William and Jack some forty-three years ago. Since then, there had been no contact between the families, not even after William’s death.
Megan inclined her head. “Yes, and there’s one more possibility.” It pained her to bring this up because she wasn’t sure how the reminder might affect R.J. and Anna, but they had to be aware of all avenues and take them into consideration. “We don’t know what became of your father’s brother, Robert. He might have remarried or at least had more children—we just don’t know.”
Tactfully, she refrained from saying that he was actually R.J. and Anna’s father. Younger than William and far less stable, Robert had abandoned his two children after the death of his wife. William, with his large heart, had taken them in. R.J. and Anna became their first two children, to be followed by five more.
“So, why don’t we hire a detective?” Beth suggested. “Start finding things out?”
Megan thought of the secrets that might be uncovered, secrets that would make them even more vulnerable to the invading press. She really didn’t want to go that route—not yet. Not until it was absolutely necessary.
“I’ll look into it,” she promised evasively, temporarily calling a halt to that line of conversation. At the moment there was something even more important to consider. “All right, for the time being, let’s proceed as if this baby actually is a Maitland. We’ll keep him at Maitland Maternity for as long as possible.”
“Which won’t be too long,” Abby pointed out. “Ford said the baby is in perfect health.” Her mother knew as well as she did what that meant. “Social services will be coming for him.”
Unconsciously, Megan straightened her shoulders. “Leave social services to me.”
They all knew their mother was more than equal to taking on any agency and coming out on top, never deviating from the rules of fair play. Unfortunately, the social agency wasn’t the immediate thorn in their side.
“But how do we stop people like that Markum woman?” R.J. asked.
“We don’t stop them,” Megan told him. “We ignore them. Breeding will win out in the end.”
Abby wished that the situation were as simple as it seemed to her mother. She exchanged glances with her twin sisters. She could see they were of like mind. “In a perfect world, Mother.”
Megan remained unfazed. “Honesty and discretion will work in any situation, Abby.”
Anna raised her brow in feigned amusement. “Littering doorsteps with unwanted babies is hardly honest or discreet.”
Abby took exception to Anna’s choice of words. “I don’t think the baby isn’t wanted. Otherwise, the mother wouldn’t have written ‘Please take care of him until I can again.’ She would have just written, ‘Here, take care of him, I can’t.’”
“Abby has a point,” Ellie agreed.