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“I will, but it may be a day or two. I have to drive up to Merced to check out those leads.”
“Merced? Is that even in the United States?”
“Yes, it is. Good night, Lillian.”
He needed to get this over with, and soon. Almost daily interaction with his father’s second wife was not good for his mood.
She meant well—most of the time. But the woman pushed buttons and pulled strings she probably had no clue were there. Every time he talked to her he felt drained afterwards, and vaguely angry. He sometimes wondered if his own mother would have had the same effect on him, if she’d bothered to stick around.
Morgan wished he could simply hire another P.I., but he couldn’t shake the image of Charlie’s child in some overcrowded foster home, subject to who knew what kind of abuse from the older kids. Kids could be cruel, especially if their victim couldn’t fight back. And it was often easier for a paid caretaker to turn a blind eye than deal with bullying. He should know.
Besides, Morgan couldn’t ignore the possibility that Charlie’s father might locate the child first and claim custody. A judge could consider the elder Thompson’s young new wife better mother material than Lillian, but two generations of abuse in the Thompson family was enough. More than enough.
Morgan pinched the bridge of his nose to forestall a headache that threatened to knock him off-task. Danby Holding Company needed his full attention if they were going to maximize their opportunities in this kind of market. He rolled his shoulders again and refocused on work.
Two days later Morgan understood the P.I.’s impulse to resort to bribery.
Death certificates were public records, but without a full name or date, the clerks couldn’t tell him if such a record existed.
Medical records might be available to a family member, but since Charlie had never bothered to marry the Mendelev woman and there was no proof he was the father of any child she might have had, Morgan couldn’t get anywhere near those records.
He was reduced to reading back copies of the Merced newspaper from the time when Charlie and the woman had lived in the area, but he found no mention of her or of any child. Only a paragraph about Charlie’s arrest when he’d tried to break into the hospital to get at her.
When he called Lillian to say he’d hit a dead end, she was unconvinced.
“What about the woman lawyer?” his stepmother asked. “If she and that woman were such good friends, she should want to help you find my grandchild. We can offer the little darling a life someone like his mother could never have imagined. Far better than being in foster care with who-knows-what kind of people.”
His thoughts exactly, but what more could he do?
“Lillian, I have a business to run. The same business that supplies most of your income. I don’t have time for this wild goose chase. I need to get back to the office.”
“I don’t ask for much, after the years I spent raising you.”
Paying other people to raise me, he corrected silently.
“But to have Charleston’s child to love in my old age …” She gave an artful sniff.
He sighed. He hated it when she tried to play him like that, but she was the closest thing he had to a family, give or take a mother in Key West he hadn’t seen or spoken to in almost thirty years.
“Okay. I’ll talk to her.” For some reason the idea of seeing Rosalie Walker again made him smile. “But don’t get your hopes up. I doubt I’ll learn anything new.”
“I knew I could rely on you, Morgan. You were always such a good child.”
I had to be or you might have walked out, the way my mother did. He ignored the little boy’s voice inside him and resigned himself to a few days more in California.
Rosalie escaped the overheated courtroom and flipped open her phone. Her heart lurched when she clicked the calendar. Her appointments for the afternoon now included Morgan Danby.
The noisy courthouse lobby swirled around her with the same black panic that had almost overwhelmed her when Mr. Danby first mentioned Márya’s child. After three days, she’d thought the man was gone for good.
She sat down hard on a well-worn wooden bench and forced air into her lungs. Then she punched her office number and tried to act as if her world hadn’t just been turned upside down—again.
“The judge is running late,” she told her receptionist when he answered. “Please tell my afternoon appointments I’ll be there as soon as I can, and reschedule anyone who can’t wait.”
And please, please make it so that Morgan Danby can’t wait and can’t reschedule, she added in silent prayer.
Not that she had much hope of that. For all his casual air, Mr. Danby didn’t strike her as a man who would give up easily or be a gracious loser. But she had to win this one for Joey’s sake.
When she reached her office building four hours later, the expensive black sports car in the parking lot warned her that her prayer had not been granted.
Mr. Danby stood in the reception area outside her office, staring at one of the paintings that decorated the wall, an impressionistic hibiscus in brilliant red with broad strokes of yellow, green, and black.
“Are you an art critic, Mr. Danby?” she asked, in lieu of the polite greeting she couldn’t force out.
He scanned her wind-blown hairdo and crumpled linen suit. She ignored the urge to straighten herself the same way she’d ignored the flutter in her chest when she first saw him.
“Rough day in court?” he asked with one sexily raised eyebrow.
“Rough day on the freeway. I won in court.”
“Congratulations.” He turned back to the painting. “I didn’t have a chance to look closely at this when I was here before. It’s quite good. They both are.” He gestured to the painting on the other wall, a golden poppy with the same bold strokes of contrast.
“Thank you.”
“You painted them?”
She allowed herself a smile at his surprise. “My mother.”
“She’s very talented.”
Her smile faded. “Was very talented. She’s deceased.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.” His tone was more calculating than sympathetic.
“It’s been a few years,” she told him as she crossed to her office and gestured him in.
He gave the hibiscus another look before he followed her.
She went to her desk and set down the bag that held her tablet computer. Mr. Danby had his back to her, intent on the painting of a flower garden on the wall across from her desk.
“Your mother again?”
She nodded, fighting to ignore the tingle his gaze sent through her.
“And that one?” This time he pointed to the painting of a child in a sandbox that hung behind her. “Is that you?”
She refused to let him see the sudden flash of grief. “Yes.”
“Your mother had a remarkable talent for that kind of middle-brow art.”
Middle-brow art? Rosalie stiffened and gestured toward the chair across from her.
“Did she sell many of them?” He lowered his long, lean body into the chair.
Why should he care, if it was middle-brow art? She sat down and jiggled the mouse to turn on her computer monitor. “No. It was a hobby. She gave a few to friends.”
He crossed his legs and leaned back to watch her face. “I came up blank in Merced.”
Irritation morphed into dread. She sat up straighter and gave him an empty smile.
Chapter Two (#u8760f581-e77f-597b-b8f2-e2cba0bdcc94)
The ice princess was back in place as soon as Morgan reminded Ms. Walker why he was here. He missed the very different, very attractive, person she had become when she smiled, but he couldn’t undo what needed to be done.
“I’m not surprised,” she said blandly.
“Because you lied to me?”
“Because privacy laws protect people like Márya, Ms. Mendelev, from people like you.”
“People like me?”
“People who want access to someone’s medical records so they can use the information for personal gain.”
He leaned forward. “I have absolutely nothing to gain from this. I’m here on behalf of my stepmother, who only wants what’s best for her grandchild, if she has one.”
“What’s best for the child—or what’s best for her? Does she really care about this supposed grandchild, or does she see it as a chance for a do-over on motherhood, since she didn’t exactly do a great job the first time around? You’ll forgive me if I remain unconvinced it’s Márya, or any child she might have had, that interests either you or your stepmother.”
It rankled to hear his own worries about his stepmother’s motives echoed by this sanctimonious lady lawyer, but Morgan bypassed an angry reply.
Instead he tried to do as Lillian suggested and play to the woman’s friendship with Márya Mendelev. “Do you think your friend would want her child to be shuffled through the foster-care system when it has a grandmother, a wealthy grandmother, who’s eager to love it and raise it as her own? Would she want to deny her child the chance to have the best of everything?”
Ms. Walker scowled. Apparently Lillian’s wealth didn’t impress her.
“You must be aware, even if your stepmother isn’t, that the odds a healthy baby will remain in foster care for long are slight these days, given the high demand for adoptable infants.”
“Before the child could be adopted, there would have to be a good-faith search for any living relatives. Given Charlie’s criminal record, we wouldn’t be hard to find.”
A flash of some strong emotion crossed Ms. Walker’s face before the professional mask dropped back in place.
“Which is one more reason to believe there was no child. Or, if there was, that it might have been claimed by relatives on Ms. Mendelev’s side of the family.”
Was that who she was protecting? He made a non-committal sound, clicked open his smartphone and scanned the file of emails from the P.I. No, he remembered correctly.
“According to Ms. Mendelev’s application for a student visa, she had no living relatives. Her family was wiped out in the civil war in her home country. Unless she lied to the immigration people.”
The woman across from him licked her lips, drawing his attention to their soft fullness, reminding him of that fleeting smile. He gave a silent sigh and refocused on the business at hand.
“How did you gain access to that information?”
“The private investigator …” had better luck bribing the staff at the college the Mendelev woman had attended than he’d had bribing the staff at the homeless shelters, but Morgan wasn’t about to tell the lady lawyer that. “… accessed her records online.”
“Be that as it may, I’m afraid you’ll have to accept the fact that this supposed child was a figment of your P.I.’s imagination.”
He leaned in, temper tightly reined. “You said yourself Ms. Mendelev was pregnant when you first met her.”
She leaned forward as well, green eyes fixed on his. “Do you want to know how many times your brother had kicked her in the belly before she managed to get away from him?”
He couldn’t help but flinch as he settled back in his chair. “You’re saying categorically that she was no longer pregnant by the time she arrived in Los Angeles County?”
No hesitation, no shifting of her eyes. “Yes.”
So it was over.
He dreaded telling Lillian, but at least he could get back to Boston tomorrow. And Charlie’s mother didn’t need to know all the unpleasant details.
His eyes slid to the colorful painting over Ms. Walker’s head.
Tomorrow was Saturday. Maybe he could stay here over the weekend and do the icy lady lawyer a favor. After all, she had helped the Mendelev woman get away from Charlie and taken her to a hospital, so in a way she’d tried to save Lillian’s grandchild.
Now they’d gotten all that behind them, maybe he and Ms. Walker could start over again, without any ulterior motives to interfere with the magnetic hum of attraction he felt for her, an attraction he’d bet his last million she felt as strongly as he did.
Rosalie made a show of gathering up the few scattered papers on her desk, but Mr. Danby didn’t take the hint. Instead, he crossed his long legs and gave her a calculating look.
“Have you and your father considered selling your mother’s work? You could get several thousand dollars apiece for them.”
Obviously a man who put a cash value on everything.
“My father has been out of the picture since before Mother … before she started to paint seriously,” she told him with as thin a veneer of politeness as she could manage. “And even if I wanted to sell any of her work, I wouldn’t know how.”
“I might be able to help you. I’m not an art critic, as you put it, but I do have a private collection that has allowed me to develop relationships with several very successful art dealers. I know of one in Beverly Hills who specializes in the kind of paintings your mother did.”
“I’m surprised you’d buy anything from someone who deals in, quote, middle-brow art.”
“Not my usual taste, but I bought something for a friend who enjoys that sort of thing.”
“Why would I want to sell my mother’s paintings?” Especially on the recommendation of someone with so little respect for her work. “I don’t need the money.”
“Of course not. How many of them do you have?”
She thought of the cluttered, sunlit studio at home.
“Dozens, I’d guess.”
“Wouldn’t your mother want people to enjoy her work, instead of having the paintings stashed away in some spare room?”
With Rosalie’s home office crammed into one corner of her bedroom after she’d moved Joey into the smaller bedroom, her mother’s studio wasn’t exactly a spare room anymore. Rosalie remembered how happy it had always made her mother to give a painting to a friend. She’d spend hours to find the right one for that particular person, and was so happy when she saw any of her work in someone’s home. But to sell her paintings …
“No, I’m sorry, Mr. Danby.”