question as she took the next exit, heading for Dumont, hoping to lose her pursuers in a maze of narrow streets and alleys.
“I made some calls yesterday,” she confessed. It was the only possible link she could come up with. “This baby could come any minute. You couldn’t be left alone at the cabin while I went into the hospital to give birth. You needed someone to run the medical equipment.”
He thought that over. “How did you get all that equipment together with short notice?”
“My father recently passed away from cancer. He wanted to die at the cabin, so I had everything set up for him.” Including two generators, plus the sun panels on the roof. “He had a twenty-four-hour nurse, and I went out there every day after my shift ended.” Her father had desperately tried to hang on long enough to meet his grandson.
Moisture gathered in her eyes. She blinked it away. “With the funeral and all, I hadn’t had a chance to call for pickup yet when you showed up.” It hadn’t been an easy summer.
“I’m sorry about your father.” His tone was subdued.
She nodded, driving as fast as she could while still keeping control of the vehicle.
“You made sure your father was taken care of. Then you cared for me. You are an extraordinary woman.”
Probably trying to butter her up for something. But when she glanced over, she saw only surprise on his face. Which irked her. “Did you think I would abandon my father at the end of his life? Or that I would leave the father of my child bleeding on the road?”
“I was giving you a compliment. We didn’t have sufficient time to fully discover each other before. Many things about you are new to me. I’m looking forward to getting to know you better.” He looked surprised at that, too, as if the words coming out of his mouth were a revelation to him.
They were finally in Dumont and she took the first bigger road to the left, heading for a more densely populated area where enough smaller streets crisscrossed each other for a car to disappear.
“You can be part of your son’s life without us having anything to do with each other.” She didn’t like the idea of sharing her baby—it hadn’t been the way she’d planned things—but, fine, he had the right, and her child would want to know his father. She could be flexible. To a point. “Once he’s old enough to be in school, he could go to Jamala for a week each summer.”
“My son will not grow up in a broken home,” he said in a tone he must have used for royal decrees, authoritative and final.
How did they get back to the subject of marriage again? “Let’s talk about something else before my blood pressure sends us hurtling into a phone pole, okay?”
“Do you have problems with your blood pressure? You said the pregnancy was going well,” he accused her.
“No problems whatsoever before you woke up.” She gritted her teeth. He got to her like no other, pushing all the wrong buttons.
Funny how nine months ago he’d been pushing all the right ones. And then some. She bit her lip. She so needed to stop thinking about those insane two days.
She glanced at the rearview mirror. No black van in sight. She careened into a back alley and slowed, surveyed the row of back doors, which she knew led to kitchens and laundry rooms, swerved to avoid the garbage cans lined up by the road. Not a person in sight, only a cat sauntering in front of her.
She brought the SUV to a complete stop. “Do we try to find a phone and call the police?”
He shook his head.
“Who then? FBI? CIA? Department of Defense?”
“No.”
“Of course not.” Because that would have been easy. “Then what?”
He looked darkly ahead.
“Did you talk to anyone on the phone before the battery went dead?”
He nodded.
“Bad news?”
He nodded again.
“Can I just remind you that you recently decided to trust me? Some information would be nice. We’re in this together.”
His face darkened further. “I apologize for
The Big Rich: The Rise, Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Fortunes