âIâd like to continue working here after my baby comes. Donât worry. I can still provide excellent care for your daughter.â here after my baby comes. Donât worry. I can still provide excellent care for your daughter.â
âGood.â Ryan ran a hand across the back of his neck and looked at a painting on the far wall. Anywhere but at Kelseyâs pregnant body. âYouâll let me know if anything changes?â
âIâm past six months. The only thing thatâs going to change is the size of my belly. Women have babies all the time and still take care of their other children.â She blushed. âNot that Mariah is my child. I mean⦠I didnât meanâ¦â
He brought his gaze back to hers. Those charming freckles had appeared, and he was tempted to touch them. âI know what you meant. Feel free to make a nursery out of the extra room.â
âThatâs so nice of you, Ryan. Thank you.â
If she didnât stop looking at him that way he wasnât sure what he might do. She made him feel special, important, powerfulâlike a man who could move mountains.
Kelsey Mason was a dangerous woman. Dangerously beguiling.
A romantic at heart, Linda Goodnight believes in the traditional values of family and home. Writing books enables her to share her certainty that, with faith and perseverance, love can last for ever and happy endings really are possible.
A native of Oklahoma, Linda lives in the country with her husband, Gene, and Mugsy, an adorably obnoxious rat terrier. She and Gene have a blended family of six grown children. A former elementary schoolteacher, she is also a licensed nurse. When time permits, Linda loves to read, watch football and rodeo, and indulge in chocolate. She also enjoys taking long, calorie-burning walks in the nearby woods. Readers can write to her at [email protected]
Look out for more of Lindaâs books, coming soon!
CHAPTER ONE
WITH A JERK, KELSEY MASON opened her eyes and groaned. She squinted at her watch. Nearly twelve hours since her flight had been canceled, stranding her in a strange city, with no money and less hope. The armrest of the standard-issue airport chair jabbed into her back, already achy from the load she carried around her middle. Every bone in her body protested as she rotated forward and straightened.
âYou talk in your sleep,â a tiny voice commented. âSombniloquy.â
Swiveling toward the sound, Kelsey was speared by a pair of huge liquid-brown eyes in a face that couldnât be more than six years old.
âYou talk pretty big for a little girl.â Kelsey stretched, rolling her head on stiff shoulders.
âIâm a genius.â The child said it as matter-of-factly as Kelsey would have said, âIâm a teacher.â If that was true. Which it wasnât. Not any more anyway. She was no longer a lot of things sheâd once been.
Glad for the distraction and amused by the dark-haired angel in front of her, Kelsey shifted around on the miserable chair until she found a comfortable spot for her belly and said, âIâve never met a child genius before. Whatâs your name?â
âPollyanna.â A dimple flashed. âWell, not really. Iâm reading that book and decided to change my name. My real name is Mariah.â
âPleased to meet you, Mariah. Iâm Kelsey.â Kelsey smiled in spite of the crick in her neck. âI loved that story, too. Have you seen the movie?â
The child looked shocked. âAbsolutely not. Daddy says the book is always better than the movie so you should read before watching and then compare and contrast.â
âDaddy is absolutely right.â Wherever he was. Kelsey glanced around but spotted no one watching the little girl. The man should be arrested for allowing a child this young to run around a huge airport unsupervised.
âWeâve been stranded here in Denver all day waiting on clearance. Actually, seventeen hours and twenty-two minutes but thatâs close enough to a day, donât you think?â
âYes, I do. Iâve been here for twelve.â
âItâs fun, isnât it?â Fun wasnât the exact term Kelsey would use. âThere are so many interesting people to talk to. Did you know the man over there,â the child pointed, âworks for the queen of Netherlands? Heâs going to send me her autograph. And that lady over there is really upset because her boyfriend moved to Syracuse with his mother. She gave me a dollar to go away. I bought her a cup of coffee with it. Daddy says never take money from strangers.â
âDid he ever tell you not to talk to strangers?â
âAll the time.â The child giggled, covering her mouth with both hands. Long dark curls danced around her shoulders. âBut Iâm discerning.â
âWhat if I were a bad person?â
âAre you?â
âNo. Iâm a teacher.â Or was before sheâd given up everything to be Markâs wife. âAnd I like kids. But I could have been a bad person.â