Normally at eight o’clock on a Friday night, Caleb would have been sitting at a dinner table in an exclusive Atlanta restaurant dining with a beautiful companion. Today, however, as he sat back in his leather chair and stared out his office window, all he wanted was to be in bed.
Correction, Miranda’s bed.
With a sigh, he closed his eyes and pictured her slender arms, long legs and silky smooth skin. It was amazing that only a week had passed since she’d stepped into his life. In the beginning, when he’d made the decision to remain impervious to the attraction, he’d had every intention of remaining in control. It was seeing her day in and day out at the hospital, getting close but not too close. Touching her on the back, her cheek, smelling her perfume, the hungry glances and the subsequent denials. He’d thought that he was attracted to her when they’d been in a relationship years ago, but this was another story. He couldn’t get her out of his head.
Only in his deepest concentration, while examining his patients, did he find a measure of peace. Yet once he stepped out of a hospital room or away from a hospital bed, Miranda was there. With his eyes closed, Caleb raised his hand and rubbed his neck. If he were a psychologist, he would come damn close to diagnosing his current state of mind as obsessive.
He lowered his gaze and stared blankly at a stack of patient files. He was falling hard. Again. As much as he didn’t want to admit it, it hadn’t taken much time. A part of him had never gotten over Miranda. If he was completely honest with himself, she was probably the reason that he hadn’t been able to commit to any of the women who’d briefly shared his life and his bed.
Caleb jumped at the chirp of his cell phone. Reaching over, his brow wrinkled when he glanced at the caller identification. It indicated the call was from Marius. Pressing the send key, he brought the phone to his ear. “I thought you were in Brussels this week.”
Not only was Marius his older brother, but he was also the CEO of Blackfox Industries. Growing up, Marius had taken to the role of eldest sibling like a duck to water. If anything went wrong, and none of them wanted their parents to know about it, they went to Marius. As much as Caleb had resented the attention Marius had received from both his father and grandfather, he was entirely grateful it wasn’t him. Started over a half century ago, Blackfox Industries, a family-owned trucking company, had been run by his grandfather.
And as the history went, for the past two generations, it had been the second son who’d run the company. His older brother was the first firstborn Blackfox son to run the company; and if business kept up they were headed toward the best year on record. Being the second child in his family, Caleb had been lucky to escape that fate. The funny thing was that Marius always said that he didn’t know how Caleb could function as a doctor, knowing that he held someone’s life in his hands. Well he could say the same thing back to his older brother. Hundreds of people depended upon his brother’s ability to manage their corporation. Not to mention that Blackfox Industries was also a privately held company that still continued to run as if it were a family-owned business. For Marius, work equated with family, and no matter the personal sacrifice he would place it first.
Marius’s normally deep voice came through the airwaves raspy. “I’m not feeling so hot. I almost passed out before getting on the plane and threw up in the bed.”
Caleb sat forward. “Did you call a doctor?”
“Did I call a doctor?” Marius repeated. “Yeah, I’m on the phone with the wiseass right now.”
“Hey, hey.” Caleb laughed. “I’m your brother first and doctor second. What are your symptoms?”
“Chills, sore throat, headache, chest aches, sore muscles, stuffy nose and I have cayenne peppers for eyeballs.”
Caleb frowned as his mind ran through the list of his symptoms in an attempt to narrow down the possible diagnosis.
“Are you running a fever?”
“How the hell should I know?”
“Pull out a thermometer.”
“Why don’t you pick one up at the hospital?”
“I’d be more than happy to grab you a couple of extra. I can get a three-for-one on the rectal kind.”
“Bro, did a patient throw up on you or something?”
“It’s not work.”
“If it’s not work, then what is it? Because I know it can’t be a woman.”
For a moment Caleb remained silent. Marius was right. He was in a rotten mood because of a female. No, two females. Within the next twenty-four hours, he would find out whether or not he was a father and if the woman that he loved was lying to him.
“I’ve just got some things on my mind.”
“It is a woman.” Marius’s announcement ended with a spurt of coughing. “What’s her name?”
Caleb’s stomach growled, reminding him that he was coasting on the fumes of a sausage, biscuit and coffee breakfast. “I’ll be over in a half hour. Got food at your place? And I’m not talking about beer, milk and cereal.”
“Yeah, Marie dropped off some meals yesterday.”
This time his stomach let out a howl that would have put any one of his littler brother’s canine patients to shame. Marie was their parents’ live-in cook and housekeeper. Caleb had tried every trick in the book, and then some that he’d made up, to get her to cook for him. Just the thought of her pot roast made him weak in the knees. It was a longstanding family mystery as to how Marius had convinced her to cook extra portions and deliver them to his older brother’s freezer.
Cradling the phone between his ear and his shoulder, Caleb stood up and began to unbutton his white doctor’s coat. “Throw a couple of them in the oven. I’ll be over in fifteen minutes.”
It took Caleb longer to make his way through the hospital and out the front doors than it took for him to drive to Marius’s place. As he confidently maneuvered the Lexus around the tight curves of the country roads, he eased back into the leather seat and smiled. The purr of the car’s engine and quick responsiveness justified all the grief his Ford-car-dealership uncle gave him at the family gatherings. If he’d wanted a truck, he would have gone to his uncle. But he’d needed a luxury car that was dependable as well as precise.
He turned the last corner and passed through the ornate stone entranceway into the executive neighborhood. Like clockwork, he couldn’t help but roll his eyes. Caleb and Marius had overseen the construction of the mansion, and he could still remember the reactions of the neighborhood: half in awe and the other in depression. His oldest brother had more than broken the color barrier—he’d shattered every stereotype.
After pulling into the driveway, he parked on the pavement outside the three-car garage. A minute later, with his medical bag in hand, Caleb strolled through the two-story foyer and headed toward the back of the house. Just as he expected, Marius was ensconced in his office, staring at the large flat-panel computer screen.
Standing in the entranceway, he watched as Marius rubbed the bridge of his nose. “Don’t you ever take a break?”
“Don’t you ever knock?”
“Why knock when you’ve got a key?”
“I can remedy that situation.”
“Whatever.” Caleb grinned. As much as he hated to see his brother sick, he enjoyed the hell out of being the one to come to the rescue instead of being rescued.
“Say ahh,” Caleb ordered as he shined a penlight into Marius’s mouth.
“Do I have the flu?”
Caleb shook his head after flicking off the light. The lack of a fever was all he needed to know before diagnosing the condition. “No, looks like you have a severe sinus infection.”
“All right. Give me antibiotics and the telephone. I can re-book my flight and at least attend two days of the conference.”
“If you get on a plane in your condition, you could blow your eardrums to shreds. You’re damn lucky you didn’t get on the flight this morning. We’ve seen some cases at the hospital where sinus membranes have torn from the air pressure.”
Marius grimaced before reaching up to rub the bridge of his nose. “How long am I grounded?”
“You’ll be out of action as long as your sinus passages look like moldy Swiss cheese.”
“Appreciate the visual, bro.”
“Anytime.”
Caleb reached into his medical bag and pulled out two prescription bottles. “Here’s the antibiotic to clear up the infection, and this will help drain your sinus passages. Be careful not to take these close to bedtime or you’ll be memorizing the ceiling at three in the morning.”
“I thought you were here to cure me, not give me insomnia.”
“Cause and effect. The sleeplessness is a side effect of the antihistamine.” His stomach growled, reminding him that he hadn’t eaten in a while. “Dinner ready, yet?”
Marius stood up and they walked toward the rear of the house. “Yeah, I left your plate in the oven. I already ate.”
Caleb must have had a betrayed look on his face as Marius shrugged. “You took too long.”
“Thanks for waiting,” he responded sarcastically.
They made their way down the hallway and passed through the spacious living room before entering the gourmet kitchen. As the CEO of a large company, Marius’s surroundings fit his stature in life. The sprawling modern-style estate housed numerous rooms, a home theater, basketball court, swimming pool and other rewards of success. Caleb knew the layout of the house almost better than he knew his own. They both had used the same architect to design their homes and Caleb had lived there while his own house was being built.
After pulling out cutlery and pouring a glass of iced tea, he turned off the gas oven, reached for an oven mitt and carefully removed the meal. The scent of roasted meat almost made him dizzy. Dropping the small pan on a plate, he brought it over to the table and sat down. He said a quick prayer, and picked up his fork and knife. The first bite with the meaty prime rib and thick gravy made everything in the world look good. So good he was still chewing when he went back for a second bite.
“Don’t they feed you at that hospital?”
Although still starving, Caleb retained enough of his manners to finish chewing and swallowing before responding to his brother. “Who has time to eat?”
“Apparently not you, little brother.”
“There’s a nasty stomach virus going around. A few of the doctors were out today and there was a chain wreck of accidents on the highway this morning.”
“So who’s the lady?”
Caleb gave Marius a questioning glance, and then took a long drink of iced tea. “What lady?”
“The lady who has made you deaf and put you in such a foul mood.”
“You’re not going go let it drop, are you?”
“I could ask Mom.”
Damn. Caleb’s shoulders slumped with defeat. If another sibling had made that threat, he wouldn’t have believed them, but Marius rarely bluffed. “Miranda Elizabeth Tyler.”
Marius sat down across from him. The walnut breakfast table gleamed under the light. His eyes locked on Caleb’s like a laser beam. “I’ve heard her name before.”
Caleb took a swig of tea before answering. “We dated in college.”
“Oh, that Miranda.” Marius tapped his finger against the table. “The same one you took on the skiing trip, went to school at Spellman, grew up about ten miles from our parents’ house and has an older brother who hated your guts? The same one that broke up with you after walking into your apartment and finding the half-naked homecoming queen in your bed? The one who messed you up so bad, that we had to pull you out of the bottom of a dozen Hennessy bottles?”
Caleb’s shoulders slumped a little more with each item added to the list. By the time Marius finished summing up their relationship history, he looked like the Hunchback of Notre Dame. “Yeah, that Miranda. She’s back in town to help her brother recover from a car accident.”
“Walk away, little brother,” Marius cautioned before coughing.
“I wish I could.” Caleb sighed putting down his fork and knife. “I wish I could,” he repeated.
An hour later as they sat ensconced in the den, Caleb leaned back in the sleek black leather recliner and relaxed. The combination of a full stomach, and a half glass of premium scotch had more than taken the edge off his day. “I’m going to get her back, bro.”
Marius turned his attention from the flat-screen television.
Caleb raised a hand. “Wait, wait. Don’t give me that look.”
“What look? The one that says you’re about to make a big mistake or the one that says you should know better?”
“I do know better this time and I’m going to make this work. I know she has feelings for me, and the chemistry…” Caleb licked his lips as the memory of kissing her in the kitchen flashed through his mind. “More powerful than it was ten years ago.”
“Yeah, yeah. The question is—how do you think that you can get around her brother this time?”
“Darren knows that I know that he set me up.”
“And you think he won’t do it again? You think that after her brother’s recovery is finished that Miranda won’t leave you like she did last time?”
“The last time I should have followed. The last time was partially my fault. This time there’s more than my precious ego involved. There’s the child.”
Marius sat up and his eyes narrowed. “Child?”
“Miranda didn’t come back alone. She has a daughter. Kelly.” Caleb rubbed his head as fury raced up and down his spine. The clinical, reasonable part of his mind understood and could reason out why she wouldn’t tell him that he was a father. The other side couldn’t deal with the fact that someone he loved could be so cruel.
“Jesus, Caleb. Are you telling me that I have a niece? That Mom and Dad have a granddaughter?”
“No…Yes…I don’t know. Miranda says that the little girl is adopted and I don’t want to think she would lie to me. But it can’t be a coincidence that Kelly’s eleven years old.”
“So what are you going to do?”
“I’ve already sent off a DNA sample to the lab. I should get the results in the morning.”
“She agreed to let you take a DNA test?”
“Miranda doesn’t know about it. She had to get a full physical for her daughter before enrolling her in school. I pulled some strings and managed to get a blood sample.”
Marius’s eyebrows shot upward and his lips curved into a grin. “I’m impressed.”
“Don’t be,” Caleb responded. “What I did was not only unethical, it could get me fired.”
“If the girl’s yours?” Marius rasped.
Caleb’s jaw ticked at the thought and his finger tightened on the glass of scotch single malt. His life would change; it already had. He’d further decrease his schedule at the hospital to spend more time with Miranda and Kelly. Next, he’d start construction on a new house near his parents. He’d already picked out an architect and an interior designer.
As his firstborn, Kelly would have the biggest bedroom and he’d give her a computer room next to his study. Miranda would have her own set of rooms for any daytime activities, but he would stipulate that they would sleep in the same bed. If the tests came back and he was Kelly’s father, the one missing piece of his life would be filled. And if they came back and he wasn’t her father…?
Caleb lifted the crystal glass to his lips and swallowed hard. The rich, smoky flavor warmed his throat. No matter the outcome, he wanted Miranda. He wanted to talk to her about his life since she’d left, share with her his good days and his bad days. He wanted to listen to her tell him about her life before and after becoming Kelly’s mother. He wanted to know her hopes, her dreams and desires. He wanted to come home from the hospital to her every night, talk about their days and hear her thoughts. “You might want to stay in town next week, because there’s going to be a wedding.”
Somehow Marius read his mind. “And if Miranda is telling the truth and the girl is adopted?”
He set the glass down lightly on the side table and compared the last week—with Miranda and Kelly in his life—to the years he’d been alone.
He’d been downright arrogant on the last few dates he’d had. The women were beautiful, intelligent and available. Syleena and Diane. They both worked in the medical field, came from good families. Whenever he needed female company for an event, dinner, or physical companionship, he called and vice versa. It had been established early on that none of them were looking for full-time relationships.
But now things had changed; he’d changed. He didn’t want to be the bachelor doctor anymore.