November
“I have a son.”
Myles said the words aloud. The reality wasn’t there. The pain was. He tried to focus on the revelation in the letter and ignore the injuries that had landed him in the hospital with months of healing and physical therapy ahead before he was fit again. Shifting slightly, he reread the letter.
The letter was dated three months ago. Why had it taken so long to reach him?
Being on a remote building site in the middle of a Middle Eastern desert probably had a lot to do with it.
Did it matter? Would it have made a difference if it arrived shortly after it was posted? He would still have been in shock. Would it have changed anything? Would he have been on the phone asking questions instead of being near that land mine?
“I have a son and his name is Zachery,” he repeated softly.
“Did you say something?” A nurse poked her head into the room. “Everything okay? Need more painkiller?”
“I’m okay,” he said, impatient with the interruption. He wanted to read the letter again. Try to understand.
He couldn’t take it in. Tiffany Walker had been his steady girlfriend the last time he’d been State side on leave. They’d had a great few months together until he’d accepted another overseas assignment. There had been no great love between them, but he’d enjoyed taking her places where others admired her beauty. To think of her as dead was hard. She’d relished life.
But she’d never contacted him after he’d left. Not even to tell him about their son.
He was grateful to her sister, Brittany, for letting him know, however, delinquent the notice. She explained she’d been against her sister’s decision to keep quiet about the baby. A child should know his father. She’d wrestled with the situation after Tiffany’s death and finally wrote to him, telling him what she knew. He’d railed against fate for Tiffany’s silence. How could she not have told him five years ago she was carrying his child?
At least he had the opportunity and means to locate the boy, his only living relative. That thought was amazing. He’d accepted years ago that he’d probably spend his life alone. He had friends, but no one close. His formative years had been in a series of foster homes. Moving from place to place had taught him not to form attachments. Nothing lasted beyond the next move. His job did nothing to change that as an adult. He was a nomad, no home, no family.
Myles didn’t know when he left the United States almost five years ago that Tiffany had been pregnant. They had used precautions. She’d never contacted him. At first, he thought she might. But his job assignment had been for two years. Tiffany had been a fun-loving party girl. Two years waiting for a man was not her style.
Yet the pregnancy would have changed all that.
She should have told him. Why hadn’t she?
Her sister’s letter also informed him of Tiffany’s death. For that, he was truly sorry. She’d been pretty and vivacious and fun. Which was probably the reason she’d given their son up for adoption. A baby would have definitely cramped her style.
But I could have taken him.
The thought came out of nowhere. Myles didn’t know the first thing about children. He was thirty-four years old and had never seriously thought about getting married or having a family.
His job wasn’t exactly conducive to a happy family—gone two years at a time to inhospitable locales where they fought to bring modern roads and bridges and dams to countries that had progressed little from the beginning of time.
Lying back on the pillows, he tried to imagine his son. The boy would be four now. Myles couldn’t remember back to when he’d been four. He’d already been placed in his first foster home by that age. There had been other children there, but his memories were hazy. What was a four-year-old like?
That led to wondering what the family who had adopted his son was like. Did they think his father had abandoned him? Did they know Myles hadn’t even known of his son’s existence until he’d received this letter a few hours ago?
He’d an overwhelming urge to find his son. See him. Make sure he was happy and well cared for. Even in the foster care system, bad things happened to children. Did adopted families have regular visits from Social Services to make sure the child was being properly looked after? Was Zachery happy and secure in the family that was raising him?
The plan was to send Myles back to the States next week—if he continued to improve. The surgeries had drained him of all energy. He was fighting to recover. But it would be several months before he could return to work. Just maybe he’d have time to find his son to make sure he was all right. To see what he and Tiffany had produced.
Did Zachery have dark hair like his, or was it lighter, like Tiffany’s blond hair? Was he fearful or brave?
Adoptions were usually confidential. Did he really have any hope in the world of finding the child he’d fathered?
He picked up the paper and pen the nurse had provided. The least he could do was thank Brittany for letting him know. It’d been the right thing to do. And maybe it’d given him even more reason for getting fit as soon as possible. He had a son to find.
April
“Here’s the final report.” Earl Adams slid the folder across the desk. “I know it took longer than I originally anticipated, but you know adoption records are hard to access. Here’s what I found out. T. J. and Anna Tucker of New York City adopted your son. I’ve located Mrs. Tucker, the husband has since died. Killed by a drunk driver a year ago.”
Myles Riker reached out for the folder and flipped it open. The first thing he saw was a picture of a small child. It wasn’t a close-up, but he could tell the boy had dark hair. He looked so little. Was he small for his age? Myles didn’t know how big four-year-olds should be.
Earl frowned as he glanced at the paperwork.
“So, how did you want this handled? Show up one day and ask to meet your son?”
Myles shook his head.
“Despite what you may think, I have some feelings for the child and the situation. The last thing I’d do is give any reason to rock his security.”
He thought briefly of the different families he’d lived with, never knowing how long he’d stay. He couldn’t imagine deliberately causing that kind of panic and uncertainty to anyone, much less a little boy.
“I merely want to know he’s okay. That he’s loved and the family life he has is good.”
The detective leaned back in his chair, steepling his hands.
“The mother appears to be doing the best she can. It was a comedown from the lifestyle they enjoyed when the husband was alive. He was an attorney and made a good income. Since his death, they’ve moved to a less affluent neighborhood. She’s gone back to work. Still, from what I could see, the mother takes good care of the boy and he seems happy enough. Quiet, not as boisterous as other little kids I’ve seen. But, hey, everyone has a unique personality.”
“But he had a wonderful mother, right?”
Myles couldn’t remember his own mother. The best foster mom had been Allie Zumwalt. He hoped Zachery had a mother as sweet as Allie.
Earl nodded. “Doing the best she can.”
“What do you mean by that?” Myles asked quickly.
“She has to work, so leaves the child with an older woman in their building when he’s not in preschool. The apartment building is old, a bit run-down. The neighborhood’s not the best place to be after dark.”
“Should they move?”
“It takes money to live where they did before. New York’s not a cheap city.”
The one thing Myles had was money. He spent little, had amassed a small fortune working overseas with the extra hardship pay. Judicial investments had the money growing steadily.
The detective had delivered, and the cost had been nothing Myles wouldn’t have paid three times over or more to find out about his son.
He looked at the photograph again. Would he recognize the child if he tripped over him in a crowd somewhere? Shouldn’t there be some kind of tie between biological parents and children? Some sort of instant connection?
To Myles, there was nothing but wonder that he could have fathered this little boy.
Railing silently against Tiffany once again, he closed the folder and stood.
“Thank you,” he said, offering his hand.
“I’ll be here if you want anything else,” the detective said.
Myles carried the folder out with him. He was staying in a small hotel near where the detective said his son lived. He could walk without the limp as long as he didn’t overdo it. His shoulder was still stiff. Maybe he needed to get back to work to loosen those muscles. He was on medical leave and still doing his physical therapy routine each day.
When he reached his room, he settled down to read every word in the report the detective had compiled. Even if he never got to meet him, Myles knew he’d left a legacy to the future. Thinking about it, he could do more. On Monday, he’d make an appointment with an attorney to leave his estate to his son. They may never meet, but someday Zachery would know his father had cared about him.