“You’re trying to hide a smile, Brooke. You don’t fool me.”
“I’m not trying to fool you, Emma. I think it’s kinda cool that you and my brother...”
“No, it wasn’t like that, really.” Oh, boy.
Having Brooke stop everything at the office and come over right away might have been a mistake. But this was big and she couldn’t hide her pregnancy from her best friend. Especially not when Brooke had a stake in this, too; she was Dylan’s sister after all. Emma needed her right now. She had no one else to turn to and time was running out. She had morning sickness, big-time. Immediate decisions had to be made and she’d have to deal with Dylan at some point.
“We’re not romantically involved,” she said to Brooke.
Her friend sat on the sofa next to her, her mouth twitching, the smile she couldn’t conceal spreading wider across her face. This was no laughing matter. Obviously, Brooke thought differently.
She’d given Brooke the bare facts about what had happened that night between her and Dylan, explaining how she’d panicked when all the lights had gone out in that nightclub. The entire city had gone dark from what she could tell and she hadn’t been in any shape to drive home. At least she got that part right. No drunk driving for her.
But instead of Brooke coming to pick her up as she’d hoped, Dylan had come to her rescue, as any good guy would. Emma tried to make clear to Brooke that she’d been the one to initiate the lovemaking. Emma remembered that much; she’d begged him to stay with her. She had no recollection of exactly how it all went down, those hours fuzzy in her head, but it was all on her. She’d been scared out of her wits and inebriated. And Dylan was there. She’d lived out her fantasy with him that night, but she didn’t tell Brooke that. Some things were better left unsaid.
“Brooke, I’ll say it again, and this is hard to admit, but I probably climbed all over him that night. I swear, he didn’t take advantage of me.” The worst would be that Brooke would hold anything about that night against Dylan.
Brooke covered her ears. “Emma, pleeeze! No details. I can’t think of Dylan that way.” And then she lowered her hands. “But it’s sweet that you’re trying to protect him. You don’t want me to think badly of my brother. I get that, Em. And I don’t. No one’s to blame.”
“Okay, no details.” Not that she could remember any. “Dylan doesn’t know any of this happened.”
“Are you sure of that?”
“I’m sure. I’d know it, if he remembered. I’d see something in his eyes. And he’s never mentioned my phone call that night, or the fact that he came to pick me up from the nightclub. When he came to my apartment the day we went to the children’s hospital, he didn’t seem to recognize anything as familiar. I’m certain that night was erased from his memory.”
“I think so, too. Just making sure there were no signs.”
“Nope, not a one.”
Brooke nodded and then gazed warmly into Emma’s eyes for several ticks of a minute. “You’re going to be the mother of my niece or nephew,” she said as softly as Emma had ever heard her speak. The tone was rich and thick as honey. “And my brother is going to be a father.”
The way Brooke put it was sort of beautiful. Emma could get lost in all the wonder of motherhood, of nurturing a new life and having a man like Dylan father her child. But the wonder didn’t come close to erasing the plain facts. That she and Dylan didn’t plan this child. That he didn’t even have a clue what was happening, yet his life was about to change forever.
“Oh, Brooke. I’m just wrapping my head around it. The baby part has me feeling...I don’t know, protective already and scared.” Emma shivered. “Very scared.”
“You’ll be fine. You have me. And Dylan. He’d never turn his back on you.”
“Gosh, it’s all so new. Part of me feels guilty not telling him about that night. It might’ve triggered some of his memories.”
“You’ll have to tell him now, Em. He has a right to know.”
It was inevitable that she tell Dylan. But she wasn’t looking forward to that conversation. Gosh, he’d been like a big brother to her and now nothing between them would ever be the same.
“I know. I will.”
“Good. You’re in no shape to do the golf event, Em. You’re exhausted and still having morning sickness.”
Emma chewed on her bottom lip. She didn’t want to miss this weekend. All those hours, all that planning. Brooke needed her, but how could she function when she was running to the bathroom all morning long? “Yes, but it’s getting better. Maybe I could come along and help out in the afternoon and evening.”
Brooke was shaking her head. When had she turned into a mama bear? “I’ve got it covered, Emma. You can’t come. You’d be miserable. I’ve got Rocky and Wendy on standby.”
The part-timers?
“I’ve been briefing them and they’re up for the task. I don’t want you to worry about a thing. You should concentrate on the baby and feeling better. We’ll do fine.”
“Are you saying you don’t need me?”
“I’m saying, we’ll make do without you, but of course, we’ll miss you. Thanks to your unending efficiency, we’ve got all the bases covered. You should take this weekend to adjust to all of this. That’s what I want for you. It’s what you need.”
Emma sighed and gave her friend a reluctant nod. Brooke was right. She couldn’t very well carry out her duties in San Diego with her stomach on the blink every hour and her body feeling as though it had been hit by an eighteen-wheeler. “Okay, I’ll be a good girl.”
“It’s too late for that,” Brooke replied with a grin.
“Don’t I know it.”
Brooke’s eyes melted in apology. “You’re not letting anyone down, Emma. Just the opposite. I know the situation isn’t ideal right now, but you’re having a baby with Dylan. My best friend and my brother...how can I not think it’s just a little bit wonderful?”
Brooke’s arms came around her and the hug warmed all the frigid ice flowing through her veins. She was wrapped up in comfort and support and friendship. “How come you always know the right thing to say?”
“Since when?”
“Since...now.”
“Oh, Emma. Do you want me to be there when you tell Dylan?”
“No!” Emma pulled away from her friend. The thought of having that conversation gave her hives, but having Dylan’s baby sister there? There was no number on the Awkward Scale high enough to describe such a scene. “It’d be too weird. I can’t even picture any of this in my head right now, but I suspect this is one time I need to be alone with Dylan.”
The tight lines on Brooke’s face crumbled and her expression resumed some semblance of normalcy. “Whew, thanks. I have to agree. I love my bro and I love you, but...”
“But I made my bed, now I have to toss off the tangled sheets and come clean.”
“Yeah,” Brooke said, giving her that same melting look. “Something like that, sweetie.”
“Promise you won’t worry about me this weekend?”
“If you promise me the same. Don’t give a thought to the golf event.”
They stared at each other, knowing unequivocally that would be impossible.
“Sure,” Emma said.
“Gotcha,” Brooke added, her smile falsely quick. Then Brooke kissed her goodbye on the cheek and brought her mouth near her ear to whisper, “The sooner you tell Dylan, the better.”
“I know,” she said, nodding. “I will.”
Problem number one: she didn’t have a clue how or when she could bring herself to do that.
* * *
“A little bit of fresh air will do wonders for you, Emma,” Dylan said as he strolled into her apartment wearing jeans and a vintage T-shirt, the Stones logo stretching wide across his chest. The shirt hugged him tight and hinted at a ripped torso underneath. Before she got caught ogling, she shifted her attention to his face and was struck by the scruffy, tousled look that appealed to her on so many levels, it was ridiculous. “Brooke is worried sick about you.”
Emma had had about half an hour advance warning from Dylan that he was coming to visit her, his text announcing he was on the way, leaving her no option. He was on a mission, commandeered by Brooke, no doubt, and Emma had raced around her apartment destroying evidence of just how sick she’d been. She’d picked up blankets tossed across the sofa and folded them, sprayed the room with cinnamon spice air freshener—the place now smelled like Christmas—slipped off her smelly sweats, taken a shower and put on a sleeveless denim dress and a pair of tan boots.
Evenings were her best time of day lately, so she was pretty sure that she could pull off seeing him without doing a sprint to the bathroom. “I’m feeling much better, Dylan. There’s no need for you to be here. Gosh, you must have better things to do on a Friday night.”
He smiled her way, that megawatt lady-killer smile that either slowed breathing or caused it to race. Right now, her breath caught in her throat and she reminded herself to breathe. He was just a man.
And the father of your baby.
“Nope, no plans. And since I’m already here, I was hoping not to eat alone tonight. Come back to the house with me. Maisey’s made an amazing meal. We can eat on the patio. It’s a gorgeous night.”
God, getting some fresh Moonlight Beach air did sound appealing. She’d been stuck in her house for eons, it seemed.
Her hesitation wasn’t lost on him. He eyed her carefully, taking a quick toll of her state of health. She didn’t want to seem ungrateful for the gesture although she knew he was here solely at Brooke’s bidding.
“Brooke says you haven’t been eating. You need a good meal, Em.”
She did, and her traitorous stomach growled quietly, but he didn’t appear to notice, thank goodness. “I don’t know.”
“You want to. Come for an hour or two.”
It was hard to refuse, with the look in those beautifully clear sky-blue eyes. When aimed at her, she usually succumbed. It had always been that way. What could she say? She, like a zillion other adoring fans, had it bad for Dylan McKay. And she knew darn well, he wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for Brooke’s nagging. She wouldn’t get off his case if he didn’t succeed in making sure Emma was well cared for tonight.
Why had Brooke put her in this position? As sweet as it was, she wasn’t anyone’s charity case. She hadn’t been for a long time, and she wasn’t ever going back there. She’d learned to fend for herself since her foster care days and didn’t want to be thought of as an obligation in order to ease anyone’s conscience. She had a mind to refuse him flat, but those bone-melting eyes kept a vigil on her and a look of hope spread across his face.
“Well, maybe just for a little while, but only to get you off the hook with Brooke.”
Gesturing in his own defense, he turned his palms up. “I don’t know what you mean. This was my idea.”
She snorted. “And the sun doesn’t shine in LA.”
Glancing out the window at the dimming skies, he grinned. “It isn’t at the moment.”
Okay, she could share a meal with him. She didn’t have to tell him the truth. Not yet. She wasn’t ready for that, and this way, he’d report back to Brooke that all was well and she’d have the rest of the weekend in peace. “I’ll get my jacket, then.”
He nodded, looking ridiculously satisfied.
A few minutes later, they were barreling down Pacific Coast Highway in his licorice-black SUV, the windows down and warm spring breezes lifting her hair. Dylan, recently cleared to drive again, was concentrating on the road, and she took a second to gaze at his profile. He had classic good looks: a solid jawline, a strong chin, a nose that was just sharp enough to suit his face and eyes the color of Hawaiian waters, deep blue with a hint of turquoise. His hair was streaked by the sun, a little long right now so that it swept over his ears. Most times he wore it combed back away from his face, but there were these locks that always loosened from the pack to dip onto his forehead that drove her crazy.
Would their child have his hair? His eyes?
Or would the baby look more like her? Green-eyed with dark cranberry tresses?
Her stomach squeezed tight thinking of the secret life inside her, growing and thriving despite her frequent bouts of nausea. She really did need a nourishing meal and Maisey’s cooking was too good to turn down.
“Here we are.” Dylan pulled into the gated circular driveway of his beach home. There were times she couldn’t believe this was all his. He’d grown up in a normal American household, the son of a high school principal and a civil engineer. Dylan’s dad had died one year before he was due to retire, but Markus McKay had lived a full and happy life. The love he’d had for his wife and family, the life they’d led filled with generosity and kindness, had restored Emma’s faith in mankind.
Once he parked in the multicar garage on the property, Dylan made an attempt to wind around the car to open the door for her, but she was too quick. She stepped out on her own, ignoring how his smile faded as she strode past him toward the service door that led into his house. “Hey, Sparky, wait up,” he said, coming to stand beside her.
He unlocked the door and opened it for her. She took a step to enter, just as his arm shot out, blocking her way in. Suddenly, surprisingly, she was trapped between his body and the door. Trapped by the compelling scent of him. Several beats ticked away and then she lifted her lids and locked onto his gaze.
“Do me a favor,” he said softly, the fingers of his free hand coming to rest under her chin. His innocent touch kicked her senses into high gear. He didn’t wait for her answer, but continued, “Don’t pretend you’re completely recovered just to prove a point. I see how tired you are. Your face is pale, and you’ve obviously lost weight.”
He’d hit the nail on the head. The shudder that erupted inside probably wasn’t visible on the outside, but boy, oh boy, how it rattled her all the way down to her toes. His noticing her body was shock enough, but noticing how bad she looked brought new meaning to her humiliation. What next? Would he point out her warts and moles, too?
“I’ve been around the theatre long enough to know an act when I see one. All I’m asking is for you to relax tonight, eat a delicious dinner and have a good time. You don’t have to pretend with me. Just be yourself.”
As he lowered his arm allowing her to pass, Emma blurted, “Yes, Dr. Dylan. Will do.” All she needed now to accompany the nod she gave him was a military salute.
His eyebrows lifted at her sarcasm. “Your mouth...sometimes I want to—” And then he leaned in before she could grasp his intention and brushed a soft kiss to her lips.
She gasped, raking in air, but quickly recovered. “Shut me up?”
He shook his head, chuckling. “That’s one way to put it. But I was thinking of it more as a way to sweeten the sass blistering your tongue.”
Well, he’d shut her up and sweetened her mouth with one tiny kiss. Dylan could get away with things like that. He’d been gifted with an accommodating good nature that charmed any woman in his path. She’d seen it over and over again. His reputation with the ladies had been mulled over, talked about and dissected by the media. Magazine covers, television interviews and social media platforms had him figured out. He wasn’t one to be tied down, but he’d gotten away with it with the press, because he never infringed. He’d been crowned a one-woman kind of man, and the woman he was currently dating received all of his attention. A smart move on his behalf, it kept him out of trouble.
And all it had taken was a power outage burdening most of the city one night to shake his very well-protected reputation. Only, he didn’t know that yet.
Oh, boy, when Emma did things, she did them all the way.
* * *
The minute they entered his luxurious home, Dylan went about opening the massive beveled glass French doors in the living room. Balmy breezes immediately rushed in bringing scents of salty sea air and powdery sands. Emma followed him into the kitchen, where he opened the doors leading to the Italian-stone-and-marble patio deck. Succulents and vines grew vertically up one wall in a landscaping masterpiece Dylan had recently commissioned, adding just the right touch of greenery to the outdoor landing. Patio tables and a cozy set of lounge furniture were strategically placed around a stone fire pit to allow the best views of the Pacific.
“Want to have a seat out here?” he asked. “I’ll heat up the food Maisey left for us and you can soak up some fresh air.”
She’d rather do something with her hands than sit outside. Alone. In the dark. “No, thanks, I’ll help you.”
“Suit yourself. But I can handle it. I give Maisey the weekends off usually.”
“You mean you cook for yourself?”
He smiled as he walked over to the double-door cabinet refrigerator and grabbed a covered dish. “Unless Maisey takes pity on me and leaves me something wonderful like this chicken piccata, I’ve been known to throw a meal together.” He set the dish down and opened the oven door.
“Impressive,” she said.
“I can also wash a dish and toss dirty clothes in the washing machine, too.”
He gestured and she grabbed a casserole dish of rice pilaf from the fridge and handed it to him. Into the oven it went, right next to the chicken. A basket of bread, something garlicky with bits of sun-dried tomatoes, was nestled on the onyx counter next to a tray of homemade chocolate chip cookies. All the combined scents should make her queasy, but she found them actually whetting her appetite. She was hungrier than she’d been in a week. “Such skills. I’m impressed.”
Once the meal was set to reheating, Dylan leaned against the granite island, folding his arms across his torso, and pinned her down with those baby blues. “You’re forgetting how I grew up. Mom and Dad expected us to do everyday chores, just as they did. I washed cars, cooked meals, did laundry, made beds, and good God, I even scrubbed toilets.”
“I bet you don’t anymore.”
He shrugged and slid her a crooked grin. “Not if I can help it.”
Thinking about her recent toilet incidents, she didn’t blame him. “Your mom and dad were wonderful people. They taught you well.”
“Yeah, but at the time I didn’t think so. I did more work than any of my friends. Before I could go out and play ball, I had a list of chores to get through. Weekends were especially gruesome.”
“They were building character.”
“Yeah, now I play characters on the screen.”
“And you still wash dishes and make your own meals. The last conversation I had with your mom, she told me how proud she was of you.”
“She is now, but when I left college in my sophomore year to pursue an acting career, my folks were both pretty bummed. Especially my dad. He had high hopes of me going to medical school. He lost his chance at being a doctor and tossed all of his hopes and guilt onto me. He wanted to be a pediatrician.” He made a noisy sigh and scrubbed at the dark blond stubble on his chin. “I guess I really disappointed him when I ran away with Renee.”
Renee had been no good for Dylan. Emma had heard that a zillion times from Brooke and Dylan’s folks. Emma hadn’t been too happy with her, either. At the tender age of fourteen, Emma’s heart had been crushed when Dylan had fallen in love with a cheerleading beauty who’d convinced him he could make it big in the movies. She had connections. She could get him in to see all the right people.
“Maybe it wasn’t in the cards for you to be a doctor. Your dad lived long enough to see your success. He had to know you made the right decision for yourself.”
“Dad didn’t think I knew what I was doing. And maybe I didn’t. Renee was my first girlfriend and I was crazy about her.” He pumped his shoulders a couple of times, hopelessly, and something faint and hidden entered his eyes. “But enough about ancient history. How about a soda?” He opened the fridge again. “Lemonade? Wine or beer? Anything else? Maisey keeps the fridge pretty stocked.”
“Water sounds good.” It was safe. She couldn’t trust her stomach right now, and even before she’d found out about the baby, she’d given up alcohol.
He handed her one of those cobalt blue water bottles that cost more than a glass of fine wine and then plucked out an Indian Brown Ale for himself. His throat moved as he tipped the bottle to his lips and took a swig. She looked away instantly. She was never one to hide her emotions and the last thing she needed was to have Dylan catch her eyeing him.
They’d had their one night. Unfortunately neither of them remembered it.
Dylan’s cell phone rang out the theme song to his latest action flick. How many people actually had their very own ringtone? He grabbed it off the counter and frowned at the screen. “Sorry, Emma. I have to get this. I’ll make it quick. It’s the head of the studio.”
“Go right ahead. I’m fine right here.” She gestured for him to take the call.
He nodded, his eyes sparkling with gratitude as he walked out of the room, the cell to his ear. Emma grabbed the salad from the refrigerator, set it on the granite island and then scrounged through drawers to find tongs. Coming up with a pair, she leaned against the counter as Dylan’s voice drifted to her ears.
“It’s Callista’s thirtieth birthday? Yeah, I think she’d love a party. Up at your house?”
And then after a long pause, “I’ll do my best to be there, Maury. Yes, yes, I’m recovering nicely, thank you. I’m back at work on Monday. Thanks for the call. See you soon.”
He walked back into the kitchen, frowning and running a hand down his face. “Sorry,” he said. “Business crap.”
“Sounds like Callista’s having a party.” She tilted her head. “Sorry, I overheard.”
“Yeah, she’s turning thirty. Maury likes to remind me he’s not getting any younger. He expects me to be there.” Dylan sighed.
Maury Allen had power and influence. That much, Emma knew. According to Brooke, he’d been pushing for Dylan to make a commitment to his daughter, but so far, Dylan had resisted. Their relationship had been on and off for three years. “And you don’t want to go?”
Dylan leaned back against the counter, picking up his beer. “Maury’s been good to me. Gave me my first break. I sort of owe him my loyalty. If he wants me at his daughter’s birthday celebration, I’ll go.”
Dylan McKay and Callista Lee Allen made a gorgeous couple. Whenever they were together, there were headlines. To all the world they probably seemed like a perfect match.
Which made Emma’s predicament suddenly jump to the forefront of her thoughts and curdle her stomach. She was feeling a little weak-kneed anyway and needed to sit down.
Dylan’s hand came to her elbow and his eyes locked onto hers. “Emma, are you okay? You’re looking pale. I need to get food into you. Come, sit down.”
Why was he always touching her? She had enough to deal with right now, without getting all fan crazy over Dylan’s slightest brotherly touch. “Okay, maybe I should sit.”
He guided her to the outside patio table closest to the kitchen. “Wait here. I’ll get some plates and bring out the food.”
She sat, dumbfounded by her fatigue, and stared straight out to sea. The waves gently rolled onto the shore, and stars above lit the sky as low-lying fixtures surrounding the deck gave off soothing light. Fresh scents from the vertical garden on her right drifted to her nose and the whole effect made her feel somewhat better.
Emma wasn’t a wilting flower. Nothing much rattled her, well, except being alone in complete darkness. Overall, considering her lousy childhood, she’d fended well in the world, but this whole Dylan thing—secretly carrying his child, losing her cookies every morning and not holding up her end with Parties-To-Go—overwhelmed her. The walls were closing in from all directions and right now her body wasn’t up for the fight.
Dylan came back loaded down with food and went about serving her as if she was the Queen of England. Then he offered her the tan suede jacket she’d brought from home. “It’s getting a little cool out here,” he said.
She nodded and he helped her put her arms through the sleeves. “There you go. Better?”
She nodded. The jacket fit her snugly. She wondered how much longer she could wear it and then, just like that, tears welled in her eyes. Her mouth began to quiver.
It had to be hormones.
Dylan didn’t seem to notice. He was too busy making sure she had everything she needed at the table. “Eat up, Emma.”
He finally sat and they both picked up their forks. The food was delicious and she managed to eat half of everything on her plate. An accomplishment, considering she hadn’t eaten this much in days.
“You’re not worried about your girlish figure, are you?” he asked, eyeing her plate. His grin and the twinkle in his eyes were right on par for Dylan.
“Should I be?”
His lids lowered as he slowly raked his gaze over her body. “Not from where I’m sitting.”
She had no comeback. He’d once touched every inch of her and seemed to have no complaints that she could remember.
She managed a smile, though suddenly her energy waned. “The food was amazing. I feel full and satisfied,” she fibbed. Actually, she wasn’t feeling so great. “Please be sure to thank Maisey for me.”
“I will.”
“Dylan?”
“Hmm?”
“I’m really exhausted. Would you mind taking me home?”
He hesitated and something that resembled regret flickered in his eyes. “Sure...if that’s what you want.”
“It is.” She rose and pushed back her chair. Before she could take a step, heat washed up and over her, spinning circles inside her head. Her legs buckled and soon she was falling, falling.
And then Dylan’s arms were around her, easing her to the ground. “Emma!”
A sharp pat to the face snapped her eyes open. She’d been slapped.
“Emma, thank God. You fainted.”
Her head felt light and she saw two Dylans leaning over her on bent knee. “I did?”
“Yeah, you were out for a few seconds. I’m going to get you inside and call 911.”
“No, no!” His words were enough to rouse her and refocus her eyes. “I don’t need the paramedics.”
“You do, honey. You’ve been sick for days now. You should see a doctor.” The resolve in his voice frightened her. This was going sideways fast.
“No, no. I’m not sick.”
“Something’s wrong with you, Emma. I have to get you help.”
“Dylan, no.” She gazed into his worried face. “I know what’s wrong. I’m not sick.”
“You’re not?”
She shook her head. “No, I’m not. I’m...pregnant.”