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‘What was the point? I thought you were a tourist and that we’d never see each other again.’ She gazed at him with a hot mix of anger and guilt and sadness. It had been a fantasy experience, she’d not wanted to shatter its perfect illusion with morning-after awkwardness. ‘It wasn’t like you were planning a second date either. You were passing through.’

‘So were you. Or so you led me to believe. You lied as much as I did that night.’

She shook her head. ‘I never lied.’

He tensed. ‘By omission, you definitely did.’

r /> ‘What about everything you forgot to mention? Like, your real name. Your true intentions for being there. You never said you were looking for something to tear apart.’

‘I’m not the one tearing apart valuable things. You’re the one who’s done that—keeping a child from his father.’ His voice rose. ‘There’s no reason you can give that excuses your failure to tell me once you knew who I was.’

‘You didn’t want me to know who you really were. I only discovered that by accident months afterwards. But you were so comfortable to lie, which told me all I needed to know about your integrity.’ She snapped at him. She didn’t really mean it but emotion had overruled her tongue. ‘I never would have said yes if I’d known who you were.’

‘You would have said it faster,’ he shot back.

‘Oh, wow.’ She drew in a shocked breath at his sheer arrogance. ‘You think you’re that amazing?’

He might be six feet three of muscled manly beauty, he might have a brilliant brain and he might have billions in the bank, but he had no integrity. And therefore, no true value.

‘The resources I have are amazing.’

‘You think I care about money?’ she scoffed. She worked as a volunteer, the last thing she was interested in was accumulating material wealth. ‘If I was a gold-digger, wouldn’t I have beaten down your door the second I discovered who you really were?’ She flushed angrily. ‘I thought you were some chilled-out surfer. I had no reason to suspect you were a billionaire bulldozer who buys whatever he wants and then destroys it.’

‘Destroys it?’ His eyes widened. ‘Are we talking about that dilapidated old hostel?’

‘It wasn’t dilapidated.’

‘You showed me a prime piece of land that was in dire need of investment.’

She rejected that notion. Lucero’s property had been perfect. Furthermore the old man had been unwaveringly kind to her. But now Javier was ripping apart his legacy. ‘And didn’t you take that information and use it well?’ she raged. ‘Well, you’re not buying me and you’re not buying my son.’

‘He’s my son too.’ His eyes glittered, revealing his own loss of temper. ‘It’s eighteen months since that night, Emmy. And I’ve only just discovered he even exists. Now he’s nine months old,’ he said. ‘I’ve missed out on almost the full first year of his life. That’s unforgivable and you can’t keep him from me. You owe me time.’ He inhaled sharply and whirled away, clearly struggling to regain his self-control.

Emmy was struck still as her worst fears were realised. Javier was going to fight. He was used to getting his way. Was he going to do whatever it took to get it now? He had everything on his side—resources, power, privilege. She had only intuition and resolve and the fiercest love imaginable.

‘Understand this,’ she breathed. ‘There’s nothing I won’t do to protect my son.’ She would be there at every step. She would never let Javier or anyone else sideline her.

‘Nothing? Good to know.’ He turned back to face her. His lips curved in a smile full of bring it on challenge that fired up that dangerous part of Emerald. ‘I consider myself warned. But somehow, I feel confident I can handle whatever you try to throw at me.’ He stepped closer. ‘You know I can handle you, Emerald.’

His words sent sparks cascading through her—anger, defiance, attraction. Unwanted, inappropriate, unstoppable attraction.

And she was furious about it.

CHAPTER TWO

‘SO, WHAT DO you want to do?’

Javier stared as Emerald Jones squared up to him.

Do? That was the terrible thing. Because the one thing that he wanted to do right now was the one thing he really, really shouldn’t. This raw kick of lust was appalling. He decided it was anger, really, fuelling the hit of ill-timed appetite—his rage tempting him with one way in which he could assert control. Well, he wasn’t going to let emotion get the better of him. Not ever. He very deliberately took a step back and shoved his hands into his pockets.

He’d come here today ready to apologise, ready to take on responsibility for his son, ready to support Emerald once they’d worked out how... But to discover she knew who he was already? And that she’d found him so lacking that she’d just ‘not bothered’ to let him know?

His gut clenched as he strove to think clearly and decide how best to answer her.

Frankly the last twenty-four hours were a blur. He’d engaged a private investigator to work urgently through the night the second he’d been driven away from the store yesterday. Javier had tossed and turned, recalculating, remembering, reliving. The confirmation had come mid-morning. Emerald Jones had delivered her son nine months ago and given him the name Lucero Ramon, Luke for short. Certainty had seared like a white-hot sword cauterising a stomach wound, leaving Javier so breathless he’d almost lost the power to think. He’d had to hurry paperwork to ensure visa requirements were met to get them both on board because he’d wanted to make sure they could have some time to talk—uninterrupted and safe. Although, truthfully, he had no idea where to start the conversation that was more than nine months overdue.

Now he steeled himself against her bone-weakening beauty. The linen shirt dress she wore today closely cupped her curves while the faded blue still brought out the blue of her emotion-laden eyes. But the accusation in them was laughably unjust when it turned out she was the one who’d hidden something far more serious. Her glorious hair hung in fiery, loose spirals halfway down her back and that reckless part of him wanted to tangle his fingers into them and pull her close. Instead he finally answered her question. ‘Can you close the shop and get rid of that woman so we can talk...?’

‘That’s Connie,’ Emerald interrupted shortly. ‘She’s amazing.’

‘I’m sure, but we need some time alone.’

And he didn’t really want to hear about the amazing Connie. Not when she was doing all the things he’d not even been given the chance to attempt—such as spending the afternoon with his son.

He had no real relationship with his own parents and frankly had no idea how to set about building one with a baby. He pushed back the slithering thought that it was too late already, that any relationship he might’ve fostered with Luke could never be recovered, that, once again, he’d missed out on something fundamental. He didn’t have time to squander on that insecurity right now. And at the very least, he could give his son all outward signs of support.

But he couldn’t stop himself from questioning her sharply. ‘Were you ever going to tell me? Or were you hoping to get rid of me quickly and keep your secret? Were you going to deny me and him for ever?’

It wasn’t the first time Javier had been betrayed, but it was absolutely the worst. An innocent child denied his birthright? How could she claim to love her son yet choose to deny him such a primary relationship? Would she deny him everything Javier could offer—his finance alone was outstanding and his son should never have to live in anything less than luxury. His tension coiled tighter with every second that she didn’t reply.

‘I don’t know what I was going to do.’

‘Well, we need to figure out things as quickly as possible,’ he said, shoving the anger down inside so he could calmly take control of this mess. ‘I’d like you to come with me—’

‘I can’t just walk out—’

‘Sure you can,’ he muttered in annoyance. ‘You’ve done it before.’

She paled but argued anyway. ‘I owe Connie. I need to give her proper notice.’

And she didn’t owe him? Javier huffed out a tight breath. ‘If she’s that amazing, she’ll understand how important this is.’

Emerald couldn’t stall and deny him more time when he’d missed this much already.

‘We need to go.’ He rocked on his feet, resisting the urge to pace.

He could feel her aggression building, but she turned away. Stiffly she locked the store door and then led

him up the narrow stairs to the tiny room above. A swift glance around the bedsit made him grit his teeth.

‘Thanks, Connie,’ Emerald said, her awkwardness evident in the colour storming her cheeks. ‘I’m sorry, I had to close the shop.’

Javier didn’t listen to the rest—their voices faded as he gazed in fascination, and frankly in trepidation, at the tiny boy playing on a mat on the floor. He was cherubic—there was no other word for it. A dumpling of a child with dark eyes, dark curls and a beatific smile. Javier felt something in his chest slip, but at the same time his gut tightened. He’d never felt as afraid for anything or anyone in his life. Nor had he felt as uncertain of what to actually do.

Moments later the older woman left. Javier didn’t glance or give a damn about her obvious curiosity. He couldn’t peel his attention from his son. He had little experience with children. He’d had no intention of having any of his own, but Luke was here and, now that he was, Javier couldn’t have him denied his heritage or the opportunities he could offer. Which were a damn sight more than this sparse existence. He had to draw in another cooling breath to stop his temper from flaring again.

The child smiled at Emmy as she crouched and put a soft toy in front of him. Javier’s gut twisted again as he watched her with Luke. Given the boy’s gurgling gleeful reaction to her, it was obvious she’d cared for him but while he appreciated that, he was also...jealous? And there was something else—something worse—bubbling beneath his skin. Another scalding emotion that he didn’t want to recognise, let alone release.

‘Please start packing, Emerald,’ he said bluntly.

She glanced up at him. He saw the nervous lick of her lips. But it was the widening of the child’s eyes that had him instantly regretting how harsh he’d sounded.

‘It’s not like I can steal him away without you knowing,’ he added in a whisper. ‘This room is ridiculously small.’

In an almost blinding wave of emotion, he realised he wanted his son to have everything. Not just material things, but emotional things—things Javier hadn’t had. Security and consistency of care—for one. The trouble was, he didn’t know how to begin with that. All he knew was that he needed to get them out of there.


Tags: Natalie Anderson Billionaire Romance