The Cowboy's Pregnant Bride. Crystal Green
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So why had he stuck around here today, putting things together for Annette if it was so painful?
The answer was easy: he kind of liked that he knew her secret and that he was even a teeny, helpful part of this baby’s life, putting together his or her first furniture.
It even made him feel as if, for a fantasy-filled moment that would never materialize, he was a kind of family man who had atoned for his mistakes.
Maybe that’s why he’d started tossing questions Annette’s way when he’d never done much of that before.
“Didn’t your fiancé want the baby?” he asked now as he rested his hand on the rim of the bassinet. “Why would he have married you if he didn’t want a family?”
“I never told him about the baby.” Annette slid down the wall until she came to the shag carpet, seeming exhausted just at the thought.
Jared wanted to pull her close to him, ease his hand down the hair that she’d worn long today. Even in her khaki pants and loose sweater, she still possessed that higher-class vibe that had struck him much earlier. Now he knew the reason.
If he’d thought she was out of his league before, there was no denying it now. To think—a rodeo bum and a woman who had an art history degree.
What a pair.
“Why didn’t you tell him about the pregnancy?” he asked.
“I was going to. I thought he’d be just as happy as I was, but then...” She shook her head. “I took the pregnancy test right before the wedding ceremony. I hadn’t done it before because everything was in such chaos—dress fittings, last-minute details, rehearsal dinners. By the time the big day rolled around, I realized that... Well, I had an idea something was different about me.”
He supposed she’d missed her period and was just too much of a lady to say it in front of him.
“Then what happened?” he asked.
“I ignored what everybody always says about keeping the bride and groom away from each other before the ceremony. It’s supposed to be bad luck if you see one another at that point, right? But I rushed to his dressing room, anyway.” She fidgeted with the edge of her sweater. “He wasn’t alone.”
Jared tensed up.
Annette noticed. “I see you guessed it. I wasn’t the only member of the bridal party who was saying ‘I do’ that day. And the worst part of it was that she was a friend. A good one, I thought.”
“Annette...”
“No, don’t be sad for me.” She tugged down the sleeves of her sweater, wrapping her hands in them, making her appear more soft and vulnerable. “Something came over me at that moment, just as she was fixing her dress and he was telling her to get out. I knew deep down that I could never love him after that. I felt stupid because I’d never even guessed he’d do something so awful.”
“You’re not stupid.”
“Okay, maybe ignorant is the better word because I never had all the information I needed about him. Looking back, I should’ve known that he was staying out late for more than oil company meetings with his family. Or that he was taking midnight calls in his study from more than business partners. Maybe I didn’t want to believe anything was wrong and I ignored the details.”
Jared couldn’t believe any man could be so idiotic as to play a woman like Annette. But maybe Casey, his ex-wife’s husband, had thought something similar about him.
Annette said, “I called the wedding off then and there. Turns out that Brett didn’t have the same conclusion in mind.”
“He wanted to go through with it, even after that?”
“Yes. He actually tried to justify himself. He told me that his father had been doing it for years and his mom didn’t seem to mind. ‘Everyone does it,’ he said. It was all very Kennedy-esque.” She laughed shortly. “Then there was the topper—he tried to apologize for me seeing him in the act.”
It struck Jared that she had a maturity that went beyond her years. Maybe that came with the class she carried, even in a small-town waitressing uniform.
“I imagine,” Jared said, “that you put him in his place.”
“I did.” Her face went pink, but she didn’t add any more.
Something about her reaction made a protective streak flash through him, but when she got to her feet before he could go over to help her up, he realized that Annette didn’t need any help from anyone.
And that was fine by him, seeing as how knowing this much about her lent him a sense of responsibility that hadn’t been there before. It was a strange feeling for a man who’d never wanted any of it in his life.
She strolled over to the bassinet, just as if she hadn’t revealed anything about herself to him. “You did a great job. Thank you so much for everything.”
“It was nothing.” But that wasn’t true. This afternoon had been something.
When she smiled up at him, it was as if his bones turned to hot water, which was apt considering that, if he got too much deeper into her, that’s what he’d be in.
Hot, scalding, bubbling water that was likely to strip him bare.
“You have that journal with you?” she asked.
“It’s in my coat pocket.”
“Mind if I read it while you see to the garden?”
“Not at all.” He absently stroked the whiskers on his chin. “There’s something I was going to mention about that garden, though.”
“What?”
“I’m afraid I’ll make a mess of it.”
She widened her gaze. “How much of a mess?”
“A mess that might have me repotting and replanting.”
She didn’t answer for a moment, and he saw his chances at finding any more Tony Amati relics circling a drain. He even wondered if he should start knocking on her neighbors’ doors to see if they wouldn’t mind a stranger making a disaster zone out of their own backyards.
But a second later, she was smiling at him again. “Your peace of mind is far more important than some herbs. Dig away.”
Jared never tolerated big shows of emotion, but he definitely felt a victorious inner fist pump inside of him now.
“Great. Thanks, Annette.” He had the grace to seem sheepish. “Truth is, I have pots and tools from Gran’s in the back of my truck already.”
Her eyes sparkled, just as they did when they were in the diner across the counter from each other. But this time, there was no barrier between