At His Service: Nanny Needed: Hired: Nanny Bride / A Mother in a Million / The Nanny Solution. Cara Colter

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At His Service: Nanny Needed: Hired: Nanny Bride / A Mother in a Million / The Nanny Solution - Cara  Colter

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she said tightly, and she meant it. A pint-size chaperone for weaklings, not that she needed to worry about this man sneaking into her room in the dead of night. That was fantasy.

      Of the X-rated variety, and she didn’t mean tic-tac-toe, either.

      “Hey, Susie,” he said turning from her, after one last look that seemed more troubled than triumphant, “do you want to play noughts and crosses?”

      Susie glared at him, clearly torn between personal dislike and the temptation of her favorite game. “All right,” she said grudgingly.

      Danielle marched down the hall with the baby. The room at the end had the same spectacular views and windows as the rest of the apartment.

      The decorating was so romantic it was decadent, the whole room done in shades of brown, except for the bed linens that were seductively and lushly cream colored, inviting in that sea of rich dark chocolate.

      Her suitcases were on the bed. How that had happened she wasn’t quite sure. A crib had been set up for Jake, too.

      Through a closed door was a bathroom, with the Jacuzzi.

      A jetted tub built for two.

      “We have to get out of here,” she confided in the baby as she took his plump, dimpled limbs out of his clothes. The fact that Joshua thought his sister might be matchmaking—and that she could not say with one hundred per cent certainty that Melanie was not—just added an element of humiliation to the urgency she felt to go.

      Was Melanie matchmaking? She frowned, thinking back over her conversations with her employer. As eager as Mel was to have everyone in the world enjoy the same state of wedded bliss she lived in, she had always been reserved about Brent.

      Dannie assumed because she had never met him.

      She had assumed Mel’s eagerness to have her join her children with their uncle had only been her effort to help her nanny over her heartbreak, to give her a change of scenery. A hidden agenda? Wouldn’t that be humiliating?

      But Mel had never alluded, even subtly, to the possibility she considered her nanny and her brother to be anything of a match.

      Because we so obviously are not, Dannie thought, and detected just a trace of sulkiness in that conclusion.

      As always, the baby worked his magic on her sour mood, her tendency toward dour introspection. Dannie put about two inches of water in the gigantic tub, and Jake surrendered his little naked self gleefully into the watery playpen.

      When the baby began to laugh out loud, she was drawn in, and she laughed back, splashing his little round tummy with warm water until he was nearly hysterical with joy.

      “Do I take myself and life way too seriously, Mr. Jake?”

      What if Mel had sent her here with some kind of hidden agenda? So what? What if she just played along?

      “Oh, Dannie,” she chided herself, “that would be like playing patty-cake with a powder keg.”

      Jake recognized the term, cooperatively held out his hands and crowed.

      Relax, she ordered herself. If you still know how, and then sadly, if you ever knew how.

      CHAPTER THREE

      “PATTY cake, patty cake, baker’s man, bake me a cake as fast as you can.”

      Dannie’s voice and her laughter, intermingled with happy shouts from the baby and splashing noises, floated down the hallway to where Joshua sat opposite Susie on the couch.

      Who would have imagined the serious, rather uptight nanny could sound like that? So intriguingly carefree?

      Not that that was the truth about her. No, the truth was what he had felt when he had touched her lip—

      “Tic, tac, toe,” Susie cried and drew a triumphant line though her row of crosses.

      Susie was trouncing him at noughts and crosses.

      Something unexpected was happening to him. Given that his carefully executed schedule had gone out the window, he felt unexpectedly relaxed, as if a tightly wound coil inside of him was unwinding. Watching his niece, whose tongue was caught between her teeth in fierce concentration, listening to Dannie and the baby, he felt a feeling unfurling inside him.

      It couldn’t possibly be yearning.

      He had the life every man worked toward, success beyond his wildest dreams, the great car, the fabulous apartment, gorgeous women as abundant in his life as apples on a tree. Just as ready to be picked, too.

      And yet all of that paled in comparison to a baby’s laughter and a little girl playing noughts and crosses. All that paled in comparison to the softness of a woman’s lip beneath his thumb.

      His sister, diabolical schemer that she was, would be thrilled by this turn of events.

      What had he been thinking when he had touched Dannie’s lip? When he had said to her with such ridiculous confidence, “I know something about you. I wonder if you even know it yourself.”

      The truth was he hadn’t been thinking at all. Thinking belonged to that other world: of deals, successes, planning. That other world of accumulating more and more of the stuff.

      The stuff that had failed to make him feel as full as he felt in this moment.

      No, the truth was that thought had abandoned him when he touched her. Something deeper had temporarily possessed him.

      He had seen her, not through his mind, but with his heart. He had seen her and felt the lie she had told him about the college professor. How could she even kid herself that she would ever be happy with a staid life?

      From the second she had appeared in his office, she had presented the perfect picture of a nanny. Calm, controlled, prissy.

      And from the beginning, he had seen something else. A gypsy soul, wanting to dance. That is what he knew about her that she did not know about herself.

      That the right man—and probably not a college professor—was going to make her wild. Would make her toss out everything she thought she believed about herself. Under that costume of respectability she wore beat the drum of passion.

      Stop, he told himself. What is wrong with me?

      “I win,” Susie said, carefully checking the placement of her crosses. “Again. You’re dumb.”

      He stared at her, and then started to laugh. Yesterday he would have disagreed, probably argued, but today, since he had done one extremely dumb thing after another, starting with inviting them here, and ending with touching Dannie Springer’s most delectable lip, he knew Susie was right.

      “Let this be a lesson to you,” he said. “Don’t drop out of school.”

      “I don’t even go to school yet,” Susie informed him. “But when I do, I will love it. I will never ever stop going. I will go to school until I am one hundred.”

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